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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 18, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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new problems with the obama care website that go far beyond plichs. congress using your campaign donations to pay relatives. in studio 57 with a preview of the 60 minutes report. >> a look at your world in 90 seconds. >> when you have a great week, you can get pretty far out of the area.
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>>a a massive man hundred dollar after a bizarre prison break. >> there is a transit strike erupting this morning in san francisco. talks broke down and bad news will for 400,000 commuters. >> fires running wild near sydney, australia. dozens of homes have been destroyed. >> terrorists stormed the shopping center in nairobi last night. >> congressional negotiators have begun trying to avert another crisis. >> we want to find out what we can agree on. >> 800,000 furloughed employees were relieved to get back to work. >> the duchess of cambridge
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showing off volleyball skills. >> you have seen her playing hockey in high heels. >> destroying a 200 million-year-old rock formation in utah. >> your hair was like -- >> uhableable. the red sox win game five. >> the saw hawks, 34-2. >> the american people's hopes and dreams are what matters. our regards to them compels us to cooperate and compromise. >> obama likes to start off with a joke. >> on cbs this morning. >> they had the annual dipper in new york hosted by timothy dolan. >> here came this close to beingnal cam selected, but he blew it in ted competition. >> this morning's eyeopener is presented by toyota. let's go places.
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>> welcome to cbs this morning. >> good mornin >> good morning.lie. it's friday.frid >> we begin with a story, a manhunt in florida for two for convicted killers.sed the they used the forged signature of a judge to escape from prison. >> workers at the prison let them go, not realizing the release p release papers were phony. no officials are checking to make sure no one else was missing. wkmg in orlando where they committed their crimes. good morning. >> joseph jenkins and charles walker were serving life sentences for separate crimes and both managed to escape using forged documents that granted them early release.em early now state and local authorities now stat are trying to get them back behind bars. the a prison on the florida panhandle presented a challenge and joseph jenkins and charles
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walker 34 did not have to scale them fences. guards let them out the front front gates. jenkins and walker.eptember forged documents obtained by cbs october news granted both jenkins and rant walker reduced sentences and immediate release. they bear the signature of ninth district chief judge belvin perry. belvin >> it is quite evident that some that had some knowledge of the judicial system and how the judicial system operates. >> judge perry presided over the highly publicized trial of casey anthony in 2011. his signature widely available on public on public documents and easily accessible online. >>. >> i think it was listed off another document and placeda o that document which is not hard ment and p to do. j >> joseph jenkins was serving a sentence related to robbery and murder in 1989. for charles walker sentenced to life after a murder conviction in 1998. the fake forms reduced the convict
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sentences of both men to just 15 years. how the inmates managed to red create the do you means is now em the focus of a florida department of corrections internal investigation. florida's governor is calling ng t the manhunt everyone's top ne's top priority. >> the first thing you do, we need to apprehend the individuals and that's what we are working on. >> joseph jenkins and charles walker are from the orlando area and may have returned shortly after the release. charlie and nora?e? >> thank you.mike john miller is a former fbi assistant director. you think this was an inside job? inside >> the judge pointed out that itested th doesn't take a road scholar to figure that out. these were not the smartest to fig criminals or the most clever supporters.e i think what you are are looking at is somebody who has enough ody background to put together a ba very convincing looking legal nt
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document. somebody with enough technical kn knowledge in a computer to get a a real looking signature cut and m pasted on the bottom so it and doesn't look cut and pasted so they get it filed where the cou documents come from.me from. that suggests it was probably gests it not the two or three of the ners prisoner who is did this. pro probably somebody within the system system of either jail house jailhous lawyers or paralegals on the outside who were part of the circle.e of >> these two men are convicted a murderers who have been on the land now for three weeks.weeks. somebody said they could get far get away.ay. is it likely they could get far?far? >> they had the advantage of time and planning. this is not something they dreamed up overnight. overnight they may have had an exit plan that took them out of the zone. typically these people when i -- would run a manhunt in los angeles, we identified the social network.ir social who were the visitors in prison.ir who were the phone calls to.ir who was the social network in ogs
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the prison and outside? you start to squeeze that so e that people who contacted or may then y have contacted them and people they may turn to later may not want to help them.t >> assuming they try to find outy how this may have happened before?ed befo >> they are finding surprises. this spring there was another prisoner serving a life sentenceng for attempted murder of a police officer, this detective was rec scanning the prison record to look in on people that were convicted of felonies from his cases and he stumbled upon the order for early release.release they got out ahead of that case before that guy was let go. now you see a second and a third case and they scrubbed the state's at records.nd a yesterday we found in our scrub the of the record a court document ordering the release of one of the two prisoner who is had the his week document this week from two wo years ago.o we are looking at that document saying hey, they tried this e
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before and why didn't it work then? it again they tried it again.>> and you'r >> you wonder if it's happening here or other places?hink >> i think a lot of courthouses said let's go through the files and just what the paperwork said.ow when i talked to judge perry yesterday, he said that his concern is they were going paperless and it would have e said vulnerabilities. while we were working on work securities for that these were paper do you means filed there. you have to look at the system. >> fascinating. thank you. >> new revelations of more t problems with the obama care website. they go well beyond basic .gov. enrollment glitches. they planned hearings for one million who still can't sign up. jan jan crawford is in washington with still reporting.jan, good m >> good morning.morning, cbs news learn the problem is more than people trying to sign up.ews has insurance companies are reporting problems when people st manage to complete the g to
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application. they say the website is generating duplicate and incomplete enrollment forms forms suggesting the problems are pervasive. pe white house press secretary jay carney deflected questions over who if anyone should be held accountable. >> accountability of the presidency comes from making the system better. >> >> the administration scrambles, former house speaker nancy y pelos pelosi who helped pass obama care pressed for a quick r a resolution. >> i hoped we would have answers have soon and the answers will be we okay. we found the glitch or whatever it is. it has been corrected. >> the so-called dplichs have in fact made the website unusable for most. out of 17 million visitors, they estimate 20,000 people enrolled. p the white house is refusing to ite hous release official numbers until num next month. cbs news learned the problems go beyond enrollment.nt
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most troubling analysts say insurance companies receiving duplicate sign up forms from the for government and records of people enrolling, unenrolling and re reenrolling. they contain highly personal information.talking >> we are talking about social security number and health history. i think that is individuals coming on to the sites basically b wanting to trust that all this will be handled properly and accurately and securely. >> gary lauer is ceo of e health, the country's largest online seller of health insurance. they have a contract with the federal government to help enroll people and obama care. he said problems with the government's website slowed their effort.t >> we're received the other things we needed two days beforee actual the implementation.impl we needed it weeks before. we >> in a statement responding to t weeks the concerns a government
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spokes woman said an individual problems are raised by insurers we work aggressively to address to them. agg >> there is one good thing aboutthere's the low enrollment numbers. nu for now they can manage the problems they can see with the duplicate and incomplete forms and check them by one. they the concern is what happens once check more people start registering. remember the target number in reme the first six months is seven million people. >> thanks jan. the government shut down is t over, but a divide remains with t negotiations to stop another budget crisis under way. on capitol hill, good morning.budget cri >> good morning to you, charlie. for the first time in weeks the morn capitol is relatively silent. lawmakers cleaned up their mess and went home. but they left a lot of he preside unfinished business behind which prompted the president to give them a to do list. the
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the years of governments have ted started turning as federal workers reopened parks, wind the clocks and stream back into their offices.ack >> i'm very, very happy to be back. >> can congress find a way to work after weeks of utter gridlock?t h the president has suggestions. >> f >> first in the coming days and weeks, we should sit down and pursue a balanced approach to a responsible budget. >> those talks suffered the next yesterday.t weeks leaders will haggle over spending levels and deficit reduction, something washington reduct has been trying to tackle for years. four years. so if the president's commission led boy alan simple and bowles, congress ignored it.. the 2011 grand bargain uk tas on deficit reduction between the president and speaker boehner failed. a bipartisan group called the super committee tried to find tisan $1.2 trillion worth of targeted cuts that same year and could not strike a deal. >> how do you ensure you are
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more successful than the super committee was? >> the goals were much broader, much larger.hey our job is to make sure we put forward a spending tax and a budget tax for congress in the this con next year or two or further if we can. >> the president's second suggestion? >> we should finish the job of fixing our broken immigration fixing o system. >> the senate passed the comprehensive plan in june.hey they want to take a piece meal approach but the pieces appear e pieces to be solved. senator marco rubio said the marko r should shut down may have hurt the effort. >> that are made it harder and not easier. >> the president named one other big piece of legislation in the limbo, the farm bill that sets agricultural policy every five respon years. the house and senate passed their versions and the house the bill cut $40 bill kron worth of $40 food stamp funding that created yet another part of the divide..
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>> president obama will nominate jake johnson who served at the pentagon's top lawyer and helped end the don't ask don't tell tell us and drone strikes. he talked about reaching a tipping point with al qaeda. in may i asked him about the future of that fight. >> i think that the end is in sight. e the end of that phase is in sight. it i think it is now up to our national political leadership to have this discussion about what is needed for the future. >> for confirmed, he would replace janet napolitano who repl stepped down in august. >> the u.s. is warning that the capital of uganda could face a ugand terrorist attack in kenya. sim newly released video shows the september. terror. the attack at the west gate mall killed 67 people and officials d say they found four assault cials fo rifles in two boxes containing i
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body parts. they are apparently the remains of some of the gunmen and the hunt for answers is leading to scandinavia. they are questioning relatives ya. of a somali-born man who is a citizen of norway. >> dick cheney talks about how his health impacted his role as vice president. he survived four heart attacks. in a 60 minutes interview, he talked with dr. sanjay gupta and he said he was rate to leave office if he became too ill to serve. >> basically i resigned the vice presidency effective march 28th of 2001. >> nearly for the entire time there was a letter of resignation sitting there pending. >> cheney discovered no provision in the constitution toas replace a vice president who is t alive and incapacitated. he drew up a letter of resignation to give to the to t president. >> in section 20 title three of s the united states code i
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richard b cheney here by resign the office of vice president of the united states. >> how did he react? >> surprised, but he thought it was a good idea. >> he survived eight years as vice president and had a heart transplant in may of 2012. you can see the complete interview this sunday night here on cbs. >> this is a rough morning for commuters in the san francisco bay area. workers at bay area rabid transit are on the pick line after going on strike at midnight. the trains are not running. 400,000 people usually ride each day. the two sides are far apart on the workable issues. >> transportation officials are changing their story about the explosion on a spirit airlines flight. s the official said engineer away pieces broke away from the ld have housing they could have ripped into the jetliner. they appear to have broken apart
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and remain with the engine and flame and smoke forced them to return to dallas. the cause is under investigation. >> no one was hurt. >> toyota is rolling 800,000 cars in the united states. it affects 2012 and 2013 camry, avalon and venza models. air the air bags and power steering s could stop working and it's dripping water from the air conditioner causing them to s short circuit. they said they will fix the y problem for free. >> time to show you headlines from around the globe. "usa today" said they had fighti trouble fighting even one major on war. top senate officials say they put the army at high risk according to reviews done every four years. >> edward snowden said he didn't give any secrets to the rugs. he is living in russia under ark he didn' sil um and claims he gave all aid the classified material he had to hong kong before leaving for scow.
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moscow. he kept the secrets away from the chinese. >> the news looks at google's stock that opened at a record high this morning. a nearly $1,000 a share due to le's sto strong earnings reports. profits are up 36% from a year ago. that adds up to nearly $3 billion for the quarter. they make most of their money billion from the number of online ads it has. >> britain's telegraph said a ads. nearly 2 million-year-old skull suggests mankind came from a single species. 2 it was found in the country of georgia and could rewrite the evolutionary history of mankind. evol >> here's a story we can show like tak you. taking out the britney's trash. catching shut eye is how the the br brain removes metal toxins and refreshes itself. >> 100 wildfires are ramging and
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more than 25 of the fires are still out of control. one person is dead and dozens of homes have been destroyed and of p hundreds of people have been sea breeze has kicked in overnight. that has brought with it some low clouds and fog toward the coastline and, well, a couple of patches inside the bay, as well. so some changes in the works for a friday. not going to be a bad day, but probably going to find some cooler temperatures out toward the coastline. maybe a little bit warmer actually in some of the valleys. some 80s showing up there. lots of sunshine inside the bay, too, with 70s. 60s coastal areas. then over the weekend, still some patchy fog in the morning hours. lots of sunshine, though, by the afternoon. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by jcpenney. hurry in this weekend for our lowest prices of the season.
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>> second minutes investigates how families are being put on the payroll. >> we wanted to ask you about your taurts on the campaign staff. >> steve croft has a preview of sunday's report. >> a nuclear engineer warned of a looming disaster. he is unemployed and they want to know why. the first television interview since losing his job. >> the nba takes them by storm. david stern is leading an
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american revolution. >> i'm surprised charlie rose is not here doing the morning news. >> charlie would love to be here. >> the news is back in the morning here on cbs this morning. stay tuned for your local news. would think. stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by humana. is what makes us different. we take the time to get to know you and your unique health needs. then we help create a personalized healthcare experience that works for you. and you. and you. with 50 years of know-how, and a dedicated network of doctors health coaches, and wellness experts, we're a partner you can rely on -- today, and tomorrow. we're going beyond insurance to become your partner in health. humana. [ telephone ringing ] [ sniffs ] girl scout: [ clears throat ] hi. i just
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bart is on strike and the commute is beginning to thin out a little bit this morning on this friday. mobile5 in traffic. lines are thick now at the toll plaza with no trains running today. bart is providing some shuttle buses at several stations in the east bay but the bus service is very limited going only to san francisco in the morning and away from san francisco during the evening commute. bart has asked the unions to at least put its latest contract offer to a vote but the unions refuse at changes to work rules. now here's liza with traffic. >> we have been looking at long delays at the bay bridge toll plaza. those delays continue as folks hop in their cars to make the drive out of oakland into san francisco. we'll begin there where westbound 580 still slow from highway 24, crowded from the caldecott so it's not as bad as
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it was, say, 30 minutes ago. still, a long commute for the drive into san francisco. a good alternate would be to head towards the san mateo bridge. no major delays on the bridge but getting to the san mateo bridge span southbound 880 slow from 238 approaching 92. the local ferries are a great alternate. they have added extra runs to the larkspur and alameda- oakland ferries. caltrain will be stopping all of their trains including the baby bullet at the millbrae station to pick up passengers. that's a look at traffic. lawrence is up next with the forecast.
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low clouds and fog returning to the bay area. the sea breeze kicked in so a change in the weather on this friday. you can see the clouds now hugging the coastline. some of that pretty dense out toward the beaches. temperature-wise, we'll notice some cooler numbers out toward the coast mainly in the 60s, 70s inside the bay, 80s in the valleys. lots of sunshine for the weekend.
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we put ther . we put together a segment for you folks and me as well. it's more informational than entertaining i think. it's called what congress has learned from the government shut down. let's take a look. what congress has learned. let's see if they learned anything. roll that. >> nothing. >> nothing. >> nada. >> zero. >> nada. >> zero. >> zip. >> nada. >> zero. >> the adventures of a squirrel named super twirchgnkie. >> the things that you can do with a tape. he warned of trouble at a waste dump and lost his job of 44 years. the first television interview. he said it's not a coincidence.
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why senators want answers. >> china is better than known for dunkling than dunking. a big hit in beijing. they sat down this morning and show us how far they are taking their love of american sports. >> it is widely known if politics and may come as a surprise members used funds donated to the action committee for permanent use. that includes scripts and hiring family members. sunday night's correspond ept looks at examples. here's a preview. >> july ron paul retired last year, he seemed to be the leader with six family members on the payroll. daughter, daughter's mother-in-law, three grandchildren and a grandchild in law paying them a total of $304,000 over the past two election cycles. >> some congress men and senators, it's a family business. >> absolutely. it's a family business. they have members of the family
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on the campaign payroll and they will often have members of their family who are lobbyists and lobby on issues in which the member may be working. >> we were interested in talking to republican congressman rodney alexander who had just retired mid-term after winning a campaign with no democratic opposition in which he paid his two daughters a total of $130,000. >> congressman? steve cross from 60 minutes. we wanted to ask you about both your daughters on the campaign staff. the figures we have according to the reports are $73,000 for lisa and $57,000 for ginger. >> that's for two years for the election cycle. >> what exactly did they do? >> everything that others did for other campaigns. >> whatever they did, it couldn't have been that much. he won 78% against the
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libertarian candidate who wanted to abolish the irs. >> it looks like you are using campaign funds for your family. >> i'm not asking for that. >> you can ept it in the family? > i kept it with somebody i can trust. if we can't trust our daughters, who can you trust? >> steve is with us now. everybody knows about it. >> it's also something that is one of the examples of congress that gets away with something you can't do in the outside world. there laws and corporations like cbs and governments for the most part and there in congress. you can't hire the people to be on the congressional staff. you can hire as many as you want to be on your campaign staff. >> in 1989 the congress passed the ethics reform act to deal with the problems and the loophole was created. they essentially become funds as you point out to employees of your family and they use private
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jets to fly anywhere. this is an open secret. how pervasive is it? >> very pervasive. not everybody does it. there congress men and people in the leadership who are particular about not using it to their benefit, but every member of congress has one of the leadership pacts. it is substantial and pretty widespread. >> do you think it will change? >> no. that's the point of our story. we talked about the lack of bipartisanship and the inability it get together over political differences. >> you have a permanent majority campaign reform or ethical reform. there two bills that are modest. either one have cosponsors and never get there. >> you did a lot of reporting and spoke with the top finance watch dogs. what did we find happened in the
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last couple of weeks of the government shut down? was there a lot of money created here? are. >> absolutely. we won't know for a couple of months but i know the leadership packs, contributors and lobbyists give a lot of money to the leaders and they throw it out to people in the party. there were millions and millions of dollars handed out by the republican leaders by two various members. we will find out to try to influence people's votes on the government shut down. >> when you walk up and say hi, i'm steve crawford. that's your family. >> the camera crew news travels fast. >> we heard you were coming across this way. >> he is keeping the government shut down open. no staffers on the hill. he is roaming around. >> congratulations. 25 years at 60 minutes.
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>> that's a long time. right out of high school. >> no, no. >> congratulations. >> i was middle aged when i got here. it worked. >> you can watch the full report on washington's open secrets sunday night. on monday we will talk and find out why politicians are committing extortion monday on cbs this morning. >> now this story. a nuclear energy who blew the whistle on dangerous problems with the largest radioactive waste dump is out of a job. the nuclear reservation is in southeastern washington state. they hold 56 million gallons of nuclear waste. the storage tanks are leaking into the ground. in his first television interview, the whistle blower with our carter evans. >> he has a tough inning? >> not yet. >> you think it was retaliation. >> retaliation?
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>> dr. walter has spoken out about the potentially catastrophic hazards surrounding the multibillion dollar nuclear waste treatment plant under construction. >> my job was to point out if there was a problem and to identify the problem and offer solutions to it. >> his biggest concern is a design flaw that can lead to a deadly hydrogen explosion or worse, a nuclear chain reaction. >> with the prevailing winds it would carry the radiation and the contamination eastward. the areas a couple hundred miles away would begin being decontaminated. >> the department of energy runs them. bechtel national will build the plant for $4.3 billion. it's more than $8 billion over budget and for the last two years, construction on a key part of the facility has been at
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a stand still halted by the federal government. >> they basically stopped construction because of the rates. >> yes, sir. >> not safe enough to continue? >> not only was it not safe enough, they would not operate. >> instead of appreciation from his company, he got a demotion and was banished to the basement. >> did it feel like you were shutout? >> clearly shutout. i was not invited to safety meetings or communication meetings. nothing. >> in an office in a basement with no windows and copy machines running behind it. it's a jump. >> it's a jump. >> he sued for whistle blower protection and told his story to congress. >> everyone sees you go to work in the basement with no windows? >> it's a very visible example of what happens when you speak up. >> his testimony was crucial. >> this is chairman on the
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committee of natural resources. >> the treatment makes a mockery out of a pledge the whistle blowers and him get a fair shake. >> were you surprised? did they give you a reason? >> the reason that we need to cut back. >> in a statement they said they don't comment on personnel matters, but encourage employees to raise any concerns about safety. >> is it worth it? stand standing up for what you believe in? >> i would do it over again. >> not the way he expected had his 44-year career to end. richland, washington. >> incredible story. now that the nba is scoring big with the world's second largest economy. why the fans are pushing to get a glimpse the american basketball stars with kobe. up next on cbs this morning.
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[ male announcer ] you got to love the weekend. it's like everyone came together and said, "if it's good, let's save it for the weekend." so here's to the kfc ten buck weekend bucket. ten pieces, ten bucks. any way you want it. just ten bucks every saturday and sunday. today tastes so good. [ male announcer ] with only minutes left before kickoff, thousands of tailgaters realized they needed one thing...and fast. mom, i need a bathroom. [ male announcer ] that's when the charmin tailgating potties rolled in, providing real relief to everyone. it felt like i was at home. that was an awesome experience! [ male announcer ] clutching victory from the seat of defeat charmin saved the day. we scored a td with this tp. [ male announcer ] tailgating potties. one more way the charmin relief project is helping people enjoy the go.
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the golden state warriors beat the los angeles lakers in a blowout early this morning in china. the week long trip to the nba bringing 30 players on 12,000 mile journeys. in beijing, seth good morning. >> good morning to you, nora. boy the end of this season the nba will have put together almost 150 of these international games since 1978. it's their way of building the brand overseas. to call this crowd enthusiastic would be an under statement. they struggle to keep back fans as the lakers entered. it felt more like southern california than shanghai where the language proved universal.
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>> kobe bryant! >> the injured kobe bryant did not play much in thursday's fan appreciate night though that did not seem to matter. kobe is huge here. this chinese advertisement hosted basketball camps here and has been coming to china with the nba for years. it made an impression. >> what's your english name? >> kobe! >> yao ming and taiwan's jeremy lin deserve credit for boosting the sport's popularity. viewership in china grew 30%. david stern pointed out 13,000 people came to watch a practice. >> china is our larmgest market
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outside the united states and has been playing basketball for almost as long as the united states. >> players took in the sights and toured the greatateat wall earlier this week. it was stephan curry's first trip to china. >> to see them and the warriors everywhere. it was awesome. >> awesome could have described the night who unfurled a banner for curry. rough translation, god of pigment. >> how awesome was it to meet him in person? >> making the nba feel closer and of course boosting partnerships and endorsements is part of the mission for david stern. >> it's the opportunity everywhere although china will be the largest economy in the world. that's pretty impressive. >> it's important for you all to be here? >> actually i'm surprised that
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charlie is not here. >> charlie would love to be here, i think. >> that's right. the nba expects to see double-digit revenue growth every year here in china. well into the future. last year it is estimated they hauled in around $150 million in china alone. like that courtside? >> i have request. that is that banner. that god of pigment. can you get one of those for me so i can get it for charlie? he's my god of pigment. >> this is great. >> you would like to have been there. >> oh, yeah. i did a pilot of jeremy lin and it's just remarkable intensity and how they loved it and the rockets seen from china.
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sea breeze has kicked in overnight. that has brought with it some low clouds and fog toward the coastline and, well, a couple of patches inside the bay, as well. so some changes in the works for a friday. not going to be a bad day, but probably going to find some cooler temperatures out toward the coastline. maybe a little bit warmer actually in some of the valleys. some 80s showing up there. lots of sunshine inside the bay, too, with 70s. 60s coastal areas. then over the weekend, still some patchy fog in the morning hours. lots of sunshine, though, by the afternoon. >> the deals and the government shutdown calls for negotiations on capitol hill, but is there any reason to expect more cooperation?
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i'm mark kelly live at the walnut creek bart station. we have actually been here all morning. we have seen a couple of the bart trains go by. we reached out to a bart spokesman about that. they say of course the strike is not over. this just running the trains, one to keep rust off the rails and shipping staff to their strike assignments. for the rest of us, here's the morning commute. here's a big line at the walnut creek bart station this morning. so long that bart was telling riders to go to the lafayette and concord stations for more buses to get folks over the bay. at this time, back here live at the walnut creek bart station, that's the last bus going to the city and they need about 40 more people to get on it. live in walnut creek, kelly lange, kpix 5.
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good morning, everybody. i'm liza battalones. it's been long delays on the nimitz as drivers take northbound 880 to get towards the bay bridge. it's been bumper to bumper from 238 approaching the macarthur maze. you make your way over to the bay bridge toll plaza, and traffic is stack up through the macarthur maze there. over one-hour delays for the drive out of oakland getting into san francisco. now, the san mateo bridge, that's also crowded. westbound 92 no longer a good alternate to the bay bridge backup. that's traffic. here's lawrence. >> all right. a little change overnight. the wind moving onshore and guess what, it brought with it some low clouds and fog. very thick out toward ocean beach. see the clouds moving onshore with the sea breeze right now even a couple of patches just inside the bay. looks like, though, high pressure going to strengthen overhead may be a little warmer in the valleys. and cooler toward the coastline with a sea breeze and the fog. 60s there. 80s in the valleys. 70s inside the bay. looking like a very nice weekend. more clouds cooler weather next week.
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♪ it is 8:00 a.m. in the west. welcome back to "cbs this morning." two convicted killers serving life sentences walk out of a florida prison. john miller looks at how they pulled off their escape. bob schieffer says there's a silver lining to the partial government shutdown. we'll talk about how the crisis ended and the odds it will be repeated. and "new york times" editor jill abramson is in studio 57. her mission, extending a new favorite brand around the world. first a look at today's eye opener @ 8. >> joseph jenkins and charles walker managed to walk away from prison using similarly forged
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documents. >> who were their phone calls, who was their social network, then you start to squeeze that social network. >> lawmakers cleaned up their mess and went home but they left a lot of unfinished business behind. >> with a website generating duplicate and incomplete enrollment forms suggesting the problems are pervasive. >> i resigned the vice presidency effective march 28th of 2001. >> how did president bush react when you told him about that? >> a little surprised. >> a nuclear engineer warned of a looming disaster. s now hee unemployed. >> you think it was retaliation? >> clear retaliation. >> the nba expects double digit revenue growth every year here in china. >> what's your english name? >> kobe of course. >> some people it just looks like you're using your campaign funds to benefit your family so you kept it in the family?
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>> what do you see in their eyes when you walk up and say hi? >> this morning's eye opener @ 8 is presented by benefiber. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. a manhunt in florida this morning after two convicted killers used a judge's forged signature to escape from prison. court officials in orlando say they saw nothing wrong with court papers ordering their release of joseph dinkins and charles walker. >> but the paperwork was bogus. this morning authorities continue scrambling to find both of the men. john miller spoke with the judge whose name was forged on those papers. john, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> very curious to hear what the judge had to say, but i really want to know why it took three weeks to discover that these guys were gone. >> it took three weeks because most prison escapes are discovered right away. but these guys hadn't -- they have tricked the system. what they did was they put in
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very convincing looking legal documents and you know the prison is a bureaucracy like any other part of government. to make something happen you need a piece of paper. the piece of paper looks real things happen. they put them into effect. here's how they found out. being a bureaucracy, they then went on to the next part of procedure, which is that they have an early release of a prisoner, they have to call the victims' family or the victims in the case and say, this guy got early release. you need to know that. then the victim's family in this murder case what? they called the prosecutor. and the prosecutor said, he got what? and he called the detective, and the detective told the prison they looked at the documents and said, if there's one, there's another. then they found the second one. this has been rolling downhill. >> john miller thank you. the federal goverment is still getting up to speed this morning after a 16-day partial shutdown. president obama said wednesday he did not expect the deadlock to repeat itself next year.
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other observers don't share that optimism. host of "face the nation" bob schieffer is with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> bob we're learning what could be the cost of this shutdown, now 16 days long could have cost up to $24 billion. do you have any confidence that this won't happen again? >> you know i may be the only person in washington that feels this way, but i think that they actually learned something from this. i mean when i hear the republican leader in the senate mitch mcconnell saying i have learned there's no education in the second kick of a mule. and hear him say on the record i will not be a part of something to shut down the government again. i kind of take him at his word. i think that a lot of republicans have learned something from this. i agree with president obama yesterday when he said there are no winners here but i think
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we're in a little different place. i picked up "the washington post" this morning and i see a quote from trent lott retired republican former republican leader of the senate about as conservative as you can get. someone said to him, what do you do now with the tea party types? and he said you roll them. he said i think there has to be some pushback against these people who arrive in washington and think they've got all the answers. he can be talking about nobody but republican senator ted cruz. now, this is not harry reid or the democrats talking about these. these are republicans and you're hearing the same kind of talk coming from former chairman of the republican committee haley barbour. so i think the two sides are going to work together. it's going to take some doing. it's going to have to be done behind the scenes. i think the democrats have to be very careful not to rub the republicans' noses in this. but i think we're in a different
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place today than we were at the start of this week. >> bob, is the president going to be part of this? i mean he has this practice of leaving it up to congress to do the negotiating. and this has taken place in the congress, but will he have a role and influence? >> you know i think he has to be a part of it charlie. he's got to be the guy who gets this thing going, and i'm not saying he does that by holding a bunch of news conferences and that sort of thing. but you know he might do worse than to call some of these republicans on the phone behind the scenes when the cameras are off and say you know why don't you come by here and let's see if we can't figure something out that will help both of us here. that's the way we solve these people who u know made washington work like lyndon johnson in the past. that's the way they operated. >> in terms of people who are out front like tret lott and others even though he's not in congress but has influence, to back them up in terms of the fact that they're out there
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criticizing their own party. >> yes. i mean i think the model for democrats right now is abraham lincoln in his second inaugural address when he said with malice toward none and charity for all, let us go forward now. and so forth. the thing now is to concentrate on how to get this stuff done. nobody was helped by this. approval rating for the republican party is lower than it has ever been. the president's approval rating is under 50%. nobody gained from this thing, but i think there was something to learn. and my open is that the people who count around here did learn something. >> there's a lesson bob, for everybody to learn. there's a lesson for everybody to learn in this. >> you know what i've learned? that there's nothing to learn in the second kick of a mule. >> that's what mitch mcconnell said. >> and speaking of that bob,
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thank you so much. speaking of mitch mcconnell this sunday he's bob schieffer's guest on "face the nation." mcconnell is the senate majority leader. he'll join bob there. an interview you can see only on "face the nation county "here" on cbs. >> that's what bob schieffer does, things you can only see on "face the nation." queen elizabeth welcomed malala yousafzai in buckingham palace. she gave the queen a copy of her new book and told her that she's passionate about allowing girls to attend school around the world. she's now 16 and living in england after recovering from last year's attack. every time i see that little girl, my heart opens up a little more. she never disapp
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the con man known a the con man known as clark
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rockefeller stands accused of murder. he is giving his first interview since going on trial. and 48 hours correspondent shows us why she says it may be the most difficult interview she has ever done. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by benefiber. better it with benefiber. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. [ female announcer ] now your most dazzling accessory can be your smile. colgate optic white dual action shines and whitens over 2 shades more than a leading whitening toothpaste. and whiten even more, with optic white mouthwash and the whole colgate optic white line.
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vo: it's that time of year again. medicare open enrollment. time to compare plans and costs. you don't have to make changes. but it never hurts to see if you can find better coverage, save money, or both. and check out the preventive benefits you get after the health care law. open enrollment ends december 7th. so now's the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare ooh, homemade soup! yeah... [ male announcer ] campbell's homestyle soup with farm grown veggies. just like yours. huh. [ male announcer ] and roasted white meat chicken. just like yours. [ male announcer ] you'll think it's homemade. i love this show. [ male announcer ] try campbell's homestyle soup.
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joo being the top editor of "the new york times" is a very big job. jill is in our green room. she's talking about the news room and the competition. that's coming up ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by party city. this halloween be a character. party citi. nobody has more halloween for less. [ female announcer ] the best thing
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for nearly 30 years a master con man spun a web of lies. he used the most famous one, rockefeller charming his way up the social ladder but can he also be called the killer. "48 hours'" correspondent erin moriarity interviewed him. >> because this is how we always start our interview. could you state your name? >> no no. everybody knows who i am. >> he's christopher chichester. >> to him it was a game. >> he's clark rockefeller of new york. >> on july 27 2008 news spread
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like wildfire that a member of the rockefeller family had kidnapped his 7-year-old daughter during a supervised visitation. >> there's still no sign of his daughter. >> but then a rockefeller family spokesman declared he's not one of ours. >> it was when the fbi apprehended clark rockefeller for kidnapping that his 30-year plan unraveled. the man with a half dozen aliases had presented to be british royalty, a famous television producer and even bond trader. >> what should i call you? >> dave. that's always a good question. i don't know erin. what would you like to call me? >> he wasn't just conning people for a living. he was also on the run hiding from investigators who suspected him of killing john silas and
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his bride linda. >> he was steeped in the literature and cinema. >> he thinks the con man could have easily turned killer just for the thrill of it. >> a lot of these movies he saw have a plot in which somebody who thinks they're very smart commits the perfect crime and it makes fools of everybody else because they get to go forth with a secret that no one else will know. >> and efforts to get to that secret are hard to get. every time i tried he would cry out to the 48 hours producer judy rybak to stop me. >> judy let's discuss that. >> and even tried to walk out. >> unfortunately, erin we've got to to stop it. >> but i kept him in his chair long enough to ask him point
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blank did you kill john silas? erin moriarity joins us. awkward. it's always awkward when you start out start with your name. no, i don't want to do that. >> he talked with us without an attorney and he'd switch back. it's interesting how he learned about american culture and it's totally from reading book watching movies like alfred hitchcock. >> that's what immigrants do. they watch a lot of television to learn english. >> when you think how smart he is, to come to this country and face these personas for 30 years. >> why did he use rockefeller? >> he's chris crowe.
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he couldn't get a table at a restaurant and he decided to throw out the name rockefeller and he immediately got a table and he was sticking with it. >> i have yet to throw out the name charlie rose. the what's fascinating is the interaction between the two of you. do you think that he is still denying what he's done? that i don't think that. i think he's performing. i think he's trying to pull the wool over my eyes as well. i think he's always performing. there's sad thing for this man. if you think for 30 years he was pretending to be other people i don't think there's anyone behind the christian gary hard matter. it's very circumstantial. that was one thing he was very clear about. in fact, he things the wife is still alive and that she's the
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one who killed the
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i'm anne makovec live outside of bart headquarters in oakland this morning. if you haven't heard, bart is on strike. they called this last evening. that is after a 31-hour marathon negotiation session. today is day one of what could end up being a long strike. here's a look at some of the workers walking the picket line this morning outside one of the many closed stations. no new talks are scheduled this morning. now, the two parties had been close to a deal yesterday, finally coming close to agreeing on pay and benefits. then management basically insisted on changes to work rules. that is the sticking point this morning. and with no new talks scheduled, it doesn't look like they are going to come to the
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table to discuss those work rules anytime soon. coming up next, weather and the all-important traffic because it has been a commute nightmare out there. right after this. once wrote something on a sheet of paper ♪ ♪ the challenge always accepted. and the calling forever answered. ♪ ♪ introducing the all-new 2014 s-class. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing.
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good morning. liza battalones. northbound 880 very slow in the oakland area getting towards the bay bridge toll plaza. in fact, it has been backed up from the 238 interchange. we are seeing some improvements
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now at the bay bridge toll plaza. it's still backed up but it's no longer delayed from the caldecott tunnel approaching the pay gates. heading for the rest of the commute, 880 i told you about those backups, you can see it right there. it is still bumper to bumper for that northbound direction leaving san leandro heading through the oakland area. the san mateo bridge is loosening up, as well. westbound 92 now fine across the bridge into foster city. here's lawrence with a look at the forecast. >> weather looking good. the sea breeze kicked in overnight so we have seen some fog move in along the coastline but in the valleys still nice and clear. high pressure sits overhead. from our mount vaca cam, hey, i was there yesterday. a very neat outlook. and the doppler running very well getting ready for the rainy season. how about this? we have the clouds moving in along the coastline now. some sea breeze developed overnight so we'll be cooler at the beaches, 60s there. 70s inside the bay. 80s inland. looking like a nice weekend after some patchy fog. cooler toward the middle of next week.
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ryback. welcome back t welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, what do we really know about the man who killed lincoln or the robber who jumped out of an airplane. d.b. cooper, they called him. area 51. his new book called "history decoded." that's ahead. >> right now to tell you this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the tennessean" federal air marshal taken into custody. he's accused of snapping photos underneath women's skirts and dresses. police say he admits using his smartphone to take pictures as the women boarded a plane. the "salt lake city tribune"
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says three leaders could face charges for defacing. after the rock falls, the men are seen celebrating. they made the claim the rock appeared ready to fall and they worried it could hurt someone. it had been there for millions of years. >> it could hurt someone when you push it around. >> the duchess of cambridge is back in action. kate played a little volleyball with young athletes. she appears to have lost all of her post-baby weight. this is her first appearance since giving birth to her prince george. >> "the new york times" is reaching out beyond new york this week. it renamed and relaunched the international herald tribune. today that's called the international new york times. this year the "times" won four pulitzers under the leadership of jill abramson. these the first female executive editor. welcome. >> thank you charlie. great to see you.
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>> if i look at "the new york times" today and there has been changes from editor to editor from rosenthal and to max frankel and bill keller and then to you. where is the abramson imprint on "the new york times"? >> well the abramson imprint, i hope, will be part of going global and basically integrating our entire newsroom so that we are covering the news in the time zone that the news is happening and, you know handing off now, you were giving the litany of very distinguished gentlemen that i follow but now my handoff is paris and hong kong and around the world. so you know it's really thrilling for me to be in the position of leading a 24/7 truly
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global quality news organization. >> jill, you talked about not covering politics like they cover sports with the winning and losing. what do you mean by that? >> well, i think what i mean by that has been on display for the past two weeks with the government shutdown. it's been constantly day after day broadly in the media, who won, who lost. and you know nobody won and, unfortunately, we know who lost. >> criticism of some of your competitors like politico? >> i think politico does some high quality work. it wasn't targeted at any particular organization. that horse race to see who's up or who's down has been a strain of political reporting certainly for as long as i've been in the trade and certainly norah, while you've been doing that. >> no doubt. and then we're guilty of it
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sometimes on television as well. let me ask you about this administration's crackdown on the week. david sanger said of this white house that this is the most closed controlled-freak administration i've ever covered. >> it's been difficult. i was washington bureau chief during the bush administration. and that was not necessarily a completely open administration to say the least. but the obama administration has initiated seven criminal leak investigations. >> so you're saying the obama administration is worse than the bush administration? >> it's demonstrable because these seven leak investigations are more than double all of the criminal leak investigations in all administrations before the obama administration. and it puts the chill on what is really a healthy discourse
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between journalists and their sources and it's our sources who mainly risk going to prison. >> explain that then. because he's got this extensive interview with edward snowden who polls suggest many americans find him to be you know guilty of leaking a lot of national security secrets. what do you think about in your mind about whether this serves the public interest to publish some of those national security secrets? >> i think it is very much in the public interest. and if a war on terrorism is being waged in the name of the people, i think would the people rather not know about the dimensions of that and what's involved? i just don't think so. i think the work of great journalism is to inform the public. and that's what we're doing. and people forget that the
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founders of our country were deathly afraid of too much centralized power. that's why the first amendment is first. >> do you believe the central point that snowden is prime to make here, i did not give any secrets to china. i took none of that to russia when i went to russia. >> there is no evidence that he did, and he said he didn't then at this point, you know without knowing specifics of people in this country's getting into his computer. he takes extraordinary measures to protect his communication and whatever is on his computers. so i do believe that. >> it's a good story. >> it's a great story. >> congratulations on the new -- we've got the premiere edition of the international. >> it's gorgeous! >> this is one of charlie's favorite papers as well. >> thank you so much. one of the big questions people ask around the world is
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are we alone in the universe? walter walter cronkite asked that report. >> cbs reports, ufo, friend foe or family. >> good evening. reports of flying saucers are nothing new. from the beginning of reported time, men have been seeing unexplainable things in the sky and no reason to doubt they saw something. the question is is what they saw really there and what was it they really saw. >> brad meltzer investigates mysteries and conspiracy theorys the like the infamous area 51 for history area channel's "decoded." he's put together ten of the greatest for his book "history decoded." area 51. >> walter cronkite one of the greatest news people of all time talking about it. this is not someone who is out in a cornfield.
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to me that's what's important. we always look at those people that are out there. >> you don't blink a lot in a cornfield? >> you know who saw a ufo, ronald reagan. you know who else? >> jimmy carter. >> jimmy carty. we want to not just tell you the stories but give you the evidence. what we do in the book you get to actually see the real evidence. this is how the book works. it's actually fortunate see. each chapter has its own secret compartment. you pull out -- this is actually the redacted first press release that the government had. and you can examine it. you can read it for yourself. you can see what did this person see when they said that they saw an unidentified flying object. to me that's the amazing part. the american people get to look and say, oh my gosh what really did happen that day. and it's an amazing story. >> these people don't say they saw unidentified flying objects. they basically say, i saw something, i don't know what it was. >> that's what an unidentified flying object is. >> right.
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>> they see something they can't explain. >> at one point it was like a weather balloon. my favorite one is the d.b. cooper story. i thought you found such compelling evidence. i now think i believe i know who d.b. cooper is. >> the only american skyjacking that's unsolved the perfect crime. he's going to hijack a plane, he wants 200,000 and four parachutes. he jumps out the back and disappears. >> you think it's an inside job? >> by a guy on northwest airline. we have people in the finn that gave us his information. when you go to the book for that chapter, gayle, you and i talked about this, we actually give you and you get to see. >> we don't have time for that. >> you see his bank account. >> he had a different lifestyle before the hijacking and a different lifestyle after. >> and suddenly has $100,000 in his bank account. >> john wilkes booth family actually contacted you, right? >> they did. this is where the start of the book came from. john wilkes booth family shot abraham lincoln.
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they reach out to me through their lawyer and said that he died 12 days after he shot abraham lincoln. but he didn't die. he's not the one in the coffin. would you like to hear our story? >> you said sure. >> in the book you can pull out the actual letter that john wilkes booth wrote. you goat see the wanted poster. you examine the evidence. for me it was really about my father-in-law. he was tired of getting ties for christmas. i'm going to get him a book that he can read enjoy, pull out, examine. >> but john boyd. their names are similar. they looked a like. >> and john wilkes booth was his other identity. and if your secret identity is john w. boyd you're really bad at picking secret identities. but the amazing part of the story is we actually found the will that he wrote. when you pull it out of the book, you see it's not signed. wait a minute this story can't be true. but the 91-year-old woman who came to us and said it was a true story.
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why are you telling this story now? i'm going to die soon and i want the truth to come out. >> you say how can you tell when someone is telling the truth. >> no one lies on the death bed. no one lies on their death bed. >> you've given your father something to do. "history decoded" goes on sale on tuesday. anna faris tells us why her
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"mom" is the newest sit-com out, and it is about a woman who is making up with her past and is also a recovering addict.
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>> do you have bathroom? >> we don't have a bathroom. >> come on help me out. >> it is not for public use. >> look, i'm in a hurry, and i have to get to school, can't you make an exception. >> i don't make the rules. >> no, but you have a brain and you could help me help my little boy put on a pair of clean underpant s underpants. >> it is okay. >> i got this. >> i don't think that you do. >> he said, i think you do. good morning anna faris, and think about this comedy and single mom and teenaged mom and addiction and dysfunctional and sounds like a lot of laugh s tos to me. >> i love it that the show e of dealing with all of the serious themes and with the comedic touch, and it is exciting for me as an actor to get to explore some of the darker areas. >> and the people are messy, and you know, it is normally a mom comedy is neat and tidy and mom
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is great, but both of the moms have issues. >> yes, to say the least. we are both recovering addicts, and we both were teen moms and now my own -- >> and a teen daughter. >> and my teenaged daughter is also pregnant and the pattern is repeating, and you know, there is a lot of financial issues, and my character is, she has ha not been sober in you know we would imagine maybe 20 years or something, and so she is rebuilding her life, and she doesn't even know who she is. >> is cop di your natural ground? >> no. i grew up doing theater in seattle, and i was always doing the dramatic work. and i got "scary movie" and now i can't get out of this comedic area. >> and jimmy fallon said that you have great comedic timing. >> well, for me it is about the sincerity of the character, and respecting the kashgcharacter even if they are a sort of awful person or crazy person. i think that commitment you
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would attempt to not judge, and you just attempt to say that line, and hope that people don't really judge you for that. >> but there is a thing about timing that seems to be either you have it or you don't. you can build on what you have, but some people seem to have a better sense of that than others. >> well, it is about rhythm and it is about listening to the co-star and it is also i think, there's a lot of physicality involved if you are good at falling or getting hit in the head, which apparently i am. >> and just in terms of the writing writing, and some say it is amazing quality. >> yes. >> is he a musician? >> yes, he e does have a ear for timing and he is very careful about a joke on a joke which is
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a no hf-no. and what i also love about him is that he will cut a great joke if it interferes with the emotional storyline or beat because this show he wants people to become invested in these characters. >> thank you so much for being here. > thank you for having me. >> you can see "mom" this monday night at 8:30 central here on abc. >> i like mom. i like maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdef
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ready? happy birthday! it's a painting easel! the tide's coming in! this is my favorite one. it's upside down. oh, sorry. (woman vo) it takes him places he's always wanted to go. that's why we bought a subaru. (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru.
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maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing mdpc-07 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345med of a looming disaster is unemployed. and it happen ss every year in china. >> in here? >> yes. >> and what is your english name? >> kobe, of course. >> and congress gets away with stuff that you can't do in the outside world. >> for some people, it looks like you are using the campaign fund s funds to enrich the family.
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>> well, somebody has to do that work. >> so you kept it in t
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. i'm mark kelly live at the walnut creek bart station. at this point, not a lot of alternatives to get around town from bart. the last bus has rolled out and they have just taken down the last casual carpool sign leaving at least one guy out here stranded. but let's show you video from this morning, all the riders lining up getting ready to go on the bus. this is what it looked like for many of us this big line at the walnut creek waiting for the bus. so, so long, that bart was telling riders to go to other stations for a bus. i talked to a bart spokesman about an hour ago, kind of wrap up how you think this morning went, how well it went for you guys. he gave it a b-minus. live in walnut creek, mark kelly, kpix 5.
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good morning. liza battalones here. the bay bridge backups began early and it's taking some time to wind down. westbound traffic still slow from beyond the 880 overcrossing. it's no longer backed up into the macarthur maze. but it's still taking folks about 30 minutes to make the drive out of oakland into san francisco. take a look at the nimitz. it has been jam-packed and still bumper to bumper for the
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northbound drive leaving san leandro. you're going to hit the brakes from 38 approaching the maze. and heads up for this new accident in san bruno. north 101 at 380 has at least one lane shut down. you can see traffic is backed up for both 101 and 280 now heading through the peninsula. that's a look at traffic. here's lawrence. >> a little sea breeze kicking in overnight. still a lot of sunshine already in the valleys going to stay that way all day long. looking toward mount diablo, clear skies and not even a brees there now. a nice start to the day. but we have some fog that's moved back in along the coastline. patchy fog continuing there now. looks like probably some fog even in the afternoon out toward the beaches today so cooler temperatures are expected there. 60s along the coastline. looking at a lot of 70s inside the bay maybe up to 80 in san jose. about 82 in livermore. and 79 degrees in santa rosa. the weekend looks good too just some patchy fog in the morning giving way to plenty of fall sunshine. cooler temperatures and clouds toward the middle of next week.
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wayne: i have a sword! you have a brand new car! (screaming) the power of the deal, baby. - wayne brady, i love you, man! (screaming) - thank you, thank you thank you and thank you. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: hello, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." come on in, let's make a deal, shall we? i need a couple. i need a couple, let's go. bacon and banana. i love a bacon and banana sandwich. how are you doing matthew, erin? nice to meet the both of you. bacon and banana. - delicious. wayne: have you ever had that together? - no. wayne: you haven't? healthy, bad. wayne: yeah, yeah, bacon and banana is bad for

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