tv CBS Morning News CBS November 14, 2014 4:00am-4:31am PST
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while temperatures continue to fall toward freezing, many americans see their first flakes of snow since last winter. a scathing report on secret service failures that allowed an armed intruder to make it inside the white house. >> i'm feeling a lot better now on the ground definitely. and high-rise rescue. we'll hear from one of the rescues saved from the side of the nation's tallest building. captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs this is the "cbs morning news" for friday, november 14th, 2014. good morning. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. it is starting to seem like there is nowhere to go in this country to escape the early taste of winter. by tonight much of the nation
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will be feeling temperatures either at or below freezing, and that is without factoring in the windchill. and on top of the bitter cold temperatures, some areas are also getting their first look at snow weeks before the official start of winter. don champion is here in new york city where a snow alert was issued last night, don? >> reporter: yeah. good morning, anne-marie. that alert was more of a precaution. we did not see many flakes here. it was mostly rain. there was some snow in the northeast, though. a little more than an inch fell north of new jersey. this is part of a storm system that's expected to be gone by the start of the morning commute here. a heavier coat of snow came down on the philadelphia suburbs less than a day after temperatures were in the 70s. in ohio highway travel became hazardous. highway road conditions in cleveland led to several accidents and travel delays, and a flight made an emergency
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landing minutes after takeoff when it was struck by lightning. a different storm system socked the northwest. several inches of snow fell in oregon, and while portland did not see much accumulation, there was enough to cause problems for drivers there as well. this morning texas will likely not see any snow, but they're getting ready for frigid temperatures. temperatures will be at or below freezing today in cities like houston, austin, and dallas. anne-marie. >> it will be an interesting morning commute. don champion here in new york. thank you, don. well, meteorologist eric fischer of our boston station wbz says folks down south need to bundle up this morning. >> we've been watching the cold make progress. it's now along the deep south. many of you waking up along the gulf coast, it is extremely cold. freeze warnings all the way down to texas. places like corpus christi and all the way to the florida panhandle.
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it will be about the same saturday morning. a long-lasting chill in the forecast. way below average. we've also got a snowstorm making its way into the northwest. crossinging into places like the front. a visual of saturday. it goes across the plains and pops out in the midwest. in terms of snow totals, we're looking at pretty significant amounts for the highest peaks moving through colorado. and then as it spreads out through the plains, it's mainly a 3- to 6-inch snowfall for saturday. it will actually go deeper and farther east. temperatures, again, 25 to 30 degrees below average for much of next week. temperatures again to 30 degrees below avege we're talking historic cold at this point. i'm meteorologist eric fisher for cbs news. president obama's trip to asia continues in myanmar this morning, but he's making headlines by signaling that he is ready to take action on a key domestic issue, immigration.
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susan mcginnis is in washington. susan, good morning. >> good morning, anne-marie. the president spoke a short time ago, mostly about bringing democracy to myanmar, but when it opened to questions, the discussion turned to his battles here at home, including his move to bypass congress on immigration reform. president obama and myanmar opposition leader aung san suu kyi met today to talk about democratic reform in the country and the challenges keeping her from running for president next year. >> it's time for the voice of the people of burma to be heard in a fair transparent election. >> they met at the home where the opposition leader spent 15 years under house arrest for challenging rulers. she has since risen through parliament and reformed what was formerly known as burma. >> in the end it is the people of burma who will decide where this country is going and which way and how.
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>> but even halfway across the globe president obama was forced to address challenges he facing here in washington on a range of issues including his plans to reform the immigration system with or without the help of congress. >> if, in fact, congress failed to act, i would use all the lawful authority i possess to try to make the system work better, and that's going to happen. >> the president plans to use his executive powers to shield 5,000 working in the u.s. the republicans will stop him. >> our goal is to stop the president from violating his own oath of office and violating the constitution. >> the president could announce his action as early as next week. but the timing of that action appears to be directly related to talks here on capitol hill about funding the government. the current funding authority expires on december 11th. some want the white house to wait on immigration reform until they're sure the government is funded for another year. some republicans on capitol hill want to use the opportunity to
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try to refuse government funding on a long-term bill in order to cut spending on immigration. anne-marie? >> all right. susan mcginnis in washington. thank you, susan. it has been reported that the justice department is secretly collecting information from americans' cell phones. "the wall street journal" reports the u.s. marshall's service began the program in 2007. it is designed to track criminal suspects, but it also collects information from innocent americans. small planes are equipped with a device that trips cell phones from transmitting identifying locations. tens of thousands of phones can be tapped in one flight. and there are new details about how an armed fence jumper made his way into the white house. a homeland security investigation of the secret service found a shocking combination of errors and poor training. craig boswell reports. >> reporter: the white house fence omar gonzalez jumped last september was about the biggest
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obstacle between him and the interior rooms of the executive mansion. that's because security flaws and white house security allowed gonzalez to make his way through the front door and make his way deep inside. they blamed it on communication problems, muted alarms, unlocked doors, and inadequate training of secret service officers. investigators found that after gonzalez had jumped the fence, initial security radio reports were muffled, and several officers didn't see gonzalez because their view was blocked by a construction project and by fading day late. another agent didn't hear the alert because he was on his personal cell phone. his backup radio was in his locker. an officer who was stationed by the north portico doors raised his weapon but did not fire because he did not think gonzalez was armed or posed a threat. the report also found that an emergency response team did not follow gonzalez inside because they were unfamiliar with the layout of the white house.
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gonzalzalez overpowered the lon female officer inside but was eventually subdued. the homeland security says based on the initial findings in the report it has imemploy meanted, it is implementing changes in training, equipment, staffing, and communication systems. craig boswell, cbs news, the white house. a doctor working in west africa and diagnosed with ebola is going to be transferred to a hospital in the united states. it's expected he'll be flown to the nebraska medical center. he'll be the third ebola patient treated there. he's a citizen of sierra leone but a permanent u.s. resident. an audio recording that appears to have been made by the leader of isis urges muslims to wage holy war everywhere. abu ba car al baghdadi spoke.
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it follows last week's report that he may have been killed or injured in an air strike. it's not clear when the message was recorded, but there are references to events this week. coming up on the "morning news", back on the ground. a window washer who got stranded on a famous new york city skyscraper tells how he managed to cling on while he waited for rescuers. this is the "cbs morning news." ...we're going to need you on the runway. (vo) don't let a severe cold hold you back. sir? (vo) theraflu starts to get to work in your body in just 5 minutes. (vo) theraflu breaks you free from your worst cold and flu symptoms. (vo) theraflu. serious power. sometimes come out with spots? well, those spots are actually leftover food or detergent residue.
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asiana airlines is banned from flying into san francisco for 45 days. the decision by south korean authorities is punishment for a deadly crash last year. a u.s. investigation found pilot error was to blame. the jet came up short during landing and clipped a seawall. three people died and nearly 200 were injured. and the man accused of ambushing pennsylvania state troopers is facing terrorism charges this morning. court documents show eric frein admitted to killing trooper bryon dickson because he was upset about the government. he was captured in october after a 48-day manhunt. frein is also charged with first-degree murder and he could face the death penalty. a former ceo has been indicted in the deadliest mine disaster in this country in 40 years. massey energies ex-chief executive don blankenship is accused of putting profits before safety. in 2010 an underground explosion
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killed 29 men in virginia's upper west branch mine. if convicted he could face more than 30 years in prison. and the window washers trapped hundreds of feet up on the nation's tallest building are telling their story this morning. a crippled scaffolding left the men dangling on the 68th floor of the world one trade center. juan lopez said he thought of his family during the ordeal. >> my wife, my kids, my mother, my father. that gives you nothing but strength, you know, to hold on and make sure the impossible will be possible, you know. >> lopez has four daughters and he says he looks forward to getting back to work. he should take a few days off. straight ahead, off to a good start. a late charge raises playoff hopes for the miami dolphins. good start. a late charge raises playoff hopes for the miami dolphins. get healthier gums in two weeks. innovation and you philips sonicare
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on the "cbs moneywatch," congress looks at defective airbags, and virgin america's ipo looks ready to take off. jill wagner is at the new york stock exchange with that and more. good morning, jill. >> good morning, anne-marie. next thursday the senate will hold a hearing on the airbags made by takata. the airbags can deploy with too much force, sending pieces of metal flying toward drivers and passengers. the problem is linked to at least five deaths. the issue has led to the recall of nearly 8 million vehicles in the past year in the united states. the hearing will also look at the government's recall process. richard branson's virgin america airlines starts trading today on the nasdaq. virgin priced its initial public offering at $23 a share. 13.3 million shares are for
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sale. virgin air started flying in 2007. on wall street a late rally sends stocks higher. the dow finished over 40 points higher, reaching another record high. it was actually the seventh record close for the dow in eight trading days. the s&p and the nasdaq closed slightly higher as well. amazon and the book publisher hachette agree to a new contract for print and digital books. the agreement resolves a long-running dispute. at issue is the pricing of ebooks and amazon's cut. hachette has the ability to set its own prices on amazon. and nba commissioner adam silver says sports betting should be legal. this is the third time silver has publicly called for a legal sports betting. in an op-ed sports piece in "the new york times" silver calls for tough federal regulation. silver writes, sports betting should be brought out of the underground and into the sunlight where it can be
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appropriately monitored and regulated. anne-marie? >> all right. jill wagner at the new york stock exchange. thanks a lot, jill. in sports the miami dolphins are thinking playoffs after a come-from-behind win over buffalo. miami outscored the bills 1-0 in the file 18 minutes. dolphins' quarterback ryan tannehill throws two late touchdown passes and miami wins, 22-9. the dow fins are now 6-4. that is their best record after ten games since 2008. in baseball los angeles is home to both of this year's mvps. the dodgers' clayton kershaw is the first pitcher to win the national mvp in nearly half a century. he also won this year's n.l. cy young award. trout was the choice in the american league. when we return, prescription for trouble. a man called an architect of obamacare is in hot water over comments about americans buying the insurance.
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because of the crash at s-f. but asiana is still flying. it's supposed to be one of e happiest days of a couples life.. how one wedding planr almost ruined his clients' g day. the city of san francisco admits.. it has a ficus pro, after falling tree limbs dad cars.. and even sent one ma the hospital yesterday. join us for kpix 5 news this morning... beginning at 4:3 ,,,,
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here's a look at today's forecast in some cities around the country. here's a look at today's forecast in some cities around the country. uninsured americans will be able to sign up for coverage under the affordable care act starting tomorrow. the open enrollment period begins amid new controversy for obamacare. wyatt andrews shows us the comments that are giving critics fresh ammunition. >> reporter: m.i.t. graduate gruber was an architect of obamacare, but here at a conference last year he said the law was written to hide crucial details from american public too dumb to understand.
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>> lack of transparency is a huge political advantage and basically, you know, call it the stupidity of the american vote or whatever but that was really, really critical to get anything to pass. >> reporter: for example, gruber said the penalty for not buying insurance, the very heart of the individual mandate, was labeled as a penalty and not a tax. embarrassed democrats quickly distanced themselves from gruber. the white house pointed out he did not work at the white house. minority leader nancy pelosi turned gruber into a stranger. >> i don't know who he is. he didn't help write our bill. >> reporter: maybe. but when the bill was being written, the administration paid gruber almost $400,000 for technical advice on drafting the law. republicans for their part turned gruber into an all important player. here is senator mitch mcconnell. >> and what this insider is saying, confirms, that they were spinning tales from beginning to end because they knew they couldn't tell the truth about obamacare and have a chance of passing it. >> gruber says he regrets making
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those comments, but with republicans taking over congress and calculating how to scale back and take over obamacare, this is ammunition. wyatt andrews, cbs news, washington. ttle angels build in strength. and that little angel says, "weeeeeeeee!" 60% more sheets than charmin. everything you want and the value you love. angel soft. sir, we're going to need you on the runway. (vo) theraflu starts to get to work in your body in just 5 minutes. (vo) theraflu breaks you free from your worst cold and flu symptoms. (vo) theraflu. serious power.
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a surveillance camera at a florida lawn care store catches a thief in the act. a man appears to look at a display before picking up a chainsaw. he then walked behind the tall counter to block the employee's view and with no one looking he slides the chainsaw into his shorts and pulls his shirt over. employees did give chase and, of course, they caught the man. you can write your own jokes on that one, folks. ground controllers are considering moving the spacecraft that made a historic landing this week on a comet. they're trying to get its solar panels to catch the sun and charge its batteries. as charlie d'agata reports, it the lander came to rest in a place scientists had not planned. >> reporter: these are the first pictures ever taken from the surface of the comet.
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philae snapped the 360-degree view from its stark and jagged new home. but imaging expert said philae missed its target landing and is now resting in the shadow of a cliff. >> we sort of get close to the place where we are, where we think we are, which is not very close to the one we wanted to but not very far away. >> reporter: after a ten-year chase on the solar system, philae landed on the comet wednesday in a cosmic first, but the lander didn't stick to the surface. project manager stephan ulamec told us philae bounced off -- twice. >> it bounced after light and then the second was longer. >> the first one was two hours. >> at least. >> reporter: the comet's weak gravity meant the 220-pound lander about the size of a dishwasher drifted off into
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space, floating about a mile above the comet. amazingly it settled back only about a mile from its intended target. philae was meant to be secured by two harpoons fired into the icy surface of the comet, but they didn't work are you still considering firing the harpoons to anchor it? >> i wouldn't dare to do it next time because the harpoons could trigger so much inertia that we may even push away the lander. >> reporter: there's another concern. the philae relies on the solar panel to recharge its batteries to manage its instruments. but because it's settled in a shadow of a cliff, it's unlikely to do that, and it's unclear how long it can survive. charlie d'agata, cbs news, darmstadt, germany. well, coming up after your local news on "cbs this morning," more on the latest message from the leader of isis. we'll hear from former cia deputy director mike morell.
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we'll also sit down with former navy s.e.a.l. robert o'neill who claims he fired the bullet that killed osama bin laden. and we'll have a preview of the hollywood film awards airing tonight on cbs. that is the "cbs morning news" for this friday. i'm anne-marie green. thanks for watching. have a great day. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com
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there is friday! >> thank you very much. >> yeah. >> we made it. >> yes, we did. >> it's looking good. we had the rain yesterday and because of that we are seeing dense fog around the bay area this morning especially in the north bay valleys. we'll have your friday forecast and, of course, what comes after that? the weekend. [ laughter ] >> that's coming up. >> wow. >> i know. we are easy to predict on a friday. there is a major injury crash in san jose. i have been watching the sensors going from green to yellow. we heard they were going to have to block several lanes of traffic southbound one at tully it was a car that overturned landed upright so we'll talk about that coming up. >> and tomorrow is? >> saturday? >> very good. [ laughter ] >> playing along well. >> very good. the time now 4:30. asiana airlines will appeal to
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