tv CBS This Morning CBS March 6, 2015 7:00am-9:01am PST
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weekend. rain by wednesday. >> all right. thanks for watching. brian, it's been great having good morning to viewers in the west. it is friday march 6, 2015. welcome to cbs "this morning." an out of control jetliner nearly plunges into an icy bay. passengers tell us how they were just feet from disaster. harrison ford undergoes surgery after crashing his private plane on a california golf course. we're at the scene. only on cbs "this morning," an american woman imprisoned for months in asia talks about her ordeal behind bars. we begin with a look at today's "eye-opener: your world in 90 seconds." >> literally five six feet away. >> that close to the water. >> didn't know if we were half in the water, half in lond.
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>> dangerous snow and ice slams the sky and roads. >> laguardia airport. broke through a fence. >> two pilots reported good conditions minutes before. >> next time dinner and a warm fire norah. >> two interstates in kentucky clogged with hundreds of cars and trucks. >> engine failure. request immediate return. >> crashing a vintage plane. >> anytime a human being is involved in an accident and survives is a good day. >> a federal judge recovering after shot during an attempted home invasion. the fbi joined the search for those suspects. >> hillary clinton is promising greater transparency around her e-mail. >> a review of mrs. clinton's e-mails could take months. >> john mccain said he doesn't use e-mail because he can't find the send button on his typewriter. >> overnight, a freight train loaded with crude oil derailed in northern illinois bursting into flames. tnt reporter craig sager's
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first night back on the sideline after a battle with leukemia. >> all that -- >> this is so bad. keying sitting in the ignition there. >> called the help desk yet? >> and all that matters -- >> say it big and loud. >> for people to see. >> a texas man is using the big blast of winter to send a romantic message. >> no one's ever done this for me. very sweet. >> -- on cbs "this morning." >> all so excited to hang with michael keaton it was like 25 of us showed up and we had this giant meal and the check comes and keaton grabs the check and -- everyone's like, no no no. "saturday night live" we'll pay for it. he goes, we'll get it. no, no, no. he goes, i'm batman. >> this morning's "eye-opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to cbs news.
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an investigation is under way at one of america's busiest airports pes this morning after a delta jet skidded off a runway during a snowstorm. a heavy crane lifted the airplane from a fence around new york's laguardia airport. >> the plane plowed through that fence yesterday coming feet from an even bigger disaster. almost ended up in the icy waters of flushing bay. i was actually sitting in another jet on the tarmac waiting for it to take off when this all happened. jericka duncan is across the bay from where this happened. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. if traveling from the west coast to laguardia airport, planes are taking off and landing from here. investigators removed the wreckage from flight 2086 which was coming from atlanta, carrying 127 passengers and 5 crew members. the crash happened shortly after 11:00 thursday morning, and left the plane's nose dangling perilously over the icy waters of flushing bay.
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>> tower? >> tower, aircraft off the runway. >> reporter: the emergency slide did not deploy. passengers evacuated making their way down the wing or jumping out of the rear of the plane. jared faellicci took these pictures from first class and posted them to his facebook page. >> felt we skid probably 20 seconds. >> reporter: he spoke with norah o'donnell who was inside the delta terminal. >> what about when you had to get out of the plane? >> reporter: when passengers started arriving. >> some people crying some frantic. some obviously praying. >> we knew that the pilot had lost control because we were not on the runway. and so it was a matter of where are we going to stop? >> reporter: it was snowing heavily when the mid-88 approached from the northwest and landed hard on to runway 13. about three quarters down the runway, the plane veered to the left hitting an embankment and crashing through the fence. >> this particular runway had been plowed shortly before the
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incident, and the pilots on other planes reported good braking action. >> reporter: moments after the crash, the plane began leaking fuel, and the airport was temporarily shut down. last night, massive cranes were used to hoist up the fuselage. mark rosenker a former chairman of the national transportation safety board says investigators will scrutinize the pilot's access and look for possible equipment failures. >> looking carefully at the thrust reversers, did he deploy when supposed to. >> reporter: the last time a plane went into the waters off laguardia was almost 23 years ago. a u.s. air flight bound for cleveland crashed on takeoff in bad weather. 27 people were killed. delta 1086 passengers were grateful they avoided a similar fate. >> you get off the plane and see half the wing gone and that close to the water, that's -- i count myself very very lucky today. >> reporter: among the passengers of flight 1086 was
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new york giants tight end larry deknell who feels blessed to the safe after such a scary landing. gayle? >> i'll say. blessed is the word. thank you, jericka. the weather was so bad, norah, i was worried about you, wondering how did you take off? did they say anything on your flight when this happened? >> the ground was so crunchy underneath the runway. i turned to my producer and said, this doesn't seem right and then lo and behold five minutes later the pilot came on said, there's been an incident at the airport. we're not taking off. i mean it's interesting. the pilot jackknifed towards flushing bay. if he jackknifed to the right, he would have gone into the terminal. just not a good option i think, for this pilot either way. >> how close it was to going into the water. >> gosh. so i talked to a number of passengers. two in first class said he felt we were just six feet from the bay. >> so frightening. nice job on "evening news." >> nice to talk to charlie in the evening. >> cool to see you both. >> i loved your hat, too.
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>> thank you. >> nicely done. now to an airplane drama in the west. harrison ford is recovering a little banged up this morning, after crashing his vintage world war ii era plane. it landed on a golf course not far from the santa monica airport. carter evans is at the scene of the crash. carter, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. harrison ford crash landed his vintage plane right here on the fairway and it was a close call. we are surrounded by tall trees here. this morning ford is in the hospital. he's recovering from surgery to repair his broken bones. >> 53178 engine failure. immediate return. >> reporter: the 72-year-old actor made his distress call around 2:20 p.m. thursday. shortly after taking off from nearby santa monica airport in this vintage ryan p-22 aircraft. this sudden descent was witnessed by golfers. >> turned around came back really low and then saw it over there and heard it -- go through
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the trees. >> reporter: ford's publicist says the plane stalled on takeoff, and he had no choice but to make an emergency landing. first responders were quickly on the scene. >> they found a single engine plane aircraft with one male victim approximately 70 years old who at the time was conscious and breathing. >> my instinct, drop my back and run to the airplane. >> reporter: this spinal sunk was playing golf when the plane came down. smelling a gas leak he and others helped ford out of the plane. >> able to speak and articulate. i asked a couple of questions. relatively coherent. >> reporter: he was carried off the course on a stretcher and rushed to a nearby hospital pap few hours later his son tweeted, dad is okay. battered but okay. he's every bit the man you would think he is. >> hang on we're going in! >> reporter: ford played the part of aeronautical hero many
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times on the big screen. an avid pilot, he bought his first plane's in 1993. >> i like to challenge myself. >> reporter: but his flights haven't always gone smoothly. in 1999 ford walked away unscathed after a helicopter in which he was training crashed in a california dry river bed. >> he approaches flying with a professional attitude. >> reporter: cbs news aviation correspondent flown many times in the past. >> he knows where the open area was. it was a golf course in this case and would have had that already in mind. when the need arose he made use of it. >> reporter: the ntsb has begun an investigation here at the crash scene, gathering evidence in hopes of determining exactly what caused the plane to go down. the plan is to remove the wreckage from here to a secure location later today. >> indeed. carter thanks. >> i've flown with him on small planes. he has a collection of different
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kinds of planes. he's a very good pilot, and this is remarkable to avoid all the possible catastrophes he avoided. >> so glad he's okay too. >> i know. >> back-to-back air stories. >> indeed. we're hearing graphic testimony from victims in the ongoing boston marathon bombing trial. the jury saw new images yesterday of the attacks aftermath including pictures of injured children. cbs correspondent outside the courthouse in bottin elaine good morning. >> reporter: tsarnaev, no reaction to the powerful testimony from survivors but others in the courtroom found it painful to hear and some were even brought to tears. of the survivors and first responders who testified thursday, bill richards story may be among the most heartbreaking. his 6-year-old jane lost her leg. his 8-year-old son martin killed. in images shown public lis for the first time in court, the backpack dropped by dzhokhar
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tsarnaev seen steps away from the martin family. richard revisited the moments after the explosion. i saw a little boy who had his body severely damaged by an explosion. and i knew from what i saw there was no chance. he then walked to his daughter jne. noticed her leg. she didn't have it. one of the lasting photos of the tragedy is of jeff bowman lost both legs in the bombing and recalled seeing tamerman tsarnaev. i looked at him. he wasn't having fun. then notice add bag on the street and told his friend, maybe we should get out of here. seconds later, he was knocked to the ground. bowman looked at his leg and could see flesh and bones and told the court, this is how it's going to end. >> right before i walked in i was dreading it. >> reporter: for rebecca gregory, testifies provided a sense of comfort. she lay on the pavement in agony after the second bomb exploded leaving her with a devastating
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injury to her left leg. the 27-year-old posted an open letter to dzhokhar tsarnaev on facebook. i have been truly scared of you and because of this fearful of everything else people might be capable of. >> what was going through your mind when you looked at him? >> when i walked into the courtroom and able to look him in the face i realized that fear was gone and i wasn't afraid, and he became a nobody to me again. >> reporter: the trial resumes monday. it is moving faster than expected, because the defense team is choosing not to cross-examine most of the witnesses. >> elaine thank you, and elaine will have continuing coverage of the trial in our digital network cbsn. watch any time there. and four police officers recovering after what officials call a terror attack. police say a palestinian driver rammed his car into a crowd of people near a jerusalem police station overnight. security forces shot and wounded
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the attacker when he left his car holding a knife. police are still trying to identify the driver. this morning, federal investigators will be on the scene of another fiery oil train derailment. six cars loaded with crude jumped the tracks thursday afternoon in northern illinois. the massive fire burned into the night. the train was carrying crude from an oil field in north dakota. no one hurt. it is the second u.s. trailtrain derailment in less than a month. in the south, windchills below freezing to atlanta. lexington, kentucky feels like it's below zero. the arctic cold affects millions cleaning up from thursday's very powerful snowstorm. icy roads in rhode island cause add violent collision caught on camera. no one seriously hurt. in kentucky police and the national guard rescued hundreds of people on interstate 65. many were stranded for 24 hours. cuthbert langley of our affiliate is in franklin
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kentucky where i-65 is open again. cuthbert, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. much of kentucky is still thawing out this morning, but the icy roads are still a big problem. especially for 18-wheelers and other sources of vehicles sump as those. 65, interstate 65 northbound is still shut down this morning. it's been shut down for nearly 12 hours. no doubt creating a very treacherous morning once again. this is what it looked like for millions in the south thursday. record amounts of snow made a mess of roads and led to spinouts and accidents. >> the right was pretty tough. >> really, really dangersous. i wouldn't be out here if i didn't have to go to work today. >> reporter: in kentucky a complete standstill several wrecks shutting down two major highways. thousands of people jammed bumper to bumper some of those people stuck nearly 24 hours. >> a mile away from here at 3:30 this morning and took me until just a few minutes ago to get
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one mile. >> how long was that? >> about 12 hours to go a mile. >> reporter: on interstate 65 the lines of cars stretched for roughly 26 mimes. governor stephen beshear declared a state of emergency sending in national guard troops to help with the relief effort. >> soon as we see drive pavement, no snow. all our worries are gone. hope on the way back it's clear. >> reporter: with temperatures set to plunge below freezing in several cities crews are rushing to clear snow-covered roads before they ice over. one of the biggest things to keep in mind here is that temperatures are hovering right around the single degree mark which means any type of tools crews put down to de-ice the roads, such as salt and brine, are completely ineffective. in fact, nashville, tennessee, set a new record low once again this morning. >> thank you. this morning the state department will review 55,000 pages of hillary clinton e-mails. officials will look for any
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security breaches after she used her personal e-mail for government business as secretary of state. clinton says that her messages should be made public. she has not yet explained why she used this account linked to her private server at her home. clinton aides said in 2011 she was told not to use government e-mail for work. and bulldozing the site of one of the world's most ancient cities. looted and destroyed the city. the news came as places were lit on fire. the iraqi military tries to gain ground. >> reporter: nearly five days into the fattal for tikrit isis militant reportedly set fire to the oil wells to create a smoke screen to protect themselves against iraqi government fighter jets. it's just the latest setback for iraqi forces that have already been slowed down by suicide bombers, mines and road-side
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bombs. iraqi officials say that nearly 30,000 men are trying to get control back of tikrit which was saddam hussein's hometown. iraqi forces fighting alongside troops from iran and an iranian general reportedly is commanding the battle. that sparked fears in the u.s. of rising iranian influence here in iraq but many iraqis tell us they welcome any help they can get as they try to retake territory from those isis extremists. charlie? >> holly thanks. a dramatic exchange is in the works this morning for ringling brothers and barnum and bailey circus. elephants leave the stage forever. the decision kept years of legal battles but the circus owner die nighs caving to animal rights activists. in poke city florida, vicente, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charl. this is where the elephants will come after they retire. the ringling brothers center for elephant conservation. you can see these guys have come out for the morning feeding and
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are pretty hungry you can see. see if they'll take bread from here. no. enough carrots for now. 12 elephants will be brought here over the next three years. they have 200 acres to roam on. the circus decided to use them saying they were responding to customers and the growing cost of fighting anti-circus and anti-elephant laws across the country. this is the circus' ceo. >> no business in the world much less an entertainment business can survive for that long without changing without being in tune with their customer with consumers. it's a bittersweet decision. there's no question about that, but it is the best thing, and we felt this was the right time to do it. >> reporter: and so at this time they're hoping that the elephants will be brought here during the next three years. by the year 2018 they should all be here and we know a lot of people want to know if this place is open to the public. not yet. at least for now. norah? >> all right.
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"60 minutes" finds the person who gave the prosecutor in argentina the weapons that took his life. >> did it enter your mind at all ever in being with him that he might use this weapon on himself? >> no. >> no sense that he was going to kill himself. >> no. >> do you think he did commit suicide? >> ahead, lesley stahl is here with a preview of her "60 minutes" story, the investigation into the death of a prosecutor on the verge of
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exposing a terrorism coverup in argentina. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this morning's portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. [kids cheering] you're up. you wanna... nope. at our 1 for everyone sales event, get 0% apr financing for 60 months on a 2015 prius. offer ends march 31st. for great deals on other toyotas, visit toyota.com. this is out of this world. you bet your asteroid. toyota. let's go places.
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with the jet's good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. the chp is on alert after gunfire hit a patrol car around midnight on 101 in san jose. investigators say two officers had pulled over a car when someone started shooting in their direction. no one was injured. southbound 101 near tully road was briefly shut down. the 25,000 lights on the bay bridge have been switched off and will be taken down temporarily. it's happening so that caltrans can do maintenance work including painting the cables on the western span. but next january, another ceremony is planned when the lights go back on just in time for the bay area to host super
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good morning. happy friday. let's head over to 880 now northbound right at davis. an accident is cleared out of lanes but you can see the damage is done. traffic backed up along 880 there. all the way back to 238 so give yourself some extra time there. elsewhere as you work your way along 880 traffic moving a little bit better through oakland. not too bad. bay bridge though we are seeing a bit of a backup. metering lights remain on but it's not bad. it actually is looking good for a friday. roberta? >> good morning, everybody. heading on out the door, grab a jacket. we do have temperatures into the 30s in throughout santa rosa also in the livermore area. we have clear skies and a slight breeze under 5 miles per hour. right now, numbers from 48 degrees in san rafael to 51 in oakland. it's now 45 in san jose. later today into the 70s. outside number will be 77 degrees in gilroy. over the weekend pushing 80
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the department of justice released a 105-page report that officially confirmed what protesters in ferguson missouri, have been claiming for months. that long before brown's killing ferguson police targeted african-americans. >> look, i came to that conclusion on chapter four of the report i published last august. show you here. yeah. larry bill more's investigation of the ferguson police department. let's see. here -- here. oh. here it is. chapter four. right here. i had it. and i think his show is hilarious. guys, he's coming to the table next month. he'll be here. looking forward to talking to him. welcome back to cbs "this
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morning." coming up in this half hour she was accused of a crime in a foreign country that she did not commit. only on cbs "this morning," an interview with the american veterinarian stuck six months in east tea more.imor. and adding 295,000 jobs in february, a 12th straight month of gains above 200,000. meanwhile, the unemployment rate fell to 5.5% consumer spending up giving employers more confidence to hire. >> the "new york times" reports on criticism of a settlement between the administration of new jersey governor chris christie and exxon/mobil. exxon agrid to paper $225 million over contamination in new jersey. christie officials praising the deal but democratic lawmakers say exxon is only paying a fraction of the nearly $9 billion initially sought by the state. a former state environment commissioner said christie's
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chief counsel inserted himself in the case and curt the deal favorable to exxon. christie calls the allegations baseless. and a police chief arrested in a prostitution sting. >> would you go with us? all right. >> a police released video showing miami chief stephen johnson agrees to pay 100 roses. slang for dollars to two undercover officers. moments after he hands over the money officers burst in. johnson was fired shortly after this. >> goodness. and "usa today" looks at the possible spread of bio terror bacteria at a research lab. more than 175 monkeys potentially exposed to a dangerous agent mistakenly moved to outdoor cages at the louisiana research center. the bacteria can cause severe disease in animals and humans. it wasn't supposed to be in the lab. how it got there isn't clear. the argentine government this morning is calling for commitment, truth and justice after the mysterious death of a
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special prosecutor in argentina. in a full-page newspaper ad in the u.s. the government says there is no evidence to support prosecutor alberto nisman's claim the president hindered the investigation of the 1994 bombing of the jewish center. yesterday the prosecutor's ex-wife said he was murdered as he was preparing to reveal evidence against argentine. argentina's government and president, and "60 minutes" leslie stahl went to invest gays and spoke with the employee who gave nisman the gun used in the killing. >> so as far as we know, you were the last person who saw nisman, one day before he died. did he say why he wanted the weapon? >> yeah. >> translator: he told me, do you know how it feels that your daughters don't want to be with you because they're afraid something will happen to them by being next to you? i had never seen nisman so concerned. >> reporter: didn't you say to him, why do you need a gun? you have ten body guards? >> translator: yes.
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that's the first thing i asked him. and he answered -- because i don't trust my bodyguards. >> reporter: sunday morning, january 18th. nisman is up in his apartment, here up on the 13th floor. but things aren't quite right. he doesn't respond to repeated phone calls from his bodyguards. we know from the coroner, edied around 3:00 p.m. in his bathroom, body slumped by the door. struck by a bullet point-blank range above his right ear. >> did it enter your mind at all ever in being with him that he might use this weapon on himself? >> no. >> reporter: no sense that he was going to kill himself? >> no. >> reporter: do you think he did commit suicide? >> i don't know. >> leslie stahl is with us now. good morning. >> good morning. >> so you jut did this last week, went down to argentina. >> a little before a week we dent down there quite some time.
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>> most believe it was not suicide? >> most people in argentina believe it was an assassination, a murder. but argentina's the land of conspiracy theories and you have the complete spectrum of people are absolutely convinced it was an assassination and the government was involved. you have people absolutely convinced it was a suicide. and when you go down with your own preconceived notions, both sides will convince you they're right while you're talking to them. including -- >> speaking of preconceived notions based on everything i've read, hard to believe this man committed suicide. you come out thinking what? >> i come out confused like everybody else. >> confused leslie really? >> really confused. when i spoke to the people who said it was suicide, they build a convincing case, because this man was about to testify about a report that he had spent a long time on that he got wrong. and he had to go publicly testify, and there is a possibility that he was just
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horrified and embarrassed that he had gotten this thing so wrong and it led to the possible arrest of the president of the country? and so you can see that he may have been speculation. >> explain -- you don't buy it? >> i don't. >> you just talked to the man who gave him the gun who said he needed it for protection. >> that's what he said yeah. >> the charges he was going to make about president fernandez were about the secret deal with iran. right? >> but there's -- there's evidence that he got it wrong. >> in what way? >> that he -- well one thing -- it's very confusing. i don't want to get too much in the weeds here that there will been some arrest warrants that were issued through interpol and that the, the prossecutorprosecutor's charge the government tried to lift those arrest warrants secretly in a deal with iran. that's what this is all about and that he may have gotten that
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wrong. >> wow. >> another reason to really watch. >> i want to hear all that. exactly. >> thanks leslie. >> a pleasure. lessie's full report including an interview with arg argentina argentina's foreign minister. watch it sunday night on "60 minutes" right here on cbs. this morning more states fighting recreation's marijuana in colorado. six colorado county sheriffs are suing the governor there. mark shausmantraussman shows how law officials from other states are also battling legislation. >> reporter: colorado's recreation's marijuana business lit up after voters made it legal 14 months ago. >> thanks for coming in. >> reporter: stores like medicine man in aurora just outside denver -- generated more than 300 million dollars in sales last year alone. but pot is still considered illegal under federal drug laws. and larimer county sheriff justin smith says his deputies feel handcuffed. >> if i defend and uphold the
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rights of an individual under colorado constitution to have marijuana, then that puts me in violation of my oath of office on the federal end. >> reporter: smith calm it is a crisis of conscience. and the lawsuit asks a federal judge to strike down the law and close more than 300 licensed retail marijuana stores. >> there is nothing that requires colorado to enforce federal marijuana laws. >> reporter: mason tevert speaks for the marijuana policy project. >> colorado is taking steps to control it. these guys are taking steps to bring back an underground market. >> reporter: it's estimated that nearly half of colorado's recreation's marijuana buyers come from other states where this is illegal. law enforcement officials from nebraska and kansas two of colorado's neighbors, have joined the suit saying they've been overwhelmed by illegal drug activity that flows across colorado's border. >> and traffic stops, coming up with a lot of marijuana coming through, which requires the
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arrest and prosecution, jail time prison time. >> reporter: but marijuana supporters say authorities should focus on serious crime. >> if these sheriffs are unable to figure out the difference between the state and federal laws, they're really not fit to be law enforcement officials. >> reporter: colorado's governor says the state will continue to defend its marijuana law, despite this being the fourth lawsuit challenging it. marijuana is both legal here and still under fire. for cbs "this morning," mark straussman, denver. all right. ahead, only on cbs "this morning," how a letter to the pope inspired and american trapped in a foreign country. >> a representative from the vatican came and visedded me in prison. >> what did they tell you? >> that they were praying for me and that he gotten that letter. >> high places. >> yeah. >> wow. see how she survived locked up in a room for 19 hours a day. you're watching cbs "this morning."
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only on "cbs this morning," the oregon woman who was wrongfully held in asia is sharing her story of freedom. stacy addison was unable to leave east timor for more than six months after being accused of a crime she did not commit. she just returned to oregon and opened up about her drama to ben tracy. >> oh, my god. oh, my god. >> reporter: when stacy addison arrived at the oregon airport, the first thing she did was hug her mom. then she covered her mom's ears. >> reporter: she still plans to travel despite her ordeal in east timor much of it behind bars. >> how did you find out you were able toll go home? >> my lawyer called me on friday at about 5:30 told me he had the passports. >> have you ever been more happy in your life to see a passport? >> no. i can't have it out of my sight now. >> reporter: 41-year-old addison is a veterinarian.
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in 2013 she set out on a globe-trotting trip by herself. she started out in antarctica and ended up in indonesia but when she ended up in tee more, a ride of a life ended up in danger. she shared a cab with a man who ended up being on a drug run. that's her with a scarf over her head. she was then sent to prison wherein they cut off her long hair and kept her locked up for two months. >> you spend 19 hour as day locked up in a room. i was sick a lot. i had no contact with anyone. you have a lot of time to think up the worst. >> what did you learn about yourself during that time? >> i think that you learn what you can take, you know, that you're stronger than you think you are. >> she was eventually released from prison but not allowed to leave the country. back home in oregon her friends launched a facebook payment to bring atoepgs her case and stacy's mom wrote letters to
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everyone from former president bill capitol hillton and to pope francis. >> a member from the vatican came and visited me in prison. >> what did they tell you? >> they said they had i had for me and hat gotten the letter. >> help from high places. >> yeah. >> john kerry about addison's case. >> there really is -- i'm familiar with the case -- no legitimate explanation for how she has been detained. >> reporter: addison was finally given her passport last friday but it's still not clear exactly why. bernadette doesn't care how it happened. she's just glad her daughter is home. >> very ecstatic that she's back and she got through this and she's home. >> does this give you greater appreciation for the justice system here? >> not really the system but the fact that people care about justice. you know, people were outraged that this would happen. a lot of places just accepted
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that that's the way it is and there's nothing you can do. it does really make you appreciate it. >> and now that she has that passport back she plans to add several more stamps. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, portland. >> wow. she's incredibly brave. >> she said something interesting i've heard often. you found out you're tougher than you knew. >> i'm with her mom. i don't care how she got home. i'm just glad she's home and okay. protest in the
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off after hearing from kids like that. sledding as you know is usually banned on the slopes around congress but 100 parents and kids defied that ban. the kids wanted to play play, play. i'm glad the police let them go. >> that's great. it seems like everything has an opinion about hillary clinton. we we talk with frank lunds. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. a bullet hit a chp patrol car on highway 101 in san jose. and now police are looking for the shooter. two officers had pulled over a car when someone started shooting at them. no one was hurt. doctors in san francisco are finishing a rare six-way kidney swap today. three patients are donating kidneys to three others in need of a transplant. they were matched using genetic profiling software. giants outfielder hunter pence will be out six to eight weeks after breaking his arm. he was hit by a pitch during yesterday's spring training game. pence will likely miss the first
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good morning. welcome back. i'm gianna franco in the traffic center. your peninsula commute got busier because of an accident at woodside at 280. it's blocking lanes. a backup there as a result. northbound 280 though free- flowing all the way into san francisco. looks like 880 still struggling with an earlier accident northbound at davis. it's clear now but speeds down to about 16 miles per hour. 10 in some spots. so give yourself some extra time. backed up in the area. bay bridge looking a lot better this morning. roberta? >> clear skies the sun is shining. and we have temperatures above average again today. good morning, everyone. wow, that is a live weather camera from mount vaca looking out towards the valley where currently we have temperatures in land in the 30s. in santa rosa up to 45 degrees. livermore now at 43. we're at 53 in san francisco. later today numbers will stack up from 67 degrees along the seashore to the mid-70s in our inland areas. 77 today in gilroy.
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the snow. delta flight 1086 skidded off the runway as it landed and stopped jut over the snow before the icy water of flushing bay. >> was on a plane waiting to take off. my producer and i interviewed passengers. one of them was jared felacy who was sitting in front of the plane. >> do you realize how close you were to being close to tragedy? >> it didn't hit me and then when i looked at it i started to cry, tears of joy, tears of gratefulness, gratitude at being alive because i was that close to going into the water. >> the passengers said they knew immediately when they first bounced and the wheels didn't have traction, they knew that this was a problem. >> help me understand. why did it turn into the bay? >> that's a good question. i think it's still unclear. the passengers i spoke with said the plane for a while the left wing was clipping that fence for several hundred yards and turned in. i think we still have more to
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learn about that, but there was a period while they were riding alongside that berm and fence. >> go, norah o'donnell. your plane is canceled and you grab a camera and go to work? >> yeah. we wanted to know what happened and wherever anybody was injured. it was a near disaster. >> a reporter's instinct. >> yes she does. she definitely does. saturday marks one year since flight 380 vanished. the work continues ted aviation mystery
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will remain just that, a mystery. one year later there's still no trace of malaysia airlines flight 370. as this anniversary approaches how are you doing? >> not looking forward to it. a year of supervisor on mh-370. we met her two weeks after the plane disappeared. >> every day i call. every day. >> reporter: nearly a year later we wondered what changed. >> i still call his phone. >> you still call his phone? >> yes. >> and you hear his voice? >> not his voice but the recording of his voice mail but his greeting is still there.
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>> reporter: the lack of answers, she says, is unbelievable. >> sometimes we think, you know how we still hang onto that hope. we will. >> reporter: in late january ten months into the search malaysia's department of civil aviation announced flight 370 was an accident. it was a technicality to pave the way for next of kin to receive compensation. it only fueled frustration. >> i'm the wife, family member. it should have been us being notified first before the press, before the general public. >> reporter: malaysia airlines is in the process of restructuring. a new ceo started sunday and mass layoffs are expected but for those who have yet to mourn their loved ones change does not bring closure. >> what happened on that day, i don't know whether
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quote, back to the drawing board. norah? >> seth, thank you. it really is hard to believe that it's been a year. >> and we still know nothing. >> nothing. >> nothing. >> i know. it's terrible. >> heartbreaking for the people. >> mm-hmm. for their families. ahead, describing hillary clinton in the wake of her e-mail controversy. a focus group
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♪ government officials say it could take months to examine all of hillary clinton's e-mails in her days as secretary of state. clinton says she wants her messages released. some say using her private account for official business looks like she had something to hide. cbs news contributor and republican frank luntz gathered voters last night to gather some of their opinions on the front-runner. >> let me ask you to give me a phrase to describe hillary clinton. >> ambitious. >> positive. >> aggressive. >> chameleon. >> cheater. >> first female president, does that matter to you? >> not at all. >> it does matter. i don't want hillary. why not condoleezza rice.
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>> it's time for a female. i thought in the '80s a female would beat a black male. >> shouldn't it be the most qualified? why does it have to be a black or a woman, to have it the most qualified individual. >> i believe both of them are the most qualified. >> why does it have to be a clinton or a bush? we've had enough of them. there aren't any other people to lead this nation? >> no one else to step forward. >> i think we need somebody who really has a fire in their belly who's a true leader who's willing to step up to the plate. i think there are some viable candidates that have that. >> so let me show you the clip of her and bill speaking because most of you responded very favorably to it. >> no matter who you are or where you come from -- >> the idea that if you worked hard -- >> if you worked hard -- >> and you play by the rules -- >> and you play by the rules. >> if you work hard and play by the rules -- >> if you work hard and play by the rules -- >> we're going to lift you out of poverty.
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>> how many of you thought bill clinton was a good president, raise your hands. so the vast majority of you. isn't it a positive that she would follow him? >> all she learned when she was with bill is how to lie. i call it clintonese. >> they all lie. >> they all lie. >> she's had some experience while in the white house and she's an intelligent candidate. it's the lesser of evils. >> first lady, isn't she the most qualified candidate? >> i think so, yes. >> so when you hear these people criticize her, why do you think they are? >> i think she may be the most qualified candidate because she has name recognition and raise money. that doesn't make her the most qualified or competent president. >> qualified to be a leader. this is a woman who cries. she cries if she has too much stress. that's not a leader. >> if you look at hillary's
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record as a state senator, she accomplished nothing. as secretary of state, our world is a mess right now. she has accomplished nothing of significance. >> i'm stunned. i think it's good to have a human being as a president, someone who shows some emotion now and then. yes, we can have a woman president, yes, that would be a great. it should be hillary. >> frank luntz is with us this morning. what stood out the most? >> i heard nothing new, that we could have conducted this group three, four years ago and the same positive comments and the same criticisms would have been spoken in exactly the same language. i didn't ask them about e-mails. i thought they would bring it up. i didn't ask them about her comments when she left office that she was poor. i assumed that this would have been discussed, and it wasn't. >> but aren't they following your lead, frank? aren't you leading the discussion? >> one of the things i do is i ask the opening question and i let them go. that's why i barely participate in my own focus groups.
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i want to know what's on their minds and what matters to them. the idea that she cries. we haven't discussed that. and in the polling, it demonstrated that it helped her. the key for her is humanity. people think she's a leader. in fact, i think and i'll make a projection now that she's elected president. her key is that she understands, she snows the concerns of people who live paycheck to paycheck. it's been a long time since she's engaged people that way. >> what about bush/clinton? >> there's a hostility. even though they want to see alternatives, not just bush, not just clinton. >> we've got a lot to watch in 2016. it's a long, long ways away. thank you, frank.
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she ran with the stars but it seems she couldn't outrun a killer. >> aspen, colorado. where anything can happen and usually does. but not this. a member of aspen's royalty murdered. three unlikely suspects. everyone wanted to know how and why the death of an aspen princess. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." morning." t you shouldn't forget this. hep c is a serious disease. left untreated it can lead to liver damage and potentially liver cancer. but you haven't been forgotten. there's never been a better time to rethink your hep c because people like you may benefit from scientific advances that could help cure your hep c. visit hepchope.com or call a hep c educator to help prepare you for a conversation with your hep c specialist. are you ready to feel the difference of truly hydrated skin? new neutrogena hydro boost water gel. discover our newest breakthrough and bask in the glow healthy skin
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the murder of a woman known as the princess of aspen rocked the colorado resort town. the potential suspect seem as surprising as the crime. "48 hours" maureen maher reveals what's at the center of the case. here's a preview of tomorrow night's report. >> it was a late winter's night in aspen, colorado. then all of a sudden the quiet was shattered by sirens and lights and everybody wondered what the hell's going on. >> no. >> reporter: no one could believe it. nancy's sister a member of aspen royalty who dated the likes of jack nichol sop and michael douglas was dead. bludgeoned with a hammer in her own home while she slept. >> everyone wanted to know why. everybody wanted to know how. and everybody wanted to know who. >> it all began when tre and nancy styler, a retired doctor and his wife agreed to rent her
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house while she weren't to australia. it seemed the perfect match. >> she said it's car marxkarma, darling, this is it. >> and it quickly turned nasty. >> she said awful things about us on facebook. you're liars cheats you owe us for this you owe us for that. >> it was so ugly she came back early and told her assistant kathy carpenter to throw the stylers out. >> make sure those fers are out of my house. >> but three days after nancy pfister has returned no one heard from her. kathy carpenter went to check on her. >> 911. >> carpenter immediately brought up the trouble between the stylers and her. >> some people there. she really pissed them off. >> the stylers were brought in
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for questioning and then a major break. the murder weapon was found near the stylers' motel. a few days later they were arrested for murder. >> i kept thinking i would wake up from this horrible dream, being treated like a criminal. >> but sown wondered if that big break in the case too good to be true, were they too framed? >> car think carpenter was a little too quick to point the finger at suspects after discovering the body. >> reporter: kathy carpenter became the third person arrested. but the intrigue in this story was only just beginning. >> there was anticipation of the trial when everything would come out. people were eager to hear exactly what happened why. then all of a sudden another bombshell. >> and i was blown away. i was blown away. >> i love a good bombshell, maureen. what was it? >> the bombshell is they're
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adamant all three are involved. one confesses, two go free. >> do they believe the confession? >> no. the prosecutors say we have to stand with what the confession says but there certain an attorney investigator family, or friend who knows the truth about what happened when she was killed. >> why is it so polarizing? >> that's a good question. why did the person confess, to bring an end to it. why was nancy so polarizing? >> a good friend said you loved her and hated her and there was at least one point in the year or a couple of years where you didn't talk to her. >> saturday night, maureen maher. you can watch the full report. it's called "murder in aspen." the titles and characters always amaze me. that's 10:00 eastern, 9:00 central lighter on cbs. ahead, a violent turning point. cbs's bill plante was there 50 years aerks everybody, interviewing dr. martin luther
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king jr. ahead, bill plante is back in selma 50 years later. this i good morning, it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. the chp is on alert after gunfire hit a patrol car just before midnight on highway 101 in san jose. investigators say two officers had pulled over a car when someone in another vehicle started shooting at them. no one was injured. northbound 101 near tully road was briefly shut down. a person of interest is in custody in the shooting death of an oakland teenager. 14-year-old davon ellis was killed along brookdale avenue while walking to a store with friends. sources tell kpix 5 the person of interest is a man who was arrested sunday and charged with shooting at hayward
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police. the 25,000 lights on the bay bridge were switched off this morning and will soon be removed. it's happening so that caltrans can do maintenance work including painting the western span cables but next january a ceremony is planned when the lights go back on just in time for the bay area to host super bowl 50. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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news looking better as you work your way towards the pay gates there to the upper deck into san francisco. a little busy though coming off the eastshore freeway. we're seeing delays westbound 80 carquinez bridge to the maze. upwards of 30 minutes through there. south 280 at woodside this accident clearing. slow through the scene. north 880 sluggish from an earlier wreck at davis. also the golden gate bridge starting to see volume into san francisco. san mateo bridge holding steady and report of some bart delays about 10 minutes late. roberta? >> good morning, everybody. taking a look outside, we have wall-to-wall sunshine, pristine conditions, unlimited visibility. it's going to pan out to be a day where we experience above average temperatures. right now, out the door, numbers stacking up into the 40s. we do have the clear skies and the mild temperatures with near or record warmth. it is coming for the weekend. your high temperatures today across the area, 60s and mid- 70s. and the extended forecast, check it out! pushin
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, the stories of selma as we approach the 50th anniversary of the historic civil rights march. bill plante was there. a look back at his interview with martin luther king jr.. plus we join julianna margulies. she's in our toyota green room. her character on "the good wife" is running for office. see how real power play in washington may be taking a cue from alicia. that's ahead. right now it's time to show you this morning's headlines. there's a gender question on why there are so few women in leadership in silicon valley.
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she claims she was not promoted because she was a woman. an investigator testified yesterday said she had a chip on her shoulder. the partner said he doesn't recall using that phrase. "usa today" says dawn spacecraft entered the planet. it followed a 7 1/2-year trip. 1/2 years. in an asteroid belt between mars and jupiter. dawn is getting a first close-up look. scientists also want to find the origin of two bright mysterious spots seen on the icy planet. p jack white was the mystery buyer of elvis presley's first ever record and he plans to reissue the songs on vinyl. he paid $300,000 for the songs in january. his songs "my happiness" and "that's when your heartache begins." it will be released on record store day.
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april 18. nobody sounds like him, charlie. nobody does. nice to hear that. >> beautiful to hear that. the "detroit free press" says research finds a big jump in heart attack risk on the first monday of daylight's saving time. we're going to move the clocks ahead one hour on sunday. heart attacks increase 25% on the first full work day. they think the additional sleep loss and additional work is part of the reason. take your aspirin, everybody. kelly clarkson's response. katy hopkins tweeted this. bad, katy. jesus, what happened to kelly clarkson? did she eat all of her backup singers. clarkson had a baby in june just learned of the criticism. she tells the magazine, quote, that's because she don't know me. i'm awesome. she said she feels especially
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good since the birth of her daughter. i love that she handled it that way. people are so darn mean. >> mean and no home training, norah. now for a piece we've been looking forward to. people pause to remember a watershed moment in the civil rights movement. sunday marks 50 years since the violent crackdown on peaceful marches. senior white house correspondent bill plante was there and is back there this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. 50 years ago they lived in a climate of fear. segregation was the rule then. it was brutally enforced here at the end of a nightstick by sheriff jim clark. that was one reason that dr. martin luther king chose selma as the target town for a voter registration drive. i was part of the cbs news team which covered all that. day after day would-be voters
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were turned away, often roughly from the courthouse. the nighttime protests, a black man jimmy lee jackson was shot by a trooper. the next morning we reported what we saw and the official version. >> late last night a reporter called the sheriff's office to ask what happened. the sheriff told him it was a small incident. one negro fell down. bill plante, cbs news, alabama. >> reporter: a week later jackson died. the idea of a protest march was born. the first attempt led by john lewis now a member of congress was stopped by state troopers and sheriff jim clark's posse at the foot of the edmund pettus bridge. >> you're ordered to disperse. go home or go to your church. >> reporter: march 7th, 1965 became known as bloody sunday as
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the police beat the unresisting marchers. two weeks later with troops protecting the route, a crowd of thousands led by dr. martin luther king marched across the bridge. i spoke to dr. king as we passed the spot where protesters had been beaten. >> of all the activities in the past weeks of selma come to a fruition now? is this the grand climax? >> i would say this and its culmination on the march on capitol on thursday. >> reporter: those pictures and these jilted the conscience of a nation. the late photographer spider martin covered selma for the birmingham news. his daughter tracy at a birmingham exhibit of his work. >> i guess that's his most iconic image. that's major john cloud who is telling them that the marchers, john lewis and jose williams who are leading the march, that, you know, it's unlawful, it's not going to go on. >> reporter: martin's editors tried to pull him off the story. they didn't like the pictures.
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>> you can see that's her club and gassed. she's 103 now. >> at 103 civil rights activist emilia boynton still has images of that day. >> the police department came up and started beating us, and i stood up there and finally i fell. >> reporter: as she lay unconscious, someone suggested they call for an ambulance. she says sheriff clark refused. >> and he said i'm not sending an ambulance over there. if there's anybody dead, let the possums eat them. >> reporter: 50 years later, she has this message for anyone who's standing on her shoulders.
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>> get the heck off of our shoulders and get to work. >> reporter: isn't that something? she has another message, too, emilia boynton. she told us, hate makes a person unhappy and that is why she went to sheriff clark's funeral in 2007. it's a message of hope and change even though there's a lot still to be done around here. but that bridge symbolizes the link between then and now. charlie? >> bill, incredible reporting. it just reminds us of our own history and the challenges that we have. >> oh, emilia boynton. i could watch an hour of an interview with her. and, bill, i've told you this before. i've e-mailed you. i know all of your work there it's online on cbs.com. there's a beautiful "60 minutes" overtime that i absolutely love. you have all your notes and scripts from back then. it's just fabulous. >> i saved that all. and speaking of emilia boynton,
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we've got to put her online. you can see more of her. >> i'll be watching it. thank you. >> bill, thanks so much. 50 years after bill first reported from selma, he's going to mark the occasion with an interview with president obama. you can see part of their conversation saturday on the "cbs evening news." the entire interview will air on sunday morning's show on cbs and on "face the nation." >> looking forward to that. >> "the good wife" is here. julianna margulies shows us what to expect in new episodes of the cbs hit drama.
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♪ new episodes of the cbs drama "the good wife" are back with some big surprises. her character is running for state attorney. julianna margulies joins us in studio 57. good morning. >> good morning. >> welcome back. >> thank you. >> welcome back. >> they warned you were here. >> this is a great, you know, season that's coming up because she's running for office. >> she's running for office. it's been a lot of fun not being in a courtroom because those are the longest days we ever have. but, yeah, i love the politics of it, and it's really changing her dynamic with her husband, and i put it in quotes because they're staying married but not romantically. so it's been really fun and i
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love politics. there's something very horrible and sexy about them at the same time. >> what is it that the audience loves about her? >> i think, you know, she's so flawed and she started out as such an underdog and a little bit -- people saw her as weak, i guess, because she had taken the back seat to her husband's career even though she had a law degree, top of the class at georgetown, was smart, let him lead the way and got smacked in the face with reality and is crawling her way back to life and you saw her in a sink-or-swim situation and her children came first, which meant she had to get back out there and get a job. people can identify with her. >> is she ever going to have sex and love again? after the death of will charles which you miss, the character misses -- >> that's okay. will gardner. s >> you know what i mean. >> she misses him, the audience misses him, and you think what's going the happen for her next.
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what's going to happen in that area of her life. >> she needs some sort of romantic -- i think she really needs someone to shake her up a little bit and let her hair down and relax. >> is that going to happen? >> a little bit of fun is going to happen. i can't speculate on the entire relationship. but you're going to have some fun soon. >> i love seeing you in this character because for me i first fell in love with julianna margulies, with cathy hathaway on "e.r." you left with all that money on the table. i thought how could she do that. you must have known something in your career. that was such a badass move to do. >> i never think to do something because of money but because i love what to do. i had six great years. i'm from new york. my home is here. i'm not quite centered in l.a.
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i knew i wanted to have a kid or two, and i wouldn't raise them out there. i'm a new yorker, you know. i mean i'm a fourth generation new yorker, you know, so i'm from harlem down in brooklyn. >> and you have a gorgeous son. 6 or 7. >> he just turned 7. >> a lot of 7s. does he know who you are and what you do? what does he think? >> he knows i'm an actress. he sees me on posters, buses, things like that, but, you know, i'm regular. i drive the subway. i don't do anything fancy and i try to make sure that he knows that that's not what's important. what's important is that i love what i do. >> what do you think about the evolution, though, of alicia because, you know, i just thought about it. it's called "the good wife" and she was the good wife but now she's something different. right? >> norah, she took dirty money last week. >> i know. ed asner.
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86 years old. he's a sexist bigot. he's horrible but he'll come back. >> it's a great show. >> it's a great show. great writing. the episode on sunday is one of the hardest exercises i've ever done. it's called mind's eye and it goes into alicia's head maybe a little bit too much. >> thank you so much. you can watch "the good wife" sunday nights right here on cbs. " sunday
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>> a long week for you, charlie rose. >> this view is so badlet it doesn't block you on the path to the bomb. it paves you. >> the moment was so unique. the president dismissed the content. >> the alternative the prime minister offers is no deal. iran will excel rate its nuclear program. >> he was shot dead. >> that's our president. >> the front line here in turkish province is as close as we can get to the battle for tikrit. >> his family has now been brought in for questioning. >> now they're actually issuing s&ps for those e-mails. >> i have no way of knowing whether secretary clinton provided everything to the state department. >> bleeding here bleeding here. >> ambassador lippert had just arrived. that's when a man approached him
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from behind with a knife. >> this is what you call your space saver. when you say they're going to take away the space sayser -- >> half my neighbors are cops. >> bao bao separates from her mother. it really tugs at your hearts. [ laughter ] >> charlie, do you need any personal coaching from chris? >> don't call us. we'll call you. >> i would be on top of a ladder and when i got to a certain point i would position my feet comfortably and jump off. >> i see an angel. >> is it harder to get naked in front of the crams as you get older? >> ooh, yes. oh, look. it's me. >> i want to travel with her.
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>> she never wanted therapy at all. >> no. you're crying. you're filled with self-pity and self loatheing for what? you know what does good? money and a girlfriend. >> it never felt confident. >> below the equator? >> yeah. >> does size matter? >> yes. not what you've got but what you do with it. >> do you have any more questions if tr doctor? >> no. >> what is it about pizza that americans love? >> it tastes good. >> chris licht says what is that you're wearing? it looks like a box of crayons threw up on you. notice what he has on. >> charlie, good to see you in the evening. >> next time dinner and a warm fire. >> because you feel fine doesn't mean you're getting enough sleep. >> so i could turn into a raging b i t bitch at any moment?
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good morning. last look at your friday morning commute. it's looking better as you work your way towards the bay bridge this morning. metering lights are still cycling a little faster. slow off the eastshore freeway. a backup westbound 80 carquinez bridge to the maze upwards of 30 minutes through there but again it is improving. looks like we're seeing better news southbound 280 at woodside cleared over to the right side. but again slow as a result. you're backed up through there past the accident. traffic looks good northbound 280 not a problem through the peninsula. checking 880, earlier accident davis is completely out of the roadway. chp no longer on scene. it's busy 880 hayward into oakland. the golden gate bridge looks good.
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wayne: yes, whoo! jonathan: it's a motorcycle! - (screaming) wayne: is that real? tiffany is a matadora. jonathan: it's a trip to switzerland! wayne: emmy-winner cat gray. jonathan: it's diamond earrings! wayne: she did it. - i'm gonna take curtain number three! 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." let's do it, who wants to make a deal? oh, let's see. miss earlene. come here, earlene. nice to meet you. - nice to meet you. wayne: we're going to give you a gift card. step over here. this gift card is redeemable for cash. 'tis yours. mr. mangum, how much money is on this here gift certificate?
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