tv CBS This Morning CBS June 8, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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thanks for watching. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning. it is wednesday june 8th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." hillary clinton celebrates becoming the first woman to head a major party ticket after a big primary win. senator claire mccaskill and john dickerson are with us to discuss the historic moment. the former stanford student admits making a mistake and admits it in documents obtained by "cbs this morning" news. what would you do for your best friend, the woman who agreed to adopt six children tells us about her life changing. we begin with a look at
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today's eye-opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> first time in our nation's history that a woman will be a major party nominee. >> hillary clinton makes history. >> next tuesday we continue the fight in the last primary in washington, d.c.. >> the last thing we need is hillary clinton in the white house, or an extension of the obama disaster. >> i would like to support our nominee, i just can't. >> whether or not they endorse me, it's okay if they don't, but they have to get over it. they shouldn't be so angry so long. >> you endorsed donald trump last week, how is that sitting? >> well, it could be better. >> a bomb threat now targeting another egyptair jet. the plane from cairo made energy landing in asia. >> pickup truck plowed into a group of bicycle riders in michigan. >> five of the bicycle riders pronounced dead at the scene. >> not happy after a hacker took
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over his account saying the commissioner died. >> everyone in the universe wondered whether or not the commissioner had signed out. >> cleaning up the soggy aftermath of tropical storm colin. >> i don't know what i'm going to do, where i'm going to go next. >> a man tried to kidnap a 13-year-old girl. >> he snatches the girl as her mother desperately hangs onto her. >> all that -- >> here we go. a big-time brawl. >> forbes magazine named hillary clinton the world's second most powerful woman. number one, the lady who tried on the chubb alcoa mask. >> never in my wildest dreams did i think it would take this long. >> on "cbs this morning." >> now she has done it. she has made the impossible possible. she is a woman who has clinched the presidential nomination. that is something you could only see in a sci-fi novel or any
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other country in the world. >> this morning's eye-opener is presented by toyota, let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is off today so anthony mason joins me and gayle. >> good morning. >> great to have you here. as you wake up in the west california is helping hillary clinton make political history. "cbs this morning" news projects clinton wins the largest primary, 57 to 43%. clinton claimed another big victory last night as the first woman to be the presumptive presidential nominee of a major u.s. political party. she told supporters her message is the right one against the republicans and donald trump. >> we believe that cooperation is better than conflict, unity is better than division,
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empowerment is better than resentment, and bridges are better than walls. >> hillary clinton won last night's primaries in california, new mexico, south dakota, and new jersey. bernie sanders won in montana and north dakota. "cbs this morning" estimates clinton now has 2754 delegates and that's nearly 400 more than needed to clinch the nomination. nancy cordes in studio 57, she covered hillary clinton's victory speech last night. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. it was a moment of true celebration for clinton, for her supporters canned wic erers san tougher than expected primary season and shaepg up to be a brutal presidential nomination. the president congratulated her but opponent didn't acknowledge it giving another question mark on a decisive win. >> with a mix of pride and relief clinton claimed the title that narrowly eluded her eight
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years ago. >> the first time in our nation's history that a woman will be a major party's nominee. >> signs of that historic achievement were everywhere, in the audience, across social media, and plastered on her website in large letters. >> tonight belongs to all of you. >> an emotional milestone for women in the crowd like ellen lance berger. >> i'm a doctor. when i was a child i was told i shouldn't go into medicine, it wasn't for women. it's good for women to be in the white house. >> i want to congratulate senator sanders. >> reporter: clinton praised her democratic opponent and supporters on a hard fought campaign. >> it never feels good to put your heart into a cause or a candidate you believe in and to come up short. i know that feeling well.
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but as we look ahead -- [ cheers and applause ] -- let's remember all that unites us. >> but in california, sanders backers were in no mood for unity. >> i had a very gracious call from secretary clinton and congratulated her on her victories tonight. >> and sanders was in no mood to concede. >> we take our fight for social, economic, racial, and environmental justice to philadelphia, pennsylvania. >> but he's also cutting half his staff as clinton solidifies her argument against trump. >> he wants to win by stoking fear and rubbing salt in wounds. and reminds us daily just how great he is. >> sanders now trails clinton by about 900 delegates, but he is doing a campaign rally in d.c.
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tomorrow where just 20 delegates are up for grabs in the nation's final primary next tuesday. clinton starts hitting battleground states on monday. aides say she's going to be focused on two things, guys, unity and trump. >> all right, nancy, thanks so much. donald trump, speaking of mr. trump, wrapped up the republican primary season with a scripted and serious speech promising to unify the party. republican national chairman reince priebus tweeted the trump speech took, quote, exactly the right approach and was perfectly delivered. earlier trump lost more gop support over his comments about the mexican american judge in a lawsuit against trump university. major garrett covered last night's speech. he's with us in studio 57. major, good morning. >> good morning. donald trump was in a fix and staring into a political abyss, so he leaned on every stylistic crutch imaginable, teleprompter, bland remarks, an adoring audience, no questions from
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reporters. victorious to be sure, trump was quiet, cautious, and completely conventional. >> you've given me the honor to lead the republican party to victory this fall. >> relying on teleprompters, donald trump tried to calm republicans alarmed and offended by recent race-based attacks. >> i understand the responsibility of carly the mantel and i will never, ever let you down. >> trump said nothing about the turmoil he set in motion on allegations of bias about a federal judge based on his mexican heritage. instead he tried to woo disaffected democrats. >> to all of those bernie sanders voters who have been left out in the cold by a rigged system of superdelegates, we welcome you with open arms. >> trump spent much of his speech ticking through policy proposal while also laying the groundwork for future attacks on hillary clinton. >> the clintons have turned the
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politics of personal enrichment into an art form for themselves. >> the speech came in an atmosphere of panic and recrimination with republican leaders openly admonishing their standard bearer. >> it's time to quit attacking various people you competed with or various minority groups in the country and get on message. >> do i think that those comments are racist comments. >> earlier tuesday house speaker paul ryan spoke to "face the nation's" john dickerson. >> when anyone in our party, especially our nominee says things that run contrary to our beliefs, our values, our principles, we have an obligation to call him out. >> trump dismissed his critics. >> there's a lot of anger, i guess, anger. they just can't come back. they can't get over it. so they have to get over it ideally. >> trump's message was discipline, something gop leaders have been publicly pleading for but it was too late for republican senators lindsey graham of south carolina, mark kirk of illini and jeff flake of
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arizona all said they could never endorse trump. norah. >> major, thank you. cbs news and political moderator john dickerson is with us. john, good morning. >> good morning, norah. a blowout in california, more than expected, a big win in new jersey, she has the majority of delegates. she's capped this as a historic moment for the country. >> hillary's task is to unify democratic party, not only because she needs sanders supporters but has to grab this moment and focus all the attention on democrats, the country that's watching. talking about the historic moment, which, of course, is no small thing helps do that, helps get everybody kind of singing from the same song sheet. >> bernie sanders says he's fighting on but president obama, senator harry reid will be meeting with him tomorrow. what do you think that conversation will look like. >> heck of a race, think of the enthusiasm, you really helped us all, focused on important issues
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we've all been working on, how great a job you did. let us join and go forward defeating donald trump existential threat to everything we believe together. you'll have a good speech, join the team. then we'll see how he responds. >> can we take a moment to talk about paul ryan for a second. i can't believe he would be happy with this headline. "i'm with racist." you did the interview with him. he seems to be between a rock and hard place. he's criticizing donald trump but saying i'm going to support him for now. >> yesterday was a perfect example of the pickle he was in. he was having an event to talk about his new poverty agenda, first plank in multi-house agenda he wants to sell to the country, conversation about policy and create a mandate to govern. that's on the one hand. on the other hand he has to interrupt that conversation and say the nominee of our party is saying things that are totally antithetical to the core foundation and principles of our
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party. he went back, paul ryan did, how the party was founded on opportunity, equality, the nominee, the fourth time at least paul ryan has had to rebuke donald trump. that doesn't go away. >> is he getting pressure, you think, to walk back his endorsement? >> he is getting pressure from people outside and inside to walk that back. the problem is he's speaker of the house. he has to represent all republicans. on the other hand, how many of these can continue where ideas he's trying to build are being potentially threatened by the nominee. >> do you think the republican party will be unified by the convention? do you think donald trump will be approved as the nominee? is there new talk about someone else? >> to the extent there's talk about someone else, it's maybe wishful thinking or we've seen how little they have been able to do that so far. i think the unity comes in two ways. one they want to remind how much they don't like hillary clinton. two, donald trump spends several months, we just need one month to look at the convention to not have eruptions, that he stays on
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message, stays focused to hillary clinton and he kind of stays within the lines. that so far has been very difficult. >> all right. nice to have you here. >> thanks. >> you can see john's full interview with speaker ryan sunday on "face the nation" here on cbs. congratulations on one year in the chair. >> thank you. >> seems like yesterday. congratulations. united states says chinese fighter jet performed an unsafe intercept of an american spy plane. it happened yesterday over the east china sea at a time of strained relations between the u.s. and china. margaret brennan is at the state department with the latest on this. margaret, good morning. >> good morning. while the chinese jet flew too fast and too close to a u.s. air force surveillance plane on patrol in the east china sea, according to u.s. pacific command who called this an unsafe encounter, fortunately no other provocative maneuvers occurred according to defense
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officials who say this is a case of what they call improper airmanship and they planned to raise it with beijing because it's the second such dangerous incident in less than a month, just a few weeks ago a chinese jet flew within 50 feet of an american plane and that violated safe conduct agreement recently brokered between beijing and washington. tuesday's episode happened the very same day secretary of state john kerry met with china's president to try to cool tensions, which have been rising over a series of territorial disputes with u.s. allies. anthony, in a statement today from china's foreign ministry, they put the blame squarely on washington and called for an end to all u.s. surveillance flights in the waters off of china. >> margaret brennan. thanks, margaret. two f-16 fighter pilots are safe this morning after a midair collision over eastern georgia. their jets collided during a
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routine training mission last night over jefferson county. the pilots ejected and were hospitalized. the f-16s were assigned to south carolina air national guard. a prosecutor considering charges after a deadly hit-and-run that involved bicyclists in michigan. witnesses say a pickup truck hit nine adults riding bikes along the shoulder of a road last night outside kalamazoo. five people died at the scene. four others were taken to the hospital. prosecutor said the community would rally together as it did when an uber driver shot and killed six people in february. >> i'm at a loss to describe how i feel. i'm at a loss to describe the impact to the community from these incidents. >> the 50-year-old truckdriver has not been identified. police were already looking for him after a series of 911 calls reporting erratic driving.
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surveillance video captures terrifying moments and terrifying is the word for this, where a 13-year-old and her mother. a man drags a little girl and drags her across the store at the dollar general store. this happened yesterday west of orlando, florida. the mother jumped on top of her daughter to try to stop attempted abduction. luckily off duty sheriff's deputy just happened to be in the parking lot. he stopped the suspect from getting away. the 30-year-old man is now charged with kidnapping stand child abuse. his mossive is unknown here. the teenager we're happy to say was shaken but not seriously hurt. >> was that just random he was trying to abduct the girl. >> it's not clear what's happening but it's very scary. security exports renewing warnings about password safety after high-profile hacking victim. roger goodell was the target. hackers took over the league's twitter account yesterday and falsely claimed that goodell had
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died. our streaming network with,000 this happened. good morning. >> you might call roger goodell lazarus, back from the dead. in recent days hackers took over the accounts of facebook ceo mark zuckerberg, which raises the question if a social ceo can be attacked, how about yours. >> tried to make life by tweeting this proof of life photo. man, you leave the office for onone day of golf with jim kelly and your own network kills you off. #harsh. on tuesday hackers posted these message on nfl's twitter account claiming goodell was dead. >> almost everything to a certain degree is hackable when you reach a certain status, people want to take you down. it's almost a goal. >> the hackers claimed they found nfl's twitter password in a social media e-mail. other hackers able to break into
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mark zuckerberg's twitter and pinterest pages because he apparently had used the same password for his linkedin account. that site was breached in 2012. user data from 100 million members was exposed. >> everyone that's watching has a password that is the same on at least one other service. so because it sounds low tech, it's more human >> he believes passwords will soon be replaced by biometrics. >> facial recognition, iris scanning as well as fingerprint detection. it's going to get to the point this is how we actually log into our sites. >> and twitter told "cbs this morning," quote, we recommend people use a unique and strong password for twitter. linked in said all members should take care to manage and change passwords across other
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sites. have you to avoid reusing the same password. it's hard to do but makes a difference and try to leverage advanced security features and update often, gayle. >> it's hard to keep track of all of them, neen,a, thank you very much. good roger goodell took it in stride. >> to see your obituary, a little scary. new details about the controversy for jail sentence of former stanford swimmer who sexually assaulted an unconscious woman.
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boxer... will be succeeded another democratic your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. california's retiring u.s. senator barbara boxer will be succeeded by another democratic woman. state attorney general kamala harris managed to get 40% of the votes at a crowded field of 34 candidates. loretta sanchez will be in second. they will run off in november. in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning," final preparations for muhammad ali's memorial service. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,,,
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i'm sandra osborne in fact "kcbs traffic center." a crash on eastbound 24 at acalanes. a rollover crash impacting two lanes now blocking them. 17 miles per hour. we are seeing some slow-and-go conditions through that area. another crash on westbound 580 at grant line road is causing some delays off to the shoulder of the road with speeds around there about 7 miles per hour and another one coming out of sausalito southbound 101 at rodeo avenue. roberta. >> good morning. when i refer to a gray slate, this is what i am really talking about. look at coit tower. with a gray slate. it's low clouds and fog and drizzle. it's the marine layer and it's pushed at least a good 60 miles inland right now temperatures very mild 50s and 60s. later today, minimal sunshine at best along the coast in the 60s. otherwise full forecast away from the bay into the 80s. cooler today than yesterday. warmer over the weekend. ,,,,,,,,
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a pilot and his two passengers survived an emergency landsing on a canadian glacier. the 81-year-old pilot, his name is vern hannah, was on a day trip with passengers near whistler, north of vancouver, when the plane hit a strong downdraft. hannah got the plane down on the glacier. no one was hurt, and rescue crews reached them the next day. >> that's when you say experience really matters. >> goodness. what a picture. >> 81 years old. go, mr. hannah. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up, the former stanford swimmer convicted of sexual assault says drinking made him do it. we have the court documents that the judge reviewed before handing down a sentence that critics say is way too short. plus, only on "cbs this morning," a shoplifting crackdown faces controversy.
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a city attorney shows why he considers one company's strategy extortion. ahead, the step he's taking that could impact stores across the country. time to show some of the headlines -- "the new york times" reports on a strategic shift by the fbi in terrorism cases. the agency is increasing its use of stings to catch people suspected of helping isis. undercover operations now account for about two-thirds of such prosecutions. critics all is it entrapment. nearly 90 americans have been charged with trying to help the islamic state. "the oklahoman" reports an energy executive's death may not have been suicide as originally thought. oklahoma police don't have enough evidence to prove that aubrey mcclendon intentionally crashed his suv last march. he had been indicted the day before on charges of conspiring to rig energy bids. the charges were dismissed after the crash. investigators say they don't know what caused the accident. "the salt lake tribune"
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reports on a leopard's escape from a zoo. a 4-year-old leopard vanished yesterday from the salt lake city zoo. it was found an hour later sleeping near a public area. the zoo went on lockdown during the search. visitors took shelter. the leopard was tranquilized, and nobody hurt. >> apparently lying on a strut overhead. can you imagine walking around the corner and seeing a leopard? "usa today" reports on rio officials trying to ease fears about the zika virus ahead of the olympics. many high-profile athletes have ex-pesed concern. officials in brazil say after hosting test events with 7,000 athletes, there are no reported cases of foreigners contracting zika. the virus is linked to severe birth defects. wesleyan with 37, and the university of virginia with 35. nearly 100 colleges and
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universities had at least ten reports of rape on their campuses in 2014. victims advocates say many cases would have gone unreported in the past. in fact, there's been a lot of criticism that these universities were not soliciting or keeping these records until just recently. >> that's why it's good to release the report as disturbing as it is. upsetting. new details from the controversial sentencing of a stanford university swimmer convicted of sexual assault. the information comes from a probation report obtained by cbs news. brock turner apologized and blamed partying for his bad behavior. the judge who sentenced him faces attacks from critics who say turner should spend more than six months in jail. john plaquestone is outside the -- joh
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calls for treatment rather than incarceration. in court documents obtained by cbs news, brock turner expressed remorse for his actions, say, "i would give anything to change what happened that night. i made a mistake. i drank too much, and my decisions hurt someone." the former stanford swimmer is serving a six-month jail penalty for three counts of sexual assault. the sentencing itself has become controversial. many call it too lenient. >> the judge really bent over backwards in order to give this man a light sentence. >> reporter: hundreds of thousands are calling for the judge who handed down the punishment, aaron persky, to be removed from the bench. others say he was fair. in an interview for the probation report last month, the victim herself said, "i want him to be punished. but as a human, i just want him to get better. he doesn't need to be behind bars." >> the judge did a tremendous
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job in deriving this sentence. >> reporter: public defender gary goodman knows persky well and says he doesn't deserve the backlash he's receiving. >> the fact that people are calling his courtroom and threatening him and his family, hoping that he degrees badly, that's just rick -- that he dies badly. that's ridiculous. >> reporter: persky received at least 39 letters from family and friends advocating for the 20-year-old. his sister wrote, "a series of alcohol-fueled decisions will define him for the rest of his life." the sexual assault conviction spans from a 2015 fraternity party on campus. witnesses described the woman lying on her back motionless while turner aggressively thrust his hips into her in the grass near a dumpster. >> she was unconscious. i checked her, and she didn't move at all. >> reporter: when the victim read an emotional letter in court last week, she said she was severely disappointed by his failure to exhibit remorse or responsibility.
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san francisco this morning hopes a new tactic will stop auted ute company's controversial -- utah's acontroversial approach to shoplifters. according to court documents, major retailers including walmart, bloomingdales, and burlington coat factory have had private security agreements with the firm. only on "cbs this morning," the san francisco city attorney shows anna werner why he's asking for a conjunction against what he calls extortion against the suspects. >> reporter: good morning. cec was founded by two harvard graduates with a goal of using what's called restorative justice instead of jail to teach shoplifters to reform. the san francisco city attorney alleges the program is breaking the law to make money at the expense of the people it promises to help.
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this video comes from correction education company. it's shown to people allegedly caught shoplifting in stores. >> right now, the agents who have detained you are preparing a case against you. >> reporter: the video tells them they could go to jail. but cec's program offers them another option -- sign an admission of guilt, pay as much as $500, and participate in an online course. then move on with their lives without a criminal record. >> the offender funds their educational program -- >> reporter: company official jeff powers explained it this way in a video on their website -- >> this is a story of complete the cec educational program re-offend. this former dallas police chief applauds it in another video from the company. >> the cec program provides the opportunity for someone who makes a mistake to correct that mistake. >> reporter: san francisco city
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attorney dennis herrera doesn't agree. you're calling it extortion. >> i am calling it extortion. absolutely. >> reporter: herrera is suing the company and wants an injunction to stop it from "contracting with retailers to threaten suspects with arrest and criminal prosecution unless they watch the video in a secluded room with security guards." >> you're falsely imprisoned in this intimidating environment with no counsel, no representation. and i don't think there's any doubt whatsoever that it's extortion and false imprisonment. >> reporter: the company declined an interview but told us in a statement it has worked closely with law enforcement agencies and prosecutors in california and across the country to ensure that we are complying with the law. herrera says the company's program doesn't provide the protections offered by the courts and alleges cec sends letters to harass and intimidate those who don't pay. >> this is sort of pseudo-criminal justice for nothing more than pure profit of
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private entities. >> reporter: we reached out to participating retailers but didn't get responses. the company operates nationwide. it says in california 90% of people who watched the video enrolled and paid. the city attorney believes, however, that they felt they had no choice. >> an interesting story. >> it is. >> this is a huge problem for retailers. way bigger than i think most realize. >> right. the statement from retailers is it doesn't cost them money. they say it attacks recidivism. the attorney says you don't sign an admission of guilt before somebody prosecutes you. >> you know you took that skirt. >> if they do -- and it's on camera. >> on camera. >> and it might be. we're going to stay on this investigation. if you know someone who's gone through the cec program, visit cbsthismorning.com. we want you to leave a comment on this story.
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>> please do. please look twice before throwing away old food. the expiration date on the package. and next, oscar winner meryl streep takes on a huge role, you could say. why she impersonated donald trump. she looks pretty good. there's donald trump right there. norah, you should see your face. >> that does not look like donald trump. that's not -- >> after a bad
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christine baransky, imitating hillary clinton. it was parts of a gala benefit in monday's central park. >> i don't think donald's going like that impression. >> i agree. >> i don't think he was meant to. >> that's true. a woman makes an incredible lifetime promise to her best friend. ahead, the inspiring story of how a family with three kids became a family of nine. >> wow. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." hi, i'm phil mickelson. i've been fortunate enough to win on golf's biggest stages. but when joint pain and stiffness from psoriatic arthritis hit... even the smallest things became difficult. so i talked to my rheumatologist... and he prescribed enbrel... to help relieve joint pain and help stop further joint damage. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal, events including infections, tuberculosis... lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common...
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your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning. 32-year-old iyona hammond will be arraigned after she allegedly stabbed a 12-year-old boy with scissors at a san leandro bank on monday. the boy needed a 90-minute surgery to survive the attack. and the bay area voters proved they are willing to pay a parcel tax for the sake of local marshland. measure aa got the two-thirds majority vote that it needed. it entails a parcel tax of $12 a year for 20 years to restore marshland. coming up on "cbs this morning" hillary clinton shifts her focus to donald trump. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. ,, ,,,,,,
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good morning. i'm sandra osborne in the "kcbs traffic center." westbound 80 a big slowdown this morning. there is a stalled big rig there causing slowdowns down to 13 miles per hour as people go there. southbound 101 shoulder blocked at rivera avenue. no major delays. the bay bridge we are beginning to see that time creep up that drive time on 80 from the carquinez bridge to the maze. it will take about 46 minutes this morning. roberta. >> good morning. it is live. it's our weather camera and it's on top of the transamerica pyramid time around, we're looking east towards the bay bridge. you cannot see the east bay, port of oakland there. visibility is limited due to the low clouds and fog and drizzle. temperatures are nice in the 50s and low 60s. couple of degrees warmer at this hour than 24 hours ago. today sunshine back to the beaches. minimal sunshine at pacifica at 64. 60s common around the bay. 70s peninsula through the 70s to around 84 degrees inland. ,,,,,,,,
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it is june 8th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs morning news." colorful mccaskill talks about what comes next for hillary clinton. >> a moment of true celebration for hillary clinton. her opponent didn't acknowledge it. >> she needs to unify the party. she has to grab this moment. >> hello. >> donald trump informs a fix, so he laned on every stylistic
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crush imaginable. he was quiet, cautious, and conventional. >> the chinese jet flew too close to a u.s. surveillance plane and it was called an unsafe encounter. >> roger goddell back from the dead. >> and now they are disbursing. once they get to this section, they're being told that all of the tickets are gone, all 15,000. >> hillary clinton is now the presumptive presidential nominee, making her the first woman to be nominated for president by a majors party. today president obama marked the occasion by saying -- not yet, hillary. i'm gayle king with norah o'donnell and anthony mason. charlie is off today. good to see you. >> nice to see you. hillary clinton is embracing her
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historical role this morning. she is america's first female presumptive presidential nominee of a major political party. the frosting on the cake was her four major victories including california. bernie sanders only one two states. >> hillary clinton now has 2764 delegates, that is 911 more than sanders and more than she needs to clinch the nomination. last night she thanked her supporters and thanked the most important woman in her life. >> my mother believed life was about serving others and she taught me never to back down from a bully, which turns out was pretty good advice. i wish she could be here tonight. i wish she could see her daughter become the democratic party's nominee.
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>> dorothy rodham would have turned 97 this past saturday. >> with us from capitol hill is claire mccaskill. one of the first women in congress to endorse clinton nearly two years before she started her campaign. you have not been late to the hillary clinton party. it was pure joy on her face last night. i can only imagine what everyone was thinking. what does it mean to you personally and to the country? >> like hillary clinton last night, i really missed my mother. she was someone that when i was 7 years old insisted i say trick or treat and vote nor jfk. >> you tweeted a very touching picture of your mother last night. >> yes, she made me believe from a young age that serving the public was honorable and that women could do anything.
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last night i think far lot of women around the country was a special moment. we tried to keep from busting out in a big grin, because we all knew what yesterday meant in terms of the history of our country and the struggles that so many women have gone through. i thought her speech was particularly uplifting in recognizing what our country is all about. >> senator, on to the campaign now and what we're looking at in november, there was a interesting quote from senator gillibrand, people are so undecided about how they feel about female leadership and it is something they struggle with. do you think that the fact that she is a woman will in any way be an obstacle for her? >> i think for some people it will be and for other people it will be a big plus. frankly this is a different kind of election. as she said last night, this is
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not about republican policies versus democratic policies. it is whether or not we're going to put into the oval office someone who is vulgar and makes frequent racist comments, who makes it up as he goes along. he is risky and reckless. he has been a bafoon and would be a bafoon on the world stage. i think america has to come together, break down barriers, unite and build bridges. not focus on the ridiculous notion that mexico is going to build a wall. >> we saw trump ridicule and go off of a tell prompt ter. >> i think the only part that he can claim is the fact that he
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removed the apology for the racist and bigoted comments he made. >> hillary in the primaries did very well with african-americans, hispanics, and seniors. but very poorly with young voters, how does she get the young vote? >> bernie has to be part of that. >> do you expect that he will? >> this campaign for him, as he said all along is about issues. there could not be a bigger gulf between how people view the issues and between hillary clinton and donald trump. and i think for bernie, the irony of this is that he began the campaign saying we need to let the people decide, not the super delegates. now he is saying never mind the people, let's let the super delegates decide. >> he says he will take it all of the way, is now the time to step aside? >> i think we need to get time.
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i have so much respect for what he did and his supporters. i think we're stronger because of it in our party. i think overtime this will all come together. i know that he cares deeply about baking sure that donald trump's finger is never near the button. >> you said you don't want to be her running mate, but is there a possibility of a two-woman ticket? >> i want her to make a thoughtful strong decision about someone who could take over if there was a tragedy. i don't think she will hesitate for a minute to choose anyone for that position whether they're a woman, a man, or whatever their ethnicity or heritage. >> okay, good to see you this morning. thank you so much. >> i like your glasses. >> thank you. thanks, gayle. >> glasses are the perfect accessory, i ahead about it in
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in our "morning rounds," in our morning rounds, why the expiration dates on many foods are confusing to customers. 91% of customers have thrown away perfectly good food because the date on the food is past. now there is a push to create a federal standard for food dating labels. we have the director of harvard food law policy clinic with us.
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explain the three main kinds of date labels. sell by, best if used by, and use by, what do they mean. >> right now, many of them are on your food products and they're -- sell-by is meant to tell the store when they should take it off of the shelf, but the others are about quality and freshness. they will say this is when everyone thought my product still tasted good, and they're not about safety been. >> aren't safety and quality both important? >> safety means it was contaminated, you could get e coli or salmonella. quality is not about getting sick, it is just if you think it tastes good. >> i could think it does, and you -- >> if i don't buy it by then,
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it's going to kill me. >> what is the stamp of the milk. does that mean you have to drink it by that date or that is for the store to sell it. >> milk is a great example. usually the store went tell is after that, but most consumers throw that date away, but it is a very good example. it is pasteurized, it kills all harmful contaminants. even when it is sour, it can still be safe. >> if it smells bad -- >> there is no national system for food dating, but you support a bill that would create something more uniform? >> right, i think what would be really fantastic is what this bill does is dividing food into two categories. most foods would now say best if used by, and the small handful
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of foods will say expires on. so you can open your fridge and say these foods i can eat them after the date if they still taste good to me, and these i should throw away. >> what products should have expiration dates, no question about it. >> there are a few, deli meats and unpasteurized cheeses. they're safe, but after the date they might become unsafe, and it would still be up to the food and drug administration to make a list of those. >> i know there are many grocery stores that sell meat and milk past expiration date. sometimes you are in a hurry and then you get home and it's past date. >> norah taking note. thank you. >> i never pay attention, i will. first on cbs this morning -- i don't cook, either.
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were left behind. only on "cbs this morning," dana jacobson is here with culley's first network interview. good morning. >> good morning. what would you do if a dear friend who was dying asked you to care for her children? six of them ranging in ages from 2 to 15? for stephanie culley, her husband, and their three kids, the answer was simple -- open their home and their hearts. they may not share a last name, but this is the very definition of family. stephanie culley's expanding family. finding joy in little ways after being brought together by grief. >> i wanted her to live so much. no mother ever deserves to live and raise her kids as much as her. i mean, they needed her. >> reporter: stephanie is talking about beth lightcap, a single mom and dear friend who leaned on stephanie while battling cancer this past year. and in april when doctors told beth they'd run out of treatment options, stephanie was the only
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option to take care of her children. >> what about my babies? she was never worried about herself. she was never worried about anything but them, and she looked to me and said, can you do there for me? can you do this? >> reporter: you said to your husband -- >> yeah. >> reporter: six kid? what did he say? >> he took a long pause and said, we'll do what we have to do. >> reporter: when you went back and you were able to say to beth, we can do this, what did she say? >> we cried together. i told her that i would love them, i would never be able to love them like she would, but i would do the very best that i could. >> reporter: the best has been better than anyone could have imagined.
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is it kind of crazy? here? >> yes, yes, very much. >> but it feels like home. >> reporter: the hallways of the culley home are little bit louder, and the piles of laundry, they've tripled. that's 14 -- but beth's 14-year-old daurghter says it's easier than expected. >> we all have each other, and if feels like home. >> reporter: tell me about your mom. >> she was a really good mom. i know we meant everything to her. >> reporter: how does she remind you of your mom? >> she pretty much does the same thing and loves us. >> we're grieving, but we know she's with us. she used to joke and say when one of them's acting up and you don't see it, i'm going to be tapping you on the shoulder. >> reporter: who's the biggest troublemaker nir group? >> i would say jackson. >> reporter: lily, you agree,
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huh? >> jack. >> reporter: what is it that jackson does? >> everything. >> it's true. ♪ happy birthday dear >> reporter: the family's trying to find a new normal by just living life. last sunday, ace, the youngest of beth lightcap's kids, turned 2. i'm not a saint. i'm not an angel. i'm not a hero, i just love these kids. to walk in the door and see all of them in the living room dancing and playing and happy, that's what it's all about. >> reporter: right now the culleys have temporary custody of the kids with a july hearing for permanent custody. i asked stephanie if they're planning on eventually adopting them. she said some of the kids have already asked about getting the culley last name, and that that decision, though, will be up to them. >> oh, boy. >> yeah. >> looks like an angel to me. >> i agree. >> what a -- you can't get a bigger compliment than the kids saying, guys, it feels like home. >> yeah. >> keep an eye on jackson, though.
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>> what a gift she gave her friend who was dying. >> so selfless. yamada were the top two finishers in the district 3 state sene race. the district includes napa, yolo good morning. it's 8:25. time for news headlines. democrats bill dodd was one of the top three finishes. the district is napa, solano and yolo counties. the warriors can take a 3-0 lead in the nba finals if they win game 3 tonight. they play the cavaliers at 6 p.m. coming up on "cbs this morning," the story of the women of the smash broadway musical "hamilton." next next. that's next. ,,,,,,,,,,
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8:27. several traffic incidents including this one at southbound 101 at hillcrest boulevard the crash is on the right shoulder accuse causing slowdowns. northbound 280 before 880 a big rig is involved with this one. it's typically already busy there so we are seeing some delays because of this. and a stalled big rig on westbound 80 causing delays as
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you approach the bay bridge this morning. we are seeing speeds just about 13 miles per hour out there. here's a live look at the nimitz freeway right now from 238 to the maze. it's about 45 minutes. roberta? >> i just love, love, love this view. it's our live weather camera from mount vaca. we can see we have sunshine inland. but look at that layer of low clouds and fog. it's the marine layer. it's surged onshore past mount diablo that you see there all the way inland. so it's going to take a while to see burnoff today. 50s and 60s. as you begin wednesday, 50s and 60s. later today clouds to the coast, minimal sunshine in pacifica at 64. otherwise, 60s common around the rim of the bay to the 70s around the peninsula. climbing to the low and mid-80s inland. 84 the outside number so cooler today's. we'll hang on to the forecast on thursday. temperatures higher on the weekend. ,,,, ,,
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wake up, everybody. here's something to put a smile on your face. gorgeous time-lapse view of the sunrise over new york city. that's pretty. a reminder, share your sunrise shots with us on instagram. post them with the hash tag #sunrisethismorning. orange and yellow always a good combo, i think. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, what are the best restaurants in the country? "food and wine" magazine is unveiling a new list. some of the new restaurants offer more than just a tasty meal. plus, history is happening for the women of the hit musical "hamilton." we speak with the three actresses who portray socialite sisters. ahead, how their characters from the 18th century can inspire
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women today. now it's time to show some of the morning's headlines. the creator of that show, lynn manuel miranda, wrote an opinion piece in "the new york times" calling for a crackdown on ticket bots. miranda blames the automated software for gobbling up tickets to popular shows like "hamilton." they're then sold at a marked up price. it's illegal to use bots in new york. miranda is urging passage of a state bill that imposes harsh penalties on repeat offenders. he says, "you shouldn't have to fight robots just to see something you love." bloomberg says china is planning a massive sea lab 10,000 feet under the ocean. it would be in the disputed waters of the south china sea. the exact location is unknown. the deep-sea platform would help china hunt for minerals, but there's concern it may also serve a military purpose. a government agency in china says it is not designed to be used against any country or region. new york's "daily news" news" reports that tiger woods won't play in the u.s. open next
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week. woods says he's not physically ready. his comeback troubles were clear to see recently when he hit three balls into the water. he is recovering from two back surgeries from last year. woods has not completed a tournament since august. this is the third time in the last six years that he's missed the u.s. open. >> sorry to see that. >> nice shot of him on the 10th green on the course at congressional country club. >> not done, though. >> he's not done. he'll be back. "usa today" reports on the worldwide slowdown in smartphone sales. an industry group expects global sales to rise 7% this year. sales growth last year was 14.4%. analysts say many global market vs. reachedments -- markets have reached the saturation point of 90% and the latest innovations aren't compelling enough to make people change phones. "time" reports that america is not making any headway in the fight against fat. one study shows that 40% of u.s. women were obese in 2013 to '14.
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the rate for men was 35%. the second study of the year is 2011 to 2014 and found 17% of children and adolescents were obese. the researchers say restaurants and the food industry must get involved to confront the problem. and the "washington post" reports on fish being able to recognize human faces. the fish are known for their water spinning skill. they can spin at certain faces. seems they can distinguish one human face from another. something never before witnessed in a fish. they also had surprisingly good memories. >> i always told my children i was convinced my goldfish knew who i was. >> now there is scientific proof. >> was he spinning at you? >> and they recognized me when i came home at night. they didn't believe me. here's the evidence. first on "cbs this morning," "food and wine" magazine unveils its second annual list of restaurants of the year. the magazine's pick for the ten best new places to eat in america will be in the upcoming
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july issue. the restaurants range from an inexpensive los angeles eatery with a new approach to fast food to a washington, d.c., spot that sources all of its ingredients from the mid-atlantic region. all ten picks have opened since january, 2015. editor nilou motamed is here to reveal the list. >> good morning. >> as i mentioned you in the green room, my first job ever was at "food and wine" magazine in 1978. i'm excited that you're here. >> i love the fact that you left it in such good shape. thank you very much. >> it all started with me. you've got a cool list here. and one of the -- one of the restaurants on the list, loco in watts is, a fast food restaurant. >> we love this concept because these two chefs, roy choy and dana patterson, both of whom have been "food and wine" best new chefs recently have teamed up to create something they hope will revolutionize the fast food industry. this is not fast food as you
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think about it. it's healthy. >> no soda, no french fries? >> no sewed ano french fries. they're sneaking tofu and healthy thing into things like cheeseburger. >> sneaking? >> you know -- >> they're expanding. they're going to make a chain. >> they're using this as an incubator. they've opened up in oakland. they're going to be opening up in other areas that are basically food wastelands. the idea of serving underserved communities with food that's both healthy and affordable. no dishes are over $6. the idea of us focusing on new restaurant that are making a change to their community. there's another restaurant called cala in san francisco where the chef is not only creating amazing food, you can go for the mexican food. you also go and don't even realize that she's hiring nonviolent felons to work in her kitchen because she saw this there was a need, and she's addressing it. >> giving back in a different way. what makes your list? it's more than just good food? >> it's good food. good ambiance. it's the idea of the fact that
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the restaurant has -- it's exciting that it is more than the sum of its part. we criss-cross the country all year long looking for talent. and this list of restaurants is really the ten most exciting places that are new to eat in the u.s. right now. >> one of the interesting trends you've found is restauranteurs using spaces that are -- that are different in order to transform into a place where you can eat and enjoy good food. >> there's a place in austin, and it's a former laundromat. great food, again, fun. they're reusing a space. and rene ortiz, the chef, is phenomenal. another place called death and taxes. you can guess why -- >> i love this. it was actually a mortuary? >> it was a mortuary and a bank. the cheeky chef -- >> what's the energy there? i don't know about that. >> the chef is -- >> does atmosphere count? >> atmosphere is 100% great. what's great about ashley christiansen is she's so committed to cooking over live fire, she shipped a 1,900-pound grill from texas to get that
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>> and in d.c., dabney's? i would like to go there. >> dabney is fascinating because the chef is so committed to using local ingredients that he only uses ingredients from the mid-atlantic. we all know the northeast and mid-atlantic, not great as a food spot all year. but he's also created a garden that he cooks from, again, in the middle of d.c. >> you say restaurants are moving away from the traditional white tablecloth experience. and that experience is really a big part of this now. >> experience is crucial. i think there's a -- there's room for fine dining, but there's room for these places that feel very much like they're -- that they're a reflection of the point of view of the chef? it's not everything for everyone at these restaurants. this is a unique experience, singular experience. the most important thing is that these restaurants make you feel like you have to be at them. i think the restaurant in new
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orleans is doing a phenomenal job of bringing teleashe to upper magazine -- tel aviv to upper magazine street. you have house-baked pita, hummus. you eat with your hands. a few years ago you wouldn't have anticipated having that in new orleans. >> people like to watch the chef cook? is that a home run for people? >> i think it's fun to see the chef being engaged. and at monteverde this is fun. in chicago, another restaurant that's become seminal to its neighborhood in the west loop. you can literally watch an italian grandmother, does not speak a word of english, making pasta. you order pasta and watch her making it for you, and it comes out to you. >> i'm hungry. >> like it. ⌞> i'm glad i did that. that's my job. >> three of the top chefs are women. >> we're happy to see women excelling in the culinary field. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. >> very nice to meet you. nice job. nilou motamed, thank you. this year's tony award relies on sisters along with the founding fathers.
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all that -- >> and all that matter -- >> all that. >> charlie rose. >> that was good. >> all that -- >> all that -- >> all that matters. >> on cbs -- >> on cbs -- >> on "cbs this morning." >> charlie. >> how was that, charlie? >> that's as good as it's been done. all that and all that matters. all that matters. ♪ love, love, love this. powerful women, they're making a name for themselves in "hamilton" just like the women they play. broadway's biggest hit goes into sunday's tony awards with a record 16 nominations. they include nods for two of the three actresses who play the schuyler sisters. jamie wax spoke with the trio about working on this groundbreaking show. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. yes, phillipa soo and elise
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goldsberry and jasmine cephas jones joined us at the historic society where a summer celebration of "hamilton" is underway. they talked about the musical's sudden success and being the women in a spotlight in a show about america's founding fathers. ♪ thomas jefferson compel him ♪ >> reporter: the three of you are the most famous sisters of the moment in pop culture, but oddly, none of you grew up with a sister. does that deepen your bond? >> yeah, it does. i feel like -- >> yeah. >> i've discovered a sisterhood being with these ladies. i think it's just amazing to be in a group of women, in a group of people that you can spend enough time with them to really get to know people and be inspired by them and learn something new about them every day. >> we will know each other for a lifetime. >> i know. >> reporter: did anybody tell you in the beginning this sounds like a terrible idea or this is
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crazy? >> nobody knew. ♪ >> everybody that is kind of in this community, actors, artist, they all said, that sounds incredible. when can i see it? ♪ when it started, it was so exciting. it seemed like these old people that would never listen to hip-hop ever in their life, to see them crying, bawling their eyes out and feeling inspired. it's amazing like what art can do. ♪ thinking past tomorrow >> reporter: have you been able to feel the impact that you have had and your show has had? >> it's hard to not feel it. we try to stay a little oblivious because we have to show up every day and not think that the mountain is too high to climb. seeps in in a really beautiful way. >> all i wanted to do was create
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theater for us, for our generation, for the people of this planet. and it's so rare that the art that you are making is reaching a huge mass of people. ♪ >> i remembered going on itunes and "hamilton" was like the number-one rap album above like fetty wap which is just -- >> impossible. >> impossible like a broadway cast album. ♪ >> reporter: i'd have to single out "satisfied." you must have been blown away whether that piece of music was first handed to you. >> it was. it's the reason why i'm a part of the show. ♪ my brother has no i just don't think that i've ever heard a character so succinctly describe who they are. i like to say that it's the moment in the show where a
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character takes -- takes the mask that you think you've been seeing and does this. ♪ patiently waiting >> reporter: musically it seems to be a cross between stephen sondheim and nicki minaj and as difficult as anything created by those artists. >> it's well written. what's beautiful is that he doesn't pander. lin doesn't think this is what women do or this is what an audience could handle. do you know what i'm saying? he just wrote, and thank god he did that because then our job as an artist is to live up to something. >> as much as we are trying to live up to it, that it lives up to us as living, breathing -- >> yes -- >> women of this century. what does that mean? what kind of material can we really sink our teeth into. >> yeah, or that can define us even. >> yeah. yeah. it's incredible. such a great diagram of the thought process of a brilliant woman. and the cool thing is that's not
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a woman from 2016. do you know what i mean? i don't know that we thought that these women that we're portraying thought in the way as revolutionary as we think we are. and we know that they did now, and that that is -- that's empowering to all women of all time, i think. >> reporter: no matter how the tonys go on sunday, these women can rest assured that their legacies with this show are well secured for sure. >> they'll be bonded for life. you go, god, i want to see it again. i want to see it again. >> find from the company, they feel like a win for the show is a win for the team. >> nice. >> however it goes in the 16 nominations, i think they'll be happy. >> you don't think it's going to be a rough night. >> if you can't see the play, at least deficit the music. >> there's -- least get the music. >> there's so much available for everybody no matter where you live. >> you can watch the 70th annual tony awards this sunday at 8:00, 7:00 central on cbs. the legacy of an here oak police officer makes its way to
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alejandro valedez jr. >> this 6-year-old boy never got to meet his dad. his father, a chicago police officer, was gunned down in the line of duty three months before his son was born. so on friday, police stood in line -- stood in for the late officer alejandro valedez at the boy's kindergarten graduation. the head of the department led a huge police celebration at the school. alejandro valedez's partner remembered the officer's excitement over becoming a dad. >> he was really excited. you know, he carried his ultrasound photo with him, you know. we both have boys, so -- >> alejandro jr. called it the
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your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 8:55. time for news headlines. 32- year-old iyona hammond will be arraigned today after she allegedly stabbed a 12-year-old boy with a pair of scissors at a san leandro bank on monday. the boy needed a 90-minute surgery to survive the attack. two students from novato high school are set to be arraigned today for the murder of a classmate and the attempted murder of another. carlos enriquez and edwin guevera are accused of shooting and stabbing the victims on a hiking trail last month. the warriors could take a commanding 3-0 lead in the nba finals if they win game 3 tonight. they play the cavs in cleveland at 6:00. the warriors are hosting a watch party at oracle arena.
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go, "dubs"! >> yes. go "dub nation"! good morning. this is a beautiful view from our mount vaca cam looking out toward mount vaca and mount diablo. there's a marine layer that gives you a good indication that surged inland 45, 50 miles. it's going to take a while to see the clouds return today. sunshine at the coast in the mid-50s. 59 in oakland. 60 mountain view. upper 50s in fairfield. very mild. later today 64 pacifica to 81 degrees in fairfield. bested by 84 in brentwood. 78 san jose. seasonable temperatures. west winds 10 to 20. more cooling friday with a trough passing through the bay area. warmer on the weekend. sandra osborne is next with traffic.
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8:58. i'm sandra osborne in the traffic center. coming into san francisco, one of these northbound 101 at alemany boulevard, the fast lane is blocked causing minor delays heading into the city. and northbound 280 at mission street as you approach 101, there's a two-car crash there, as well. also causing some minor slowdowns in an already very busy area. okay. 80 westbound has been seeing some major delays all throughout the morning. a stalled big rig causing issues approaching the bay bridge down to 17 to 26 miles per hour as your driving speed towards the the bay bridge. have a great wednesday.
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wayne: ah! you've got the big deal of the day! jonathan: yeah, girl! it's a trip to bermuda! - bigger isn't always better! jonathan: you won a car! - aw, yeah! - zonks are no fun! - big deal, baby! 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." i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. i need three people right now. three of you, let's make a deal. let's see, with the bucket. next... with the hat, with the sombrero, yes, sir. and lastly, the unicorn or you're a little animal, yes, you, whatever you are, kimberly, stand right there. everybody have a seat, welcome to the show, kimberly.
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