tv CBS This Morning CBS July 9, 2016 5:00am-7:01am PDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is july 9th, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." terrifying. new details about the former soldier whose rampage left five police officers dead in dallas. plus, remembering lives lost while protecting others. we speak to the family of the officers killed in the ambush. >> across america thousands hit the streets. plus the presidential candidates take to television to address a week of heartache.
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we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> we are heart broken. there are no words to describe the atrocity that occurred to our city. >> it's a sniper? >> dallas mourns after the ambush. >> we got a guy with a long rifle and don't know where the hell he is at. >> police identify the gunman as micah xavier johnson. a lonist and army reservist. >> they think the police shooting this past week were the triggers, if you will, that prompted him to act. >> demonstrators taking to the streets again in several cities. >> trouble in phoenix. >> pepper sprayed children. you have to go as far as doing that, you're the problem. >> the two murders must be addressed by the law enforcement in congress. if we fail to act, this will be a long, hot summer. >> we must stand in solidarity
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with law enforcement which we must remember is the force between civilization and total chaos. >> we have got to start treating each other with respect and dignity. >> all that. >> president obama will cut short his european trip to return home sunday and he will also travel to dallas early next week. >> and all that matters. >> texas rangers would like to take a moment to pause and remember those who have lost their lives in tragic events across our nation in the last week. >> on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> as protests continue against the violence that has sent america into mourning, the father of a fallen hero makes a plea for peace. >> it doesn't matter whether you're black, white, green, purple. we need to all get along. this has to stop. my son paid the ultimate price to take care of people.
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>> good morning. i'm anthony mason. >> i'm vinita nair. president obama is cutting short his overseas visit with nato and european leaders to e of two black men at the hand of police officers this week. protests against those killings continued across the country friday. last night in phoenix, police in riot gear used pepper spray against protesters. some of whom threw rocks at police. three people were arrested. six were injured. however, most of country's protests were peaceful. >> this morning, we are learning more about the gunman. investigators say micah johnson was massing an arsenal at his home outside of dallas. johnson was an afghan war veteran. his tour of duty ended in 2014 when he was sent back to the
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united states after a female soldier accused him of sexual harassment. manuel bojorquez is in dallas with the latest. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. with the gunman dead and believed to be the only person involved in the attack, the dallas mayor has now said he believes the city is safe and can move on to healing. but given the horror that played out on these streets, that could take a long time. this cell phone video shows the gunman targeting an officer. a gun fight ensues. the officer goes down. the attack unfolded in downtown dallas thursday night just as a march in solidarity with victims of police shootings, attended by 800 people was wrapping up. the shooter kept firing. even as officers rushed to help the injured. protesters ran for cover and provided almost instant live feed of the ambush on social
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media. one of them was freelance photographer michael bautista. >> i was literally maybe 20 yard away, 30 yards away. >> close enough to see an officer go down? >> yes. close enough to see the ricochetses of bullets hitting off glass and metal. >> reporter: cbs news has learned that after the initial shootingsing, the gunman ran into a nearby college where he reportedly shot through windows and doors was eventually cornered by police on the second floor of a campus building. officers tried to negotiate with 25-year-old micah xavier johnson, an army veteran. police say it was then that he made his motive clear. >> the suspect said he was upset about black lives matter. ed he was upset about the recent police shootings, he wanted to kill white people, especially white officers.
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>> the police chief said the negotiation eventually broke down. >> we saw no other option but to use our bomb robot and place a device on the -- on its extension for it to detonate where the suspect was. other options would have exposed our officers to grave danger. >> reporter: the mayor said there were others the night of the protests who were carrying rifles and wearing protective gear, but it turn out not to be involved in the shooting. he also said parts of downtown dallas could remain closed at least through the weekend. >> manuel bojorquez in dallas this morning, thank you. also this morning, we are finding out more about the gunman's planning and what police found in his home. jeff pegues is in our washington bureau with that part of the story. >> reporter: good morning. law enforcement sources believe micah johnson had been planning the attack on police for sometime. but that it was the police shootings of black men in baton
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rouge, louisiana, and minnesota, that pushed him over the edge. despite niche reports of three gunmen, investigators believe johnson was the lone shooter who had set his sights on police. an arsenal was found in the gunman's hole. dallas police say they uncovered bomb making materials and a personal journal of combat tactics. dallas mayor mike rawlings. >> this was a mobile shooter that had written manifest tos t shoot and move, shoot and move and he did that. he did his damage, but we did damage to him as well. >> reporter: skills he may have picked up during a six-year military career. in september of 2013, he was activated to serve in 42th engineer brigade in afghanistan and he went through basic training where he would have had to qualify on m-16 or m-4 which
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are basic rifles carried by soldiers. in the army reserve, he received several award, including an army achievement melgdal and another medal. the 25-year-old from mesquite, texas, was also active on facebook. on a page of the black panther party of mississippi, posted a graphic video of dolphins being slaughtered and what he wrote suggested a hatred for whites. why do so many whites, not all, enjoy killing and participating in the death of innocent beings? plus called him a loner who did not have a criminal record. an army soldier who served for him described johnson as quirky and funny and child at heart who never seemed to have hate toward anything. >> thank you, jeff. for more on the dallas shootings we are joined by mary ellen o'toole, a fbi senior pro filer and one of the foremost experts on mass shootings.
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good morning. >> good morning. >> you heard what was in jeff's report. the suspect apparently planned this for sometime and kept a personal journal of combat tactics. what do you make of what little we know of him so far?e r?im a idenceby a behavior at the scene, was really based on iman. and it actually began in the brain. he probably has thought about this for years. and h he fantasized about it an it moves into the developmental stages where he acquires the weapons and the ammunition and the other items that needs to carry it out. and then he is so well-planned, this is so interesting to me that he is able to put it together pretty much at the last minute. he could not have forecasted that the march would have occurred when it did. so that's how well-prepared that he was. and then a cold blooded callus
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way he carried is out is a product of his personality and i think is very significant in this case. >> you mentioned his personality. it's interesting to hear police detail the hostage negotiations and just how hostile they were. what do you make of that particular detail? >> here is what i make of that. as a trained hostage negotiator, what you look for is the ability to relate to the person you're talking to and observe times, the way you do that is to relate to their emotions. to relate to their empathy or feelings of guilt what is going on. in this case, that was not possible and what is very unusual is that these negotiators had to finally make the determination that this negotiation wasn't going to go any further, that they were not going to be able to persuade him to put down his weapons and that is gut-wrenching for the negotiators, but the person that does this kind of reluctance or failure to negotiate is,
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oftentimes, a person that manifests trace of psychotherapy. that is a person that have no feelings and have no empathy and don't feel bad for what they have done. at the same time, they are very cold callus individuals. that is the person that this behavior seems to suggest. so it's not really confusing to me that dallas had to make the decision that they did. >> were you surprised, mary ellen, that they found bomb making materials in his home? >> i'm really not. i'm really not. here is what i think about that as well. the fact that he had those materials suggestses to me that he was doing more than just reading about them, that he was in the -- he was at the place he was possibly going to put them together and practice with them and had this event happened perhaps two weeks from now or a month from now, he would have brought very likely those explosive devices with him.
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so i think he did not have the time to really put them together or practice with them and that may have been the only reason that he didn't have them, which, of course, would have made this already tragic event ten times as bad. >> when you think about this situation and the broader picture, does someone like this inspire other people? a lot of people are talking about whatever pushed him over the edge might have been what happened this past week. could he be the inspiration for someone else? >> well, yes, he can. and i wouldn't say that he was pushed over the edge. i mean, this was a very -- he did this. he was motivated. he chose to do this. make no mistake about that. but here is what is very concerning is that in about -- in less than a month, we will be looking at the 50-year anniversary of the texas tower shooting in which charles whitman went up to the texas tower and for 90 minutes, he was the same predatory person that we saw in this shooter a couple of days ago.
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so you have a combination of this case coming up in less than a month. what we saw a coupled ago, that is going to be a very strong motivator to someone else who is already contemplating carrying out a similar act. this won't cause someone to do it, but someone who is already doing it, it will inspire them. >> mary ellen o'toole, thank you for your perspective this morning. >> you're very welcome. an honor guard escorted the body of one of the fallen officers to a dallas funeral home on friday. besides their occupation, the five men shared common bonds. four were fathers and three were veterans, all of them died in service to their community. >> reporter: brent thompson was a 43-year-old grandfather who was starting a second family. he had just married a fellow dallas transit officer within the last two weeks. lorne ahrens was married to a former cop and he leaves behind two children under the age of
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11. >> in the milled ddle of physih tea with his daughter. >> reporter: michael krol knew the danger of his job but never shied away from his duty. the michigan native moved to dallas to become a police officer in 2007. 55-year-old michael smith joined the force in 1989. according to "the dallas morning news," he suffered a gash in his head in 2009 while lunging to protect his partner from a gang member. the army veteran was a father of two. before becoming a police officer, patrick zamarripa spent eight years on active duty for the navy. he served three tours in iraq. his father spoke to cbs news. >> my son paid the ultimate price to take care of people.
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good young man. he is my boy. the world lost him. he had a daughter and his wife, he'll never get to see her graduate, get married, have kid, become a grand daddy. hopefully, god willing, it will give them the strength to be able to see that. >> president obama is expected to return from washington tomorrow to his visit to europe. white house says the president will focus on supporting police officers and working to address racial disparities in the justice system. from warsaw on friday, mr. obama described thursday's shootings in dallas a vicious and calculated and despicable attack on law enforcement. he also eluded to the nation need to have a conversation on violence and guns. >> when people are armed with powerful weapons, unfortunately, it makes attacks like these more deadly and more tragic.
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and in the days ahead, we are going to have to consider those realities as well. >> the president also americans to express gratitude to police officers nationwide every day. presumptive nominee hillary clinton and donald trump condemned the dallas attack. both said much more needs to be done to keep all americans safe. >> we should walk in the shoes of police officers who do dangerous jobs. we should walk in the shoes of african-americans who, you know, worry about every traffic stop or every routine arrest or just going out, you know, into their neighborhood. we have got to start seeing each other with respect and dignity. >> a brutal attack on our police force is an attack on our country and an attack on our families. we must stand in solidarity with law enforcement, which we must remember is the force between civilization and total chaos. every american has the right to
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live in safety and peace. chant black lives matter. other demonstrations across the nation. >> reporter: rallies on friday flooded the streets of atlanta. thousands marched peacefully through downtown and bringing traffic to a standstill after gathering at the centennial olympic park. the police chief of pittsburgh joined this crowd in a peaceful march over that city's iconic bridges. while in the nation's capital, the group black lives matter held multiple demonstrations throughout the city. >> i'm mad about everything that is going on. >> reporter: the city's police chief said despite thursday's tragic events in dallas, her force will continue to do its job, as always. >> we go out there and we do our
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jobs. we watch each other's back and engage with people in our community. believe it or not they watch our back for us as well. >> reporter: in los angeles, demonstrators got support from celebrities like rapper snoop dogg who joined this protest line outside of a cadet graduation ceremony and later met with the mayor eric garcetti. >> it was very necessary that we begin to build our laws because there has been so much miscommunication from police and the community and this is the beginning. >> reporter: and back in baton rouge, louisiana, where this week's deadly events began, an angry crowd kept up the chants heard all week long. >> no justice. no peace. >> reporter: not likely to subside any time soon. >> we need to know! >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," john blackstone. as the protests spread nationwide so does the violence against police. on friday, in valdosta, georgia,
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police say an asian man who called 911 to report a car break-in shot a white officer who responded several times. the police officer is expected to survive. prosecutors in missouri say a black man shot and critically wounded a white officer in st. louis in a traffic stop. the man opened fire as the officer walked back to his car and giving the officer no chance to defend himself. on thursday in bristol, tennessee, a man shot at cars. a police officer was wounded. investigators say the suspected gunman told him he was angry about the recent police shootings of black men. what does this week of deadly clashes between civilians and law enforcement mean for officers patrolling the streets around the country? ed davis is a former commissioner of the boston police department. he in newton, massachusetts. ed, good morning, and thanks for joining us. >> thank you. good morning. >> what do you think is going
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through the mind of so many officers across the nation today? >> well, caution is the watch word today. i think that officers understand that -- that the situation in the country is such that they have to be deliberate and cautious in the way that they are performing their duties. and it really is a terrible to have this kind of situation develop. it really cuts into my former cocolleague's attempts t to implement commmmunityy policini the n neighborhood of the unite states. . >> commissssioner, after a an e like thisis, do t the major pol departmentnts around the countr tatalk too each otherer about h handle somethihing likike this? > they do. we spepeak all thehe titime. the majojor city chihiefs have a centers are pushing information out to each and every department across the country. so there are good systems in place and i think there are conversations about doubling up
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on patrols right now in many cities across the country. it's really a very difficult development. >> a lot of people this morning are also talking about the use of the explosive robot, questioning is this -- the new precedent? is it a good or bad one? what are your thoughts about the use? >> use of force is based on a continuum of force that depends on what the suspect is doing. in this particular case, the murderer of five officers and shooting of civilians, the continuum has gone right to the top and allows lethal force. it doesn't say exactly what can be used. quite frankly, we teach our officers in the police academy if they are disarmed or lose their firearm somehow and they can use anything, any weapon that they find in the area to defend themselves. so i think that this is just an extension of that training. and i think that the dallas police were confronted with a situation of further loss of
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life of their officers are doing what had to be done in a unique way. i think it's a good issue to discuss for the future, with you i don't s -- but i don't see a problem in the way it was handled. >> we will have much more on the dallas shootings the next half hour. tonight a special edition of "48 hours" "bringing a nation together." it starts at 10:00/9:00 central. for now it's 22 after the hour and here is a look at the weather. coming up more on the ambush in dallas. they were the center of the recent shootings that apparently inspired the dallas sniper. we will speak to the fiancee and
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in theatres july 8th. i want to ask you because i think you provide such great perspective covering so many events the last 60 years. the civil rights movement and jfk's assassination and vietnam. can you put into context the type of divisiveness we are seeing in this country and the rhetoric we are seeing? >> i think one thing that we overlook, jamie, is our culture is changing. i don't think there is any question about that. we are becoming a less patient society. we are becoming a more demanding society. for want of a better word, we are becoming a ruder society and we see this playing out in road rage, in the way we treat one another. there's just almost people -- nobody is satisfied with anything now.
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people are dissatisfied, they are frustrated, and they act out on these things. and when you put those who are deranged into the mix, and they have access to these very powerful weapons of war, it just makes the stakes even higher. there's no excuse for some of the police shootings that we have been seeing. police are shooting first and asking questions later. but on the other hand, you have to remember that the police are scared too of these weapons. >> right. >> that is why they are on such a hair trigger now. it's going to take great training and we are going to have to have more of it for our police departments around the country. i think scott pelley talked about this earlier. the dallas police department is a very good police department. they have been very transparent, they have put emphasis on commute policing. ,,,,,,,,
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♪ a plea for peace has been a common theme among those most affected by the two recent police shootings. that apparently sparked thursday's deadly attack in dallas. on tuesday in baton rouge, louisiana, video captured the moment two police officers struggled with alton sterling before he was shot dead by a police officer. police say sterling had a gun in his pocket. the next day, sterling's 15-year-old son cameron broke down at a rally at city hall. david begnaud spoke with cameron's mother. >> reporter: did your son see the video before he even knew it
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existed? >> yes. >> reporter: what was that moment like when he came to you? >> he just came to me and he was just screaming and he said, mamma, i want my daddy! my daddy! mamma, i want my daddy. >> reporter: in regards to what happened in dallas, what is your reaction? >> i'm sorry that that happened. violence do not take care of violence. the hurt of those families, the pain that i know they feel because i'm going through it, it hurts. it's just a bad situation and it's not right. >> similar feelings are being expressed by diamond reynolds. she was the fiancee of philando castile.
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on wednesday, reynolds posted the video of castile bleeding to death and no one assisting after he was stopped at a traffic stop. >> please, officer, don't tell me you just did this to him. >> reporter: people couldn't believe you had the presence of mind to be able to tape what happened. >> i wasn't able to do it, but god told me to do it. at the end of the day, it's their word against ours. and i just wanted the people to see that we didn't do this to ourselves. >> reporter: what do you think you're going to miss the most about him? >> him being there every day, being the father figure for my daughter. we both grew up -- i never was raised with my dad around and she's young and her dad isn't around, so he was the father figure that we both yearned for. >> your daughter witnessed
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something terrible. >> horrifying. >> reporter: how is she doing? >> she knows what is going on, but she is only 4 years old. there's not much a 4-year-old can understand from all of this, but what she does understand is that in life, we don't always make the best decisions. at that time, the officer didn't make the best decision. >> reporter: but she doesn't think the way to answer castile's death is through violence. >> i'm at total disbelief what is going on in dallas. >> reporter: what do you think philando would have said about what happened in dallas last night? >> he would be hurt. he would be very, very sad and devastated. violence not the key. us coming together and standing together is what makes our voices be heard. >> political and religious leaders across the country have also called for calm saying this is a time to unite, not divide. >> the entire city of dallas is grieving.
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police across america, this is a tight-knit family, feels this loss to their corps. >> there will be a temptation to let our anger harden our divisions. let's not let that happen. >> violence is not an appropriate response to violence. >> it is not an appropriate response to treatment that hatred is not an appropriate response to hatred. >> and to all americans, i ask you, i implore you do not let this week precipitate a new normal in this country. i urge you today and every day, we are one nation and we are one people and we stand together. >> joining us now with more on what can be done to move the country forward is mike borel, the president of the national urban league and the former mayor of new orleans. mark, good morning. >> hi, anthony. good to be with you. >> you've run a big city.
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the cab driver who brought me in this morning saying are we going to have a civil war? people are upset, obviously. how do you bridge this divide at this point? >> this has been a tough week for the nation, particularly for the communities affected by this cycle of violence. anthony, the people of goodwill, the people who understand that killing police officers is not an appropriate response to the killing of unarmed black men, have to raise their voices, cannot be silent, and cannot be indifferent and stand on the side and be spectatorses and observers. we need, if you will, the coalition of those who want a just nation, a peaceful nation, and a tolerant nation to raise their voices in dallas. there was an interfaith event yesterday in many communities. i think there's a commitment to
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peaceful responses and, of course, that is appropriate. we don't want to suppress people's voices. we, i think, want to suggest to people you should speak up, but we should speak out with unity and tolerance, but we should also recognize the underlying challenges, the substantive issues in communities also have to be addressed. this is not just about conversation. it's also about action. >> as you point out, though, the sad truth there is a cyclical feeling to all of this. we heard from the attorney general saying what you're saying there need to be concrete steps toward unification. what are the first steps people need to be doing? >> i think the first steps people need to be doing isnd we can express our political views and our philosophical views and our views in race in rational, reasonable terms. we have all got to speak out, but we have got to also engage in a little self-checking to ensure that this conversation
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and this change in america certainly takes place with a level of civility and. >> conversely, do you think some things need >> you don't condemn every community when it comes to this and many community, even dallas. the chief in dallas has worked very hard and places like camden have worked very hard. in the '90s when i was chief, our department worked real hard to de-escalate and build train and it has to happen on the local level in each and every community. >> how do you do that? >> it requires leadership. on this, it's the mayors, it's the police chiefs, it's the business, labor and religious leaders. >> has to come from the top down? >> from the bottom up.
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from the bottom in terms of local government. >> a little bit of retraining is almost what you're suggesting? >> i think it's comprehensive retraining. i think it's a philosophical change. how do you de-escalate conflict between citizens and police officers? how do you build trust? everyone wants a safe community. this is not about saying we should not be, if you will, responsive to acts of criminal whav behavior but we need to change of it because the root of it and the response we see is about these police incidents. so i just also want to express to the people of dallas and certainly to the families of the officers, but also to the family of the victims in minnesota and baton rouge, the deepest thoughts and prayers and sympathy. we have to remember we have grieving families and we have a pain that the community feels pain but no pain is like the pain of anyone who has lost a loved one. >> thank you very much for being with us this morning.
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>> thank you. coming up, the rest of today's news. first, a look at the weather. the fbi said she was extremely careless with classified information. up next, what hillary clinton told us about voter concerns that she can't be trusted with america's secrets. plus, reaction from donald trump. you are watching "cbs this morning: saturday." caring for someone with alzheimer's means i am a lot of things. i am her best friend. i am her ally. so i asked about adding once-daily namenda xr to her current treatment
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of a private e-mail server with classified government secrets was extremely careless. clinton told cbs news yesterday she did not intend any wrongdoing. >> we often have to respond quickly to a head of state, to a government official somewhere in the world, to the press, and the people that i was relying on, the professionals, the diplomats who were sending me that material, i believe, knew what they were doing and they, too, take classified material seriously. >> presumptive republican presidential candidate donald trump said isn't it sad on a day of national tragedy, hillary clinton is answering softball questions about her e-mail lies on cnn. power is back across north carolina this morning after thunderstorms caused outages for thousands of customers. but some homeowners witnessed how powerful such summer storms can be. strong thunderstorms lit up the skies near charlotte overnight.
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meteorologist ed curran in our chicago station wbbm-tv is here with a national forecast. >> reporter: good morning. a couple of chances for severe weather around the nation for today. yellow means a slight chance for severe. a little higher than the marginal chance. damaging wind, large hail and isolated tornado possible here in the dakotas. on the east coast in new york, new jersey, eastern pennsylvania, a slight chance for severe weather with damaging wind and large hail and maybe a weak isolated tornado. let's look to sunday now. a higher risk, enhanced risk for severe storms up here in north dakota and this includes damaging wind, large hail, as well is some tornado and that is fo playbig looks ahead to
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♪ the road to the olympics in rio de janeiro has been a bumpy one to say the least. the run-up to the games has been plagued by worries about zika, doping, water pollution, street violence, and construction delays. >> now there is another concern -- cybercrime that is on the rise. with the summer games opening in less than a month, officials here in brazil and elsewhere are warning travelers to beware. devin redmond is here with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> this is in addition to all of those concerns, a lot of people aren't even thinking about cybersecurity. what are you guys seeing in a lead-up to the games?
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>> one of the new trends we are seeing out there is the rise and usage of social media as a mechanism to perform everything from phishing to delivering m malware and a trend over the last olympics and carry forward to this one and much more rise from here. >> i was surprised to hear that brazil is a hub for cybercrime. how is that? >> it's purely opportunity. if you have an area where the capacity and the ability to enforce laws around cybercrime are lower and you have the ratio of committing cybercrimes to other crimes, you see that on the rise. >> you mentioned phishing but how are people falling prey? >> we are seeing the use of fake social media accounts associated with the olympics so they are branded with the rio olympics and have the appropriate logos on them and free offers like streaming media and get uncensored footage to the game and tickets at the events they are offering on these accounts and they are fake offers
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designed to get your credit card information and personal information' ste and steal from >> what about attacks on malware and ransom ware? >> officials are worried about this. one of the examples we saw is a great one where somebody is delivering a link for an app that is designed to help you get better coverage during the olympics and it takes advantage of your phone once you install the app and gets your calendar and contact info and drives forward on social engineering and other times of attacks. >> what surprised me you not necessarily clicking. just having the device with you and having information is important to you could get hacked. >> absolutely. a device can be compromised in a variety of mechanisms. the interesting thing that we are seeing from the scammers is they are getting more clever will using the mechanisms. they move from social to get you to install something and give them a piece of information to give them access and they have you compromised from there. >> what do you do to protect yourself here?
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>> i think two areas of protection. there is the first for consumers. . make sure especially when using social media you see lots of people go to social media and get information and coverage that they are actually going to the verified authentic sites of the sponsors of the people doing the coverage and that they are only interacting with those that they don't buy tickets from anybody outside of the olympics pages on that one. then, in addition, it seems too good to be true as an offer or something you can click on from a link perspective, don't do it! avoid polic water and the givin aou a coverage on those things thatha♪
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>> the naacp came into being in the last to combat a former racialized violence called lynching. we brought it to an end. we, in this century, face a violence called police misconduct. we can when we can and within ourselves do so with a strategy and a plan, bring police misconduct to an end. we can do that. there are cities that have done it and there are cities that have gotten it right. we can, in fact, do this better across the country. we have to do it at both the federal level and at the state and the municipal level. >> cornell, i know you're the father of two sons. i wonder how you talk to them about not only what happened in minneapolis and baton rouge, but what you say to them after that, but also what you say to them
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after what happens in dallas or what happened in dallas last night? >> like a great many african-american parents, my wife and i had a talk, as we call it, with our sons, and the talk was not about the birds and the bees, but rather the police and civilians and how they interact. we also talk with them about dallas. what we will say to them, as we have said to them, is in the same way that you do not judge all african-americans in a stereotypical way or latinos or other groups in the country, we cannot judge law enforcement to the prism of stereotype or generalization. that being said, law enforcement is in a crisis. racial profiling and police brutality is real. we say to them be hopeful and be confident about our ability to affect change. but also be vigilant. ,,,,,,,,
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♪ welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> i'm vinita nair. coming up addressing a national tragedy. the two presidential candidates take to the air waves to give their perspective on the dallas attack. we will look at the political implications on their latest appearances. plus, we will take you behind the walls of a women's prison where inmates are turned into students. they are getting free education from an ivy league school as part of their rehabilitation. a new documentary shows what it's like to live and work in the white house. we will speak to the filmmaker who got a unique perspective on the nation's most famous address. our top story this half hour, dallas rememberses the
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five police officers who were killed on thursday. they were targeted by a sniper during a protest against police violence. >> the demonstration followed the deadly shooting of two black men. alton sterling was killed in baton rouge, louisiana, on tuesday and philando castile was shot near st. paul, minnesota. manuel bojorquez has the latest. >> reporter: good morning. investigators say they have determined the gunman acted alone and had been planning an ambush on police for sometime. he chose thursday night to carry out a massacre on the streets of downtown dallas, opening fire on police officers who were doing crowd and traffic control at a protest against police brutality. twelve officers were hit and five killed. two protesters were also injured. we have learned the shooter, take-year-old micah xavier johnson was an army veteran who told police during a standoff that he wanted to kill as many officers and as many white officers as possible, upset over recent killings of black men by police.
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the standoff went on for hours until a tactical team used a robot bomb to kill johnson. there were several people arrested after the shooting and the mayor said there were others who had rifles and were wearing protective gear at the protest, but turned out not to be involved in the shooting. the mayor said he now believes the city is safe and can move on to healing. >> manuel bojorquez this morning, thank you. investigators have revealed more details about the killer. micah johnson. authorities say johnson was amassing an arsenal at his home outside dallas. he was a veteran of the war in afghanistan and 2014 his tour of duty was cut short when he was sent back to the u.s. after a female soldier accused him of sexual harassment. a dozen dallas police officers were struck by bullets on thursday. the five who were killed ranged in age from 32 to 55. four of the men were fathers. three of them served in the u.s. military before they became police officers.
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brent thompson, a dallas transit cop, is the first officer in that department's history to be killed in the line of duty. dallas police chief david brown expressed to the world the heartbreak of thursday's shooting. the veteran law enforcement officer has experienced loss to violence before. his younger brother was killed by drug dealers in phoenix 25 years ago. a former partner was killed in the line of duty and his son who suffered from mental illness was shot and killed by police after he killed an officer and another man in 2010. >> protesters prompted by the minnesota and baton rouge killings drew crowds nationwide. police used pepper spray and closed freeway ramps last night as a thousand people marched in downtown phoenix. three people were arrested and some officers wore plain clothes to support protesters. there were peaceful protesters in atlanta and a dozen other u.s. cities and a crowd also marched in london. a ro new york,
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television said two of its reporterers who cover demonstrations were taken into custody on friday. >> telling us it's time to go. people are being taken into o custody. >> the station wham says the pair were e released quickly. no charges were filed against them. their station manager called their detention outrageous. the violent deaths of black men and police officers is in the presidential campaign and put new light on where the candidates stand on race relations, law enforcement and gun control. joining us now to discuss the political response to the shootings is "the washington post" columnist catherine ramp dell. what has hillary clinton said? >> it's a time to come together and get over our hatred and think about police training and gun control, sort of the standard points you would expect given her policy positions thus far. >> what response to previous
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tragedies in recent weeks. released a statement basically saying these are horrible events and senseless violence i think the terms he used. and called out specifically the tragedy in dallas, as well as the shootings of two black men by police officers. >> how do you think, at this point, what has happened in the last week will affect the campaign and these two candidates? >> you know, it's very hard to say. in a sense, this was a horrible week, a terrible week. and in a sense, it's not so far of a departure from other things we have seen in the last several months and so will it necessarily change the tone of the campaign a and will it put more momentum behind gun control legislation? it doesn't seem that way, given that we haven't had that after
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orlando. whether or not that becomes more of an issue in the campaign going forward, it doesn't seem likely, unfortunately, at this point. >> i'm curious. the black caucus is demanding a gun control vote. do you think that will happen? >> no. certainly not before they go on to their recess, i believe next week or sometime soon, in any case. again, if we didn't see this after orlando, if we didn't see this after newtown, for that matter, it seems very unlikely that despite the many tears shed and hugs shared over this past week, that the calculus will change very much for many politicians. >> the shootings overshadowed the news at the beginning of the week somewhat which was the fbi's report on clinton's e-mails when she was in the state department. she spoke about it somewhat yesterday. do you think she is past this? >> certainly not. it looks like this might be the closing of this chapter, right? the fbi has said that -- they were going to make a
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recommendation there was not enough material to indictment. the attorney general chose to accept that recommendation. yet, of course, a lot of damming material that came out in the process of those announcements, both in terms of disclosures of new facts, about some of her e-mails being marked classified when she had said there were no such e-mails. the hearing, itself, and other comments made by fbi director comey that will provide ample material for many attack ads going forward. >> we have got to leave it there. catherine rampell, thank you. here is a look at the weather for your weekend now. up next, a lesson behind bars. >> okay.
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class is in session. the teacher is a professor from the ivy league. the students are inmates here in prison and they are getting real college degrees in a program that is about to expand. i'm mark albert at a correctional facility. that story is coming up on "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ does your makeup remover every kiss-proof,ff? cry-proof, stay-proof look? neutrogena® makeup remover does. it erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. need any more proof than that? neutrogena. i'm terhe is.at golf. but i'd like to keep being terrible at golf for as long as i can. new patented ensure enlive has hmb plus 20 grams of protein to help rebuild muscle. for the strength and energy to do what you love. new ensure enlive. always be you. i want my blood sugar i to stay in control.ck. so i asked about tresiba®.
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the united states accounts for 5% of the world's population. we account for 25% of the world's inmates. here in el reno, excellent work is being done inside this facility and to provide job training, college degrees, drug counseling. >> president obama became the first sitting president to visit a federal prison last year as he
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sought to build support for criminal justice reform. and while it seems to have bipartisan support, in congress this year, it now appears to be stalled amid the intensifying election campaign. bun one state is moving ahead with a controversial plan to extend a rehab program for some of its prison inmates. mark albert takes us behind bars. >> there is no will in play-doh. why is that? >> reporter: inside building 82 down the hall from the cosmetology course, the inmates are being taught philosophy. >> we are spending the 16th and 18th and 19th century. >> reporter: if education is said to free the mind the only freedom the students will get today because they are inmates incarcerated at this correctional facility in bedford hills, new york. >> education. >> reporter: on this thursday night, the ivy league has brought columbia to the clinic.
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>> having done playdo and thought about christianity and we have a time to talk more. >> cecile davidson is serving one to three years in grand larce larceny. >> right now we are working on socrates and the mineset before he went into prison. >> i believe playdo. i believe you separate the body from the soul you can attain the truth. >> reporter: leah's truth includes a second-degree murder conviction and she has been incarcerated 19 years and goes before the parol board for the first time in 2008. >> 2018. >> it's bad enough i'm leaving prison with felony. >> reporter: homicide. >> homicide. that is even worse. i have to be armedored up so i
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can diamondback to society and be a success. >> reporter: she is one of nearly 900 students armed in an education program offering bachelorses and associates and master's degrees from elite universities. 22 college and universities, including columbia, and others send professors behind the prison walls every week. how do you develop a columbia course for prison? >> it's pretty easy. >> reporter: easy? mercer says she doesn't change much. even in a prison system where 50% of the inmates, 1 out of every 2, didn't graduate from high school. >> we did teach shakespeare. >> yes. >> i am not loring my standards. >> reporter: you're not watering down the course as a form of charity? >> no. that would be an insult to them. >> reporter: mercer, a
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distinguished member of the faculty at one of the most prestigious universities in the land say they analyze shakespeare's play 12 right in a way never seen before. >> it was astonishing inciteful analysis of this play in ways i never thought of before. >> reporter: so what you are learning with these students in prison is affecting how you teach here at columbia? >> absolutely. constantly. and also how i think about the world. >> reporter: this fall, new york's education program will expand, over the objections of state lawmakers, who rebuffed governor andrew cuomo's request for more money. instead, cuomo teamed up with manhattan district attorney to divert $7,500,000 for more students. >> i know the data supports my decision. therefore, i think the citizens of the state shouldnd this makes
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sense in terms of communities safety. >> reporter: the state says 39% of new york's inmate commit another crime once they get out but with a college degree from the program, the recidivism rate drops to 16%, a drop of more than half. linda holleman -- >> they don't come back into our system and really how we know it work. >> reporter: what is it like walking out of this gate? >> it's a bit surreal. >> reporter: sean was 32 when he first made this walk out the front door of notorious singe prison. the son of two police officers, he spent half of his life in prison here after killing a friend's father as he told "48 hours" in 2004. >> i walked out of the shrubbery and i shot and killed him. >> reporter: he began taking classes in prison while still a teenager. the first in his family to go to prison, he became the first to get a college degree. now he has three and in a
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surprise to many of the guards who used to watch over him, pika now coordinates the education program at five prisons, including the one he lived in for so long. how are you back here? if i had served so many years in prison and somebody asked me to come back, i would have run as far away as possible. >> it's tricky. it's tricky to come back in this place every day. >> reporter: you're getting a little emotional. >> yeah. but it's good. i got the best job in the world. >> reporter: pika is a lesson in endurance and commitment. >> it's astonishing inspirational. >> reporter: students including leah farer. >> my soul is searching to become a better person and i love it so much because i put
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mize into it and try to walk the walk that i talk, do you understand? this is just me. >> reporter: she told us when she is released, she plans to cotinue her college career at columbia. for "cbs this morning: saturday," mark albert, bedford hills, new york. >> i'm so impressed they are taking on playdo. i had trouble with that in college. >> at the end of the day, knowledge is armor as we heard her say there. >> if you're spending time, make the best of it. up next maybe the most famous home in the world is the white house. a new documentary reveals it's sometimes surprising history. it introduces you to the staff working there around the clock. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." do you often consume fruit, fruit juices, coffee or soda? acids in everyday foods and drinks may weaken and erode your tooth enamel over time. damaged or lost enamel can lead to yellow, dull and thinning teeth.
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i said "if you need to stop, there's a bench we'll just hang out in the shade." she said "absolutely not! we are going to finish this race!" and we were the last ones in, but you know what? we finished the race. and she goes "desiree, i'll never quit walking. ever" it's through this door the head of state come and this is where the president meets him and he is where the marine band played. >> more than 50 years ago, first lady jackie kennedy gave americans a tour of the white house in a live special that aired here on cbs.
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now a new documentary provides an unprecedented look at the history of america's most famous residents and the people who work and live there. >> i think what i actually will miss most has more to do with people. from the landscapers who maintain the rose garden, to 20 something year-oldses who prepare my packet of letters to my chief of staff and my cabinet. they understand the incredible privilege we all have in working here and there is a sense of seriousness and responsibility and commitment that the place confers on you. and that never leaves you. >> the white house's inside story airs this tuesday on pbs. joining is the film's director peter schnall. one said this is a permanent staff for impermanent residents. why did you pick this story to
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profile? >> journey we were given for a rare access into the white house most don't know a permanent staff that work in the house and it's regardless of president, regardless of politic, regardless of who actually is which family. >> right. >> is in the house at the time. and most people don't realize that the permanent staff is in charge of the impermanent residents and it's quite a privilege. you have to imagine that they are watching history unfold in front of them every single day. >> is this one of the really interesting jobs on the staff is something called a chief usher which is held currently by angela reed. why is that job so important? >> basically, she is the chief usher is running of the house. we often forget it's a home, it's an office, it's a command center so someone need to run literally the house and the staff that runs it and angela reed is the first woman to actually be the chief usher in the 100-year history of the hundred-year history of the chief usher. oddly enough she is only the
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ninth chief usher which gives you a sense how long these folks stay on within the permanent staff. >> when they tell you these things, because i'm sure they all have so many secrets about all of these different president, do they observe? is there sort of a breaking-in period for people to get comfortable living with so many people around them? >> i'm sure you have to imagine in washington these folks see things that every washington correspondent would love to know about. but the great thing about the staff is that they keep these secrets to themselves. what they say, what they hear, it stays all within the house. one of the things that was so fascinating when we interviewed first lady michelle obama, she said because of that, because she feels this sort of unconditional sort of -- >> protection. >> protection, that's correct. that she feels she can walk around and be herself and that is important for a family, for a first family. >> i was going to ask you about that. obviously, these transitory president who and go, do they
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actually become comfortable in this as a house? >> right. i asked both the first lady and the president as they told us in their interviews, they do feel that. they feel they can have a home amidst the grandeur of the executive mansion themselves and children. one thing that actually barbara bush told us which i thought was quite fascinating. she had presidents come and go but the staff always remains. >> there is some interesting just history lessons throughout the film as well, especially the oval office. when did this actually come to be that this was the designated room? >> most people don't realize the oval office one of the newer areas. it was under teddy roosevelt's administration that the west wing was built and it wasn't until taft, i believe, the actual oval office was constructed. and it was done so because basically, the residence and it's very unusual that a presidential executive mansion
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has a residence, was being overtaken by too much office space and the president needed a place to have an office. >> when all is said and done when you walked away from all of your time looking at the white house, what struck about you the most? >> i think most people don't realize that the house is a place that we, the people, are loaning, giving to the president and his, or in some cases, her family. and i think that what most people don't know is the house is often called the people's house and it's a place where we, the people, offer the president a place to work. >> so nice to be able to see what happens behind the scenes. peter schnall, thank you so much. >> thank you. up next, the dish. chef barbara lynch boot-st hnbod her way out of boston and got to cooking. we will learn about her amazing life story coming up. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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1776, the nation is already at war. let's set the scene a little bit when the 56 men are sitting down, they are in open rebellion against the most powerful man on earth. we sometimes take that for granted that these men who say we pledge our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor were really risking everything. they were politicians but they were doing something very brave. >> you mentioned john adams, by the way. i always found this one of the most fascinating parts of american history, that john adams and thomas jefferson, these two men who tussled so much over the course of their political careers, both then die on july fourth. >> an incredible coincide of sorts. the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the declaration, they both die. they had been, of course, very close allies at philadelphia in 1776.
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became bitter political rivals. jefferson, by the way, when you're speaking with about vice presidents, was adams' vice president, even though they were of different views. later, they became friend again and die on this day. people thought this was divine providence. >> and had wonderful correspondence later in their years. >> after a bitter alliance. i'm reminded of a discussion of the vice president that someone once asked about being the vice president and said i'm opposed to vice of any kind. that generally has been the view of most people suggested for it. but this is about the ideas of life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, jefferson's word. he changed the word happiness from property, by the way, because that, at the time, implied slavery and this is the other important thing we have to remember, the great contradiction here. jefferson written about slavery in his draft to the declaration and it was removed by congress and they did not want any conversation about it. ,,,,,,,,
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we had a grand chef this morning in the dish. in fact, barbara lynch is the only woman in the u.s. holding the elite title of grand chef and chateau. years of hard work paid off. she was named outstanding restauranteur in 2014 for her popular boston area restaurant that has dining options and seven in all. we are excited to welcome her to the dish! hello! >> hi. >> lots to roll in from boston. what is more appropriate? >> new england summer, lobsters? fabulous. >> tell us what else you got here. >> beet salad with toasted
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croutons and goat cheese. lobster rolls. coleslaw are buttered pickles. like you have to have it altogether. this is tomato tar tar tan with a special cheese on top. >> nice. >> caramelized onions underneath. this is fettuccine with basil and much more. and we top it off here that you have to have much more. >> tell us whatt we are drinkin. >> signature cocktail from day one. vodka and fresh lime juice. >> you say you grew up in a rough neighborhood? >> well, yeah. i'll say humbled upbringing. >> what were you like as a preteen and when did the cooking
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buzz hit you? >> i don't know if i is kcan sa that on television! >> an interesting past you had. >> my mom had seven children and i was the last one. she raiseded us single-handedly so i had a lot of time on my hand, put it that way. i didn't like school and i wasn't a big fan of school and academics. >> your first job was actually cooking for the priest across the street, a church? >> three priests. >> when you were 13? >> yeah, until i almost burned the church down. then second i worked at a club with my mother who was a server. i waited on tables as well. and then many jobs in boston and then a boat on martha's vineyard. >> was it around this time that you knew? was it 13? >> 12, 13, i knew i wanted to be
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a chef. i felt right. it felt right to me. i don't know. >> why did it feel right? >> cooking felt natural to me. then i talked myself into it. i'm going to be a chef, i'm going to be a chef. >> when i look at your biography, a lot of people consider themselves fearless. you actually stole a city bus at 13. >> i don't recommend that. >> how did that fearlessness help you in the kitchen? i think a lot of female chefs we hear from still say it's like still a male-dominated world. >> it could be. i put the blinders on. i guess it is from growing up and playing hockey and being a rough and tumble kind of inner city kid. i knew what i wanted and i went for it. i never thought i'd get this far but i just always thought, god, if i can cook, i'll always have a job. so i just wanted to learn how to cook. i'm self-taught. i actually grew up in kitchens, basically. and that is how i learned. >> i think it's wonderful you
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did so much work mentoring other women in the kitchen as well. >> we need more women in the kitchen. we need more women business owners in general. not just in the kitchen but business owners. you can do this and you can have a family and your children will be proud. i have to say hi to my daughter. she is so proud. it's great. we make lobster rolls every sunday. now in the summer. >> as i hand this dish to you and get your signature on it, if you could have at this meal with any person, past or present, who would that person be? >> julia childs would love this. this is right up her alley. just throw some goldfish in there! >> for more on "the dish." head to cbsnews.com. here is a look at your weather now for the weekend.
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up next our saturday session grammy winner gregory porter is one of our best jazz writers of all time. we will speak with him about his heart breaking movement that moved him to music. (vo) stank face. a universal expression of disgust, often caused by inadequate cat litter. if you or your a loved one suffers from stank face,
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before we go too far ♪ >> gregory porter new album is a follow-up to his million selling album liquid spirit. he had a surprise dance hit with the song "holding on." >> he is called a thriller of singing presence and you'll see why in a moment. first, i talked to him at the b.b. king news club here in new york. you had a huge success with your last album. what has that ride been like? >> it's been some surreal moments. you know, from performing at buckingham palace to having dinner with stevie wonder. it's been an amazing ride. ♪ but it's holding on >> reporter: the distinctive cap which he first wore after skin surgery has become a trademark for the 44-year-old singer who originally went to san diego
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state on a football scholarship, until a shoulder injury cut short his career. >> i remember calling my mother in tears and she had, son, so does this mean you get to keep your scholarship, right? i said, yeah. and they don't hit you any more? aids, no, no, nobody is hitting me any more. she was like, great! >> reporter: mom saw the up'. >> mom saw the upside but i was devastated. >> reporter: so porter went back to his first love, music. was it broadway that brought you to new york? >> it was. >> reporter: he won a part in the musical "it ain't nothing but the blues." by the way, on the opening night of the show, i actually fell off stage! i fell six feet off the stage! we were clapping our hands and walking off stage. ♪ i wish somebody would catch on fire ♪
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and i went like this? >> reporter: he grew up in bakersfield, california, his mother ruth a store front preacher, exposed him to gospel early. >> she was great and with my record and my music, she comes her teachings are energy and sermons. >> she's in there. >> she's in there. in the title track about my new record "take me to the alley." the alley is a street in bakersfield. ♪ take me to the alley take me to ♪ >> it's kind of skid row. it was when i was a child and that is where my mother wanted to be. she wanted to go to the places that people needed her the most. >> j >>. >> reporter: definitely great to have someone like that our child. >> it can be difficult as a child. >> reporter: he remember his mother's charity with the family meal at thanksgivings. >> she went and fed the homeless first and brought the leftovers
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to the family. and we ate the scraps off the bones. at the time, we were outraged. but now it's golden, golden. i keep the memory and it's just like i'm glad that i nibbled on the bones after a homeless person. i am. i miss it! i'm thankful to her and i'm thankful to her because she has given me a song. >> reporter: and now from his new album "take me to the alley." here is gregory porter with "don't lose your steam." ♪ sitting on top of the roof the bridge drove by the bridge is falling down ♪ ♪ and so do my dreams ♪ boy you hear me calling your name the bridge is your time the bridge is falling down don't lose your steam ♪
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♪ young man i've come to know you ♪ ♪ and whoa young man i'm counting on you boy, i didn't make it too far but baby you are the family star ♪ ♪ tighten your stars don't lose your dreams ♪ ♪ you hear me calling your name the bridge is your time if the bridge is falling down don't lose your head of steam ♪ ♪ hey, young man i'm counting on you and young man i'm counting on you get me to the other side ♪ hey hey ♪ ♪ pressure is new
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whoa whoa can you get me can you get me to the other side ♪ ♪ i'm counting on you young man don't lose your head of dreams ♪ not ♪ ♪ don't lose your head of steam i'm counting on you young man don't lose your head of dreams don't lose your head of steam ♪ ♪ young man i'm counting on y you ♪ >> don't go away. we will be right back with more music from gregory porter. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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you will have a pardon you will have a pardon by listen to me ♪ ♪ >> if you're still with us, we have one more from gregory porter. >> here is "in fashion." ♪ you wear a black leather belt that holds the waist i used to hold your color fade but not the color of your jeans ♪ ♪ you wear a hat packa with many swirls the envy of other girls ♪ ♪ you change your shades before our day turns into eve i think i'm going to go
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think i better let it go ♪ ♪ because i'm thinking runway fashion no longer in fashion ♪ ♪ and i find myself obsessed with how you dress and who you see when you're without me ♪ ♪ dah, dah, dah dah whenever garden picture frameses the paparazzi knows our name they know our fashion our love is not for real ♪ ♪ the weather is find but in your mind you make that flare and so you wear big blue fur and feathered hair
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live, from the cbs bay area studios, this is kpix 5 news we believe now that the city is safe and the suspect is dead and we can move onto healing. >> a city in mourning this morning after a deadly ambush on dallas police. the investigation now underway as we learn new details about the gunman behind the attack. this as protesters take to the street across the country. >> a car smashes into the back of a fire truck overnight. what the drive says he was doing just moments before. >> time now is 7:00. good morning. >> we're going to get started
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