tv CBS This Morning CBS October 13, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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comments@captioncolorado.com good morning, to our viewers in the west. it is thursday, october 13th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump threatens to retaliate after several women accuse him of unwanted sexual contact. we'll talk to "the new york times" reporters who interviewed two of the women for today's front page story. the u.s. strikes back overnight after missile attacks on american warships near yemen. for the first time the pentagon is targeting rebels backed by iran. >> only on "cbs this morning," the woman who witnessed -- keith lamont scott's widow talks about what she saw. >> we begin with today's eye
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opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> he was like an octopus. it was like he had six arms. when he started putting his hand up my skirt, and that was it. >> multiple women accuse donald trump of sexual assault. >> trump is categorically denying the allegations, and demanding a retraction. >> this is the exact same new york "times" that tried the same stunt back in march and then those women came forward and debunked that article. >> we have a whole bunch of women who have said the same thing. >> we're in bill cosby territory now. >> without the media and without the press hillary clinton would be nothing. she'd be nothing. zero. >> the united states launching multiple cruise missile strikes against yemen in response to two separate attacks on u.s. ships. >> two boston police officers were hospitalized with gunshot wounds after a shoot-out. the suspect was killed. >> hurricane nicole making a beeline towards bermuda. >> that is bermuda.
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this is the eye of the system. in north carolina officials have ordered thousands of people to leave their homes as floodwaters rise. >> it's overwhelming. >> wells fargo's embattled ceo retiring immediately in the wake of a sales practice scandal. >> the little dog is lucky to be alive thanks to a quick thinking motel manager. >> he scores! matthews what a debut. four goals! >> you can sometimes price your mom. >> kevin durant score sharing some courtside snacks with a fan. >> and all that matters. >> trump is on the war path as the republican civil war escalates. trump tweeted the shackles have been taken off. now trump is like king kong. in that they both broke free of their shackles and like grabbing white women without asking. >> on "cbs this morning." >> i have to ask, how much do you wish you could debate donald trump? do you -- do you --
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>> i think it would be too easy. i want someone like sarah palin. >> yeah, exactly. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump is angrily denying new allegations that he groped or kissed women against their will. in a series this morning several women allege trump touched them sexually. the alleged incidents happened over a more than 30 year span. >> the stories contradict trump's video where he talked about kissing and grabbing women without their permission. remember what he said on sunday's debate that it was just talk. >> you hear these things they're said, i was embarrassed by it. i have tremendous respect for women. >> have you ever done those things. >> and i will tell you no i have not.
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>> major garrett is in tampa covering the trump campaign. the candidate will start his day in florida. major, good morning. >> good morning. the dizzying array of charges surfacing after trump's blanket denial of sexual misconduct depicts an egotistical celebrity willing to accost or intimidate women whenever the mood strikes. now the trump campaign is denying everything, and branding all of women a political media conspiracy to deny him the white house. regardless, scrutiny will now go to words and trump actions. >> it was a real shock when all of a sudden his hands were all over me. >> jessica leeds is one of several women who accused donald trump on wednesday of unwanted physical advances. >> he was like an octopus. it was like he had six arms. >> leeds said trump grabbed her breasts and reached up her skirt during a first class flight in the early 1980s. other women allege that trump, a former pageant owner, barged in on their beauty contest dressing room, something he described to radio personality howard stern in 2005.
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>> i'll go backstage before a show. >> yes. >> and everyone's getting dressed. you see these incredible looking women. and so i sort of get away with things like that. >> who do you complain to? he owns the tpageant. >> tasha dixon said she was subjected to trump's voyeurism. >> he just came strolling right in. there was no second to put a robe on or any sort of clothing or anything. >> buzzfeed news spoke to four beauty queens who said trump spent time in the changing room though other contestants cast doubt. "the new york times" spoke to another woman who said upon meeting trump in 2005 he quote kissed her directly on the mouth. trump's campaign also denied a first person account from "people" magazine writer natasha stoynoff who wrote that during a 2005 interview with trump at his mar-a-lago resort he was pushing me against the wall and forcing his tongue down my throat. the story appears in line with this boast secretly recorded during an access hollywood taping that same year. >> i just start kissing them.
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like a magnet. just -- and when you're a star they let you do. merry christmas. merry christmas. >> in addition this 1992 video released by entertainment tonight, captures trump's voice talking about a young girl at trump tower that caught his eye. >> you're going up the escalator? >> yes. >> i'm going to be dating her in ten years. can you believe it? >> the trump campaign called the "times" charges fiction and said the allegations trivialized sexual assault and demonstrate a new low for where the media is willing to go to determine this election. >> i've obviously never been in the beauty pageant. >> trump campaign manager kellyanne conway struggled with specific denials. >> there's no way for me to know what happened there. i would have no way. i'm the campaign manager as he runs for president. >> late last night the trump campaign sent "the new york times" a demand for a retraction calling their story defamatory and reckless. "the new york times" published its report, even though it knew there was some threat of a lawsuit from the trump campaign.
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>> all right. thank you major. hillary clinton's campaign says the new allegations suggest that donald trump lied on the debate stage, and that the disgusting behavior he bragged about is more than just words. trump is bashing clinton over this latest leak of e-mails apparently stolen from campaign chairman john podesta. nancy cordes is in san francisco, where hillary clinton will attend a fund-raiser later today. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. wikileaks says it has about 50,000 of these e-mails, and if what we've seen so far is any allegation, they'll release another batch of them every day between now and election day. enough to create a steady trickle of embarrassment for the clinton campaign which her aides say is exactly what the russians and the trump campaign want. as clinton sampled tacos in las vegas, the latest batch of stolen e-mails were giving her opponent something to chew on. >> this wikileaks stuff is unbelievable. >> the e-mails that wikileaks says are from the gmail account of clinton campaign chair john podesta reveal the ego stroking
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and horse trading involved in courting top supporters. in one 2015 e-mail entitled needy latinos, podesta urged clinton to call former energy secretary federico pena who is close to committing but carrying some baggage. and former new mexico governor bill richardson, notwithstanding the fact that he can be a blank. another exchange with obama campaign manager david plouffe reveals clinton was laying the groundwork for a possible run far earlier than previously known. in december of 2013, plouffe agreed to enlist a small number of people to draw up a battle plan. but promised his helpers would have no knowledge of who the project is for, of course. clinton adviser cheryl mills of equally secretive telling plouffe i have shared that we met with hillary clinton and john podesta and with no others. >> hillary! hillary! >> the he e-mails which cannot be independently verified by cbs
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are a distraction from what would otherwise be a banner week for clinton. >> that's how desperate they are. >> polls show her leading in six battle ground states, including colorado, where new voter registration stats show democratic voters exceeding republicans for the first time in decades. >> i think americans want to turn out in as big a number as possible to reject the dark, and divisive, and hateful campaign that is being run by my opponent. >> just out this morning another endorsement for clinton. this one from "the washington post" editorial board which writes no, we are not making this endorsement simply because ms. clinton's chief opponent is dreadful but because she is business-like, knowledgeable and willing to work across the aisle. the endorsement is hardly a surprise. the paper has never endorsed a republican for president. nancy thanks. mark leibovich is chief
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political correspondent for "the new york times" magazine. he says the campaign is taking risk by being cautious. good morning. >> hi, charlie. >> before we get to hillary clinton, donald trump, what are the implications of all this? >> well it's a drum beat. i mean it's sort of competing drum beats. you had wikileaks, that the trump campaign seems to be drumming up pretty seriously and then you have this which seems to be drip, drip, drip. it's a problem obviously for the trump campaign and he seems to be in a very, you know, take 'em all on stage. and we'll see where it goes. >> and what do we see in terms from the e-mails of hillary clinton's cautiousness and is that a surprise? >> not a surprise at all. what i think is fascinating about the e-mails is you really see the sort of political maneuvering, the calculation, the kind of overscriptedness, frankly, that we see in the candidate. so i think what's so effective about seeing these e-mails if you're donald trump, and using them, is that it underscores that hillary clinton is a politician. you know, we don't need more politicians.
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she's been part of the problem, i'm not a politician. therefore look at this. this is someone who says one thing in private, another thing in public. >> your article points out that she's sort of tired of selfies as many famous people are. do you think she's over it? >> what was interesting in our discussions she pointed to the phenomena of selfies as sort of a larger sociologic issue. she used to talk about seven, eight conversations you would have on rope lines with voters were very important. you could get people's stories. you could have an exchange. everything now in public is geared towards getting a selfie and she thought that -- >> no connection. >> no connection whatsoever. just images. >> but you write in the piece that in a sense that her daring voters to study her position, to listen to her answers and not look to her for entertainment or emotional support is risky. >> it's risky in this day and age, which is just so stimuli based which is so emotional. donald trump has propelled himself in a big way just by dominating the oxygen of this election. at the same time, you know, it
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did sort of cut the glare against hillary clinton in a way that she's probably somewhat comfortable with. but, yeah, there's a risk to be boring in this day and age and also a risk to be familiar and predictable and calculated as we're seeing with the wikileaks e-mails and i think that is a risk. >> that's what her husband is so good at. >> what? >> the emotional aspect. >> he was, absolutely. obviously he's not the candidate and he's part of the campaign, but yes her husband was just a great retail politician, had a great emotional connection, was a great story teller. >> wikileaks is promising more releases up until election day. but what you've heard so far is there anything that's been very damaging to her? not getting a lot of attention. but is there anything that you think okay, this is trouble? >> i think the cumulative effect, i think the drum beat of it is, in fact, damaging. i think the public/private thing reinforces a lot of the worst images people have of her. so i think as long as that continues and these e-mails bolster that it is problematic for her. >> do we know anything about how
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wikileaks is planning to release these things? what kind of plan they have and what they have, and -- >> yeah. unclear. i mean, if you look at the precedent over the last few days it looks like there will be a steady almost daily batch that have dropped into, you know, onto the internet. and people can digest it day to day. sounds like the trump campaign is very, very happy to use it and mr. trump is very, very happy to emphasize. >> trump campaign says they're coming after "the new york times." you all worried over that? >> you know i haven't been over there yet this morning. i just drafted the letter tonight. yeah look this isn't the first time, it won't be the last. >> thank you, mark. in our next half hour "the new york times" reporters who wrote the story about the sexual assault allegation against donald trump will join us right here in studio 57. the u.s. military says it fired cruise missiles overnight at three radar sites along womenen's coast. the strikes were in response to two separate incidents when a u.s. navy ship in the red sea area came under fire. david martin is at the pentagon. david, good morning. >> good morning, the purpose of
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this strike was very simple. to send the message that anybody who takes a pot shot at a u.s. navy ship can expect to pay a price. the american warship "uss nitze" launched the tom hawk cruise missiles into western yemen before dawn. the white house approved the so-called self-defense strikes on the three remote radar sites and territory controlled by iranian backed houthi rebels. the pentagon said the strike which appeared to have destroyed the radar sites were conducted to protect our personnel our ships and our freedom of navigation. the destroyer "uss mason" had been targeted twice on sunday and again on wednesday while sailing in international waters between yemen and east africa. state department spokesman john kirby. >> we're going to continue to encourage and urge all parties and we're going to do this by and through the u.n. special envoy to cease hostilities, stop the violence, reduce the tensions and return -- >> this marks the first u.s. military action targeting the
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houthi rebels who are trying to overthrow the government of yemen. the pentagon says the targets, which were located in remote areas away from civilians, were destroyed. but the real measure of success will be whether it puts an end to attacks on ships. gayle? >> all right. thank you very much, david. that is the point. thank you. this morning bermuda is the bull's-eye in the projected path of hurricane nicole. this is what the dangerous category 4 hurricane looks like from the international space station. nicole has maximum sustained winds of up to 130 miles an hour. it is expected to make landfall a little bit later today. don dahler is already feeling the effects in hamilton, bermuda. don, good morning. >> good morning. since 1851 bermuda has only had seven major hurricanes come close. number eight has just arrived. category 4 nicole has just gotten close enough for us to start experiencing the early rain bands and high winds. but we probably will not see the same kind of destruction that
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matthew had farther south from here, because there is a coral reef offshore that protects the island from that devastating storm surge. the experts are saying they expect to see waves about 8 to 12 feet inside the reef but outside they could be as high as 35 feet which is one of the reasons why the people around here have not been panicking. they went about their preparations very calmly. boarding up windows. and gathering up groceries. as for the u.s., nicole is expected to turn northeast after she passes over bermuda later today, and will not affect north america. charlie? >> thanks, don. rising floodwater in north carolina this morning threatens to shut down bridges, and cut off communities. the death toll in the state climbed to 20. they make up most of the 36 deaths in the united states from hurricane matthew. damage estimates are in the billions. manuel bojorquez is in griften, north carolina where the flooding threat is far from over. >> good morning.
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some rivers are not expected to crest until this weekend. the concern here is that even though this water has reached its peak, it may not recede for the next several days. a bird's-eye view of grifton north carolina reveals the situation many are struggling with. the threat of flooding long after murre cane matthew swept through. this isn't residual flooding. >> this is water that's still rising. >> the police chief took us through town to survey the damage. >> this is main street. >> so your community is pretty much sliced in half by this. >> that is correct, yes. >> the creek runs through grifton. it's one of several swollen waterwas in eastern north carolina funneling more than a foot of rain dropped by hurricane matthew. the rising waters threaten to shut down bridges in several communities. >> things that you can't change you have to learn to accept them. >> charlene has lived in grifton for 61 years and lost everything
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when hurricane floyd came through here in 1999. >> you never expect to have to go through the same thing again. but you know you're going through it. so. >> since sunday there have been at least 80 air rescues and thousands are displaced. cassandra and her daughter had just 15 minutes to evacuate their home. leaving nearly everything behind except for some clothes. >> emotional, because i don't know. >> you don't know what state your house is in right now? >> right. i don't know if i have a house to go back to. >> state agriculture officials say this widespread flooding is also having a catastrophic effect on farms and livestock in the affected areas. but it is still too early to put a dollar amount on the damage. >> all right, manny, thank you so much. two police officers in boston are in the hospital with gunshot wounds this morning after a shoot-out. the police commissioner says the wounded officers are in extremely critical condition. they were responding to a domestic disturbance call last night when they came under fire.
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>> we have an officer down. can we get -- >> multiple officers heading that way. >> multiple, multiple shots. >> now the suspect was kid. he was wearing body armor and was armed with an assault rifle. authorities say nine other officers are being treated for minor injuries and threats. a surprise announcement a short time ago from sweden. ahead why bob dylan, that's right, bob dylan, is the latest to win a nobel prize. >> hey! >> nobel prize. that warrants a yay, couldn't it? >> but first --
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by listerine. bring out the bold! donald trump gave an angry response to "the new york times" even before the paper published accusations of inappropriate touching. >> the reporters who broke the story are here in studio 57 today. ahead, what they learned from two accusers and how donald trump responded during a phone interview.
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stake in this election, former cia director michael hay from the bottom of the bay. the at tipped over thi good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. in just a few hours, a capsized boat will be pulled from the bottom of the bay. the boat tipped over this weekend probably from too many people on board. 30 passengers were pulled from the water. in hayward, engineers are preparing a robot for battle. megabots incorporated built their prize fighter who will face off in the ring with a japanese robot. n the next half-hour of "cbs this morning,," high schools are celebrating homecomings but why are some schools opting to cancel their dances? that's next. but first, traffic and weather coming up. ,,,,,,,,
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time now 7:27. it's been a busy morning in the traffic center. let's check san jose now. we have that traffic alert still issued on southbound 101 before brokaw road. this is an overturned big rig still out there blocking those right lanes. cars are moving pretty nicely on past it. also, southbound 101 before highway 87 that two-car crash is blocking the middle lane and it is causing some delays here if you are heading southbound, as well. let's move over to the san mateo bridge. very slow almost an hour from the span to the peninsula. we are tracking showers on hi-def doppler heading south this evening. heavy overnight into tomorrow. low 70s inland, 60s at the coast. rain friday through monday. ,,,,,,
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♪ donald trump told supporters last night to go out and vote on november 28th. when election day is actually november 8th. >> go and register. make sure you get out and vote november 28th. >> i can't wait to hear trump on november 9th. cnn is so biased. they are saying hillary has already won the election even though it's 19 days away! >> actually, not for president. he means voting for him on "dancing with the stars." he is on that show november 28th. if you try to vote on november 28th, you're just a weirdo hanging out at the elementary school. >> nobody wants that. remember to vote, november 8th. welcome back to "cbs this morning." this half hour, an inside look at the latest allegations
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against donald trump of unwanted sexual advances. two "the new york times" reporters who wrote today's front page story are in the green room. ahead, why they felt very comfortable publishing the accusations, despite threats from donald trump. the growing trend of cancelling high school dances. school administrators say to punish rowdy students or deter bad behavior. ahead the backlash against the plans that affect well-behaved students. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" reports on the sudden leadership change after the scandal at wells fargo bank. john stumpf retired yesterday as chairman's ceo. he gave up stock awards worth $41 million and gets no severance. chief operating officer tim sloan is taking over as ceo. regulators fined the bank because workers opened as many as 2 million phony accounts to meet high-pressure sales goals. the hartford courant says suicide could be the reason for
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a plane crash in connecticut. the student and pilot fought for the controls as plane plunge. frietekh died in the crash and prevalla was severely burned. they think it was intentional but not terrorism. a first court appearance today for ahmad rahami will appear by video link after he is still recovering in the hospital after wounded in a shoot-out. he told the investigators his bombings were random and claims no one else was involved. >> the guardian of britain says bob dylan received a nobel prize about new poetic expressions within the song tradition. it includes a prize of more than $900,000. dylan, who is 75, was born in
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minnesota as robert allen zimmerman. >> you said, bob dylan with gusto. you like that? >> i do. >> congrats to him. >> well-deserved and about time. >> maybe he'll do an interview. >> with david rimer of "the new yorker." we reported earlier that more women are accusing donald trump of improper physical conduct. this morning's "the new york times" features accounts by two of those women. cbs news has not confirmed their stories but rachel crooks was a 22-year-old receptionist at a company inside trump tower in 2015. the times says she introduced herself to trump and they shook hands and shoon after he kissed her cheeks and then she said he began to kiss me on the mouth. another kis you're jessica leeds told the times trump's hands were all over knee during an airplane flight. the 74-year-old said it happened more than three decades ago. >> he was like an octopus. like he had six arms. he was all over the place. if he had stuck with the upper
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part of the body, i might not have gotten -- i might not have gotten that upset but when he started putting his hand up my skirt and that was it. >> the trump campaign immediately responded saying, quote, this entire article is fiction. this truly is nothing more than a political attack. this is a sad day for "the times." over overnight, trump's lawyer asked the times to retract their story and said failure to do so will leave my client with no option for action and remedies. michael barbaro and megan twohey wrote the story and in studio 57 for their first tv interview about this article. tell us about these allegations made in your story, megan. >> jessica leeds is a woman who shared her story with us and said that a little over 30 years
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ago she was on a plane seated next to donald trump when he proceeded to grope her and put his hand up her skirt, forcing her to fleet to another seat in the plane. >> that allegation comes forward, it's from 30 years ago. how do you verify it? how do you know that something like that is worth putting in the paper? >> we can also -- we are heavy to discuss that, but the second allegation was made, dates back to 2005 from a young woman who was working in trump tower at the time. she was a 22-year-old receptionist for bay rock, a company located there. she said she bumped into trump outside of an elevator and that, you know, she introduced herself. they shook hands. he kissed her on the cheek and proceeded to kiss her on the mouth and she felt uncomfortable about it. what do you do when two women come to a newspaper and tell stories like that? >> did they reach out to you all or did you put out a call to them? >> they reached out to us. >> back to norah's question. how do you verify it? >> what we do we interview the
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women in both cases more than once to make sure what they told us in their e-mails and lined up with what they told us in interviews. then we also, in both case, these are women had shared their stories with friends and family. in the case of the 22-year-old, she immediately made a phone call to her sister right after this happened. she went home that night and told her boyfriend, you know, so we talked to the boyfriend. we talked to the sister in the case of jessica we talked to other people she had told as well. >> did you talk to donald trump? >> yes. we did. >> before we get to that, we talked, not just to the two women who went on the record' used their names, we talked to the people around them who went on the record and uses their names. there are no anonymous quotations in the story. these are people who are putting their names and their reputations by the claims that were described in these stories. i think that is important. >> at the time they allege these assaults, they had told close friends and family who recall similar stories? >> in the case of rachel crooks, that is absolutely correct.
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in the case of jessica leeds, about a year and a half ago she had to tell a widening circle of people, including her son, her nephew and more than two friends but we talked to two friends as well as the nephew and son who recall the details of what she told them, which lined up with what she told us. >> megan, you talked to donald trump, you said? >> yes, absolutely. publish these accounts without talking to the presidential candidate himself. so on tuesday night, he got on the phone with me and i smelled out the allegations and, you know, gave him a chance to respond. >> what did he say? don't leave that out! >> he insisted that all of the allegations were a fibuabricati and "the new york times" made them up and he increasingly agitated as i continued my questions and started to yell at me and told me i was a disgusting human being. >> what did you think of that? have you had anyone speak to you like that in the past? >> that -- i have not had that
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experience before. but -- >> what do you say to that, okay, thank you very much? talk to you later? you keep talking? >> you keep asking questions. you keep asking questions. once again, these women, i think, were inspired to go on the record, especially after the debate on sunday when trump was asked about this. as we all know on friday, there was a recording released in which he in his own words was describing kissing women and groping women without consent. anderson cooper asked him about in the debate on sunday directly. you were caught talking about this behavior on tape. have you, in fact, done this? he looked at cooper and said, no, no i haven't. which was, you know, i think for the women that we spoke to, you know, part of a motivation to speak out. >> they were watching the debate. >> they reached out to you after the debate? >> jessica leeds were watching the debate and she and her friend turned to each other and mouthed -- and they contacted "the new york times" the next
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day. >> you were talking about donald trump's behavior around women and after that story, brewer came out and said you misrepresented her experience. she said, quote, she spun it to where it appeared negative. i did not have a negative experience with donald trump. >> yes. that was -- we did, in fact, do a story in may about looking at trump's treatment of women and, you know, it was an extensive story. >> she said she was misrepresented. >> we included the voices of many women and, you know, brewer did not like the story in the end but we have not received any request for a correction or retraction from brewer. >> or from donald trump? >> or from donald trump. >> you point in your story the two latest women you're talking about told you they support hillary clinton? which donald trump would say, look, this is another way of attacking me? >> we believed it was important. we actually pro actively sought information about their political views and decided to include it and thought it was an important disclosure. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you so much for joining us this morning. homecoming looks different this year for many high school students.
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ahead why some school official are cancellinging the dance for anyone to punish a handful. take us with you on the go. we invite you to subscribe to our new "cbs this morning" pod cost on itunes and apple's podcast app. today we have an inside look on life on the campaign trail. hanna frazier will talk about the most memorable moments from more than a year of covering hillary clinton. the news "cbs this morning" podcast is online right now. it's pretty good. >> i've heard. >> it's very good. >> i've heard they are good. >> we will be right back. and my life is basketball.all ot but that doesn't stop my afib from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto® significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people with afib not caused by a heart valve problem.
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,,,, to punish everyone for the bad behavior of just a few? corona del mar's high school's football game went on as scheduled last week, but this past weekend's homecoming dance was cancelled, a casualty of alleged student drinking at a recent game. >> let's go! >> the behavior of many of our student were despicable and deplorable. >> that is just out of control. when you're under age you shouldn't be drinking any ways. >> reporter: the school decided to send a clear signal. >> as a consequence of extremely inappropriate and totally inexcusable behavior, the homecoming activities have been cancelled. >> you're punishing everybody because of a select bunch of idiots. i mean, come on! >> reporter: at walfole high
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school student drinking forced them to cancelling everything except for prom. their principal issued a statement to cbs news, we are working together to move forward and addresses age-old but increasing pervasive issue head-on. >> i think some of the responsibility has to go to the parents. >> reporter: the national institutes of health says the percentage of high school students engaging in binge drinking has actually declined over the past decade. but the percentage of students drinking at levels far beyond the bench threshold is a growing concern. rob pickell and his daughter who attends the high school understand why the homecoming dance was cancelled. >> i think sometimes actions, as big as that, are necessary, even though it's a real bummer for, you know, the students who weren't participating. >> it actually facilitates
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business, and he defends his actions. >> ah. thank you. it seems they should find another way the whole school has to pay if a small group of people were drinking. you remember the homecoming dance? >> i do. >> i do. >> were you homecoming queen? >> no, i was not. shawna was, who you have met. >> i would think you would be, norah. a four-legged guest, a good story. the quick thinking action to save a dog dragged up by
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fargo, amid an "unauthorized account" scandal at the san i'm kenny choi. john stumpf has abruptly resigned as ceo of wells fargo amid an unauthorized account scandal at the san francisco- based bank. federal regulators say that wells fargo employees trying to meet sales goals opened about 2 million accounts without customers' knowledge. >> the u.s. coast guard has issued a coastal flood advisory and high surf advisory for northern and central california. a good sized storm is forecast. the advisories will be in effect tomorrow from 3 a.m. until 9 p.m. and in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning," a woman who recorded video as her husband was fatally shot during a confrontation with police in north carolina. we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,
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tobacco companies knew that smoking kills. and they lied about it for decades. now they're lying about prop 56. if you don't use tobacco, you don't pay. smokers pay - their fair share of the 3 billion in health care costs all taxpayers are paying now. and there's one more thing: our kids. every state that's significantly raised tobacco taxes has reduced youth smoking. please. vote yes on 56. if we can save even a few lives, it's worth it.
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southbound 101 before brokaw road, this is a traffic alert issued at 4:20 this morning the overturned big rig that's out there is still blocking the two right lanes has not been cleared yet. and not causing too many slowdowns. southbound 101. but another crash earlier is still causing some slowdowns and as you can see, it's running just 6 miles per hour. also slow northbound 101, as well. san mateo bridge expect a 45- minute commute across the span. julie. >> we are still tracking rain. it is still well north of us but it's heading our way and will move in overnight tonight into tomorrow morning. hi-def doppler showing rain still well north of the bay area. high temperatures today will be on the cool side. low 70s inland. 60s by the bay. and along the coast. rain tomorrow. we have flood advisories. we have high surf advisory likely going to see ponding on the road and saturday and sundlingering showers. another system moves through
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good morning to your viewers in the west. it's thursday, october 13th, 2016. welcome back to cbs this morning. more real news ahead, including the wife who saw her husband kill bid charlotte police. gayle talks with her about that moment, but first, here's today's eye opener at 8:00. >> the array of charges that depict an egotistical celebrity -- >> got on the phone with me and i spelled out the allegations. insisted that all to have the allegations were a fabrication. he got increasingly agitated. started to yell at me and told me i was a disgusting human being. >> they say there's about 50,000 of these e-mail, enough to
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create a steady trickle of embarrassment for the clinton campaign. >> looks like there will be a steady batch and sounds like the trump campaign is very, very happy to use it. >> to send the message to anybody who takes a pot shot at a us navy ship can pay a price. >> since 1851, bermuda has only had seven marria major hurricanes. >> boll dylan has won noble prize for literature. >> maybe he'll do an interview. >> former house speaker joboehn says he still plan ons voting for trump, even though quote, donald wasn't my third or fourth, who was your fourth? when he is per jeb. choice. who was your fourth choice? whisper -- jeb. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah >> multiple women say this morning that donald trump made
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unwanted add vabs vanced towards them. they claim he groped them, ki kissed them or made thinker physically uncome r fortable. trump has denied all the allegations. cbs news has not confirmed their claims! a "people" magazine reported writes this, we walked into that room alone. and trump shut the darbee hind us. i turned around and within second, he was pushing me against the wall and forcing his tongue down throat. we spoke earlier with the reporters who published accounts from two women. one said trump on a plane, lifted the armrest and began to touch her. >> the asuzanne koouzer spoke out -- the women in "the new york times" article support hillary clinton. they say they were angered during sunday's dewhen trump denied touching anyone. >> are you saying what you said on the bus 11 years ago, you did not actually kiss or grope women without consent? >> i have great respect for women. nobody has more respect for
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women than i do. >> so, you're saying you've never did that? >> you hear these things and i was embarrassed by it, but i have tremendous respect. >> have you ever done those things? >> no, i have not. >> the times got trump's reaction before the article was published. quote, none of this ever took place, so trump who began shouting at the reporter, you are a disgusting human being, he said. we asked the trump organization to provide someone to talk us, but they were unable to do so. >> the lawyer said tit was reckless. the attorney called the timing quote, nothing more than a politically motivated attempt to defeat mr. trump's candidacy. also reports that trump is thinking of suing the paper now. ricky clingman with is with us to discuss. if he sue, he could sue on what grounds and doesn't it open him
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up to others thing? >> let's start with the lawsuit. for liable. it's print. he is say iing that it has defad him. that it is cast him in a light that is unfavorable, obviously, a sexual assault or an unwanted groping or kissing would do that. however, he is a public figure. and "the new york times" knows well because the seminole case that every law student has ever heard about is called "new york times" versus sullivan. and what we've learned in that case and it teaches us in the media, also, about the law, is that if you are a public figure, the standard is higher for a newspaper in that it is reckless disregard for the truth. it's what we call actual malice. and actual malice means you acted wreck reklessly or the times would have actedlessly if its publication, so you have to reporters on in the last hour.
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it seemed to me from listening to them and knowing a news organization whether it would be a "new york times" a "washington post," "wall street journal" or cbs new, we have lawyers. we have lawyers who vet things. you just don't throw something into print or put something on the air without vetting it. your times reporters noted that the stories did occur originally contemporaneously, that there were others who had heard them. >> donald trump has threatened to sue "the new york times" in the past. just recently, when the they published his part of his tax summary, apparently, up this day, he's not sued them. if he were to sue them, what would the discovery process look like? >> well, this is the question that you and gayle both want answered and charlie does, too. anyone who files a lawsuit for defamation in a case like this
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involving allegations of sexual misconduct, is asking for trouble. this is when we say be careful what you wish for. in the discovery process, he has said, i didn't do these particular things, he said to ander kohn cooper, i never kissed a woman or groped a woman against her will. well, in discovery, we could find out all the things he might have done and with whom he might have done it. not only in a deposition to him, but also then in looking and casting a ballot for other women. this would be a nightmare. >> so, if you were donald trump's lawyer, you could say we could send this letter threatening, withdraw it, but what? what would your counsel be? >> that he could demand the retraction which he's done, with letter, because it is too late the catch that train. it's gone. but i would not tell him to sue. because i do think that opening up your entire past, talking
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about the word never, i have never done this. so, the discovery process i think would be horrendous for him. and if we think some people came out of nowhere, just wait. if there were a lawsuit. >> can you sue the people that are cited in the story. >> yes, you can and he may want to threaten to do that or in fact, to do that. for the idea that it may deter others from coming forward. >> thank you. >> thank you. nice to see you. >> indeed. say hello to bill. sfwl i will. thank you. the longest serving monarch in the world died a short time ago. thailand's king was 88 years old. palace spokesman said he died peacefully. the king had been on the throne since 1946. he had sufed from multiple medical problems in recent years. you can see people on the street
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the nation's capital is the nation's capitol is about to get some new stars. jane crawford is in washington. >> this is where magic happens at rose's luxury. one of the top restaurants in washington, d.c. and is now in contention for a covet t militia lynn star. coming up, we'll introduce you to the undercover critic who will help decide which restaurants make the cut as the finest in the world. decide with which restaurants make the cut as the finest in the world. ♪ ♪ dreaming about the things that we could be ♪ ♪ baby i've been playing hard
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an indep an independent autopsy released by the family of the charlotte man killed by police confirms that keith scott died from gun shot wounds in the back and abdomen. he was sitting in his car waiting for his son to arrive home from school. police say he was armed with a gun. his family says he was not. the video was captured on video by his wife and police. we sat down with her for the first time. it's an interview you'll see only on cbs this morning. >> when did you know this is a problem, a bad situation? >> when i came out the door. and two officers were pointing their gun at my husband in the car. >> what is your husband doing at this point? >> he's sitting. in the car. he's just sitting there looking. forward he's confused, i know he was. just taken his medicine. >> we hear you come to the scene.
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>> king, don't do it. >> and you're saying keith, don't do it. don't you do it. keith, don't do it. what are you tellinging him not to do? >> i'm not talking to keith. i'm calling keith's name for him to hear me. i'm talking to the officers that i actually see changing their stance. their positions. >> did who you were? >> no, not like, i'm sure in heat of the moment -- >> who is this woman standing here. >> no, they wouldn't have known me personally, but i was the only one out there. i'm yelling at them. i'm loud enough for them to hear me. >> keith, keith! >> you know, i won't say they knew i was his wife, but i was somebody of importance. >> the police report said sez that they encountered your husband. he was in the car, they saw marijuana and a gun. what did you see? >> no gun. >> you didn't see a gun? >> no gun. >> assume he had the marijuana and a gun. at the moment of the shooting, what i think people are focussing thing on. to that, you say what?
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>> he had no gun. he was not a flet. and he just, he was just not a threat. period. he didn't have a gun. he wasn't a threat. what is your purpose? what was your reasoning? why -- you saw him backing up. why didn't you just say give him a command then? >> the police say the videotape is inconclusive. >> but i was there. i saw this. incident unfold before my face. what people don't seem to understand, they're trying to bring in our past. after november 2nd, after this accident, his motorcycle accident when he returned home in january, he was a totally different person. >> talk about that for a second because there's been a lot of pub liss thety about the fact you had taken out a restraining order against him. that he had pulled a gun on you. that there had been violence in the marriage and to that, you say what? >> all that is correct. absolutely. but that's my marriage.
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i don't expect anyone to understand our marriage. >> does that have anything to do with this case? >> had they known him, then i would understand. why they would be, you know, in defense mode. they didn't know who my husband was. they didn't know nothing about him. >> i heard you say he has traumatic brain injury. he's just taken his medication. >> he has a tbi. he's not going to do anything to you guys. he just took his medicine. >> he takes almost 11 different medications. he take them and you have to give it time to kick in. if not, he's not, if you start a conversation with him, he's not going to remember the conversation once the medicine has kicked in. >> don't you do it. did you shoot him? >> what role do you think race played in the shooting of your husband? >> 100%. >> people say officer vincent is black and your husband is black. >> officer vincent i don't believe shot my husband.
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>> what do you mean? >> because of the positioning when the shooting actually occurred. officer vincent was to my left. further. my positioning was where i could see the officer with the white shirt. my husband. the police officer with the dash cam and the officer right here with the red shirt. >> you did not see officer vincent at that time or did you? >> no, no, i did see him, but he's at a distance. not a part of the interaction. >> i see. so, to you o, it doesn't make sense that officer vincent with was the one that pulled the trigger. >> correct. >> what does the charlotte police department have to gain by saying it was a black officer who shot your husband? >> i'm not sure. what they have to gain. i'm just going by what i believe. call and believe that day. >> how are are you children? is your family?
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>> all u we want is to know why. why did you have to take keith that day. give us the real, valid reason as to why my husband's life was taken that day. before me. >> there are seven children, guys. they've been together tr 25 years. seven children from 9 to 23. and she said you know, they're taking it day by day, but the officer is brently benson. identified by the police as the one who shot keith scott. he has on administrative leave. ballistics tests could clear this up, but none have been leased that's why they did the independent autopsy. this whole encounter from beginning to ended three minutes. police had gone there to execute a warrant on something else. they saw him and engaged in an encounter with him.
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>> how did the police answer her question, why? >> she said no one has given her an answer because no one has talked to her. no one has said we're sorry, had a conversation with her about what happened that day. >> right. zwl. >> she's in a lot of pain and you know, you could feel her pain. you could feel her anger. she really held it together. as soon as the interview was over, she burst into tears. she said i just want the get through this. i want people to hear me. i don't want people to see that i'm in a lot of pand angry so they don't hear the story i'm trying to tell. >> was there a gun or not? >> police say there was a gun. the family says there was not, but the police say yes, there was a gun. >> you could see the fear in her voice almost anticipating. >> yes, you could. why she u pulled out her phone. what you have to do these days. >> coming up, the presidential election could have an impact on your financial future. ahead, we'll bring you the results of a survey, the world's largest investment firm. that's here on cbs this morning.
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be right back. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me go further. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ready for a new chapter? talk to your rheumatologist. this is humira at work.
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alla lot of it's a hoax.bal warminit's a hoax. it'll get cooler. it'll get warmer. it's called weather. we need some global warming! we need leaders who get it. so that we can move away from coal and oil to clean energy. i'm tom steyer. if you want to do something about climate change, you can. please. register and vote. nextgen california action committee is responsible for the content of this advertising.
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democratic presidential nominee hillary clinton is scheduled to attend a fundraising event at bill graham civic auditorium i'm kenny choi. democratic presidential nominee hillary clinton is scheduled to attend a phrasing event at bill graham civic auditorium in san francisco for fundraising tickets still available. the fifth annual autumn lights festival today in oakland. more than 100 local artists are scheduled to participate. the festival runs through the 15th. coming up on "cbs this morning," a new poll finds that nearly two-thirds of americans say that the upcoming presidential election has impacted their investment decisions. we have a guest in studio 57 to break it down. raffic and weather in just a moment. 600 dollars. of abuse. important step forward. the time is long overdue... pharmaceutical industry. passes - the ballot.
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good. time now 8:27. good morning. we have had a busy morning in the traffic center. let's head to the south bay in san jose. first, starting with a traffic alert that still issued by chp southbound 101 before brokaw road. this overturned big rig still out there blocking those right lanes. and then on the other side, northbound 101 before brokaw road as well, there's a motorcycle versus a vehicle crash out there blocking lanes and causing some delays. northbound 101 moving at just 19 miles an hour. moving over to the bay bridge toll plaza, backed up all the way beyond the maze on to 580 here. the maze to downtown will take
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you 30 minutes. it's heavy across the span of the bay bridge. julie, how's it looking over there? >> we are tracking rain on hi- def doppler. the leading edge of the system that will bring us heavy rainfall by tomorrow is right now to the north bringing heavy rainfall really to the pacific northwest and northern california. later today we stay dry for the most part. temperatures in the low 70s for the warmest spots inland. 60s by the bay and along the coast. likely starting to see showers this evening in the north bay spreading south overnight. looks like the timing is slowed down a bit. so the front will move through likely sometime during the morning commute through the north bay and then for the rest of us, towards the end of the morning commute tomorrow. heavy rainfall flood advisory in effect for tomorrow. and we do anticipate some ponding and some localized flooding on the roads as well as high winds. could see gusts in the 30- to 40-mile-per-hour range tomorrow. rain through monday. ,,,,,,,,
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♪ ,,,,,,,, check out these two kung fu pandas and their play quickly turns rough as you can see on this video from china. one pushes the other off the ledge and into a trowel. he faces a little panda payback. then they are friends again. hugs solve everything. they act like nothing had happened. perfect time to sing "kiung fu fighting." would you like to lead us off, charlie? >> not with you two! ♪ kung fu fighting >> you have to play that song all day in your head.
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you're welcome. welcome back to "cbs this morning." uncertainty about the presidential election is impacting what americans do with their money? rob kapito is in our green room. settle down. >> i'm still laughing. the michelin guide has coveted stars. ahead and first on "cbs this morning," jan crawford met with a michelin inspector to learn the criteria for these international honors. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" reports a glut has forced dairy farmers to dump millions of gallons of milk. 43 million gallons of milk was destroyed in the first eight months of this year. that is enough to fill 66 olympic-sized swimming pools. the gut has pushed milk prices down an average 36%.
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the "los angeles times" records on ronda rousey return to fighting after being knocked out by holly holm last year. she could retake her bantum weight title. wearable monitors may provide interesting fitness information but a study shows they are not always reliable. report says heart rate monitors are wrong 10% to 2020 of t% of time. patriots quarterback has called trump a good friend but here is what happened yesterday when brady was asked about trump's vulgar comments. >> tom, you have kids of your own. would you respond if your kid heard donald trump's version of locker room talk? >> thank you, guys. have a good day. >> the reporter spotted a make america great again had in brady's locker room last year. >> i love how he handled it.
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so people are sitting in cash at a very, very bad moment when interest rates are so low and globally some rates across the world are actually negative, so they need to invest this money into the market today. and i think there are many, many opportunities for them to do that but it's so critical that they get this money invested or they won't have enough for retirement. >> what is the safest thing to be in? >> well, thif in ti think in th people say after the election they will focus 20% more of their portfolios in equities and 20% more in bond.
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i think equities that have a dividend and dividends have always been a large portion of the total return of a stock, are very important. these are large cap companies, open your refrigerator, see the companies that represent different product that pay a good dividend. you can get 4% to 5% dividends versus being in cash at 25 basis points. i also think, charlie, because there is over 50 trillion, 50 trillion dollars of cash that is sitting in banks right now earning next to nothing and some places, negative. >> right. >> that when that money starts to get allocated, it's going to keep rates lower for longer and it's actually going to buoy the stock market to rise. so i think there is some really good opportunity in income generating equities, municipal bonds, no matter who wins the election, and short term maybe high-yield bonds that give people some income because that
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is very important for your future. >> the federal reserve minutes were released and indicated, once again, we are expecting interest rates to rise, probably after the election. what impact do you think that will have? >> well, it really is not going to change people's lives the next day. so if interest rates rise 25 or 50 basis points, it may beginning the signal of rises in interest rates, and that is why i would say people should be in shorter term bonds so they will get the opportunity to invest their coupon at higher rates later. but like most people in this survey, they realize in the election and also in the federal reserve, that the economy, today, is not going to change the day after the election and a day after interest rates rise. >> does blackrock bleach the federal reserve will raise interest rates in december? >> well, there's a 50% chance and what janet yellen is looking at, the jobs. >> does blackrock think it's a good idea to raise interest rates?
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>> i think at this point in time it would be a good idea to begin the process of raising rates. it's hard for people to live off of the incomes they have today with the higher tlif eer cost o. if you look at where short-term rates are, this changes people's lives. in a sense, it's a self-tax on the future. they need higher interest rates so that the money that they have deposited in banks or in money market funds gives them some income so that they can take that income, pay down their debts, and have some money left over to invest in the future. >> thank you, rob. >> we always like it when you come up to the table. >> a pleasure. >> thank you very much. restaurants in the nation's capital are about to get some international recognition. ahead, and first on "cbs this morning," jan crawford finds out what it takes for restaurants to earn a coveted micheli
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♪ if you want a memorable meal out, you might want to pick up a copy of the famous michelin restaurant guide. it offers the opinions of food professionals are from a week night dinner. to do t today, it will announce picks for the first washington, d.c. division. jan crawford sat down with the chief inspector to learn what it
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takes to evaluate the world's best restaurants. jan is at minibar, one of several restaurants, eager to find out if it has earned a coveted michelin star. >> reporter: good morning. this is the day for the big reveal. in washington, it hasn't been known as a destination for fine dining, but that is about to change. michelin inspectors visited hundreds of restaurants in this city and they are going to recommend 107 of them in the guide and of those, only a select few will get one of the most coveted food honors in the world, a michelin star. >> not good enough. >> when celebrity chef gordon ramsey lost a coveted michelin star. >> i started crying. >> reporter: he told a norwegian television station, for once he didn't scream. >> like losing a girlfriend. >> reporter: for nearly a century, this red book has decreed the top restaurants in the world. this week, after a year's long process, shrouded in mystery,
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michelin comes to washington with a new guide and for a few select chefs, new stars. we sat down with michelin's top u.s. inspector at the tasting table test kitchen in new york with the promise not to blow her cover. >> it's an award they take seriously because they don't know we have been there, they can't influence our findings. >> reporter: it strikes fear and awe in chefs' hearts. >> this is the holy grail for them and what they have been working toward their whole year. >> reporter: she is strictly anonymous and even close friends don't know her real job. >> we are not trying to play tricks or hide from the chefs but what we are trying to do is have an honest experience the way a consumer does when they go to a restaurant. >> reporter: so you're not getting special treatment like, my gosh, there is inspector? >> we sit on hold making reservations to long on time and have to eat at 5:30 or 10:30 and get terrible tables. >> like you're in the cia? >> cia but much better food!
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much better food! >> reporter: in washington, michelin found some great food like the dishes coming from cutting edge filipino chef tom kunana. >> this is our pizza. >> reporter: this is octopus? >> yes. >> reporter: we visited their bad saint with d.c. food critic jessica sidmond to find out why it's on the list of 19 washington bid ormans. this looks very sophisticated. >> right. kind of trendy. >> reporter: all right. well, let's try it. oh, wow. >> you get all of the textures. >> reporter: the kind of moderately priced restaurant the inspectors might frequent on their night off. >> of course, they meet the michelin guide criteria of quality and the cooking is excellent. a place like that is great. >> reporter: one day, they could get one, two, or even three elusive michelin stars. what is a three-star michelin restaurant?
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>> the best way of some of the three-star restaurants, it's once in a lifetime. it's something you're going to remember forever. >> reporter: any star is an honor. the restaurants that make it into the guide, just 10% actually get a star rating. in the u.s., only 13 restaurants hold three michelin stars. places so exceptional, they are worth a special journey. that was the purpose of the guide when it was founded in the early 1900s. the french-based michelin, after all is a tire company. in the early days of the automobile, its founders wanted to encourage travel and what better way than a guide to fine dining. it now has 27 guides worldwide, three in the u.s. washington long seen as a town of steak houses and expense accounts, this week will become america's fourth. >> in the last few years, it's incredible what that gone on with the restaurants in washington, d.c. there are a lot of young chefs who are expressing a very unique and distinctive personality and,
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similarly, the chefs and restaurants that have been around a long time are evolving. >> reporter: one of those young chefs is aaron silverman. his restaurant is widely considered one of the city's best. customers stand in line for hours to get a table. >> at the end of the day, our job is to make people happy, whether you're a server or bartender waiting on a guest or a chef leading your cooks. your job is to make them happy. >> reporter: but will rosa's luxury get a star or will his new venture, the high-end pi pineapple and pearls? >> it's incredible and i hope that we get something or multiple things from them, but the biggest benefit i'm going to get out of that award is hopefully we are busier and we can do more for our staff. >> reporter: michelin's full announcement won't come out for another few hours with you learned that the chef here and his staff here at minibar have
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been awarded two coveted michelin stars. jose got the car this morning from the michelin inspector. i think excitement may be an understatement. as he has said, this is the kind of thing chefs spend their entire careers hoping to achieve. gayle? >> wow! congratulations! some good recommendations! >> jose, that is awesome! i wonder what they are making there? >> they had beef they were putting sauce on and it looked really good. >> all of a sudden, i'm hungry! >> d.c. restaurants have really changed. >> it happen. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back.
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hour... crews will pull up a boat that capsized this weekend from the bottom of the bay. 30 pas it's 8:55. i'm kenny choi. in about an hour, crews will pull up a capsized boat in the bay. 30 passengers were in the water when it flipped. eight were hospitalized but will be okay. john sump is retired as ceo of wells fargo amid an unauthorized account scandal is he san francisco bank. federal regulators say that wells fargo employees trying to meet sales gold old 2 million accounts without customer knowledge. the fifth annual autumn lights festival continues today in oakland. more than 100 local artists scheduled to participate. the festival rubs through the 15th. now for a check of weather, here's julie. >> rain on hi-def doppler.
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gray skies outside now and increasing clouds the story today ahead of the approaching front. rain and hi-def doppler radar still well to our north. it is pretty impressive with the pacific northwest and the northern portion of the state later today. it will be sinking south and we should start to see showers in our neck of the woods overnight tonight and into tomorrow morning. high temperatures in the low 70s for folks inland again staying dry for most today with the exception of the north bay maze showers later on this afternoon and evening. 60s along the coast and by the bay today. the big rain event is tomorrow. and then we stay unsettled through the weekend. drying out by early next week. traffic coming up after the break. i'm_ ,,,,,,,,
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tobacco companies knew that smoking kills. and they lied about it for decades. now they're lying about prop 56. if you don't use tobacco, you don't pay. smokers pay - their fair share of the 3 billion in health care costs all taxpayers are paying now. and there's one more thing: our kids. every state that's significantly raised tobacco taxes
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has reduced youth smoking. please. vote yes on 56. if we can save even a few lives, it's worth it. good morning. time now 8:58. if you are heading out the door to 880, get ready for slow conditions. let's take a look now at southbound 880. this is the nimitz freeway before "a" street. there's a motorcycle versus car crash out there still blocking the left lanes and backup is into downtown oakland. let's check the live look of the nimitz. 238 in san leandro to the maze, 43 minutes. now, this traffic alert is issued at 4:20 a.m. still out there. southbound 101 in san jose, before brokaw road. this overturned big rig is still out there blocking those right lanes and crews are trying to fix it for you now. have a great day see you at noon. ,,,,,,,,,,
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wayne: (screeching) jonathan: it's a trip to ireland! (irish accent): hello, wayne mcbrady. wayne: oops, i'm naughty. jonathan: it's a new motorcycle! omg. wayne: come on, brother, let's do it! what?! tiffany: wake up! wayne: if you're having a good time say, "yeah!" (cheers and applause) jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: what's up, america? welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. one person, let's go. who wants to make a deal? yvonne, come here, yvonne. hey, yvonne. you look like you're ready to go out dancing or to a party or something. - i am. wayne: so what are you dressed as? - i'm a '70s diva, mix of chaka and diana, and i'm a glamma. wayne: ooh, a glamma. - yes, i have two grandkids. wayne: you do not have two grandkids.
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