tv CBS This Morning CBS October 3, 2017 7:00am-9:00am PDT
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>> no no. liic land. >> thanks for watching kpix 5 news this morning. your next local update is 7:26. have a great day. ♪[ music ] ♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, october 3rd, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning." americans still mourning the las vegas shooting victims and asking why an accountant turned gambler killed 59 people and wounded so many. >> 22,000 people from across the country were enjoying a concert when they got caught up in the deadliest u.s. attack since 9/11. we'll have stories of heroism, and grief. president trump goes to puerto rico after hurricane maria devastated the u.s. commonwealth. many survivors struggling nearly two weeks into the sis as
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center. this morning there are signs of progress. plus just one week after finishing his final big tour, rocker tom petty has died. we'll look back at the life of the singer and songwriter who said music was the only thing he was good at. but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> humanity revealed itself last night. everyone who was there, everybody who is watching the coverage of this, i think all our lives have changed. >> the search for answers, after the deadliest mass shooting in modern u.s. history. >> we're hunting down and tracing down every single clue that we can get. >> investigators have a big job ahead of them. the motive for the attack remains unknown. >> the insanity of a scum bag mad man. how dare any human being do that? >> the responsibility for this epidemic of mass execution lies with policymakers. >> emotional calls for new gun laws from senate democrats.
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>> there's a time and place for political debate. now is the time to unite as a country. >> the president trump is on his way to puerto rico and will visit victims of hurricane maria. >> it's now acknowledged what a great job we've done, and people are looking at that. >> all that -- tom petty has died at the age of 66. ♪ free fallin >> and all that matters. >> in las vegas hundreds of people answering the call to donate blood in the wake of the shooting. >> what you see here is an outpouring of community support. it's a really remarkable feeling. >> on "cbs this morning." >> there was a point in the show, we had all 22,000 people out there singing "god bless america" at the top of their lunges. an incredibly powerful moment of unity. ♪ god bless america my home sweet home ♪
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>> welcome to "cbs this morning." we all need a little "god bless america." charlie rose is returning from assignment in the middle east. norah o'donnell is in las vegas. jeff and brianna are here at the table. welcome once 9/11. >> the country music fans who became victims describe an unimaginable ambush.
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norah o'donnell is near the scene outside the mandalay bay resort and casino with new details of the victims and the investigation. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that's right. the front page of the paper saying unimaginable, and the people here in las vegas, in this state, the whole country still stunned more than 24 hours after the attack. we're also hearing extraordinary accounts of courage and heroism by the 22,000 people targeted at that country music festival. behind the numbers are the faces and stories of those killed on sunday night. we know some of their names this morning. identified victims range in age from 20 to 57. one mother and grandmother died in her husband of 32 years. we also know more about 64-year-old stephen paddock who brought 23 guns and thousands of rounds of ammunition into his suite at manned day bay.
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police found 19 more weapons at his home. think about that, 42 guns in total. we're learning new details of his sniper-style attack from the 32nd floor and the response from concert goers caught in a horrifying barrage of gunfire below. we begin with john blackstone who was here in las vegas when the shooting happened. john, good morning. >> good morning. the alleged gunman, stephen paddock checked into the mandalay bay hotel on thursday. law enforcement officials tell cbs news over the next three days he was able to bring bags full of weapons and ammunition into his suite, building his deadly arsenal as a registered hotel guest. as panic swept through the crowd of more than 22,000 country music fans, six police officers rushed across the street to the mandalay bay. with the help of hotel security, they located gunman stephen craig paddock inside his suite on the 32nd floor around 10:24
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p.m., shooting through windows he smashed with a hammer. >> i know he shot the one security guard on the 32nd floor, but i don't know if he continued to shoot after that or not. >> the guard survived, and about an hour later the s.w.a.t. team stormed the room. >> i'm going to form a strike team. mandalay bay and the boulevard. i need five officers on me. >> breach, breach, breach. >> one suspect down inside the room. >> police believe paddock killed himself. this is the same hotel building the gunman was in on sunday night, just in the next wing. but this is about the same view he had in the darkness on sunday night. clearly he's a long way away here, but it's a clear line of sight, and with the high-powered weapons he had, he was able to do tremendous damage. >> i seriously thought he was next door. >> reporter: this army veteran was just two floors below the gunman when the shooting began. >> the walls and windows were vibrating. you could hear the compression, the sound -- >> reporter: investigators found
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23 guns and rifles in paddock's suite along with two tripods and thousands of rounds of ammunition, potential bomb-making chemicals were in his car. during the shooting many concert goers were trapped by the fencing around the wide-open venue. few places were safe from paddock's high vantage point more than 500 yards away. >> i've worked here for 30 years and i've never seen that many ambulances that i saw last night. >> reporter: this shooting now involves four separate crime scenes, not just paddock's hotel suite and concert venue but also two of paddock's homes. >> john, thank you so much. the shock many people across
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left his side. >> heather was working as a bartender but escaped the gunfire. 23-year-old jordan mcildoon did not, he was among the seriously wounded that heather helped. >> his fingers were kind of wrapped on my hand -- his hand, kind of squeezed a little bit and then just went loose. hechter spoke to his girlfriend
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and was sheltering in place nearby. >> she said be honest with me, what's going on. i said he didn't make it. she said to me, you know, he's the love of my life. are you sure? i said yes. >> reporter: there were dozens of stories like jordan sunday night. caught in the crosshairs of a killer. sunny melton of tennessee was running with his wife to safety when he was shot and killed. >> our whole town is shook and turned upside down. >> charleston hartfield was a 34-year-old las vegas police officer, off duty at the time of the shooting. angela gomez was a cheerleader from california. rachel parker worked for the police department in manhattan beach, california. teacher sandy casey was rbd by her partner as a woman who lived life to the fullest and made me the happiest man in the world. heather stayed with jordan's
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body for more than four hours. >> didn't want him to get lost? >> no. i would hope someone would do it for me. i would hope that they wouldn't let me be alone. >> reporter: heather says she's not the hero. that the heroes ran in to try to save lives. though she couldn't safe a life, she did save a family from the agony of waiting hours to find out the fate of their loved one. norah? >> heather is an incredibly wonderful woman. thank you for telling that story. hundreds of people in las vegas have been lining up to donate blood. some volunteers told us yesterday they waited eight hours in line. carter evans is outside university medical center in las vegas where many of the victims are still being treated. carter, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. university medical center is the only level one trauma center in the state. ambulances were streaming in here sunday one after the other. they weren't the only ones bringing in critically injured
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patients. as gunfire erupted, first responders moved victims to safety in wheelbarrows, office chairs and hotel luggage carts. tom mcintosh was shot in the leg and rescued by a stranger. >> opened the tailgate of some drug and threw me in there, and took my belt off and tied my leg up. he saved my life. >> reporter: victims rushed to five hospitals, university medical center treated more than 100 patients. >> these patients, with so many coming in so fast, we did what's called damage control, really stopping the process of dying. >> trauma surgeon jay coates says they train for situations like that. >> have you ever experienced anything like that in. >> no. this is the largest mass casualty i've been involved in. >> colleague tony mullen got the call around 9:30 p.m. after her shift was over to come back to
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the trauma center. she said the patients just kept coming. >> every death means something. every death touches us. when these patients were coming in, the loss of life we were hearing was so grave, we go into a motion that we do what we need to do. >> reporter: just a few months ago the staff at the hospital met with a doctor who treated patients at the pulse nightclub shooting. they were able to use some of what they learned from that doctor on sunday. norah? >> wow, carter, thank you so much. let's go back to gayle in new york. think about all those doctors and nurses and the staff there at the hospital who helped save so many lives. >> i'm thinking about that and thinking about heather and how she stayed by jordan's side for four hours. amazing how you become connected to a stranger that you don't even know. every death means something. thank you so much. investigators are learning more about the gunman, stephen paddock as they search for a
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motive. jeff begues is in washington. >> reporter: investigators deployed across the country searching for information about the gunman. that what they found is few final really knew stephen pod dock and hutch of a threat he really was. >> we're hunting down and tracing down every single clue we can get in his background. >> authorities say in covering stephen paddock's motive is his first priority. >> no religious affiliation, no political affiliation. he just hung out. >> reporter: paddock's brother eric says there was nothing in his past that would explain his rampage. a retired accountant turned high rolling gambler, paddock made millions from real estate investments across the country. >> very up forward, up front about being a professional gambler. >> reporter: on one trip he slipped and fell at the cosmopolitan hotel in las vegas and sued the casino. at the casinos weekend he used
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i.d. of his girlfriend, 62-year-old marylou danley who worked at a reno casino for three years. investigators don't believe she's involved but have questions for her when she returns from tokyo. >> the scary part of that is knowing he was transporting all those gun, all that ammunition back and forth right in front of o our house. >> reporter: owners of at least three gun stores in nevada and utah say they legally sold a total of six firearms to paddock including a reported handgun, two shotguns and three rifles. >> he was visiting all the local firearms shops is what he was telling everybody. >> reporter: paddock's factor was once on the fbi's most wanted list, described as a bank robber who was psychopathic and considered armed and very dangerous. but with only a parking ticket on his record, stephen paddock wasn't on law enforcement's radar as someone to watch. isis claimed responsibility for the attack, but so far u.s. officials say they have not
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found a link between paddock and international terrorist organizations. bianna? >> investigators still hoping to speak with his girlfriend when she returns to the u.s. jeff, our thanks to you. president trump will visit las vegas tomorrow to meet with victims and their families. this morning he called the gunman a sick man. >> we have a tragedy. we're going to -- what happened in las vegas is in many ways a miracle. the police department has done such an incredible job, and we'll be talking about gun laws as time goes by. >> the president spoke before taking off to puerto rico. he'll meet with hurricane maria victims and first responders today. david begnaud is in san juan. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the president expected to highlight the work being done by federal relief workers on the ground after that work was criticized as being too slow. the criticism came from local leaders and people who so
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desperately waited up to ten days to get food and water. 95% of the island is 12i8 without power. still today people are asking for food and water, begging for it. but there are signs of progress. 12,000 federal aid workers are here. hospitals and airports are coming back online. 70% of gas stations are back up and running. the gas lines have gone from 18-hour waits to less than an hour. in the capital of san juan, they got 700,000 pounds of supplies they're distributing. when you get out to the rural areas, people are tapping into streams to get drinking water. the mayor of san juan wednesday attacked by the president for being a poor leader. the white house confirms the president and the mayor will meet later today. david, thank you. in puerto rico fans and musicians are remembering rock legend tom petty. the 66-year-old music icon died yesterday. ♪ don't do me like that
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>> petty released that hit song with the heartbreakers in 1979 and so many more. his career spanned more than 40 years and inspired generations. anthony mason who has interviewed petty is in las vegas where he'll be anchoring tonight's moonews. good morning. >> good morning. singer, songwriter, musician. he sold more than 80 million albums, most with the heartbreakers, the band he shared the stage with for decades. ♪ break down honey >> releasing their debut album in 1976 and together created classic hits that generations of fans would embrace. ♪ don't have to live like a refugee ♪ >> in 1999 petty sat down with charlie rose on his pbs program and discussed how his songs came to life. >> inspiration is never really
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very far away if you look for it. it's all around you. >> so this is your off snis. >> yeah, i guess you could call it that. >> i spoke with petty in 2009 for "cbs sunday morning" about the pressure of working with your idols, something he did when he joined the traveling wilburys. >> what's it like writing with bob dillon? >> he's just as good as you think he would be. i was there for a reason, so i had to get passed -- >> a year later he released the first of his solo albums. but petty will most be remembered as the front man of the heartbreakers. just last week the band closed out their 40th anniversary tour
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at the hollywood bowl in los angeles. in the city of angels, the last song he ever performed on stage was one of his biggest hits. >> i really, really, love this music. i love rock and roll music. i love all music really, but especially rock and roll music. ♪ you belong somewhere you feel free ♪ >> tom petty was inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame along with the heartbreakers in 2002. music is the only real magic i've encountered in my life, he once said, it's real and it heals. this one is really painful. >> it is. just when we thought october 2nd couldn't get worse, we lost a music legend. anthony, thank you. the country music community meantime is coming together in the wake of the mass shooting in las vegas. ahead how musicians got on stage to share their grief and lift up those who were hurt and
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. a former u.s. marine turned into a lifesaver when the shooting started in las vegas. >> people started scattering and screaming. and that's when we knew something real was happening. it was a mini war zone, but we couldn't fight back. >> ahead, how he rescued 20 to 30 wounded people in a borrowed truck. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the all new 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places.
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"missing" after the las vegas shooting - has been confirmed dead. stacee good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. a bay area woman considered missing after the las vegas shooting has been confirmed dead. the woman's brother-in-law announced the news this morning on facebook. she got separated from her husband, an sfpd officer, when he rushed to help victims, telling her to run. uc-berkeley list released this surveillance video of three suspects who beat a student unconscious. he went to the hospital. stay with us, traffic and wea ther in just a moment.
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we're tracking a traffic alert along northbound one as you approach trimble road. a motorcycle accident has two lanes blocked. traffic backed up beyond hellyer avenue at this point. it's 73 minutes for drivers from hellyer to san antonio avenue. if you use 85, that's slow. a new problem one lane blocked due to a breakdown. westbound 4 at port chicago highway an accident blocking a lane. over an hour just to go from loveridge to 680. let's check in with neda on the forecast. clear skies out there. you can see the golden gate bridge. nice and clear. over to the coast, we're expecting to see some high winds and some high waves today. concord in the 50s. oakland low 50s. livermore and santa rosa in the 40s. some areas temperatures in the 30s this morning. so chilly start to the day. also breezy conditions and it looks like our high temperatures will be a couple of degrees below average today. temperatures in the mid- to upper 70s. and chance of sierra snow.
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>> we heard what sounded like fireworks going off, but it just -- it kept going and going and going. we didn't -- we refused to believe it was gun fire and then when jason aldean went off stage it was kind of clear something was wrong. people started screaming, hitting the ground and running. and we were just lucky we made it out. >> reporter: how was kristen hit? were you running out? were you taking cover? >> we're not quite sure when she was hit. she kept complaining that in her words she got hit by a water balloon. that's how she described the experience. she was hyperventilating. i thought she was just panicking but when she started coughing up blood i kind of realized that she'd been hit and she probably had a collapsed lung. >> reporter: what did you do? >> i immediately checked when she started coughing up blood i checked her body for a wound. i looked, i felt and we couldn't find anything at first. but we agreed that the number one priority was to get outside of the venue. >> reporter: and so were you able to walk outside the venue?
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we actually hopped that fence right there near the national stage set up behind us. >> reporter: you jumped over the fence? >> we had help. there was a table or something in front of the fence and we just got on top of that and kind of went over the fence. it wasn't as tall as people are making it out to be. >> reporter: got it. and were first responders immediately on the scene? >> first responders were there when we hopped the fence and this was within minutes. metro did an excellent job getting there as fast as possible and i really appreciate everything they did. >> reporter: was she loaded in an ambulance? >> no, not at first. we went to a hotel and checked her and found a wound and a good samaritan who was a concert goer and also a paramedic helped us put her in a truck and once we realized the strip was barricaded we put her in an ambulance we found on the side of the road. thanks to joseph who said
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kristen is doing okay. still needs to recover. gayle, i think you can tell from talking to people this morning, people are still in a state of shock and trying to process just what happened. >> i think everybody is trying to process. no matter where you live. i can't imagine what it's like for the people in las vegas. special kudos to kaye lotaylor and his story. what helps is pictures of folks helping other people and putting them in a hotel or a wheelchair, whatever they found. a wheelbarrow to transport them to safety or try to protect someone. looking at those pictures makes you feel like there is good out there. >> you heard kristen describe it as being hit by a water balloon. i never heard that description. we're thankful she's alive and recovering.
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>> country music stars send a message of unity. they describe their feelings in the wake of that attack that targeted their fans. you're watching "cbs this morning." watching "cbs this morning." ffed hash browns. they're stuffed with delicious meat and cheeses. all of that crispy goodness has him seeing the day in a whole new light. jimmy dean stuffed hash browns. shine on. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the all new 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places.
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♪ >> that is the great garth brooks offering a song of support on facebook last night for the victims of the massacre in las vegas. the country music community is really rallying together. the shooting started while jason aldean was on stage. he posted on instagram, this world is becoming the place i'm afraid to raise my children in. a vigil took place in nashville, the home of country music. jan, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. so monday night's vigil was a concert of sorrow and hope and a way of raising money for victims all with the message that nashville will be there for
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them, determined and resilient. ♪ when tears are in your eyes ♪ i will dry them all >> keith urban, vince gill. ♪ go rest high on that mountain ♪ ♪ son, your work on earth is done ♪ >> some of country music's biggest stars took the stage last night in nashville to share their grief. ♪ oh how we cry the day you left us ♪ >> they're like family. it's the one thing about country music that's always been at the center of it and it is community. >> reporter: it all took place less than 24 hours after a gunman opened fire on tens of thousands of country music fans.
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influential radio personality bobby bones performed on saturday night. >> for us i think the most fun festival that we've ever played. >> reporter: but monday morning on his radio show we spoke with jake owen who performed sunday night about the scene of horror. >> it went on for at least five minutes straight. >> i'm sad and confused and angry. >> reporter: one guitarist said it changed his political views. saying we need gun control right now. >> a lot of courage. but other artists left politics aside offering messages of unity. ♪ dear hate, saw you on the news today ♪ >> marien morris who performed on saturday released a song she wrote three years ago featuring vince gill. ♪ >> as the stars showed on monday night, music can start the healing.
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>> the fans will persevere, we'll be there to help them and the music will be right behind them. ♪ i will lay me down >> maren morris is one of the many country music stars raising money for the victims of the attack. all proceeds will go to the charity music city cares. in the coming weeks, you'll see more of country music coming together to raise money for people they consider family. >> thank you very much. how about that song. dear hate. >> i saw you on the news today and bridge over troubled water is always a good song. >> such a tight knit community. >> up next, a look at this morning's other headlines including gm's electric car push and the gunman did not raise any suspicions despite all the weapons he had in his hotel room. security experts tell us why it's virtually impossible to prevent such an attack. but first 7:46. time to check your local
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always good always good to hear bruce springsteen. here's a look at some of this morning's other headlines. republicans want to send funds to puerto rico as part of a bill to fund chip. that's a federal program that provides health insurance to children. republicans want to send $1 billion to puerto rico for hurricane relief with chip legislation. three states and d.c. will exhaust chip funding at the end of the year. more than two dozen will run out many march. >> the san francisco chronicle reports facebook says about 10 million people saw russia links ads on its site before and after the election. facebook is hiring more than 1,000 people to review ads globally. the tech giant will require better documentation to run u.s. election ads.
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the detroit free press reports on gm and ford's plans to increase electric car production. they're launching two more electric cars in the next few months. ford's electric car team plans to introduce 13 new vehicles over the next five years. over the next five years. ahead an inside account, the police response in las vegas from a veteran of the police force. even a "red-hot mascot." [mascot] hey-ooo! whoop, whoop! [crowd 1] hey, you're on fire! [mascot] you bet i am! [crowd 2] dude, you're on fire! [mascot] oh, yeah! [crowd 3] no, you're on fire! look behind you. [mascot] i'm cool. i'm cool. [burke] that's one way to fire up the crowd. but we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ let's get the lady of the house back on her feet. and help her feel more strength and energy in just two weeks.
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increasing security, in the wake of the mass shooting in las vegas. san francisco says it'll have more security for some high-profile e good morning. i'm kenny choi. some bay area cities are increasing security in the wake of the mass shooting in las vegas. san francisco will have more security for high-profile events this weekend. santa clara county supervisors are looking to implement bail reform, allowing some defendants to be released under the supervision of some community organizations. stick around; we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment.
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live look. you can see the crash blocking that far left lane and traffic trying to scoot on over to the right lanes just to get by. over an hour commute for drivers making their way from highway 4 down to the macarthur maze. give yourself plenty of extra time heading in that direction. richmond/san rafael bridge a couple of problems as you approach the toll plaza. 26 minutes from marina bay parkway to sir francis drake boulevard. let's check in with neda now on the forecast. >> look at the bright rays of sun coming out this morning. and yes, we still have cooler conditions out there so don't let the sunshine fool you. temperatures in the 40s and 50s for most areas across the bay area. but also in the 30s for some neighborhoods with chilly conditions breezy at sfo, west winds at 13 miles per hour. downtown san francisco at 8. fairly calm elsewhere but we are under a red flag warning before the north bay hills. temperatures to the north san rafael 80, napa 78. fairfield will be 80 degrees. livermore 77. a couple of degrees below average for the east bay.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, october 3rd, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, the stories of more people who died in the las vegas shooting ranging from a kindergarten teacher to an alaskan man who died in his friend's arms and police say that the gunman had 23 weapons when he broke his hotel room windows and opened fire. now this question, what can hotels do to prevent another massacre? but first here's today's eye opener at 8:00. the mass shooting in las vegas described as like a war zone. the numbers create staggering headlines. >> people here in this state, the whole country still stunned more than 24 hours after the attack. >> the alleged gunman was able to bring bags full of weapons
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and ammunition into his suite building his deadly arsenal. >> what investigators found so far suggest that few people really knew stephen paddock and how much of a threat he really was. >> ambulances were just streaming in here sunday. one after the other but they weren't the only ones bringing in critically injured patients. >> the president expected to highlight the work that is being done by federal relief workers after that work was criticized as being too slow. >> tom petty did it all in music. he sold more than 80 million album, most with the heartbreakers, the band he shared the stage with for decades. >> the monday night vigil was a concert of sorrow and hope all with the message that nashville will be there for them, determined and resilient. >> the entire country music community comes together today to tell everyone we love you. our hearts are broken and we're going to do everything we can to help us heal and get us back to our joy once again.
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>> thank you, big, big and rich. we certainly needed those words. i'm gayle king with bianna golodryga back at the table. charlie is heading home from an assignment in the middle east. norah is reporting from las vegas as you know, the city still terribly shaken up as we all are after sunday night's mass shooting. >> the official death toll stands at 59. this morning more than 500 were hurt. it was the deadliest u.s. attack since 9/11. >> people in las vegas and around the country held vigils last night to honor the victims. norah o'donnell is near the scene of the shootings. norah, good morning. >> reporter: and good morning to you. it has been more than 24 hours since the attack, the sun coming up this morning and we're learning new details about the people who died. they came from all across the u.s. and canada and the ones who have been identified reportedly range in age from 20 to 57. many were surrounded by friends and family at that country music
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festival. they include jenny parks, another of two, married to her childhood sweetheart, a kindergarten teacher. adrian murfitt from alaska died in the arms of a longtime friend who calls him a giant teddy bear with a huge heart and bailey schweitzer was at the concert with her mother and best friend, her boss told us she brightened everyone's day. we have more from a memorial on the strip. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this memorial continues to grow. the survivors that we've spoken to have told us that they have been scarred both physically and mentally. last night we met paige malannson the former miss america. her mother took a direct hit. it entered her mother's shoulder and went down into her abdomen and paige explained to us what it was like to have to leave her mother at the scene.
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>> a retired firefighter crawled his way over to us because he saw we were in hysteria and he said that he was retired firefighter and he was going to stay with my mom and he said that if we wanted to live that we needed to run for our lives and we need to get out. that was as you can imagine probably one of the hardest decisions i ever made in my entire life and my mother is laying theren 0 the ground and of course i didn't want to leave her but in order to protect even myself and the people i was with, it was best to get out of there. >> reporter: for the next 11 hours paige had no idea where her mother was or if she had even survived. thankfully the two were reunited at the hospital. paige said she was extremely relieved to see her mother and see that her mother was awake. now, paige received stitches for her elbow wound. her mother is expected to go into surgery again today and is responsive. norah. >> all right, adrianna, thank
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you so much. we are learning new details about gunman stephen paddock and his arsenal. police say he had 23 guns in his hotel room located on the 32nd floor of the mandalay bay hotel. 19 other firearms were found in his home. paddock was known as a big gambler who had earned money in real estate and investigators say they want to talk to his girlfriend, marilou danley, when she returns from tokyo. they do not believe at this point that she was involved. randy sutton served in the las vegas metropolitan police department for almost 24 years. he retired with the rank of lieutenant. good morning. thank you for being here. >> good morning. >> let me ask you first the police, your former colleagues did such an incredible job. have you been able to talk to any of them. >> yes, in fact, the events of that night are going to be remembered for their entire careers. many of these young men and women have experienced trauma before but nothing on the scale
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of what they saw on this particular night. they acted not only bravely but with great skill, with competence and without a shadow of a doubt by their efforts, they minimized the death toll in this tragic circumstance. >> i'm just thinking about the police not only trying to save lives but then to try to find the shooter who is on the 32nd floor of a hotel. how did they find him? >> this was amazing police work. you saw that when the shooting occurred there was muzzle flashes being -- emanating from the room so they were able to get the area. they -- officers and some of the supervisors put together teams to get into the hotel as soon as possible. they weathered the fire getting to the hotel. they entered -- got up to the area and were able to isolate that room and determine that the shooter was in there, also a security officer was shot through the door or through the
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wall there. remember, these rounds that he was firing will go right through the walls of these hotels. >> 23 guns he brought into that room. how he did that, well, that's part of the investigation, i know. >> yes. >> but the types of weapons that he used, were they semi automatic rigged up to be fully automatic. >> that was the initial question. when i heard the gunfire on that night and recognized it as fully automatic gunfire, very difficult to get a fully automatic weapon, however, so far the investigation has revealed that he purchased at least one of these weapons, it was a semiautomatic but had been altered. there are ways that a gunsmith or someone skilled in that field can take that firearm and make it a fully automatic weapon. and if you saw the weapon, he had it rigged with a tripod and a scope which made it even more
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deadly. >> how was security, law enforcement going to change here now? >> that's a really good question. this event is going to be studied by -- from every angle from a law enforcement angle, from a security angle, from a corporate angle and it's going to be determined if there are avenues to improve both the security in the hotels and security at these events like this and also the police response, remember, every time something like this happens law enforcement learns something. they learn from each of these horrendous events and they try to use that, it's like a living organism. it becomes part of the dna of law enforcement to change, to morph into ways that you can be more efficient and save more lives. the reality is this man created a killing machine and rained down hell on innocent people. >> randy, thank you so much.
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this shooting is reigniting calls to debate the nation's gun laws. before the massacre we spoke with republican congressman steve scalise about gun control. last week's interview for "60 minutes" was his first since being critically injured at a congressional baseball practice. a portion you did not see, he stated his support for gun owners' rights. you're now a victim of gun violence. >> yeah, but i'm also saved by well trained people who had guns to shoot back and whatever the weapon is going to be, i mean, if it's not a gun it'll be a hand grenade or a knife or an ax, you know, i think what's important to focus on is that we have strong rights in this country and, you know, we were protected by them in do you think all congressmen and women should be able to have concealed carry permits? >> i'm a strong believer in concealed carry legislation, it comes with proper training and i
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do think it's important to remember that if you're going to have a firearm it's important that you know how to use it and how to protect your family so that it doesn't get into the wrong hands, but it's every day in america you see people use their firearms to protect them against a criminal. >> do you wish you had had a gun? >> you know, i'm on a baseball field playing. probably not going to be putting a sidearm on when you're feeling balls but, you know, it would have been -- i think it would have been a disaster if the security detail wasn't there with their weapons to take down the shooter. >> it is important to point out distinctions in the scalise case it was a rifle, four people were shot in a matter of ten minutes, in this case, of course, you're talking about two semiautomatic potentially fully automatic killing 59 people and wounding 500 more in about that same time period so different cases there but, again, raising questions about whether gun control with be debated in the congress.
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jeff. >> norah, thank you very much. gun laws in nevada have fewer restrictions than in other states and don dahler has a look. >> nevada is viewed as having some of the most lax gun control laws in the country. you can openly carry a gun without a permit. gun registration is not required and there is no mandated waiting period for firearm purchases. as with most states, this is going to surprise a lot of people it is legal to own a class 3 weapon which includes fully automatic miachine guns ad weapons with silencers. investigators found some of these weapons in the suspect's possession. only law enforcement and military personnel can have new versions of these sort of weapons but civilians can purchase fully automatic weapons if they are manufactured prior to may of 1986. the old versions can cost anywhere between $15,000 and $50,000 but you can modify newer and cheaper semiautomatic weapons to be fully automatic
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for as little as $50. police believe the suspect in las vegas modified some of his weapons to be fully automatic to legally obtain a class 3 weapon, you have to pass a federal background check, file an application with local law enforcement and pay a $200 fee. nevada does not have a limit on bulk sales of ammunition or magazine capacity. meaning one can fire for a longer period of time without having to reload. we asked the nra about some of nevada's gun laws and if they had a comment about the number of weapons the shooter had. they have not responded. >> it will be interesting and so far no response as you point out. many people thought after newtown with those slaughter of little children in their classroom gun laws would change. i don't know if this will make any difference. you point out nevada is a very gun friendly state. >> not far from where norah is there is an indoor shooting range where they can shoot fully automatic weapons for fun. >> just for fun. thank you, don dahler.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." here in las vegas. we are still with lots of unanswered questions and healing ahead. the man who led boston police during the marathon bombing calls the las vegas attack law enforcement's worst fear realized. former police commissioner ed davis told cbs radio station wbz to stop something like this from a high vantage point is very difficult to do. and anna werner is in the building attached to the mandalay bay. anna, good morning.
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>> good morning. we're on the 37th floor which is five stories above where the gunman was and from here you can see how he saw the country music festival down below and the question is, how do you protect against a shooter who is using this high floor of a hotel as an advantage. >> one of the fundamental principles within security is you cannot protect against everything. >> john choate helped to revamp security for the wynn and encore hotels in vegas. they're looking out for anything suspicious but stephen paddock didn't appear to raise alarms. >> in this case do you think he checked any of the boxes that you would really be looking for? >> i think that is probably one of the most confounding aspects for the information that's available right now. >> is that he doesn't seem to check the boxes. >> he does not seem to check the boxes. >> i don't know how it could have been prevented. >> clarke county sheriff joseph
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lombardo says they will comb through many hours of hotel surveillance footage looking for clues from the time stephen paddock checked in last thursday to when he broke windows in two different rooms and began firing. >> we have determined that there has been employees going to and fro from his room and nothing nefarious was noticed. >> i think he would have alluded attention anywhere. >> steven edelman is with the event safety alliance and says the only sure way to detect the weapons come nothing a hotel like mandalay bay would involve impractical layers of airport-style security. >> there is no hotel in the u.s. that has that kind of x-rays or metal detectors at every entrance and every elevator. because this is literally unprecedented. >> mandalay bay did not respond to us for comment. choate says some hotels, however, do have baggage scanners that visitors never see. but as for protecting the crowd down there on the ground, only a
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trained sniper aiming this way could have done it and that would have been incredibly risky for innocent civilians here in the hotel, norah. >> scared to think about, anna. thank you very much. hospitals asked the people of las vegas for one thing and they've been lining up for hours to provide it. ahead, the blood drives benefiting from the huge outpouring of good will. f good will. you're watching "cbs this morning." my insurance company definitely doesn't have that... you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with you™ liberty mutual insurance. ♪ ♪ hi ted, glad you could join us! ♪ ♪ give it a try. mmm. give that to me. ♪ ♪ (laughing) ted? ♪ ♪
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we'll talk to the medical ambitious plan to a ease the city's housing crunch. mayor liccardo unveiled a 15-point plan to build more g. its goal is 25- thousa good morning. i'm kenny choi. san jose has an ambitious plan to east the city's housing crunch. mayor sam liccardo unveiled a 15-point plan to build more housing. its goal is 25,000 new units with 10,000 for low income people in the next 5 years. former oakland police officer ryan walterhouse is due in court today in a case involving a sex worker. he is facing multiple felony charges for allegedly tipping her off about an undercover prostitution sting. raffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. 8:27. an accident on 580 this is right nears high street. you can see that backup on the left side of your screen. right now, just under an hour ride for drivers making their way westbound 580 from 238 on over to the 980-24 interchange. slowdowns along that stretch, 880 slow, as well. we are tracking delays along the eastshore freeway. all of your approaches over towards the bay bridge toll plaza are a mess now. it's over an hour ride from highway 4 to the maze. and then an additional 30 minutes from the maze into san francisco. we are in the red for all of our drive times just under 20 minutes westbound 580 from marina bay parkway to sir
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francis drake boulevard. you're right across the richmond/san rafael bridge. golden gate bridge no reports of any problems. but heavy southbound. and we continue to track travel times in the red for drivers heading along westbound 4. let's check in with neda on the forecast. if you are going out, grab your sunglasses. we have clear skies. temperatures though cool. don't let the sunshine fool you. it's a bit brisk out there. concord 53. 49 degrees in livermore. santa rosa 43. wind gusts picking up especially at sfo, 13-mile-per- hour sustained winds. downtown 7. calm elsewhere. but we are under a red flag warning in the north bay hills. so gusts could be up to 50 miles per hour later on today. still dry conditions out on the mountaintops. those ridgetops. it's a dry air mass, a cooler air mass. that's why today temperatures are a couple of degrees below average. 80 will be the high in concord and fairfield. 76 for vallejo and san
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this is the line of people that are here to donate blood. look at this. >> wow, people in las vegas showed solidarity to help wounded victims. crowds lined up to give blood yesterday. the line snaked around the corner at one local blood bank. volunteers distributed bottles of water and snacks to people in line and some waited as long as eight hours to make their
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donation. >> it's truly amazing scene. our neighborhoods pull together like this. it's crazy out there, but it's so nice to see everybody knows that the community is in need. >> united blood services is also accepting donations from blood banks across the country. thousands of units of blood are already on their way to the state. i saw stories of people who said they'd never given blood before and people were afraid of needles but said they wanted to do that. >> it wasn't just las vegas. heard about lines all around the country for people. >> humanity really coming together. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. politico says hundreds of white house e-mails were sent to a third account associated with jared kushner and ivanka trump's private do main. the family representative said ivanka trump had been careful about keeping her personal life
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separate from work. >> the washington post reports amazon promised to cut prices at whole foods. a research firm checked to see how that's going. it tracked prices pk% amazon did not respond to requests for comment. those atm fees across the country have jumped to new highs. the arch price for using an out of network atm hit a record $4.69 per transaction. it's 55% than ten years ago. banking experts say you're not going to like this but fees are likely to continue to rise. it's tough to pay for your own money when you don't have the right atm machine. meantime, britain's
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humanity are the stories of those who risked their own lives to help strangers. >> we have an active shooter. we have an active shooter inside the fairgrounds. >> with concert goers scattering for cover, first responders wentz to work, many of them into harm's way. >> we have multiple casualties. gsw to the medical tent. >> you were right in the middle of it. >> robert hayes of the los angeles fire department was off due few watching the show with his wife when the shooting started. >> we realized that now something is going wrong and people started screaming. >> as everyone is running out you're running toward the scene. >> anybody in my profession would do the same thing. i'm doing the job i was trained to do. >> reporter: in his 29 year career he's responded to shootings before. nothing like this. >> it was a hard sight to see but everybody came together.
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they were bringing blankets, water and food. >> what was it in you that made you stay, made you go from person to person to see how you could help? >> honestly because if that was someone in my family, that's what i would have wanted somebody to do for me. that's kind of what i'm trained to do is to just go into action mode and not worry about myself. >> this man's best friend was shot three times in the chest. >> we got him compressed and kept compression on his chest. he put his finger in the hole and we could keep the compression on. there's a lot of heroes outs there. >> yes, heroes were everywhere. >> we need to get people over to the hospital. okay? personal vehicles became ambulances. >> the guy had been shot in the backside and i thought he was going to be okay but he was bleeding and so he wasn't as serious to shove him into the ambulance that was right there so i took him in my car. >> when you see people coming to
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about 25 critical. what are the recoveries needed for those in critical condition? >> they can include operations ongoing care for penetrating wounds in the chest. there are a number of patients who have vascular injuries in the extremities and a fair number of orthopedic injuries that have to be managed. >> i understand it just so happened that umc recently consulted with doctors and physicians from orlando. what were some of the lessons learned? >> we received a presentation from the doctors in orlando as part of a combined program with metro to understand what the experience was after the pulse nightclub shooting, and it gave us a different frame of reference to work from. when we combine that with our regular disaster drills, it
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created a really good platform for us to work off of in this situation. >> and how are the staff members at the umc doing? >> you know, when you walk around they're all really tired. but they're beaming with pride now. >> dr. john, i know it's been a long almost couple of days now. thanks to you and all of your staff at the hospital. thank you so much. >> thank you. medical professionals have done and continue to do an amazing job. we send it back to you, jeff, in new york. >> thank you, nora. our thoughts with them and those in the hospital, as well. musicians are remembering the life and legacy of tom petty. his biographer warren zanes is in the
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paul mccartney wrote "sending love to tom petty and his family at this difficult i feel like today the music truly died. along with "free falling." the front man of the heartbreakers gained fame with hits like "american girl" and "no i won't back down." know that song. warren zanes, you know it too. he wrote the book called "petty: the biography." he clearly must have trusted you. you have known each other for a long time. he was candid and honest with you in the book. how did you meet? >> i'm 52 now. we met when i was a teenager, and we were just fans and we were going make sure we were going to meet this man. >> who was that? >> you and your band were fans? >> yeah. from the first record on we were
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committed to tom petty and made it our business to find this guy and he was kind enough, eventually, to reach out and he didn't come see us play, but we were doing a run at the rocksy in l.a., and he called me in my room at like 3:00 in the morning and went out to his house the next night. >> he called you in the room. we saw a picture of you as a teen with him. he calls you at 3:00 and says this is tom petty and you think what? >> i think, tell me who this is really. [ laughter ] >> warren, what has the music world lost? >> i think we've lost one of the great american song writers and one of the great american band leaders. and it's that combination of the material that he wrote, and how he brought it to his band that makes him singular. and he's, to me he's up there with the buddy holly and hank williams of the world. >> he said all he could do is
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sing well and write well but that was all. do you agree with that? >> he wasn't interested in much else. he wanted to make the next record, he wanted to write the next song. i got the sense he was a restless spirit and wasn't going to be overly satisfied with his own work for too long. he was just, you know, driven to make the next record. >> talk about his influence on pop culture. i think of music videos with johnny depp, faye dunaway, his songs have been in many movies and sound tracks. did he care about that? >> all that happened, i think, because his fans are out there on the streets but they're also in hollywood. he just wrote these kind of songs that many people could just see themselves in them. so that could be me. that could be johnny depp. but eventually these people reached out to him. it's just like george harrison
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reached out to him. bob dylan reached out to him. he was a guy who was real about this rock and roll thing. and that attracted people. he never sold himself. he just attracted people. >> he was very candid with you about his abuse he suffered as a child and his heroin addiction. what role did music help play in his life? >> i think music was the saving grace. i think music was the safe place. in a turbulent situation. growing up was turbulent. if you're growing up in an abusive home, it's all the more turbulent. the music was the safe place. >> did he always struggle with that abuse? >> i think so. when we sat and talked, as you say, he was very open with me and i was, you know, it was a privilege to be let on the inside of that. you know, he talked about it as if it was still close to him. and which was consistent with the experience of people who go
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through that. >> how did he change and evolve as both the song writer and the band leader? >> he's, you know, he's got that identifiable voice. he's got an identifiable writing style. but he -- he grew up under the, you know, the sign of the beetles. the beatles made every record different. and he was, you know, hell bent on doing the same thing. so around the time like "southern accents" for instance. he was listening to prince and it just forced him to see what else tom petty could be. but he also knew that next record had to be different. >> i asked you during the break who were some of his closest friends within the industry. you sort of jokingly responded, well, if he could be close to anybody. he was a loner in many ways, correct? >> yeah. he stuck to himself. you didn't see him at the parties. but people knocked on his door. i mean, this is a guy -- and
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when he was very young he met elvis pressley but then asked to join a band with the beatle bob dylan. he worked with johnny cash and karl perkins. the history of popular music knocked on his door. that's the kind of guy he was. when i say he attracted people, he didn't just attract people. he attracted the best. >> even more reason to take pride in him calling you at 3:00 in the morning. warren zanes. >> i'm a lucky kid. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. you can hear more of "cbs this morning" on our pod cast. find extended interviews and pod cast originals on itunes and apple pod casts out. you are watching "cbs this morning." fety."
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twe are the generation that had expethe music and the moves. we are the generation that had a dream. we came together to feed the world's children. we came together to protect them, and in this dangerous world we have to keep on saving them and protecting them, even when we're gone. if we remember unicef in our will, we'll be the generation who left a better world for children. visit uniceflegacy.org. sending all good thoughts to
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a bay area woman considered "missing" after the las vegas shooting - has it was confirmed just hours ag good morning, it's 8:55. i'm kenny choi. a bay area woman considered missing after a las vegas shooting has been confirmed dead. it was just confirmed hours ago. she was separated from her husband an sfpd officer when he told her to run and he went to help other victims. uc-berkeley police have released new surveillance video in their search for three suspects accused of beating a student unconscious. it happened at a residence hall over the weekend. >> and we now know what lit up the sky around cole valley over the weekend. according to muni, when the n line was shut down, bright lights were sparked during the deenergization process. raffic and weather in just a moment.
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at stanford health care, we can now use a blood sample to detect lung cancer. if we can do that, imagine what we can do for asthma. and if we can stop seizures in epilepsy patients with a small pacemaker for the brain, imagine what we can do for multiple sclerosis, even migraines. if we can use patients' genes to predict heart disease in their families, imagine what we can do for the conditions that affect us all. imagine what we can do for you.
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good morning. time now 8:57. we continue to track slowdowns for drivers heading along the eastshore freeway. it's been a mess out there. and you can see a new crash just coming in westbound 80 at gilman street. one lane blocked. and we're still in the red. 40 minutes from highway 4 on down towards the maze. it's another 32 minutes from the maze into san francisco across the bay bridge. heading through oakland, 880 a mess in that northbound direction. 43 minutes from 238 to the maze. southbound 880 looking okay. san mateo bridge crowded in both directions, 32 minutes from 880 to 101. through san mateo, 101 is slow near hillsdale and continues to be slow down to university.
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we have a new crash southbound 101 at willow road. two lanes blocked, about an hour commute in burlingame into palo alto. neda iranpour has the forecast. at least the skies are nice and clear. look at the golden gate bridge out there. calm conditions across the bay. it will be cooler though today. get ready for that. we are going to see a little breeze picking up this afternoon especially to the north. it's chilly in santa rosa and livermore and the winds are at 7. to the north dry north winds coming through which is why we have a red flag warning until 5 p.m. today. gusts could be up to 50 miles per hour. low humidity today. then warmer air coming through starting tomorrow. temperatures a couple of degrees below average today especially in livermore and concord. oakland 75 would be the high. 71 san francisco. here's a look at the seven-day forecast.
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wayne: i'm on tv. -(screaming) wayne: puerto rico! jonathan: say "yah..." wayne and jonathan: whoa! jonathan: game show. (tiffany laughing) wayne: you got it! -(screaming) wayne: go get your car. ♪ just a little bit of money - that's a lot of information. (cheers and applause) - wayne, i'm taking the curtain. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady. wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in to our kwanzaa episode. no, it really isn't, but i just wanted to say that. four people, let's make a deal. let's go. (cheers and applause) the queen. rainbow girl right here. you guys come right there. the baby. and the hard hat. everybody else, have a seat.
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