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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 30, 2017 7:00am-9:00am PDT

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your update is at 7:26. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, october 30th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning." breaking news. former trump campaign chairman paul manafort and an associate face a dozen criminal charges in connection with the russia investigation. the charges include money laundering and conspiracy against the united states. the military investigates the possible role of two navy s.e.a.l.s in the death of an army green beret. the sergeant serving in africa reportedly was strangled. a source says the s.e.a.l.s argued with him before he died. plus, a former athletic trainer speaks on camera for the first time about her sexual harassment allegations against nfl great peyton manning. she spoke with "inside edition"
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anchor deborah norville who will join us here in studio 57. >> but we twin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> if you're paul manafort, this is not good for you. mueller's coming for you. you have serious problems on your hands. let's not sugarcoat that. >> the first indictment in mueller's investigation are handed down. >> they are moving aggressively and that's not surprising. >> what i would say the important thing about today for the american people is the president is not under investigation and no one has told him that he is. >> pouring rain feels like a tropical storm. >> driving, walking extremely dangerous. >> a major storm is slamming the northeast. >> bringing heavy rain, damaging wind and significant travel disruptions. >> and you're not done yet. >> kevin spacey apologized following allegations he made sexual advances on a 14-year-old boy in 1986. >> the power authority in puerto rico moveded to cancel its controversial contract with
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whitefish energy. >> it doesn't go towards the best interest of the people of puerto rico. >> hundreds of thousands took to streets of barcelona to condemn catalonia's unilateral declaration of independence. >> all that. >> ju ju smith, 97 yards. holy smokes. >> and all that matters. >> do you think you'll be remembered for the "back to the future" movies or for a cure for parkinson's? >> if it happens, it's not going to be because of any movie or any tv show. >> on "cbs this morning." >> ties it. >> a lot of people won't believe it. >> a pivotal game five turns into an instant classic. one of the most insane games in recent world series history. >> comes through and the astros win 13-12 in ten! they lead the world series 3-2! >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places.
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welcome to cbs this morning as you wake up in the west. we have breaking news in the criminal investigation of russian meddling in last year's presidential election. former trump campaign chairman paul manafort and his business associate rick gates have been indictmenteded by federal grand jury on 12 counts. >> manafort and gates surrendered to the fbi this morning. they're accused of conspiracy against the united states, money laundering and other charges. >> the money laundering allegations covers some ten years of manafort's business activity. paula reid is at the federal courthouse in washington with the latest on this story. paula, what can you tell us? good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is the most significant development so far. the 12-count indictment today alleges manafort and his associate gates lobbied on behalf of the government of
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ukraine, paid tens of millions of dollars, failed to fully disclose this to the u.s. government. in the indictment it alleges they funneled tens of millions of dollars through offshore business accounts and also laundered it through other businesses that they set up for this purpose. of course many people have a question about that charge as conspiracy against the utdz and are asking does this have anything to do with the campaign, does this have anything to do with donald trump. based open my reading of the indictment so far, it is not that explicit. there's no mention of trump, no mention of the campaign. the indictment does allege that as recently as the fall of 2016, manafort and his associate were still making false statements about their lobbying activities to the u.s. government. >> all right, paula, thank you. jeff pegues is also in washington. >> manafort is a key figure in the russia investigation and we're seeing why with the release of this charging document. manafort between may and august of last year, he was running the
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campaign and it was during the period the investigators began seeing contact between russian operatives and campaign representatives. rick gates is also part of this. he was indicted today and he has been, for some time, a manafort business associate and he also worked on the trump campaign. both have long-standing relationships with russian businessmen with ties to the kremlin and ukrainian politicians with ties to the kremlin and manafort has been charged as working as an unregistered foreign agent, even though he had been negotiating earlier this year with prosecutors to retroactively register, which is what he did. this is a start of the new phase of the investigation and others under scrutiny like former national security michael flynn will be of course taking notice of this. he also had to register as a foreign agent retroactively last march, but that was after he was fired for misleading the vice
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president about his contacts with russian officials, charlie. >> our chief legal correspondent jan corbett has been going through the charges. a number of questions. the first count is conspiracy against the united states. what does that mean? >> right. that is the general federal conspiracy statute. it's commonly used in cases where you're alleging tax or any kind of financial crimes. two people or more, here it would be mr. manafort's mr. gates, came together to defraud the united states government. they had a conspiracy to defraud the government of the united states. by failing to file their report. by not paying proper taxes. so that's kind of a general conspiracy statute. that you see often used in these tax and financial crimes cases. >> would you call this an aggressive action by the special prosecutor. >> oh, i mean, there's no question. if you go back -- going back to when they kind of did a raid of manafort's house without a warrant to get business documents, it signals that
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they're moving aggressively at a special counsel. remember, he has wide discretion to look at any number of crimes and there's nothing in this indictment right now that says anything about president trump or the campaign. this a straight forward indictment alleging a wide number of financial crimes committed by paul manafort and his associate, to enrich himself and line his pockets so he could spend millions and millions of dollars buying property, antique rugs, clothes, cars, luxury goods. it really outlines the case against mr. manafort that he defrauded the united states government, failed to file proper forms and taxes all to enrich himself. the question is where does russia come into this. what if anything did the campaign or the president himself know. >> good question. >> all right, many more questions to come, thank you, jan. we just learned that paul manafort and rick gates have left the fbi field office and are likely on the way to the courthouse. so far, there has been no white house response to these
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indictments. margaret brennan is at the white house with more on that, margaret, a lot of people checking twitter this morning, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, yes, and that silence was deffening, intentional. the white house really wants to keep manafort in the headlines and not donald trump. they want to create a good amount of distance here. i have been talking to the president's lawyer and also to his communications team today to try to get a handle on how are you to respond. there will be one but i believe they are waiting for the special counsel to be able to have the first word on this to explain what he decided to do with the 12-count indictment against paul manafort. the white house has been laying the groundwork in anticipation of the movement against manafort. saying look, these financial crimes that are alleged here have been pre-existing before the special counsel got involved, really trying to downplay what's happening here and put it in the broader
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context of what the president has continued to claim is a political witch-hunt. we know the white house will not be able to remain silent on this for long. it's a big week for the president. high-stakes trip to asia at the end of it. this could overshadow everything else. >> busy agenda ahead, margaret, thank you. we'll continue to bring you new developments as they happen. another big story. two members of the navy s.e.a.l. team 6 are under investigation in the death of an army green beret. 34-year-old staff sergeant logan mp melgar was found dead. he was reported strangled. naval investigators have taken over the case. david b martin is at the pentagon this morning. >> reporter: another operation is coming to light in the neighboring country of mali. another american soldier is dead, only this time, it's a
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homicide. army green beret staff sergeant logan melgar died last june in a house he shared with the two navy s.e.a.l.s in the capital of mali. an autopsy ruled his death a homicide, reportedly by asphyxiation. a report that the two army s.e.a.l.s had been under investigation. neither the pentagon nor the u.s. afri-com command announced the death because it would reveal the presence of special operations forces in mali. he was a member of the same special operations group as the same americans killed while on patrol in the neighboring country of niger earlier this month. based in mali and escaped back across the border. the texas native melgar was honored at the football game earlier this month. the pentagon is still struggling to explain the sequence of
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events which led to the deaths of the four soldiers in niger. now it must also explain the death of sergeant melgar as well as what special operations forces are doing in mali. >> thank you, david. puerto rico is canceling a controversial $300 million contract with whitefish energy to restore power to the island. the head of the power company estimates the cancellation will delay power restoration by 10 to 12 weeks. citizens, elected officials and fema administrators had raised repeated questions about this contract. they wanted to know how a contract so large was awarded to such a small montana company. whitefish energy says it is disappointed by this decision. david begnaud visited montana. he's with us from los angeles with the latest on this story. david, good morning. >> reporter: gayle, good morning. when the confirmation is official, it takes 30 days to go into effect. whitefish already paid $11
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million. they've billed for another $10 million. it could take an additional $10 million to send all the whitefish workers back home to the mainland. that would be about $30 million of a $300 million contract. remember, while we're talking about all this, 70% of puerto rico is still in the dark this morning. >> it's interfering with everything. and it doesn't go towards the best interest of the people of puerto rico. >> reporter: governor ricardo rossello has praised prepa's decision to cancel the contract. but the mayor says it needs to be voided entirely due to a single clause. >> the people of puerto rico would still have to pay something called a reasonable profit on top of everything that they have already been charged. >> reporter: the outcry began after revelations that a $300 million no bid contract to repair puerto rico's devastated power grid had been awarded to whitefish energy.
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at the time of hurricane maria, it was said to be a two-person operation based in wisefish, montana, the hometown of u.s. interior secretary ryan zinke. we went there, looking for the company's headquarters. we found what's believed to be the headquarters here in rural montana but it looks like a private residence. [ doorbell ringing ] this two bedroom house in a remote area of northwestern montana is where the energy company calls home. after signing the deal, whitefish hired 350 workers and the company says it was moving more than 500 linemen to the island this week. the head of prepa ricardo ram moz has defended the deal and on sunday emphasized there was nothing illegal about it. in a statement, whitefish said the decision will only delay what the people of puerto rico want and deserve, to have the power restored quickly. >> there can be no distraction whatsoever that out there is a course of action so we can elevate and restore our energy system in puerto rico.
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>> reporter: right before coming on the air, we called prepa to see if they would void the contract, they said no, they would cancel it. whitefish first got in contact because the ceo sent a message to the power officials via linked in. >> david, thanks. oscar winner kevin spacey is apologizing to fellow actor anthony rap over a harassment claim going back 30 years. rap says spaes made an advance at him when he was 14 years old. he says by sharing his story he is standing on the shoulders of many courageous women and men who have been speaking out, to shine a light and hopefully make a difference. michelle miller is here with the reaction from spacey and hollywood. >> reporter: he tweeted he did not remember the alleged encounter with rap which he detailed in an interview with buzz feed. he says he is beyond horrified and it's encouraged him to do something he's never done
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before, publicly acknowledge that he's gay. in 1986, kevin spacey was a 26-year-old starring on broadway. he met fellow broadway actor anthony rap that year. rap was 14. >> you're out of your depths here. >> reporter: rap now stars in "star trek discovery" and was in the original cast of the broadway musical "rent." in 1986, rap says he recalls being alone in spacy's apartment after a party. my impression was that he was drumpg, he pidrunk, he picked m and then he lays down on top of me. i was aware he was trying to get with me sexually. he says he was able to squirm away and left. spacy, star of the netflix series "house of cards" is a two-time oscar winner. he hosted the tony awards in june. just about the long-standing rumors about his sexually.
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♪ i'm coming out -- no, wait, no. >> reporter: spacy tweeted that he doesn't remember the encounter. quote, if i did behave then as he describes, i owe him the sincerest apology. the story has encouraged me to address other things about my life. i have had relationships with both men and women. i choose now to live as a gay man. >> people on social media are noting that coming out as gay is completely separate from addressing allegations of being a sexual predator. you could argue that coming out as gay in this particular moment might deflect attention away from the allegations against him. >> reporter: and we've reached out to rap for a respond to sta spacy's statement but have not heard back. other celebrities are reacting including harvey weinstein accuser rose mcgowan who tweeted, quote, keep focus on anthony rap, being the victim's voice. >> certainly raising a lot of conversation on many levels.
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thank you, michelle. the l.a. dodgers have to win and then win again after collapsing in game five of the world series last night. houston beat the dodgers 13-12 in ten innings taking a 3-2 lead in the series. this game was a long one, lasting five hours, 17 minutes and featured seven home runs. vladimir duthiers is here. er's talking about the balls today. >> reporter: if you are a fan of the dramatics, this fall classic is exactly what you've been looking for. extra innings, plenty of runs, lots of strikeouts and a record setting of home runs. >> count it! >> reporter: the slug-fest extended into the early morning hour, of houston with the astros winning the game's final blow. >> hits it. here comes fisher. astros win it!
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>> reporter: in one of the most memorable back and forths in recent world series. >> we said, hay, our backs are against the wall right here, why not have fun and play loose. >> how about huften? >> reporter: for both players and fans, the series has been a gut-wrenching up and down affair. fuelled in most part by one thing. >> good-bye! >> reporter: this year, home plate has doubled as a launching pad. 2017 has seen most home runs in the regular season, playoffs and now world series, and that's leaving some questioning the consistency of the game's most used tool. "sports illustrated" spoke with pitchers and coaches from both teams who say the baseball is slicker than balls used during the regular season. a slippery baseball makes it difficult for pitchers to throw certain pitches. on the left is a baseball from the regular season. on the right from the world series. >> the players, the coaches,
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everybody is weighing in on these topics. i know nothing about it. i don't see a ton difference. but i'm not going to get in a verbal war with coaches and players who think otherwise. >> reporter: major league baseball told "sports illustrated" the baseballs are made from the same materials and to the same standards as regular season balls. monday night's game lasted well over five hours, the second longest in world serie history, stretching into early monday morning. that was long enough for major league baseball to issue a get out of work pass for fans who stayed up late. there it is. game six is tomorrow in l.a. >> everybody's focusing on the ball but they're in the world series for a reason, couldn't it be they're just really good at their job? >> really good hitters. >> thank you so much. two americans are safe on land this morning after they were stranded for months at sea. ahead, they share what kept them sane as they drifted
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good morning. lots of fog, drizzle at the shoreline. generally setting the stage for a fairly cloudy day in the bay area. a cool start to the week with numbers 10 degrees below average. today in san francisco, only 60 degrees, oakland comes 62, san jose, 66, and 67 in concorde. tomorrow and wednesday, warmer, increasing sunshine but the end of the week, rain friday and and unsettled weekend.
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the woman accusing nfl great peyton manning of sexual harassment gives her first tv interview about the case. >> ahead, why she is speaking out now and how the retired quarterback is responding. deborah norville will join us with her interview. >> you're watching cbs this morning. you wouldn't do only half of your daily routine, so why treat your mouth any differently? complete the job with listerine® help prevent plaque, early gum disease, bad breath and kill up to 99.9% of germs. listerine® bring out the bold™ you'dreamt about it, it, maybe you should just go ahead and do it. we're legalzoom, and we've helped over a million people just like you start their own businesses. legalzoom. legal help is here. ♪ that one.
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this is the kpix 5 morning update. good morning. it is 7:26 am. i michelle griego. six more santa rosa schools are reopening for the first time since the wine country wildfires started. santa rosa city school say that the opening involved campuses identified as phase 2 mike schools. campuses listed and phase 1 reopened friday. police officers were taken to the hospital after they were involved in a car accident. sf pd says the patrol car made contact with a parked car that forced the car into the building and took out a parking meter. the officers are excited to be okay traffic and weather isn't just a moment. -- in just a moment.
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7:27 am. we are tracking slowdowns for drivers along northbound 101. that is into san jose, due to an earlier traffic alert remaining at effect. we have one lane blocked, 42 minute ride to hilliard and it looks like the on ramp remains shut down. we expect delays through the area. out of hayward come into foster city, an accident is along 92, near edgewater. right as you are exiting the san mateo bridge from you can expect delays, about a 30 minute commute for drivers going to 101. 880 through oakland, earlier crash, all lanes have reopened. you are still slow, as were passing the oakland coliseum. 28 minutes from 238 up to ward. that is a look at the traffic. stay safe. 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
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♪ all right, if you're a nervous flyer, this is one of your worst nightmares, a passenger jet trying to land at the austria airport ran into a very strong crosswind. the pilot battled, but as the plane approached the runway, a powerful gust nearly knocks the plane over. look, he touches down. right back up, he or she. the pilot regains control, bounces off the runway, and is able to gain altitude for another go round before it landed safely. there is two different angles. passenger inside the plane, meaning they're okay, and you get to see it when it comes in. >> isn't this a depends moment? >> a little accident on board the plane. don't need to go into details but it shows the skill of the pilots and what that plane can
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take. nicely done. >> quick thinking by the pilot s. >> very quickly. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things you should know this morning. we're following major developments in the special counsel robert mueller's russia investigation. federal grand jury indicted paul manafort and his business associate rick gates on 12 counts. a third person, george p popadopolus pleaded guilty. they are accused of conspiracy against the united states, money laundering and other crimes. the republicans tax cut push suffered a big setback as they prepare to unveil it on wednesday. the national association of home builders, a powerful business lobby, came out against the plan over the weekend. the group is upset that a home ownership tax credit will not be in the bill. they said yesterday, we'll be working very aggressively to see it defeated. the massive storm that slammed the northeast overnight
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arrived five years to the day after storm sandy devastated the region. in 2012, sandy killed 182 people and caused more than $70 billion in damage. experts say new york is still the u.s. city most vulnerable to future storm surges. and also to sea level rises. more than 1 million homes and businesses lost power overnight in the northeast. a former athletic trainer who accused peyton manning of sexual harassment is speaking about the allegations. jamie talked with inside edition anchor deborah norville. she accuses manning of inappropriate behavior as she treated him for an injury in 1996. manning was a 19-year-old all-american quarterback at the university of tennessee. he maintained he was horsing around with a teammate. the interview includes never before seen video of manning's 2003 deposition, responding to a defamation suit later brought by
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nawright. >> i briefly pull ed down my pants to so-called moon him. one second, one and a half seconds, pulled my pants back up, and continued with jamie's examination of the bottom of my foot. >> peyton manning has said he was just mooning a friend. what do you say to that? >> that's a lie. i was repulsed. i was scared. i was intimidated. it was definitely a predator intimidating, anger, violent eyes he had. >> manning's attorney said in a statement, peyton manning has been absolutely clear jamie's accusations are false. when her claims were first investigated 21 years ago, she told a very different story. her current account was invented several years later in connection with her first of several groundless litigations
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against peyton. most recently, she left peyton's mother a vulgar and extremely disturbing voice mail. she should stop this abusive behavior. deborah norville is here with the first tv interview about the alleged incident. good morning to you. >> good morning, guys. >> this is very serious stuff. i'm curious about what exactly did she say happened and has her story changed? >> at the time she was a trainer at the university of tennessee. she was examining peyton manning's foot. she said she was down in a crouch position and he dropped his shorts and placed his bare naked back side on her face, made physical contact, his genitalia touched her face. she said she pushed him away, called him an ugly word and that was the end. >> is that a different story than what she's telling -- his attorney says she's telling a different story, he says he was mooning a friend. >> that's what he says. there were two other individuals in the training room at the time. one of them said he wasn't in a position to see what happened. the other has -- both have been questioned under oath in depositions and he said this
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would be malcolm saxon, i don't know why you dropped your drawers, a letter he sent to peyton manning, he didn't see it as mooning. >> in her 1996 affidavit, she doesn't mention physical contact at all. that detail then emerged as this 2002 lawsuit. so to gayle's question, does she acknowledge her story has changed? >> i would say it has become more detailed. the challenge is this, she reported it to her superior, he said don't tell the police, don't tell the press. she did, however, call the sexual assault crisis hot line in knoxville the night of the incident. >> record of that? >> there is a record of that you'll see in the report today. in the report, the person taking the call said she feared for her life, she feared for her job, however she declined to give the detail she preferred to do that in person, there is no record to confirm what details she may have given at that time. you're right, that's an open thing. >> was there a settlement? >> there was -- she left the university, she filed an eeoc
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complaint, after this happened. then the doctor got a new job, worked as a challenge down in florida, her career was going fine. she even had taken the olympic team to the beijing olympics. then peyton and archie manning published a book. and in the book after a nondisclosure agreement was signed when she left the university, both by her and peyton, the book was published and there was an excerpt she considered defamdefamatory. it said she spoke with vulgar language, she sued based on the excerpt in the book. there was a financial settlement reached after the judge declined to dismiss the lawsuit. the judge said, quote, there was sufficient evidence to allow a jury to find the existence of actual malice on the part of the defendant. a settlement then. >> why is she coming forward? because he violated the nda in her opinion? >> correct. >> that's why she's talking. >> also the nda no longer -- many years later, many legal discussions, both parties free to talk.
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the reason this has come up more recently is in 2016, a title nine lawsuit was filed against the university of tennessee saying that there was a hostile environment, and sexual harassment was going on. this was mentioned in that lawsuit, and now more recently harvey weinstein, she says, she's inspired by the women who have come forward. >> all right, we can see more of your conversation tonight. thank you. >> curious to see what she has to say. >> deborah's conversation today on inside edition. you can check your local listings. it comes on at different times in different parts of the country. thank you, deborah. two americans say the navy saved their lives after they were stranded in the pacific for nearly six months. >> we saw the navy, we're, like, yes! someone who can actually help us. >> the women are back on land this morning talking about their ordeal. ahead, how they survived hurricane force winds and a pod of sharks. you can find all the stories on
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two american women stranded for months at sea are now safe on land. jennifer appel and tasha arrived in japan this morning, the first time they set foot on solid ground for nearly six months. a navy ship rescued them on wednesday after they drifted from thousands of miles in the pacific ocean. we have new information on their nightmare journey. good morning. >> good morning. jennifer says she began planning to sail from hawaii to tahiti two and a half years ago, but despite all of that preparation, she now admits she had no idea what she was getting into. >> the crew of the "uss ashland" saved our lives. >> reporter: safe in the hands of the u.s. navy, jennifer and tasha weren't shy to express their gratitude. the women and their two dogs were rescued wednesday after an 18-day journey swelled into a five-month long crisis. >> seeing other boats and seeing
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them turn away from us was just heart breaking. we got to a point where we actually rode in the log we had been left for dead. >> reporter: they were discovered on tuesday, 900 miles southeast of japan. they say their engine died in and the sailboat drifted 5,000 miles from their original course from hawaii to tahiti. >> we saw the navy, we're, like, yes! someone who can actually help us! >> reporter: the crew admits they faced problems with their equipment, and including their radio from the start of their trip. >> we hear maui -- storm. we're like, okay, turn away from maui. not realizing that the antenna was already messed up and we were turning directly into the storm instead of away from it. > > a piece of the mast broke limiting the craft's steering and speed, another storm they say flooded the boat's engine
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and disabled communications. they said the crippled vessel drifted into a group of aggressive tiger sharks. >> and the tiger sharks figured we had entered their living room and we were not leaving fast enough. >> reporter: as the challenges mounted, they looked to their canine crewmates seduce and valentivazeus and valentine for support. >> we would be nuts, way more nuts than we already are. >> yeah. >> the women credited their survival with a water purifier and as much of a year's worth of extra food that they packed. their sailboat is still floating out there in the ocean. appel says she would like to try and recover it and sail to tahiti next spring. after all that, she wants to go again. >> i know, our friends and family are going what's wrong with you? they survived all of that, to go through that again, i don't know. >> they love being out there on the water. won't find me out there. >> like falling off your horse and getting back on. >> yeah.
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i'm having scenes of castaway, that movie, how it could have really ended up. >> yeah. >> thank you so much. thank you. up next, a look at the other headlines including stressed out teachers talking about their mental health. and japan, famous for rice wine, now a throwing thirst for the kind grown from good morning. at the seabreeze has kicked in and with that, low clouds, high clouds as well. it will only be in the mid 60s in length, low 60s along the shoreline. there is a fairly cool start to the week. out the door, the numbers are the upper 40s and 50s and the forecast highs for today, not all that warm. san francisco, 60, 66, san jose, and getting to the end of the week, we could have rain moving into the bay area. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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law approved after 9/11 gives the white house too much authority to exercise military force. jared kushner took an unannounced trip to saudi arabia last week. it was the third time president trump's son-in-law has gone there this year. the senior white house official told cbs news the trip was part o ongoing israeli palestinian peace efforts that engage regional partners in discussions. britain's guardian says people in the spanish region of catalonia returned to work today uncertain of who is in charge. hundreds of thousands of demonstrators in barcelona called for unity yesterday. the spanish government has deposed the president of catalonia. he could be jailed. meanwhile, the soccer fans there had something to celebrate. a small local team beat the spanish giants real madrid for the first time ever. >> wow. usa today looks at a survey that found teachers' mental health is declining as they face job stress. 58% of educators said their
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mental health was not good for seven or more of the previous 30 days. that number in 2015 was 34%. 61% of school employees say their work is always or often stressful. 78% said they get seven hours of sleep a night or less. the wall street journal says the u.s. distributor of corona beer plans to develop adult beverages made with marijuana. constellation brands is investing $191 million in a canadian marijuana grower. constellation says it is interested in developing nonalcoholic cannabis infused drinks. the company says it could sell the products in canada in 2019 when they are expected to be legalized there. they would not be sold in the u.s. until marijuana is legal nationwide. >> good idea? i don't know. can't imagine the taste. i don't know. president trump just tweeted his first response to the new indictments in the russia probe.
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ahead, the latest on the charges against former trump campaign chairman paul manafort and his former associate. plus, we just learned another former trump campaign aide pleaded guilty to making false statements to the fbi. we'll have new details on that too ahead on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. we'll be right back. (burke) at farmers, we've seen almost everything so we know how to cover almost anything. even a swing set standoff. and we covered it, july first, twenty-fifteen.
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this is a kpix 5 morning update. >> good morning. i am kenny choi. testimony will pick up in the san francisco murder case that is drawing national attention. josi garcia arrived, accused of killing 32-year-old kate steinle on san francisco's about darrell in july 2015. the palo alto city council will consider plans to issue permits to companies that offer -- operate delivery robots about the size of the cooler and roughly about 40 pounds. leaders will be considering speed limits for the robots. traffic and weather in just a minute.
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7:57 am. we are tracking delays for drivers going to san jose. it has been rough along
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northbound 101, due to an earlier cross that has lanes blocked with debris. you can expect about a 37 minute ride going from kaufman road to hillary avenue. the crash 101 -- that has the on ramp closed. a look at the bay bridge, approaching treasure island, getting the reports of a crash involving two cars. 19 minutes ride from the maze into san francisco. there is a live look at the a bridge toll plaza. lights are on a and e shore freeway, under 50 minutes from highway 4 to the maze. give yourself extra time. good morning. the seabreeze kicks up. the temperatures go down. that is what is happening this morning. what will happen through tomorrow evening, low 60s, along the coastline, mid 60s inland. we will get a lot of clouds around the day and drizzle as well. the high temperature is forecast to be as warm as 71 in santa rosa. it is 16 temperatures go, 66 in san jose. halloween looks a dry going towards the weekend, rain
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moving to the bay area on friday. right through the weekend.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, october 30, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." following breaking news, president trump's former campaign chairman paul manafort and associate face a dozen criminal charges connected to his business ties with russia. the president just tweeted, "there is no collusion." plus, kevin james and leah remini of "kech condition can wait" talk about getting started as performers. first here is today's eye opener at 8. >> paul manafort and his business associate have been indicted by federal grand jury on 12 counts. >> this indictment alleges they lobbied on behalf of the government of ukraine for which they were paid tens of millions of dollars. >> manafort is a key figure in the russia investigation, and
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we're seeing why with release of this charging document. >> what it means is mr. manafort and mr. yates came together to defraud the united states government. they had a conspiracy. >> silence intentional. the white house really wants to keep paul manafort in the headlines and not donald trump. >> puerto rico is cancelling a controversial $300 million contract with whitefish energy. >> when that confirmation is official, it will take about 30 days to go into effect. remember, while we are talking about all of this 70% of puerto rico is still in the dark this morning. >> if you are a fan of the dramatics, this year's fall classic is exactly what you've been looking for. extra innings, plenty of runs and a record-setting number of home runs. >> that is hit down into the corner at the wall. it is gone! >> this is the moment a lot of people are talking about. baseball tradition, a woman caught it and somebody rips it out of her hand with fury on his face. said, i get giving it back but i wanted to be the one to throw it on to the field. >> yeah, sure. ♪
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i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. president trump just responded on twitter to the slew of charges against his former campaign chair, paul manafort. the president said of the allegations, quote, this is years ago before paul manafort was part of the trump campaign. but why aren't crooked hillary and the dems the focus. also there is no collusion. >> manafort is facing a dozen charges in connection with the russia investigation. cbs news was there as manafort surrendered to the fbi with his lawyer this morning. his former business associate, that's rick gates, is also indict. this morning we are learning this. former trump campaign advisor geor papadopolous pleaded guilty. >> they are facing slews of charges can dealing with conspiracy. the document also show manafort and gates funneled million also
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of dollars to countries such as cyprus, the grenadines and the seychelles. >> the document says he launlderred more than $18 million used by him to buy property and goods here in the united states. next to the fbi offices where manafort surrendered this morning, paula, what stands out to you from the indictment? >> reporter: good morning. it is such an incredibly detailed indictment. they're not getting manafort on some sort of technicality to try to pressure him to cooperate. this is an expansive, detailed account of how he allegedly committed crimes over the course of a decade. now, according to the indictment from 2006 to 2016 he allegedly received tens of millions of dollars for lobbying on behalf of ukraine that he failed to disclose to the u.s. government. he was able to hide the money by funneling through certain foreign corporations and stashing in off-shore accounts. according to the indictment he
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allegedly accessed this money to fund a luxurious lifestyle here in the united states. the indictment alleges he used this money to buy multi-million dollar properties here in the u.s., to fund his children's tuition, to purchase luxury cars, landscaping and even interior decorating for his homes. this is a very extensive, very detailed indictment that if you put before a lot of tax-paying jurors they're probably not going to be terribly sympathetic. >> thanks, paula. margaret brennan at the white house where the president's first response on twitter came about half an hour ago. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. by taking to twitter the president is disregarding advice of top advisers who wanted to keep the focus away from the white house and on paul manafort. the president seems to be trying to say nothing to see here, no collusion, he says, was proven in these indictments this morning. also said these crimes predated paul manafort's role as chair of his campaign. but, remember, paul manafort lived in a trump building, he
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worked on the trump campaign. in fact, he ran it for about five months. so the two men are deeply tied when it comes to that, though the president is saying that relationship ended sometime ago. no comment yet from the president when it comes to that unsealed plea agreement with campaign foreign policy adviser george papadopolous. that plea which we read through does name russia, it does layout some misleading statements made by george papadopolous in regards to attempts to make contact with russia during the campaign on behalf of the trump campaign. no comment on the president from that portion. we know that the president's advisers and his lawyers would really like the message here to be that the president will continue to work with the special counsel, robert mueller, and to say, look here, we're not the focus. but as we've seen with this latest plea agreement, there are going to be more questions to ask later today when the press
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secretary takes the podium, norah. >> margaret, thank you. jeff beguys is in washington taking a closer look at the guilty plea by former trump campaign adviser george papadopolous. jeff, this is interesting. he was indicted earlier this month. we are just learning about it today. this was someone inside the trump campaign having direct connections with the russians, correct? >> that's right. that's what was alleged in these charging documents which were unsealed just about an hour or so ago. it was under wraps since october 5 october 5th, earlier this year. rp papadopolous, a form campaign and policy adviser, but someone in a lot of political circles didn't know. he wasn't someone who had a big name in foreign policy circles, and that's why when he came aboard the campaign in march of 2016, like carter page, another relative unknown, there were a lot of people in some of these campaign circles who were
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puzzled about why they were picked to advise then-candidate trump on his foreign policy agenda. so what we're seeing in this charging document -- and this is one that's about 12 pages long -- is that he at certain points, according to the fbi-tried to set up meetings with a foreign contact and in one paragraph of this charging document it outlines how papadopolous, according to investigators, made contact with this foreign contact who had ties to the kremlin, and this foreign contact was telling p , papadopolous, according to charging documents, that he had dirt on hillary clinton. what is significant about that, and the dirt was apparently e-mails, hillary clinton's e-mails. this person was telling papadopolous that the usurussia had hillary clinton's e-mails. i think what is significant here
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is according to the charging documents, according to papadopolous there was this contact early on in 2016. you know, this story about russians hacking the dnc computer networks really didn't catch on until june and july of 2016. so the fact that there is this revelation in this charging document that papadopolous was made aware in early 2016 i think is significant. charlie. >> do we know specifically what questions he gave a false statement to? >> well, they were trying to establish these contacts. it seems like fbi investigators knew that there had been some sort of contact, and then they're saying that papadopolous was less than forthcoming about that, did not reveal that, but then after his meeting with fbi agents tried to erase his facebook account where there was allegedly some evidence of this contact with this foreign contact with ties to the kremlin. there are indications that
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papadopolous has tried to cooperate with investigators, and that has certainly earned him some capital, pleading guilty to making false statements. >> thanks, jeff. the moneyering charges against manafort go back to 2006. indictment claims that as part of the keep, manafort and gates repeatedly provided false information to financial bookkeepers tax accounts and legal counsellors. good morning. >> good morning. charlie. this is an indictment that alleges that manafort and gates for years work for pro-russian, ukrainian politicians, and they had a conspiracy where they failed to disclose that. they didn't properly register and proceeded to launder tens of millions of dollars in the subsequent payments that they got from those pro-russian ukrainian politicians they were working on their behalf. as jeff points out, there is no mention of the trump campaign or
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collusion in this very straightforward indictment, alleging a series of financial crimes by manafort and gates. but what is interesting is what happens next. will there be a subsequent indictment? will manafort decide that he has some information that the prosecutors may be interested in, to cooperate, that might spring open this investigation or take it into other directions. >> jan, thanks. paul manafort and rick gates are expected in court in a couple of hours at 10:00 a.m. pacific time. watch continuing coverage all day on our streaming network, cbsn. >> california is one of the world's greatest wine centers. some people across the pacific are trying to catch up. ahead, how more japanese are making and drinking their own
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benches from japan you might ic- think of sake or even beer, but the country is developing a taste for wine, drinking it and making it. as ben tracey shows us, japanese women are leading the way. >> reporter: with its high-tech robots, bustling cities and fast trains, japan often seems ahead of the curve can. when it comes to wine, it is trying to catch up. >> my friends love wine. if my friends don't drink wine they're not my friends. >> reporter: belinda jo is a writer covering the food and beverage scene in tokyo. >> reporter: this for work? >> of course, it is always for work. >> reporter: she says women are the reason japan hit a new wine-consumption record every year since 2012. >> one of the reason we see women drinking wine is because we see more women in the
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workforce with disposable income. the idea of getting together with friends and drinking wine has become, you know, very common. >> reporter: per capita wine consumption in japan has jumped 50% since 2006. the average japanese drinking now sips a little more than three bottles of wine per year, but that's still a fraction of the nearly 12 bottles downed by americans or the whopping 56 bottles the french consume. >> reporter: so why do you think wine was not a big deal with people here for so long? >> well, because the sake culture was so strong. younger people see sake as more old fashioned and wine is a bit more cosmopolitan. >> reporter: this is japan's wine country. with all of the vineyards popping up here it is being called the napa valley of japan, even though japanese wine has historically been considered bottom of the barrel. >> people never thought like we will make great wine. >> reporter: she is the wine maker at gray's vineyard, which
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her family started in 1923. >> reporter: the grapes are coming along nicely. >> reporter: this part of japan gets nearly three times as much rain as california's napa valley. it is so wet and human ill they have to put little grape umbrellas on the sign so the fruit doesn't grow mold. >> reporter: how hard is it to make wine out here? >> to make good wine it is very, very difficult in this climate condition. >> reporter: so you could make a lot of what people might call bad wine, but making good wine is hard. >> yeah, good wine is hard here. >> reporter: so it is a good thing these grapes, known as koshu, literally have a thick skin. grace vineyards wine is now being exported to 20 different countries and winning awards. tourists are showing up to sample what is still a novelty, quality japanese wine. >> reporter: why do you think people are finding that they like this particular kind of wine? >> japanese wine is very mysterious.
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>> reporter: it is mysterious? >> yes. >> reporter: what is mysterious about it? >> the taste, so very different from other wines. >> reporter: that's because it is meant to perfectly pair with equally delicate japanese cuisine such as sushi and sashimi. the idea of japanese fine wine is no longer a joke. >> the attitude towards japanese wine has been changing a loot. the reason is mostly because the quality has gotten so much better in the last 20 years. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," ben tracey, tokyo. >> i like that. >> sounds good. >> it does. >> yes. >> okay. i almost said sake was safe. that shows how much i know about drinking. three bottles for japan, and 12 bottles for usa. >> i thought it was an interesting figure. >> i did, too. and 56 for the french. >> love the french. >> i know you do. all right. a little girl made a big play at the world series. ahead, an update on the
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seven-year-old who threw the first pitch using a hand made from a 3d printer. kevin james and his costar leah remini interview each other about the moments that shape their careers in our series, something in common. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ just tell me what to do ♪ i'll fall right into you ♪ going under because the spell just say the word ♪ ws, go to cbsnews.com. because i am so in tune with my hands and how things feel to me. when i pumped it out i was like, oh this is different. the foam was really light, fluffy , weightless. and it feels really moisturizing, not sticky. i have never tried anything like this as a body wash before.
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7-year-old haley dotson threw the first pitch at the world series. she through it with a 3-d printer. she was born with three fingers on her right hand, so she's used the prosthetic. before the game she met several of the players. astros pitcher justin verlander gave the las vegas native a pair of cleats that read vegas strong. she also showed yankees pitcher mariana rivera how she grips a baseball. game six of the world series is
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tomorrow night. haley has two suspected looters are in custody in sonoma county. neighbors in santa rosa say they good morning. two suspected people are in custody in sonoma county. neighbors in santa rosa say they spotted a man and woman stealing a flatscreen tv yesterday in a neighborhood where homes were damaged by wildfires. they watched them until police arrived. the san francisco transit agency says people that received parking tickets since 1995 might be owed money. overpayments on parking tickets total about a half million dollars. names are posted on the website for mta. stay with us. traffic and weather in a moment.
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good morning. a busy day out there on the roadways. we continue to track delays. let's go to the maps. we are tracking slowdowns for drivers heading to the north bay. this is 101. drivetime is 32 minutes heading southbound down too 80. getting across the richmond san rafael bridge is a struggle. 18 minutes from the parkway to the straight. expect delays into walnut creek. southbound 680 down to highway 24, about 20 minutes that is likely due to the stalled vehicle. one lane of block. southbound 680 there. you can see we have about a 30 minute ride. traffic alert remains in effect for drivers
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on the northbound 101. two lanes are blocked due to an earlier crash. and the on ramp to 101 remains a shutdown as well. 38 minutes from cochran to hellyer avenue. let's check on the forecast with brian. >> after 80s and 90s last week, we are looking at temperatures to fall today. 10 degrees below average. a cool start to the week. drizzle along the shoreline. even some high clouds up top later in the afternoon. less sunshine today than lately. temperatures in the mid-60s inland. 67 degrees at pittsburgh. 55 -- danville. 65, dublin. of the extended forecast gives us a surprise. things changing in the latter half of the week. today, clouds. halloween, we get done. wednesday, increasing clouds. chances of rain friday and beyond with an unsettled weekend.
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♪ ♪ he's 23 years old. call him champ. charlie says, i like that. a new cube master. over the weekend, he set a new world record for solving the puzzle, 4.59 seconds. he broke the old record by a tenth of the second. he's in the u.s. army, he also attends business school. don't you remember those guys when we were kids playing with those. i loved them. yeah. very nicely done. >> a lot of practice went into
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that. >> yeah. welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> now time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. kobr says california's gas and diesel tax will increase on wednesday. building up a 15 gallon tank would cost an extra $2. that adds up to an extra $200 per year. the goal is to collect $52 billion over ten years. money would pay for pothole repairs. britain's telegraph says heathrow airport is investigating how queen elizabeth's security details reportedly were found on a usb drive found laying in the street. the memory stick contained information on the exact route the queen takes to the airport. it had 76 files and including maps. an airport spokeswoman says security plans have been review ed in light of the incident. have to figure out they'll find out how that happened. how many people have access to that information? >> sounds like a royal mess. >> it does. britain's guardian says saudi arabia will allow women
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into sports stadiums for the first time to attend sporting events alongside men. stadiums in three cities will be ready to accommodate families starting early next year. hundreds of women allowed to enter a sports stadium in the saudi capital to celebrate a national holiday. jetblue has a bathroom problem. the airline put in smaller restrooms on some planes to make room for extra seating. but a spokesman says they were taken out of service due to alignment issues and are being fixed. the airline installed smaller bathrooms on 21 of airbus jets. that created six inches of additi -- 68 inches of additional space, enough for six more seats. >> could they get any smaller? my children have trouble fitting in there. >> is that putting the customer first? >> we don't like that idea, jetblue. the wall street journal says homeowners are hunkering down as the housing supply stays very tight. the average homeowner this year
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spent 10 years living in his or her current home. and that's the highest level measured in 32 years. more homeowners are choosing to renovate rather than sell. that's because inventory levels have fallen nearly multidecade lows. also, home prices have risen to record levels. newsweek says first lady melania trump's white house halloween party is tonight. local children and their parents, military families and community groups are invited. the first lady's communications director tweeted a picture of workers hanging decorative webs on the south portico. she tweeted a photo showing the finished product as seen from inside. she wrote the white house is ready to celebrate halloween 2017. i wonder if they'll dress up. >> what do you bet? >> probably not. >> yeah. i bet no. >> that's a good bet. >> she might. i don't think he will. toyota, let's go places is one of the world's largest car companies. the toyota motor corporation started in 1926, textile loom
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company. it soon turned its sights to building a better automobile. they built cars for more than 80 years. now toyota is rethinking what it will take to get through next 80 years. the new focus is creating a world where mobility issues of all kinds are overcome, using artificial intelligence and robots. >> toyota is not alone. with car sales down in 2017, automakers and tech companies like tesla, alphabet, ford and toyota are reimagining everything from how we move through cities to how we get around our homes. they're shaking up the auto industry by taking on public transportation, ride sharing and self-driving cars. toyota, which sponsors our green room every morning, put aside $1 billion last year to create the toyota research institute. its ceo gill pratt is leading the charge to a new frontier in transportation. good morning. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> tell us what the new frontier will be like. >> we are working on several different things. one is making cars safer. the other one is more accessible
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and then finally more convenient, and even more important than that, we're thinking about what is next for toyota. how do we bring technology that is used for mobility in the streets into mobility within the home. particularly for aging society. >> elon musk estimated almost every car will be autonomous by 2027, i think it is. what is your estimate? >> i don't know if that date is correct. we are coming out with something we call the highway teammate in 2020. that's going to allow for autonomous driving on the highway and coming out with an urban teammate within cities a few years after that. >> self-driving cars, we have to say get ready for it, all the cranky yankees afraid of the people that are worried about it. you're saying relax, because it is coming. you have options for us, do you not? >> that's absolutely right. we think that automated cars are going to be coming. but we think about it in two ways. one is what we call chauffeur mode, letting the car drive for you, when either you can't drive or you don't want to drive.
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>> i like that. >> the other one, which we think is going to come even sooner is guardian mode. what guardian is, a safety net underneath of the driver, the driver continues to drive the car, has lots of fun driving the car, and it prevents you from having an accident. >> has china set a date for phasing out fossil fuel driven cars? >> i think that's true. but the toyota research institute works mostly on ai, not on different types of fuels. >> what is standing in the way of self-driving cars as you see it? >> there is some technological barriers we have. self-driving car uses perception, it uses prediction to figure out where other people are going to go, and it uses planning to figure out where it% should go. the first and the last layer of that sandwich, the perception, and the planning, are actually pretty well in hand. prediction is the hard part. how do you figure out what other people are going to do? >> help us understand why you all in this industry think it is safer. elon musk does too. >> well, people, of course, get tired. so they get drowsy.
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people get distracted, and sometimes people get drunk as well. and that causes relatively ten fold increase in the number of accidents. so we think that if we have automated systems, they can see better than people, and, of course, they don't get drowsy or distracted and they don't get drunk. >> and they drive at the speed limit? >> they -- well, that's an interesting question. it may be that the safest speed to go is the median speed of the cars around you, and it is still yet to be worked out along with the government exactly what that speed should be. people of course drive faster than the speed limit that is a current issue that needs to be worked out. >> that's interesting. >> you know what is interesting to me is how you're looking at this self-driving technology to what you call human autonomy. so how will this apply to our human activity? >> so i think that that is most important. toyota cares about people most of all. i went to interview their -- to get my job, they talk ed to me
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mostly about love and how the relationship between a person and a car is different than the relationship between a person and refrigerator. people love their cars. they tend not to love their refrigerators, so what is the difference? and the difference is that a car enables human autonomy, it is not really about autonomous cars, it is about the autonomy of people. we think we can extend that beyond cars to robotics as well, particularly as the baby boom hits in the u.s. and we have many people who are trying to age in place within homes. we think a lot of that technology can be used to help people lead a better life. >> doing cool things with robots too. you haven't hugged your refrigerator. >> i haven't, in a long time. i love my car. >> i know you do. >> gill pratt, so nice to talk to you. thank you so much for joining us. appreciate it. >> very nice to be here. thank you very much. can kevin james and leah remini find it easy to hit the right notes.
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>> as a kid, it was your dream to be an annie. can you sing? >> i cannot. >> tomorrow? >> i can't. >> the song tomorrow? >> i can. but, i mean -- >> for us, can you sing it for us? >> sure. >> ahead, the stars of the cbs comedy "kevin can wait" interview each oth don't ju
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our collaboration with pg&e is centered around public safety. without pg&e's assistance, without their training we could not do our mission to keep our community safe. anytime we are responding to a structure fire, one of the first calls you make is for pg&e for gas and electric safety. it's my job to make sure that they have the training that they need to make the scene safe for themselves and for the public. it's hands-on training actually turning valves,
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turning systems off, looking at different wire systems all that training is crucial to keeping our community safe and our firefighters safe. together, we're building a better california.
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♪ what is the big deal anyway? i'm feeling good about myself. >> so what? i'll tell you so what. you feeling good about yourself and me feeling lousy, that's not going to fly, buddy. you're going to hang up your old chain, let your nose hair grow, and we're going to go back to sitting on the couch feeling just okay. because that's what marriage is. >> kevin james and leah remini first joined forces on the popular cbs comedy "the king of queens" for nine seasons. they reunited for the second season of "kevin can wait" on cbs. they play former police partners. we asked them to interview each other for our ongoing series "something in common." ♪ >> here we go. >> are you sitting? >> well, yeah. would i stand?
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>> no. >> oh, okay. >> can i sit like this? i'm sitting exactly like you. >> okay. i'm going to do this so i'm really comfortable. >> i'll do the stretch out move, a big guy move when you have a shirt. okay, so we're going to interview each other here on "something in common." i never interview ed anybody before, leah remini. >> really? i'm glad to be your first, kevin. do you have any questions for me? >> i do have a question for you. >> what? >> when did you first catch the acting bug? >> as early as i can remember, i mean, i grew up on television, watching "i love lucy" and i remember hearing the laugh from the audience and i was, like, wow, to be able to do that. but now i feel like you're not listening. >> i'm really not. i'm thinking of my next question. >> that's not a good interviewer. >> i'm not good at this. >> kevin -- >> yes. did you answer that one by the way? >> yes, but you didn't hear me. the people at home heard me.
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everybody who is married understands you didn't hear a word i said. >> i got the gist. >> what did i say? >> lucy. >> i thrive in this environment. >> do you remember the first laugh you got on stage? >> my first laugh that i got, like, i got it from a public speaking -- i was doing a public speaking class. i picked that in college because i was a shy kid. >> you were? >> yeah, very shy. i was really shy. >> i didn't know that. >> just quiet. so i took an easy class, and someone said it is public speaking, it is easy, easy grade, you'll get it right away, never thinking i would have to public speak in the class. i found out that was the final, to public speak. >> and? >> i got a laugh. >> how did it make you feel in. >> it made me feel all grown up. >> no, really, kevin. >> it made me feel good.
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i got to ask you a question. >> okay. go ahead. >> hold on. this is very unprofessional. yeah, okay, i know as a kid it was your dream to be in annie. can you sing? >> i cannot. >> tomorrow? >> i can't. >> the song, tomorrow? >> i can. but, i mean -- >> for us. can you sing it for us? >> sure. >> go ahead. ♪ the sun will come out ♪ ♪ >> want me to give you some keys? ♪ ♪ the sun will come out tomorrow ♪ >> oh. we're going to move on. >> okay. >> that was a rough one. >> everything okay? >> yes. i'm doing great. >> okay, good. look at you. with the beard. >> yeah, looks good, right? >> no. >> when did you know you made it? >> i don't think anybody in the
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business ever thinks they really made it. do you? >> right. for me it is always a sense of i got to figure you out, like if i'm getting by, i'm doing things, i love what i'm doing, but i don't know. you never know. >> you never know. and you have some success, you just don't have -- you don't have jobs to carry. this is not a job for somebody to go, i made it. >> right. but you've done great. you know you've done great. >> i'm blessed. >> all fired up. ♪ >> finish this sentence. >> okay. >> i wish i had never -- >> folded my leg and sat down because my knee is going to pop, there is a lot of weight on the structural part of my knee that -- i'm trying to look comfortable right now, knee fell asleep about three questions in. she's going to be a -- to get
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up. give me a tough one. >> i'm going to eat around the bite marks. >> we're trying to get information and you are yapping about your burger. >> so leah -- >> yes. >> if you wouldn't mind, speak into the tiny microphone in my blouse, that would be super. >> okay, leah. >> yes. >> is there something in this career of yours that you have not yet achieved that you would like to achieve? is there anything that you would like -- >> i never played annie on broadway. >> it is a circle of life, really, if you think about it. >> yeah. ♪ the sun will come out tomorrow ♪ ♪ bet your bottom dollar that tomorrow ♪ ♪ there will be sun
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♪ just thinking about >> i won't do it, but the thing about these two, i use ed to watch them on "king of queens," playing a married couple, now playing police officer partners, they're so good. the two of them, they play off of each other so well. they have that thing called chemistry. >> very natural. >> and comic timing. >> yes. great together. >> you can watch the second season of "kevin can wait" mondays at a new time, starting tonight, it airs at 8:00, 7:00 central here on cbs. >> i already set my dvr. you can hear more of "cbs this morning" on our podcast, itunes and apple's podcast app. you're watching "cbs this morning." thank you. we'll be right back.
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that does it for us. tonight.o tune in to the cbs
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we'll
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first time since the wine country wildfires good morning. i'm michelle griego. a half dozen more schools are set to reopen today in santa rosa for the first time since the wine country wildfires. more than a dozen campuses reopen friday. two san francisco police officers are expected to be okay after their patrol car crashed into a parked car. a preliminary investigation finds the patrol car hit a wall and took out a parking meter. nobody else got hurt. thousands of people paying too much for parking tickets in san francisco. now mta wants to refund about half a million dollars from overpaid parking tickets. the overpayments date back to 1995 through june of 2014. stay with us. weather and traffic in just a
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moment.
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good morning. we continue to see delays for drivers heading along 101 -- through the south bay. this is because of an earlier crash. this has traffic down to two lanes. that is in the northbound direction. and the on ramp remains closed to northbound 101. of yourself about 40 minutes to get to hellyer avenue. 880 a so ride through oakland. a couple earlier crashes keeping us in the red. 41 minutes from 238 to the maze. the san mateo bridge -- in
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the yellow. 32 minutes from 880 over to 101. the ride along 101 in and out of san francisco this morning, about a 15 minute ride from the split down to 0-point parkway. jampacked. in the red. busy monday morning commute. let's check in on the forecast. good morning. the sea breeze picks up. the temperatures go down. that is what is happening this morning. and what will happen through tomorrow evening. only low 60s along the coast. mid-60s inland. a lot of clouds around today. and some drizzle as well. the high temperature, 71, santa rosa. 60, san francisco. 66, san jose. halloween looks dry. for the weekend, a chance of rain in the bay area friday. right through the weekend as well.
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♪ what if home security was different? what if it looked different? what if the measure of working, was that you never had to think about it. ♪ what if it was so easy to use, you actually used it. [alarm] you have 3 minutes to exit. what if it gave you time, and what you really need from home security. a sense of security. ♪
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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) 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, everybody. welcome to "let's make a deal." thank you so much for tuning in. i need one person, let's make a deal. (cheers and applause) the lucha libre, over there. the lucha libre, michelle, everybody else have a seat. hello, hello. (michelle squeals) (wayne imitates squealing) michelle, nice to meet you. - likewise. wayne: so what do you do? - i'm a teacher. wayne: give her a round of applause. (cheers and applause) what do you teach? - i teach in riverside, california,

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