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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  May 21, 2018 7:00am-9:00am PDT

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morning as we take a live look at sales force tower. "cbs this morning" is coming up next. >> have a good one. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, may 21st, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." a tight-knit texas community mourns the eight students and two teachers killed in america's latest school shooting. we're learning more about the 17-year-old facing murder charges. the justice department opens an internal investigation after a demand from president trump. who claims an fbi informant spied on his campaign. an allegation that one democrat calls nonsense. >> the kilauea volcano pours lava into the ocean, creating a new health hazard for hawaiians, a toxic gas cloud that could extend for miles.
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the explosive threat intensifies. plus, the fda restricts use of a permanent birth control device after thousands of women complain of very painful side effects. and the royal wedding, it was awesome. just the beginning of prince harry's and meghan markle's celebrations. new details about what happened after they tied the knot. >> we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> the kids suffered something no child who have to suffer. >> a motive remains unknown in the santa fe school shooting. >> it is a roller coaster of emotions since this tragedy. >> this madness is unnecessary. no one should have to be going through what we're going through. >> president trump is calling on the justice department to look into whether the fbi spied on his 2016 campaign for political purposes. >> somebody's got to watch those who watch us. >> two inmates are still on the loose after escaping a south carolina detention center. >> we have to get them off the
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street. >> a north carolina man facing two murder charges after ramming his suv into a restaurant killing his daurz aghter and daughter-in-law. >> lava flowing into the ocean has created a potentially deadly mix known as laze. >> all that churning hot steam. >> the nypd is investigating sexual misconduct allegations against celebrity chef mario batali. >> i think he's a monster. >> all that. >> justified! he won the preakness! not even the fog could stop him! >> and all that matters. >> celebrations to the happy couple. >> people around the world tuned in to watch. >> they're going to have an impact that's going to make a difference in this world. >> on "cbs this morn iing." >> i'm so sick of moments of silence. my god, it's not working. >> at the bill board music award, host kelly clarkson opened the show in honor of the ten people who died at santa fe high school in texas. >> in your community, your friends, everybody, let's have a
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moment of action, let's have a moment of change. welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with that school shooting. there is no school today in santa fe, texas where people are mourning the shooting deaths of ten people at a local high school. dozens of people attended a candlelight vigil last night for the victims. >> we now know the names of all the eight students and the two substitute teachers who were killed friday morning. oth 13 others at the school were hurt. >> the suspect, 17-year-old dimitrios pagourtzis. new video shows him performing in a church festival reportedly less than a week before the attack. omar individuvillafranca is out high school. >> reporter: good morning. police reportedly confronted the gunman just four minutes after the first shots were started.
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started a 25-minute gun battle. two officers were shot before the suspect gave up. what people focused on here were the victims. >> there are no words. to take away that hurt and pain. >> reporter: through multiple church services and vigils the community of 13,000 came together to honor the lives lost. >> doing all right? >> reporter: texas governor abbott greeted grievie ining parishioners at this service sunday. hundreds of worshipers attended this mosque sunday to remember pakistani exchange student shabika sheikh who aspired to work in civil service. joleen cogburn was her student foreign exchange mother. >> wanting to impact the world.
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>> reporter: hundreds packed the stands at the high baseball playoff game. police say 17-year-old suspect pagourtzis wore wore a trench c during the attack. witnesses say he hovered between four classrooms while taunting students as he shot classmates and teachers. the governor suggesting guns were not the issue. >> the best way to take the shooter down is with a gun. >> reporter: patrick went on to say school shootings could be prevented by limiting the number of doors that lead into campus. >> you have the necessary exits for fire of course. but we have to funnel our students into our schools so we can put eyes on them. >> reporter: pagourtzis sur renn rendered to police. he immediately waived his miranda rights and is now in solitary confinement. >> it's certainly possible that wasn't a complete -- a knowing
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and intelligent waiver. >> reporter: they say their client might not have been in the right state of mind, even though his social media post before the shooting showed an affinity for weapons and contained violent messages. >> this is a young kid who at this point is very confused and i think still in some shock. >> reporter: the suspect's attorney says they've only met with their client twice and they do plan to meet with him again. no word on his next court date. help faces a capital murder and aggravated assault on a peace officer charge. meanwhile, j.j. watts has offered to pay for the funerals for all of the victims. >> well, j.j. watt comes through once again. such a sad story. it's becoming way too familiar to us. thank you very much, omar. one of the victims in santa fe is 17-year-old christopher stone. he was shot and killed in his first period art class. he was a football player described as adventurous and funny. mir rhea villarael spoke to his
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sisters about chris' final moments. >> what have you been told about what's happened? >> we were told by a student that was with him that chris was trying to escape the room. didn't succeed. but he did go into a closet with other kids. and he was the one to help hold the door closed. he did shoot through the door and it hit my brother. the boy that was telling us, he stayed and he prayed with us. my brother wasn't a lolone and will always be grateful for that. many kids are saying if it weren't for chris the other kids in the room probably would have been down as well. >> our brother was selfless. he was our baby brother but he was our big brother in so many ways. >> he was so gentle.
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anyone that knew him were touched by him. and i just don't think he deserved anything that happened to him. we know he's still with us. and he'll always be in our hearts. >> the sisters want their brother to be remembered for how he lived and not how he died. they also say they do not plan to forgive the shooter. >> the justice department internal watchdog will investigate if the fbi probe or the trump campaign's ties to russia was politically motivated. in a tweet, president trump demanded an answer about whether the fbi had an informant infiltrate his presidential campaign. at the request of the obama administration. paula reid is at the white house. paula, good morning. >> good morning. deputy attorney general rod rosenstein didn't wait for a direct order from president trump before handing this off off to the office of inspector general. he has given the president something without fully caving to his unprecedented demands. this move is seen as a way to
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deescalate the situation, as the president and his lawyers ramp up their attacks on the russia investigation. >> yes it bothered me that there may be an informant in one of the campaigns. unless there's a damn good reason. >> reporter: senator graham backed up the president's outrage on sunday. in the middle of a tweet storm, mr. trump wrote, i hereby demand and will do so officially tomorrow that the department of justice look into whether or not the fbi, doj infiltrate order surveilled the trump campaign for political purposes. career justice officials view the tweet as highly inappropriate. as traditionally the justice department has operated independently from the white house. california's democrat adam schiff. >> this claim by the president's suggestion by giuliani that there is a political spy embedded in the trump campaign is nonsense. >> reporter: the president was seizing on media reports about an fbi informant who made contact with at least three trump campaign advisers. carter page, george papadopoulos
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and sam clovis. after the fbi learned at least two of them had suspicion contacts with russian officials. papadopoulos pled guilty in the russian probe and is cooperating with special counsel mueller. a few hours after the president's tweet, the justice department asks its internal watchdog to investigate whether there was any impropriety. the deputy attorney general rod rosenstein said if anyone did infiltrate or surveil participant we need to know about it. last week, nunes subpoenaed the justice department. but officials rejected the request, warning exposing him could put the informant in danger. it's not clear whether this decision to hand this issue off to the internal watchdog will satisfy the president. in the past, he's criticized the inspector general for being too slow in his investigations and also the fact the inspector general doesn't have prosecutorial power. if the inspector general finds any evidence of criminal wrongdoing, he can pass that off to the justice department for
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possible prosecution. norah. >> all right, paula, thank you. an intense manhunt is under way this morning to find two murder suspects who escaped from a south carolina jail on saturday. police say tyshon johnson and curtis green may be armed and dangerous. a third inmate was recaptured overnight. meg oliver is outside the county jail in orangeburg, south carolina, meg, good morning. >> good morning. investigators believe this escape was planned, and that at least one officer inside here was assaulted. the three inmates escaped from the orangeburg county detention center saturday night. the sheriff's department is not ruling out the possibility they had help. tyshon johnson was in jail, charged with reportedly shooting and killing a 24-year-old and injuring two others during an armed robbery last year. curtis green was charged for reportedly shooting and killing a 35-year-old man during a car jacking. both men were awaiting trial for murder. police are warning the public if you spot the inmates, do not
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approach them and call for help christopher bolton was captured sunday night after a tip led police to his location. at least 18 miles from the jailbrea jailbreak. he was originally jailed for possession of a stolen car. the orangeburg county detention center has been criticized in the past for having outdated technology. right next door to where these men escaped, they're building a brand-new facility. it will have new cameras, censors and alarms. this site will not be finished for at least two years. john. >> meg, thanks. a serious new danger threatening people's health near hawaii's lava flows. rivers of slow moving molten rock reached the ocean over the weekend. the reaction is creating a toxic corrosive gas that can spread for miles. that comes as the eruptions cause their first major injury. mark strassmann is in kapoho, hawaii, near an active fissure.
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good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that molten lava doing an angry dance behind me. how hot is it? that lava's around 2,000 degrees. geologists here call this fissure 20. the lava that has poured relentlessly from it for days needs some place to go. we found the end point. this is where swift moving molten rock from the kilauea volcano has finally run out of room. you're looking at a river of lava spill into the pacific ocean. it came from fissure 20. one of the most dynamic. racing as quickly as a half mile, an hour, before ending here at the water's edge. resulting steam cloud is called laze, a mix of lava and haze. it's laced with hydrochloric acid which is toxic and burns on contact. officials warn the cloud could extend 16 miles. fissures spew more lava intoila
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estates where some still defy evacuation orders. >> i have no fear for not getting out if something catastrophic could happen. but i don't believe anything catastrophic will happen. >> looks pretty catastrophic behind you. >> but i'm saying right now, it wouldn't blow up and cause us to be running down the road. it would be real slow. >> reporter: but another holdout in leilani estates was hit by lava spatter that shattered his shin. these aerials show a flow of molten rock flowing from one of the fissures. a lava mountain 30 feet high. geologist carolyn parcheta. >> we're moving into phase two, increased activity, higher lava flows, more dynamic situation than before. >> reporter: because of the dangers of flying lava, we're trying to keep a save distance from this fissure, about a half mile. just as we did on our boat trip to watch the lava pour into the pacific. there, too, officials say that
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lava shows no sign of slowing. gayle. >> all right, thank you, mark stras strassmann, reporting from hawaii. prince harry and his wife megan will not wait long to resume royal duties after their historic wedding. they'll be back at work tomorrow. more than 29 tv viewers in the u.s. waved the coup edwatched t married on saturday. that's more than kate middleton's wedding in 2011. they got married on a friday. the ceremony matched british royals with hollywood's elite including oprah, george and amal clooney and james corden. entertainment tonight's kevin frazer co-hosted. good morning, good to see you. >> it's not the same without you being here, gayle, i got to tell you that. the newlyweds will have their first official engagement as a married couple tomorrow at buckingham palace. a garden party to celebrate the 70th birthday of harry's father
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prince charles. this nation is still buzzing about this couple and also the wedding which was as much a celebration of love as it was a celebration of change. from the very first moment meghan markle appeared before the world, the wedding made an early statement about pushing the royal family into a modern era. she chose the british designer, the first female artistic director at french fashion house givenchy. >> she really admired the fact it was a woman designer. and the fact i'm a working mother maybe played into that as well. >> reporter: the new duchess of sussex walked down the aisle alone before being joined by england's future king, prince charles. as an anxious looking prince harry waited. the bride's mother doria raglan sat directly opposite the queen in the ceremony that mixed
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tradition with diversity. ♪ stand by me ♪ stand by me >> you just heard the love of jesus, how he died to save us all. >> reporter: the u.s. bishop michael curry delivered a fierier isman thfiery er serman. >> dr. king was right, discover love, the redemtive power of love. >> reporter: and left some members of the royal family both amused and bemused. after the wedding, curry told cbs news he was speaking directly to the bride and groom. >> we got to get you all married. >> no matter how big or small the wedding may be, talk to the couple. and when you talk to the couple, if you're talking to their soul, you're going to actually stumble on and talk to some other ones along the way. >> reporter: after sharing so much of their wedding with the world, the newlyweds drove through windsor castle to a private reception.
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the bride wore an emerald cut aquamarine ring, a gift from prince harry that belonged to his mother princess diana. now, the couple spent last night at kensington palace which will be their permanent home. and the duchess of sussex already has her website up. it says, i'm a proud woman and feminist. and gayle, i need you at some point today to pull out a fascinator. >> i think the fascinator days are over for now, kevin, but i'm curious about what it's like. because in windsor, people still did not want to leave that town. are you finding that to be the case? >> yes, people are still buzzing. i think that wedding, as you know, was such a unifying moment. it changed this nation. and it changed the monarchy forever. >> you weren't here saturday night but the bishop curry is already a skit on "saturday night live" where people are saying he changed it in a way people never thought possible, which i think is also very interesting. thank you, kevin frazer.
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>> for our entire cbs team, you guys did a terrific job. the coverage was really fantastic. that location you had was awesome. >> yes, yes, yes, you know what, norah, it really does take a village. you expect it to work when you're out there but there are a lot of moving parts. everybody, ortiz, ryan, the team, it was amazing, it was a group effort. we'll talk about that a little bit later on in this broadcast with tina brown. >> great village. all right, ahead an extremely rare mountain lion attack is good monday morning to you. we did get a few clouds out there along the coast. bringing in some drizzle blue san francisco, seeing the sun shining. overall satellite and radar showing we are underneath an upper level low. that's why the moisture is coming down over parts of the sierra. temperature-wise today, right along the coastline it's going to be cool around the bay. also low to mid-60s. inland areas, that's where you'll get the warmer weather and sunshine.
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by this national weather report sponsored by wells fargo, established 1852, re-established 2018.
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celebrity chef mario batali could face criminal charges for alleged sexual misconduct. >> the report where several women made accusations. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." >> this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by centrum, your cells get hungry, feed them with centrum micro nutrients. centrum micro nutrients. with centrum micronutrients. restoring your awesome, daily. centrum. feed your cells. ( ♪ ) face the world as a face to be reckoned with. only botox® cosmetic is fda approved to temporarily make moderate to severe frown lines, crow's feet and forehead lines look better. it's a quick 10 minute cosmetic treatment
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crashed throug good morning. it is 7:26. i'm ann makovec. one person is dead after a car crashed through a fence and ended up in a pond overnight. chopper 5 was over the scene at crow canyon road near bollinger canyon road. it is still unclear exactly how that driver lost control. today is the last day to register to vote in the june 5th primaries. according to the state's report of registration, 75.3% of eligible citizens are registered to vote and that is the highest percentage of eligible voters heading into a gun in a tore ya prime area -- gubernatorial primary in 64 years.
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to california schoolsd, need big change. marshall tuck is the only candidate for state superintendent who's done it before. less bureaucracy, more classroom funding. marshall tuck for state superintendent. marshall tuck. good morning.
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it's getting busy outs there for your monday morning -- out there for your monday morning commute. novato, this is nearing a nacio -- agnacoi. and 580, speaking of 580, the richmond san of a fell bridge, you can see the -- san rafael bridge, you can see the back-up. that is a check of your traffic. look at these clear conditions across the golden gate bridge, not a bad way to start the workweek. some of the cloud coverage we had earlier over san francisco burning off quickly. here's a live look at san jose. a few clouds hanging around but overall, you're going to see the sunshine, 57 degrees in san jose right now. a cooler 49 in santa rosa. quite a difference with the chillier conditions across the north bay this morning. afternoon highs, they're not going to be very high around the beaches today, upper 50s, around there. mid-60s for the bay. upper 70s inland.
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♪ ♪ when was the last time you heard "oh, you nasty boy." janet jackson thrilled the audience with the performance of her 1986 hit "nasty." that was at last night owes billboard music awards, the first time performing on tv in nine years. we missed you, janet jackson. he also accepted the prestigious icon award and used her speech to pay tribute to women. >> i'm deeply humbled and grateful for this award. i believe that for all the challenges, for all our challenges, we live at a
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glorious moment in history. it's a moment when at long last women have made it clear that we will no longer be controlled -- [ cheers and applause ] -- manipulated or abused. [ applause ] >> the 52-year-old singer looks good, too. she's the first black woman to receive the icon award, so we haven't seen janet jackson in a while. she was on tour. she's been mayor owed and divorced and has a son, and it was just nice to see her back on the stage. >> nice to see her back. >> she doesn't talk very much so when she talks she's a woman of a few words. >> nice to see her back. >> in addition to that message, there was the one where she said i hope everyone turns back to the source of all of this which is god. >> that's right. >> a strong message there as well. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." three things you should know. president trump will attend the swearing in the cia's first female director this morning at
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the agency's headquarters in virginia. gina haspel won senate confirmation last week despite concerns over her role in the brutal post- 9/11 interrogations. the 33-year cia veteran replaces mike pompeo who became secretary of state. >> chinese state media is praising what it calls china's productive talks with the u.s. as trade tensions ease. treasury secretary steve mnuchin says the two countries are putting a potential trade war on hold. he says the focus is on reducing america's $376 billion trade deficit in goods with china. the trump administration agreed to delay up to $150 billion in tariffs on chinese imports. and this morning president trump tweeted that china has agreed to buy, quote, massive amounts of u.s. agricultural products. and the average price of gas in the u.s. hit $3 a gallon ahead of memorial day weekend. pump prices have jumped 41 cents over the past three months, including ten cents in the past two weeks.
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higher crude oil costs and the phasing in summer-grade gas are to blame. prices are the highest in the san francisco area at $3.79 a gallon. baton rouge, louisiana is the lowest in the country. gas sells there for $2.54. new york city police are now investigating sexual misconduct games against celebrity chef mario batali. "60 minutes" spoke to dozens of women who worked at batali's restaurants or at his cafe called the spotted pig. one unidentified woman accused batali of drugging her and sexually assaulting her and another accuser says he was a monster. >> we called him the red menace. >> why? >> because it was a warning the red menace is here. like pull all of your bits n.mario is in town. >> he came to party and have a good time and make passes at the female wait staff, made inappropriate comments, grabbed people. >> that happened more than once? >> that happened a lot. >> yeah. >> that was common?
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>> yeah. >> in a statement to "60 minutes," batali strongly denied the sexual assault allegation, and he also said my past behavior has been deeply inappropriate, and i am sincerely remorseful for my actions. batali's restaurant group announced it's ending their partnership after last night's report. he stepped down from daily operations in tv shows when he was first accused of misconduct in december. every time a woman speaks up, hopefully it leads to another man saying enough, enough, enough, that this kind of behavior will end. wildlife officials are baffled by the first deadly mountain lion attack in washington state in nearly a century. the cougar attacked two mountain bikers over the weekend in a forest 30 miles east of seattle near the town of north bend. one man escaped. his friend did not. demar comorgan shows us how the cougar displayed unusual behavior before the attack. bemarco, the survivor, a 31-year-old isaac seared balm is
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in the hospital recovering from his injuries and is in satisfactory condition. authorities tracked down the mountain lion hours after the mauling and shot and killed him. this 100-pound cougar, a 3 to 4-year-old man injured one man and killed another saturday morning. the victims were mountain biking around 11:00 a.m. when they noticed the panther chasing them. officials say the men stopped and did what they were supposed to do, try to scare the predator away. >> one of the victims swung their bike toward the animal it is a approached, and that cause it had to run off into the woods. >> but the reprieve was short lived. the puma returned moments later and pounced on one of the bikers isaac seared balm. >> he said he had his whole entire head in the jaws of this animal and was being shaken around horribly. >> the big cat released him and then attacked his friend s.j. brooks. seared balm managed to get back on his bike and rode two miles until he could get a cell phone sigal to call -- signal to call
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9 is 1. they found the lion later and killed it. >> the lion dragged the victim back not wood line and was found dead there. >> a cougar was seen in the same area three weeks earlier. it's unclear if the same animal attacked the men this weekend. >> the fact that it stayed in close proximity to these folks and stayed with them is highly, highly unusual. >> wildlife officials say the cougar was emaciated even at 100 pounds, and officials hope a new cropsy can help explain the animal's odd behavior. they say there's no indication that the victims attacked the lion. the last attack was was years ago when a 14-year-old boy was killed. thousands of women say a permanent birth control device caused painful and dangerous side effects. ahead there's new calls for essure to be taken off the market while its makers defend the device. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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essure to be taken off the market while its maker defends the dae advice. you're watching "cbs this morning." what plots they unfold, but only in my mind. over 50% of people with parkinson's will experience hallucinations or delusions during the course of their disease. if your loved one is experiencing these symptoms, talk to your parkinson's specialist. there are treatment options that can help. my visitors should be the ones i want to see. my visitors should be the ones so allstate is giving us money back on our bill. well, that seems fair. we didn't use it. wish we got money back on gym memberships. get money back hilarious. with claim-free rewards. switching to allstate is worth it. wearing powerful sunscreen? yes! neutrogena® ultra sheer. unbeatable protection helps prevent early skin aging and skin cancer
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♪ tens of thousands of women say they suffered painful and serious side effects from a medical device meant as a permanent birth control option. the device known as essure is the subject of nearly 27,000 complaints to the fda since its. evhae men rwo allergic reactions and in some cases perforated organs. a anna warner looks at the issue. >> the essure was recently approved but it was restricted to patients who provide their patients with a checklist about the risks. the fda gave the device a black box warning in 2016. the manufacturer admits there's no way to know who may develop problems and women who have had problems told us the experience affected every aspect of their lives.
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>> the whole process was very, a very, very dark time for me. >> >> reporter: even though aman amanda rusmisell feels the pain from a decision she made ten years ago. it happened after she and her husband decided two children were enough and her doctor recommended a perm ent member of birth control. something called essure. can go back to work the next day, no problem at all, it's non-device it's. >> reporter: it's designed to prevent pregnancy permanently without surgery. a doctor inserts two flexible coils into a woman's fallopian tubes where it's supposed to build up scar tissue and block the tubes. essure has been used in nearly a million worldwide and advertises it as surgery-free, hormone-free and worry-free. >> reporter: it was the worst thing i've ever -- pain i've ever been through. >> reporter: rusmisell said the pain continued along with heavy periods so debilitated she
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started to miss work. her doctor told her it was likely just her age and when the symptoms persisted said she would need had a hysterectomy. she was 38. >> i didn't have support of anybody dealing with the same things as me, and so it was very hard and it was very -- i felt like my body was failing me. >> reporter: it wasn't until she found this facebook group that she realized she wasn't alone. thousands of other women posted about problems they experienced, including pain, severe bloating and rashes, some posts images they say showed the devices perforated a fallopian tube or their uterus. bayer declined an on-camera interview but says they take those matters serious. they said they do not see anything that the risks of essure outweigh the benefits. illinois doctor brett cassidy says at first he agreed. implanting essure in 114
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patience, but his opinion changed, he says, after a patient came back. >> she was having brain fog, migraines, joint paint in her knees, arms, wrists. >> reporter: those seem like strange symptoms to even be linked with a device like this. >> yeah. my exact thoughts. >> reporter: he eventually determined she needed a hysterectomy which removed the essure devices along with the uterus. >> reporter: and what happened to her symptoms? >> gone. >> reporter: completely. >> completely gone. within a week she was feeling 100% better. >> reporter: that was three years ago and since then dr. cassidy has done over 100 hysterectomies with women with the same problem. essure can cause reactions in some women. >> the coils are made of nickel and polyester fibers and when they are placed in the tube it creates an inflammation reaction but the inflammation reaction continues in the body. >> reporter: so you're basically saying that these to you tiny little coils can make your whole
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body go haywire? >> it's hard to imagine or believe. >> reporter: bayer sis hysterectomy is not the only option for essure removal. their executives says the reason for the complaints is hard to say. he told us a lot of those symptoms can be hormonally related and common as women go through reproductive life, but the explanations aren't good enough for amanda rusmisell. >> we still want this product off the market. everything we've done is because we have banged on people's doors and we don't go away. >> reporter: well, one way the women have had an impact is on essure sales. the company confirmed to us that the sales have dropped. they say they are facing challenges. we also spoke with a doctor who is a paid consultant for bayer. dr. peter rothchild of northern virginia told us he's implanted essure devices in more than 1,100 patients with no reported problems, no patients coming back to him anyway. fda has ordered bayer to conduct a post-market trial to compare essure side effects with those
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of tubal ligation, and that final report date is 2023. nora. >> so disturbing to hear the pain that these women have gone through. >> some say it's really been life-altering. >> and bayer says these are acceptable rates. >> right. >> you've got numbers here, 27,000 women may be affected, 35,000 may be affected. you said 16,000 lawsuits. doesn't seem like acceptable rates when you get into the multiple thousands. >> and that's what women who are saying they don't believe this is acceptable, and that's why they are conducting a campaign trying to get it taken off the market. bayer disagrees obviously. >> thank you, anna. up next, a look at this morning's other headlines including a major change at starbucks about who is allowed to hang out in its stores, but good morning. nice clear conditions right around the golden gate bridge this morning. a sign of a good-looking monday. temperatures around the coast will stay pretty cool. we have a chance for monday drizzle, especially along the higher elevations throughout
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mount shasta, the sierra, because of the upper level low. for the bay area, temperatures cool at the beaches and anywhere around the bay, inland that's where you'll see that warmer weather but still we're hovering right around normal for inland locations. below average at the beaches. t how many years that money would last them. how long do you think we'll keep -- oooooohhh! you stopped! you're gonna leave me back here at year 9? how did this happen? it turned out, a lot of people fell short, of even the average length of retirement. we have to think about not when we expect to live to, but when we could live to. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. new digestive advantage now has probiotics that add good good bacteria to your body... and prebiotics that feed the bacteria you already have. together, they support your digestive health. one pill, two ways to help you... stay strong. is not a marathon.
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around the globe. nicolas maduro won by a landslide in an election criticized as legitimate. maduro won a six-year term yesterday. his challengers rejected the election results saying there were massive irregularities. the "washington post" reports on starbucks' new policy for customer. it allows anyone sitting in its cafes without having to buy something. the announcement comes five weeks after two black men who had not bought anything were arrested in a philadelphia starbucks. the company's chairman howard schultz was asked if the men had been lashl profiled. he believes they were and that was very upsetting to him. the knights are headed to the nhl finals after yesterday's win over winnipeg. the team was once a 500/1 shot
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to win the cup. the sports books are worried about having to pay big accounts. one oddsmaker says it could be the beggest loss in history. senator john mccain who used to ride a bus called the straight talk excess says you can really be honest if you ear not running for auction. ahead, the co-author is here in studio 57 to talk about the senator's world view as he battles brain cancer. but like a real hike. with deer and stuff. at a-a-r-p, we're all about hikes, bikes... swims... and... whatever this is... because we're here to help you become your healthiest self. it's why we offer health tips for your body... ...and your brain. yeah, your brain! today is your day to make fitness happen... and a-a-r-p is here to help take on today and every day with a-a-r-p. i feel like i get clean, but is beth's soap as clean rinsing as dove?
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again...to ban gun shows at cow pa it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. lawmakers are trying once again to ban gun shows at cow palace in daly city. according to the "san francisco chronicle," efforts to end gun shows at the cow palace have ended in failure three times already. there's a new push to find homes for people displaced by the -- still administrators have to sign off on the plan. we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. time now is 7:57. and we are tracking a slow ride for your monday morning commute. along 101, this is in the north bay right near fulton and we
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have a crash near steel lane. and that is keeping your ride slow in that southbound direction. it's blocking one lane. speeds below 15 miles an hour. we have some police activity that has caused delays for the muni inline judah line at debows and church. there are bus shuttles running from la playa and church. early morning clouds definitely burned off pretty quickly out there. here's a look at san francisco. you can see blue skies. yes, you'll need your sunglasses. temperature-wise, pretty cool, 59 in concord, oakland 53. 54 in santa rosa. your afternoon highs are going to be cool along the coast. that's where visibilities are still down bout 4 miles. 6 miles visibility a at oakland airport. to temperatures inland will feel warmer in the mid to upper 70s right while around the bay and beaches, 50s and 60s. you're going to stay there for
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the next seven days, especially for the coastal conditions.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's may 21st. welcome back to cbs this morning. the first reporter talks about the medical tech company that regulators have called a massive fraud. plus, what happened after the royal wedding had something to do with this song, but we're hearing from the receptions for the duke and duches of sussex. first the eye opener at 8:00. >> no school today in santa fe, texas, where people are mourning the shooting death of ten people at a local high school. >> the gunman still in custody. what people focused on here in santa fe was on the victims. >> rod rosenstein didn't wait for a direct order from president trump before handing this issue off to the office of
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inspector general. >> investigators believe this escape was planned and the sheriff's department is not ruling out the possibility they had help. called this fissure 20 and the lava that's poured from it for days needs somewhere to go. >> this nation is still buzzing about the wedding which was as much a celebration of love and it was a celebration of change. >> the survivor is in satisfactory condition. they tracked down the mountain lion hours after the mauling and shot and killed him. unbelievable. atlanta scores six in the ninth inning. he's running for his life. i'm gayle king with norah o'donnell and john dickerson. such an interesting weekend of contradictions. in england this joy and celebration.
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in this country, such sadness and pain. it's interesting how life can -- what life does to you sometimes. we begin in santa fe with the santa fe, texas, school shooting. it's reigniting the debate over gun control. ten people were killed. the suspect is 10-year-old dimitrios pagourtzis. >> activists rallied to protest gun violence. the incoming nra president told fox news the focus on gun control is misplaced. >> the disease in this case isn't the second amendment. the disease is youngsters who are steeped in a culture of violence. they've been drugged in many cases. nearly all of these perpetrators are male. and they are young teenagers in most cases. and they've come through a culture where violence is commonplace. all we need to do is turn on the tv go to a movie. if you look at what has happened to young people, many of these young boys have been on ritalin
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since they were in kindergarten. >> there's been no indication the santa fe suspect has been linked to ritalin or other drugs. after a twitter demand from president trump, the justice department's inspector general will investigate claims that an fbi informant infiltrated the triumph campaign for political purposes. the president also demanded to know, quote, if any such requests were made by people within the obama administration. paula reid covers the justice department for cbs news. is there evidence in the justice department investigation into this informant that there was any political or is there any political ties here? is that something just the president raised? >> well, at this point my sources are telling me they don't have any indication this was politically motivated. i've talked to some sources who worked on the russia investigation at its inception and they say this informant made contact, was directed to make contact with the trump campaign advisers after the fbi received a tip about suspicious contacts these men had had with the russians. two of these advisers, george
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papadopoulos and mike flynn, they have both pleaded guilty in the russia probe and both are actively cooperate with the special counsel. >> one other question, paula. rudy giuliani said that maybe the special counsel had told him he may be able to wrap up his work by the first of september. what do you make of that from rudy giuliani, the president's lawyer, in his negotiations with the special counsel about that interview? >> well, just as you said. they're negotiating. this seems like a negotiation tactic. it seems highly unlikely the special counsel would give a hard deadline for the end of his investigation. as these two sides go back and forth, negotiating a possible interview with the president, there seems to be some posturing or tactic. i spoke with giuliani and he was softening to the idea of a presidential interview and the two sides were narrowing the questions the president would possibly be asked. >> paula, thanks. many more steps to go. concern is growing near hawaii's kilauea volcano over
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dangerous toxins in the air. rivers of lava are flowing into the sea, and that is creating a hazardous cloud spreading for miles that can irritate the skin and eyes. mark strassmann got a close-up look on the pacific ocean. >> it really is an extraordinary sight to see nature working this hard, and all that hot lava, in some cases, lava that comes out of the ground at 2,000 degrees. and dumping into the ocean and creating just a tremendous force here. >> officials say the acid in the plumes is almost as corrosive as diluted battery acid. >> if i was mark's family looking at that, i'd say, okay, dad, move back a little bit. getting a little close. a beautiful, beautiful shot. prince harry and meghan markle made a point to blend british and american traditions. tina brown, the author of "the
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diana chronicles" and vanity fair diaries will join us once again in studio 57. she made it back. how the couple's choices were received, and new details about their closed-door receptions that only tina can >>
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a survivor of the deadly las vegas shooting did not let her injuries stop her from accomplishing her dream.
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kristen babock walked across the stage to get her degree from the university of florida law school friday. >> so relieved. maybe relieve is a good word. it's just an ending. it's coming to a close. i'm very proud of myself i was able to make it here. babik was shot in the back in the shooting. it hit very close to her spine and she worried she may never walk again. we spoke with her just days afterward from her hospital bed. >> i just remember asking the doctor if i was still going to be able to graduate. i'm supposed to graduate in may. and i kept asking, am i going to be okay? all i want to do is graduate law school. and she told me when i woke up after they put the tube in my chest, you're going to graduate. and you're going to be able to run a marathon. >> babik is grateful for all the
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support she's received and is looking forward to the next chapter in her life. i have to tell you, when i was there in las vegas, when you go and sit by someone's hospital bedside -- >> it hits home. >> but i remember when you did that interview, it may seem so far away. and now that it's here and to see that she did it, it's really nice. >> incredibly hopeful. >> she walked across that stage, too. >> she told us at the time that a bullet was just inches from her spine. she could have been totally paralyzed. she is grateful. >> we are all grateful and so happy to see that. >> go kristin babik. first lady melania trump is back at the white house after a five-day hospitalization for a kidney treatment. she returned from walter reed national military medical center. she had surgery for an unspecified kidney problem. the white house said it was benign. the length of her stay raised questions about whether it was more complicated than first revealed. president trump tweeted melania
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is feeling and doing really well and in his original tweet he misspelled his wife's name but quickly corrected the error. i'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt. we've all had spellcheck change things. i said that's a really nice "slut" and was trying to say "suit" so they can really trip you up. i don't think for one minute the president of the united states doesn't know how to spell his wife's name. >> i agree. they founded a start-up that was going to transform medical testing but it turned out to be a massive fraud. >> where is the revolution? >> well, it's in -- first of all, making it possible to do tests on tiny samples. >> "wall street journal" reporter john carryrou exposed one of the biggest financial
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♪ it sounds genius. what about those who say that's not enough blood to do all the tests that need to be done, especially if machine is very sick and you're trying to figure out what it is. >> this is every time you create something new, there should be questions. and, to me, that's a sign that you've actually done something that is transformative. >> theranos founder told us in 2015 how she'd transform blood tests by using a drop or two of blood from a fingerprint to get fast, low-costs tests for everything from cholesterol. she managed to convince investors to sink hundreds of millions of dollars into her company. at age 30 she became the world's
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youngest female self-made billionaire. this past march, the securities and exchange commission called theranos an elaborate yengars-l spoke to insiders who witnessed the lies and tried to raise red flags. >> when i was there, we could not complete any test accurately on the devices that we were manufacturing. >> doug matje joined theranos in 2012 after getting his doctorate in biochemistry. his job was to adapt blood tests for the edison. tests which holmes told investors were ready to use on patients. >> elizabeth holmes told walgreens it developed this test that could run a blood test from realtime in less than half the cost of traditional labs. was that true? >> no. certainly not. >> do you think she was lying to walgreens? >> i do, yeah. >> "wall street journal" reporter john carreyrou broke
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the story of the theranos deseptsion and chronicles the company's unraveling in his new book "bad blood." cbs reached out to theranos and holmes about the book and have not heard back. john, good morning. many people watched the piece last night on "60 minutes" remarked about her voice. her deep, baritone voice. was that take, too? >> according to my sources, it was. an employee who joined the company in 2011 had a meet with her shortly after he joined and it was late in the day and they were finishing up the meeting and she sort of expressed her excitement that he had recently joined. as she got up she slipped back into a more natural sounding women's voice. >> was everything about elizabeth holmes a fraud? >> a lot of it was a lie. >> how was she able to dupe so many powerful, intelligent people, most of them, as you
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point out, were men. >> right. well, i mean, she did have enablers. robertson, the stanford engineering professor, was the first to give her credibility when she was just 19. and she dropped out of stanford and he accompanied her on pitches to venture capitalists. then she charmed donald l. lucas, a famous -- who is a famous silicon valley venture capitalist who groomed larry ellison, the billionaire software entrepreneur. later she charmed george schultz, the former secretary of state who was passionate about science and who met elizabeth in 2011 and was just wowed by her vision. >> how was she able to do that, though? we know the people. what did she do? how was she able to do this? >> she was incredibly charismatic. also very smart. people were -- one after the other were impressed with how sharp her intellect was and, you
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know, she really played the role of the genius of the precocious genius really well. >> so even when people were raising questions, she was presenting, as super confident, in control, i've got it all figured out. can you explain to people the stakes here, though in terms of human health and potential lives? this isn't about just losing money? >> not at all. the most egregious part in terms of the theranos scandal is when they went live with the blood test in fall of 2013 and that's when it became a big fraud. before that, the company was a research and development operation. once it commercialized the tests in walgreens stores, it started affecting patients' lives and patients' health. when they went live with the technology, they had the latest iteration of the device was called the mini lab. it didn't work at all. just a prototype. they dusted off the older generation, the edison, which was a very limited machine that
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only did one class of blood test and didn't do them well at that. and they also modified commercial analyzers made by the german company siemans. >> when your story came out, the company said this. called the story factually and scientifically erroneous. grounded in baseless assertions by disgruntled former employees and industry incumbents. when you heard that, did that throw you a little bit? did you start to have doubts about what you were doing? >> how did they threaten you? >> it was more of the same for me at that point because the company had been fighting us for several months. david boise, the outside counsel had come to our office twice. twice i strongly suspected some of my confidential sources were being followed. they were certainly being threatened with litigation. and so it came as no surprise after the scorched earth campaign before the story was published that they would come out and outright deny it. >> did that affect you? >> i knew that my reporting
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wasn't going to be good enough to bring the charade to an end. it also would take regulators backing up my findings. and that's what happened in the ensuing weeks and months. >> how much was theranos worth? >> $10 billion. >> how much today? >> zero. >> and she's still looking for investors. >> theranos still exists. probably not for long. in a few months it's probably going to go bankrupt. >> john carreyrou, thank you so much. amaze sting story. "bad blood" is available today. coming up, mark salter will be here with his book on how the mission suddenly changed after the arizona senator's brain cancer diagnosis. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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before today prince charles guests made them cry and prince william might have made them blush. ahead, we'll talk with tina
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brown about what happened after the historic ceremony. we years since a bay area teen good morning. it is 8:25. i'm ann makovec. today marks five years since a bay area teenager vanished. eventually leading to questions about a possible link to four other disappearances. they became known as the california five. still no trace of any of them today. this year's bay area sports hall of fame honorees will include matt cain from the giants, former warriors star tim hardaway, u.s. soccer legend brandy chastain. tonight's induction ceremony is at the st. francis hotel in san francisco. and more just. president obama called him one of america's finest mayors.
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he's more prepared to get things done. antonio for governor. brought business and labor together to expand career training and apprenticeships, invested in transportation and helped create over 200,000 living wage jobs.
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antonio villaraigosa for governor. good morning. the time is 8:27. we are tracking a new accident southbound 880. it's just past the coliseum, so just past 66. they just cleared that truck out of the lanes over to that right shoulder on the left side of your screen there but our travel times quickly leaped into the red. we are tracking about a 13- minute ride from broadway to alameda -- or excuse me, to 66. so do give yourself some time. that northbound side pretty heavy as well. and heading into hayward continues to be a slow ride towards 84. we've got 23 minutes there. we have a new crash reported near winton and that is what's causing the delays. it's nice to see the golden gate bridge under clear skies out there. we did have morning cloud coverage but it was early while
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most people were sleeping. you can see that drizzle on the lens here. this side be our ocean -- this would be our ocean beach view and the clouds have cleared up. our kpix 5 camera showing clear conditions behind the trans america pyramid. 56 in san francisco. 58 in san jose. santa rosa, you're at 54. we started off in the 40s, though, so nice to see those temperatures are warming up. here's a look at those winds, pretty calm for sfo, redwood city. fremont you're around 4 miles breeze. we are going -- 4 miles an hour breeze. we're going to have the winds, bringing the temperatures pretty cool. satellite and radar giving you a glimpse of all the clouds that did come through and burned off. temperatures by the coast will be right around the upper 50s. for the bay. low to mid-60s, below average conditions. inland areas you're looking at mid to upper 70s. : that's wherethe warmer air will be. trust for the rest of the next
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week will stay pretty consistent.
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♪ well, there you see. meghan and prince harry, their kiss. look, he's got the beard. >> the beard. thank you, prince harry, for keeping the beard. he must have heard about our bet. >> that's right. he was in the barber's chair. as he lifted the razor, gayle came diving in. >> no, harry, no. for those of you who missed last week, norah and i had a bet for charity. i said he would keep the beard, norah said he wouldn't keep the beard.
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the bet was reaching $500. norah texted me and said i think i'm going to lose the bet, we should up the money for charity, let's make it $1,000. i said i'm not so sure. military people said he's in the uniform, he has to shave the beard. >> we developed the theer on friday, it's her day, the wedding day, so you wouldn't do something to focus the attention on him. >> i hadn't thought about that. >> the good news is, good money to good charity. >> honor project, started by the parents portfolio a little girl from youngstown. >> in the tradition of meghan and harry who are philanthropist and list add number of charities. >> they didn't want wedding gifts, that's right. they listed a bunch of charities. if you wanted to do something that's where you go. they weren't looking for blenders and toasters. they got that. >> welcome back to "cbs this
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morning" this morning. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. fortune reports walmart is number one on the 2018 fortune 500 list, which ranks companies by revenue. number two is exxonmobil, number three is berkshire hathaway, which knocked apple down to number four. amazon cracked top ten for the first time coming in at number eight. >> newsweek reports on a study that electronic brain waves for people, a chemical that makes people feel sated. it could be used as an alternative to surgery or dprugs. tied as record for fastest pitch in history. the first fastball was way outside. the second was fouled off. he tied the record set by yankees relief pitcher chapman.
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>> lexington leader reports meghan markle podesta beagle, rescued from a kill shelter road with the royal queen. he was spotted riding by queen elizabeth on a trip to windsor p guy was reportedly adopted through a canadian-based rescue. markle met the dog during an adoption in ontario and brought him home to england. >> i thought that was one of the sweetest shots, the beagle riding with the queen. >> with the little head out. >> the queen as we know loves dogs. saturday's royal wedding, another sign she's part of the family. saturday's royal wedding ceremony blended british tradition with american customs. american bishop michael curry delivered a rousing sermon you could say. musical by saint georges chapel and gospel singers known as kingdom choir.
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vladimir spoke with some after the ceremony. >> to be part of the day, even in the vicinity with them is a blessing in itself but to share what we think was very dear to us as singers and musicians and vessels of message givers. it transcends beyond anything. i can't quantify. i've said a lot of words. i'm not able -- i can't truly pinpoint how this feels. it's mind-blowing. >> mind blowing is right. cbs news contributor and author of the diana chronicles tina brown was with us in windsor for the whole six hours and she wasn't wearing comfy shoes. she joins us at the table. she actually had on heels. tina, i still can't get over -- the after glow is huge. i met somebody from prince charles office who told me it was prince charles' idea to get the gospel choir. he present thad to harry and meghan. i was surprised. i assumed it was meghan.
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>> it was a mind blowing fact to learn that. >> did you hear that, too. >> yes. charles is really an off beat and wonderfully sort of progressive and eclectic guy. he loves all kinds of music. people don't understand that charles has always been this very inclusive man. somehow because he looks so square. >> he does look buttoned up. >> he's in the stuffy. all the things he loves, environmental passions, organic food. people mocked him for it. of course, he was right. he was ahead. he loves gospel music. people are blown away to hear that. >> a couple of things ahead, too, tina. they seem ahead like anybody has seen. we said that before the wedding. after seeing the wedding and the way people cheered, tears of joy literally in the streets of windsor. >> it really was an amazing uplift to be there. you and i were standing there. somehow when that carriage came out and so close to us as it
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came around the corner, you saw the intimacy of windsor, too. that's one of the things that made it so joyful. it was a small town really. people were so close. it felt more emotional. much more emotion in this wedding than i've seen in the royal wedding. >> beautiful and symbolic. the titles, duke and duchess of sussex, a nod to .duke with slave trade. who chose the titles. >> the queen has a repertoire of titles she can hand out. there's a great number of royal dukes and so on. she needs to go into that closet and get out a title she can use. partly it was the fact that it was available. but i'm sure it was a delight that was part of his pedigree. >> speaking of delight, what happened at the party after with the speeches and dancing? >> prince charles blew everyone away, apparently, with a very moving speech at the reception at lunch where he actually
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recalled giving harry a bottle when he was a tiny baby and changing his diaper and called him darling old harry. it was such a sweet thing. and i think you've seen a lot more emotion from all of the royal family. this is a most loved up wedding i can remember with the royals. there was such a fierce passion between these two people. you even saw princess anne's daughter zahra tyndall, her husband patting her baby bulge and there was love, charles calling him darling harry. this was not the usual royal wedding. >> upper lip. >> the stiff upper lip really did not just tremble, it was blubbering. >> i heard people didn't know the royals didn't quite know what to make of reverend curry. i saw somebody who knows the royal family very well. they said, listen, the queen would have speen what he was going to say but she would not have known he was going to deliver it that way. "saturday night live" said it was like chicken and waffle
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kiosk in pottery barn. what in the world was this. i think they liked it. >> i actually heard that everybody thought it rocked. they loved it. i brought that energy into that church. then when you followed it with the gospel choir, this is a happening marriage. >> happening marriage. >> amazing message, too. he was focused on the love of the couple but then he turned it around to the rest of the world and said love brought us here but bring this love back out into the world. >> it was actually beautiful. i thought it was a complete hit. clearly he had 40,000 tweets a minute going on. >> it all goes down to the love, though, tina. i still will not forget prince harry looking at her and saying, you look amazing. there's something about the word amazing. not beautiful but you look amazing and i'm so lucky. the look between the two of them i remember and that resonates with a lot of people. >> the admiration in his face when he takes off the veil. between the two of them there's
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an extraordinary chemistry. >> you did an amazing. >> amazing. >> six hours flew by. >> and that cake. >> thank you, tina. >> it actually was good. >> thank you. senator john mccain says his cancer diagnosis makes him free to speak his mind. he does that in his new book "the restless wave. in the greenroom good morning. nice, clear conditions right around the golden gate bridge this morning. it's a sign of a good-looking monday. there you go, temperatures around the coast will stay pretty cool. we have a chance for monday drizzle, especially along the higher elevations throughout mount shasta. for the bay area, temperatures cool at the beaches and anywhere around the bay. inland, that's where you're see the warmer weather but still we're hovering around normal for inland locations.
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the senate armed services division will be begin taking up the bill. it's something john mccain has pridefully led for years. he's being treated right now for stage 4 brain cancer. there's an airing on memorial day "for whom the bell tolls" on monday, may 28th. >> i know this is a very vicious disease. i greet every day with gratitude, and i will continue to do everything that i can, but i'm also very aware that none of us lives forever.
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>> reporter: senator mccain goes into more depth about his diagnosis and how he wants to be remembered in his new book "the restless wave," and it's co-written by john salter. he served on senator mccain's staff for 18 years. never stopped serving. he's written seven books with him. good morning. >> good morning. >> given us an outdade how john is doing. >> he's doing really well. he's working hard to get strong. >> when's the last time you saw him? >> about a week ago. he was in good spirits, cracking jokes. some of the nurses don't know him, they're new, and they don't understand his sar came. >> being in the witness protection program? >> yeah. >> you were writing this book and diagnosis came in.
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tell us about it. >> it became personal and he wanted to write what america means to him after 60 years of serving the country and what it means to the world. it's still quite a bit of foreign affairs and national security issues because he didn't want to talk about issues most important to him. but there's very heartfelt expression of what his particular form of patriotism is. >> you wrote the first and last chapter? >> we did. i think we decided we were in the middle of writing about his last presidential campaign and he said, let's write a forward and a conclusion that i can record while i'm still strong enough to do it, so we did that. and those are probably the most personal parts of the book. >> the book is named -- the name of it, "the restless wave" is based on a navy hymn. >> yes. eternal fathers who arm is saved, the restless arm yet
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waves. >> it's so beautiful. you write so beautifully about this. and when i thought about this, his life has been defined by restlessness. >> very much so. and only god could still it. it actually had a different title as those of you who covered it. "it's always dark before it's totally black" which he has contributed. >> it's abeauted to mao. >> and he thought it was a little flip. >> his father and his grandfather, the book starts with that on pearl harbor. was this conversation already much in your head before the diagnosis came in and in his head and of course because he's got sons who served as well. >> yes. he's got two sons in the military right now. one on active duty. yes. there's obviously the long military tradition, but it's 60
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years in service to this country and in uniform and public office. that's a long, long time. it means something very perj to him and he wanted to express gratitude and the joy he's had for being able do that. >> he's wanted to let us know how important it is and that it's okay. that your party affiliation and beliefs do not have to determine whether you can be friends with somebody or determine your character. i thought that was a very powerful message. >> he came up in a different tradition. he was the navy lee azan officer to the senate and he worked with the then armed services committee, tower, goldwater, scoop jackson, and traveled with them overseas. the economy tee always worked in a bipartisan way. as he's chaired the committee, it's continued. he reports on his defense bill every year unanimously. >> he has relationships with people he fought quite bitterly, romney, bush, explain that. >> he fights.
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he's fought with everybody at one point or another. he talks about the country being 325 million vociferous souls and he's one of them. so much more unites us than divides us and in this country the only way to get things done is together. if you just scream and yell and stand for 100% of your way, nothing gets done. >> i'm curious what this is like for you, mark. as norah points out, you've been with senator mccain for a very long time, knowing this could be your last time together. you've written sneechb maybe. >> nobody knows the answer to that. >> nobody knows the answer. our time is our time. but it's been a great prish ledge to work on them, and if this is the last one, i'm pleased. >> he's such an american hero and you've helped narrate that
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and put it in books and speeches. >> this is usually john's job. the part i like about ghostwriting is the ghost part. >> you can't do that anymore, casper. now it's you. >> well, he'll have reviews, i'm sure, of every performance. >> he will, he will, and it will be none too kind, i'm sure. >> mark, thank you. an incredible book. "the restless wave" is in stores tomorrow. you can hear more on "cbs this morning" podcast. today john talks with geophysical physicist, what's his name? >> carlo rovelli. >> you know who he is. >> i'm juchtd saying. he used his philosophy and physics to unravel the mist of time. you're watching what
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at stanford health care, we can now simulate the exact anatomy of a patient's brain before surgery. if we can do that, imagine what we can do for seizures. and if we can fix damaged heart valves without open heart surgery, imagine what we can do for an irregular heartbeat, even high blood pressure. if we can use analyze each patient's breast cancer to personalize their treatment, imagine what we can do for the conditions that affect us all. imagine what we can do for you.
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i we worked with pg&eof to save energy because wenie. wanted to help the school. they would put these signs on the door to let the teacher know
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you didn't cut off the light. the teachers, they would call us the energy patrol. so they would be like, here they come, turn off your lights! those three young ladies were teaching the whole school about energy efficiency. we actually saved $50,000. and that's just one school, two semesters, three girls. together, we're building a better california.
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ugh a fence and good morning. five minutes before 9:00. i'm ann makovec. one person is dead after a car crashed through a fence and ended up in a pond overnight. chopper 5 was over the scene at crow canyon road. it's unclear at this point exactly how the driver lost control. today state lawmakers kick off a new push to ban gun shows at cow palace. and a new push to raise tolls on bay area bridges. three bay area mayors will be in a san francisco today to support a $3 increase over the next six years. it is a measure on the june 5th ballot.
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your weather and traffic coming up next. he's been called a rockstar lawyer. he tops the charts on progressive causes... winning pro bono battles for immigrants and the homeless. defending gay rights and gun control. democrat jeff bleich. after columbine, bleich led president clinton's youth violence initiative. with joe biden, bleich took on domestic violence. served president obama as special counsel and ambassador. maybe bleich can't pull off the rockstar look... but his progressive record is solid gold.
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good morning him time now is 8:57 and we are tracking some slowdowns in the east bay. we have an accident and that is keeping things very heavy along 242 and 680. we're starting to see the back- up in both directions there. as you head a little further south along 680, you'll be tapping the brakes again due to a crash right near -- that's blocking at least one lane. speeds dip below 15 miles an hour. you're looking at about a 32- minute ride from 580 down to 84. as you are making your way in that southbound direction,
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washington boulevard, one lane now blocked after an earlier crash at a couple of -- had a couple of lanes blocked. 25-minute travel time from androtti to mission boulevard south. check out all the sunshine on our dublin camera. looking pretty good out there. not a bad way to start this monday under clear skies. temperatures will be warming inland areas. san jose, you woke up to cloud coverage but it's starting to clear. we're getting more and more sunshine as the hours move on. san jose, 59 right now. santa rosa 58. quite a jump in the temperatures. now satellite and radar showing a lot of those early morning clouds are now gone. marine layer is definitely disappearing on us. we are noticing a very light west wind that's going on right along the coastline, barely a breeze, though. it's really not wind direction that's going to keep the coastline cool. temperatures expected to only reach the upper 50s if you're near the water. mid-60s around the bay and mid
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to upper 70s inland.
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wayne (high-pitched): oh-oh! jonathan: it's a trip to australia! tiffany (australian accent): it's a diamond ring! wayne (in french accent): you said that before. say it again. - going for the big deal, baby. wayne: you got the big deal! jonathan: ha, ha. tiffany: hello? open the box! wayne: you won a car! you did it! - (screaming) jonathan: i'm vanilla pudding. wayne: dreams do come true! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! (cheers and applause) wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." this is our first ever luau show. we love this. look at these people! (cheers and applause) who wants to make a luau deal? you, jada, everybody else, have a seat. hey, jada. - nice to meet you. wayne: welcome to the show, jada. - thank you so much for having me. thank you for the opportunity. wayne: well, you're welcome. - ahh!

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