tv CBS This Morning CBS June 22, 2018 7:00am-8:58am PDT
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>> yes. they are ready. east bay shoreline. have a great day, every.yb >>odningo our viewers right now concord 65, oakland 61 livermore low 60s already at 8 o'clock in the morning. in the west.r viewers it's friday, june 22nd, 2018. 96 santa rosa. today it will be 5 to 12 welcome to "cbs this morning." thousands of immigrant parents are desperately trying to get degrees warmer depending on where you are. their children back after they were forcibly separated at the concord will be in the upper border. we'll show you the emotional 90s. instead of forecast, the reunions for some families who can finally see each other again. warmest temperatures in the we only on "cbs this morning," will be tomorrow. we have heat advisories posted throughout the bay area for the story behind this dramatic saturday. a little cooler on sunday, photo of a little girl crying. cooler next week, but in the we'll hear from the photographer meantime, the heat is on in the and the border patrol agent who say the picture may not be what bay area. we will have more on the weather in 30 minutes. what about him? it seems. an intersection near pittsburgh demanding justice for an unarmed teenager killed by police. plus, we investigate how organized crime at one of nation's busiest ports could be
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increasing the cost of everything. and charles krauthammer, a >> c beginse todayrv with ivtod let's do it. ♪ eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> the american people don't like we're separating families. never really intended to do that. >> confuse follows the come on. president's executive order. this summer, add a new member to the family. at the mercedes-benz summer event. >> 500 of the more than 2,000 children recently detained have lease the glc300 for $429 a month already been reunited with their at your local parents. mercedes-benz dealer. >> our first lady is down now at mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. the border. because it really bothered her as it bothered me, as it bothered everybody at this table. >> it was the jacket the first lady wore to the board they're raised eyebrows. >> she should just say let them eat cake. that is literally the message she's sending. >> protests after the deadly shooting. >> people are mourning the loss of a g n conservative politics. charles accurate hammkrauthammes
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battle with cancer. ♪ let it be >> the governor of texas let it be ♪ declares disasters in six counties along the gulf coast flooded by days of heavy rain. ♪ there will be an answer >> all that. let it be ♪ >> with the firspick, the phoenix suns select deandre that is a #goals moment ayton. >> we're a young team. right there singing "let it be" and we're ready. >> and all that matts.er with paul mccartney in the car on carpool karaoke. >> the defeat for leo messi and it moved james cordon to tears. ingenta. >> simply levelled. >> despair for argentina and he joined sir paul on some of his greatest hits while driving ecstasy for croatia. around liverpool england. they stopped at a local pub for >> do you mind if we listen to a surprise concert. some music? >> on "cbs this morning." ♪ baby you can drive my car oh. ♪ yes i'm gonna be a star >> whoa! ♪ baby you can drive my car ♪ it's been a hard day's night ♪ baby i love you >> that is so cool. >> that is awesome. beep beep. >> oh, my gosh. ♪ beep beep yeah >> this morning's eye opener is t'esented by toyota. ♪
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♪ make me feel all right >> i didn't know that was going to happen. james says one of his dreams was to sing "penny lane" driving down penny lane with sir paul welcome to "cbs this mccartney. morning." riding shotgun with paul look at that lady. that's one of the coolest mccartney. >> he's taping shows in london things. >> james cordon, that was like all week. you can tell he's having a blast the trying of like, i do not there. believe this is happening. but for that particular one, he >> and he loves sir paul so said -- well he didn't, but paul much, as we all do, but to be there, that close, that's great. mccartney wanted to pick all the >> it's an echo of that famous songs. so paul mccartney decided what rooftop concert that surprised they were going to do. >> when paul mccartney says he everybody, right? when "let it be" and the beatles wants to be in the driver's were ending which is a very seat. >> right away. dramatic moment. >> we have new information on welcome back to "cbs this what happened to mor than 2,000 morning." we don't have paul mccartney children forcibly separated froe their parents under the trump behind the curtain. administration's zero tolerance boarder policy. the salt lake tribune says a for undocumented immigrants. a senior official tells cbs news canadian company wants to start mining on utah lands that used about 500 children have been re weiram to be part of grand staircase s it's unclethir >> u intli in the u.s. staircase-escalante. it appears to be the first pressure, president trump signed an executive order temporarily mining claim. ending the separation of president trump removed nearly families. half of the monument from the administration says it's now protection in december.
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exploring a plan to use u.s. cbs great falls, montana, military bases to house up to affiliate, krtv, has new 20,000 detained immigrant information about a grizzly bear children who are arrived in the attack in that state. u.s. alone. amber kornak was working as a david begnaud's at a children's field assistant when she was shter in mcallen, texas, where attacked last month in the the first lady made a surprise visit yesterday. cabinet mountains. david, it was a surprise. investigators say it was a surprise encounter and the male good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the first lady landed and there bear was just acting was a flash flood here in mcallen, texas, yesterday, but defensively. the attack left her with two that did not slow her down. skull fractures. she was able to walk two miles we were standing in this spot to her car and drive to get for "cbs this morning" yesterday help. she is slowly recovering. not knowing the first lady would variety says a roseanne spin-off called the connors is coming to abc. be here a few hours later. the series will star original cast members including john she came here because she said she wanted to help speed up the goodman and sara gilbert. unification process. three children inside the roseanne barr who starred in the facility have already been original '80s sitcom will nobt reunited with their parents and about 55 more are still waitingt part of the next spinoff. a reboot of roseanne was the roy0 children around the country who are abruptly canceled last month staying in shelters and thewh ti after barr posted a racist to be reunited. comment on twitter. deadline hollywood says items from black panther will be this was the first time this displayed at the museum of guatemalan mother held her son african-american history and in more than six weeks.
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identified only as delia, she culture. the costume, scripts, elements told the intercept her and production photographs will 5-year-old now refuses to leave be included in this display. her side. the marvel superhero movie that delia and her son crossed the smashed box office records rio grande river on an inner tube and were detained may 7th featured a predominantly black for entering illegally. they were finally reunited last cast. and business insider says a week. delia was released after an new study has even more evidence that coffee is good for your heart and four cups might be the asylum officer kedeemed her clas ideal amount. german researchers writing in ofaleton wertie bk the general plos biology studied credible. she was not charged with entering the country illegally. caffeinated lab mice and human >> prosecutors have discrion tissue. a joellt of caffeine could make what charges. >> reporter: this civil rights certain proteins in older adult attorney efren olivares says he cells perform more like young cells. they say drinking the equivalent was in court when prosecutors of about four cups of coffee a day could help reduce the risk decided not to charge 17 fathers who illegally crossed the border of heart attacks. >> everyone in this studio is were their children and were like, yes! separated. prosecutors say they decision feeling good. a 13-year-old boy faces a were not related to the felony charge in illinois for separation issue. the men are out in awaiting a recording a conversation with his school principals without deportation hearing. >> their main concern was the their consent. his state has one of the children. wherere my children? strictest eavesdropping laws in when am i going to see them the country. we're not revealing the boy's
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again? i did not have an answer to name because of his age. them. >> reporter: their children were he recorded the conversation probably sent to centers like when asked to explain why he new hope for so-called wasn't showing up for detention. unaccompanied children. first lady melania trump was >> i wanted to have protection told three children have already been released to their families. because they're adults and it's 55 remained. usually their word against mine. >> when it's a child's word >> how many times they speak with their relatives, their against an adult word and families, per week for example? >> well, the children are there's no actual evidence of what was said, the adult is going to be taken into account as the person being truthful allowed to communicate with their families twice a week. automatically. and that automatically renders >> reporter: kurt senske the child totally voiceless. there's nothing there to protect oversees the shelter. if a parent gets out ofody, the children. >> we asked the principal, could they come here to pick u assistant principal and school their chiluld depend on the superintendent for comment and have not received a response. specific situation of lawsd? an the specific s>>ituation t of e the superintendent said they child and our case managers work cannot comment on a pending through that. some matter and are not authorized to >> repter:e' point within the f7 release confidential student information. cbs news legal analyst rikki 72 hours of being arrested, they klieman joins us. go before a judge and are the law is pretty strict. charged with illegal entry into you can't record a conversation this country. if they plead guilty, most are without the consent of the other given credit for time served and person. what may be the teen's defense? >> he has a good defense, and pay a fine, sometimes as cheap it's a factual defense about as $10. what is a reasonable expectation >> david thank.r moromla
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of privacy. uldn't hkher son for fir according to his story, as has time sincehey were separated been reported, he was called to at the border. the principal's office. he was talking with the principal, assistant principal, but in the reception area where the mother and child were reunited just hours ago in the secretary would ordinarily sit with an open door. baltimore. she is actually suing the trump so there's a question of whether you have a reasonable administration officials for splitting them up. expectation of privacy in a weijia jiang is in maryland with the reunion. reception area and where people could walk by. weijia, good morning. in addition, this was a >> reporter: good morning, conversation about discipline. norah. she says she and her son arrived to the u.s.der bjourne after so wasn't it logical the boy would go home and tell his parents and that the school 2,300 miles by foot. she says they were seeking disciplinarians would tell his parents so is there reasonable asylum, fleeing violence in guatemala and domestic abuse, expectation? >> why did he feel the need to but she was detained and for record it? more than a month, mahia mahia >> he felt the need to record it because he had felt the school says she had no idea where her was not treating him son was. appropriately and, therefore, he wanted a record of it. as soon as he tells them that biatachia mahia mahiobbeds ermo. he's recorded it, they stop the conversation abruptly and then,
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two months later, finds out he's what did you tell your mom when charged with a class four you saw her for the first time? felony. >> translator: i love her. >> what does that mean if i'm >> reporter: she and 7-year-old 13? am i facing hard -- what am i darwin were sarated in may after they crossed the border facing? >> you're not facing hard time. we can laugh about it and i near san louis, arizona, seeking originally thought, oh, this will blow over. then i found out in illinois, asylum. but asylum seekers must go to a it's an overzealous prosecution port of entry to enter the u.s. by many about this particular legally, something she did not do. they were taken to a detention center in arizona. statute. he faces being adjudicated a can you describe the moment you realized darwin was being taken delinquent as a juvenile which means he could go from being from you? supervised or to a juvenile >> translator: one day, they uslled him by his name, she told detention center and held in a , and okim h away. juvenile detention center, though i don't anticipate it, we asked darwin about what it until the age of 21. was like inside detention in addition to that, as we all might have thought, if you have a juvenile adjudication, you center. darwin, were you scared? think that your record, no one can see. did you wonder when you would i would have certainly thought that. see your mom again? but it turns out that in certain instances, prospective employers and colleges can get a hold of a
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mejia mejia filed a federal juvenile adjudication of delinquency. that to me was pretty stunning. lawsuit tuesday against several government agencies and trump so there are collateral administration officials seeking consequences. this is a kid who was a court order releasing darwin interested, perhaps in having a into her custody. career in the military. on thursday, the justice well, that's a problem for him. department agreed to release and a class 4 felony, if he were darwin. >> what are you most excited to an adult, for heaven's sake, 1 to 3 years in prison and a do now that you're back $25,000 fine. it's no laughing matter. together? "i just want to talk to him," >> now i want to really hear the she said, "it's been so long." tape. we asked the state's attorney the family's lawyers tell us darwin claims he received shots who comment comment on the pending juvenile matter. while inside that detention but when his office gets a case facility. he will now get a medical checkup, including a full blood that can be proved beyond a test. reasonable doubt, they file it. meanwhile, mehia-mehia is out on is he just doing his job? seems extreme. >> do you want me to become a bond as she awaiting her hearing rocket ship going out of my for asylum set in august and chair? >> not today. >> what happened to that lawsuit of hers is still open it. prosecutorial discretion? >> weijia, thanks. we know that prosecutorial nice to see those reunions. >> we talked a lot about the discretion exists throughout policy. this country and that a lead that's the people aspect. prosecutor or even a line and poor darwin looks like he prosecutor. when i was a young assistant, i has been traumatized. >> well, it's what the doctor could go to my boss, the d.a. kids ctainly as age what
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and say, do we really want to prosecute this? it will do is cause lifetime -- >> is this worth our time and could cause lifetime drama and resources? >> hey, wait a minute. we're an hour outside of chicago. why are we prosecuting this trauma to them. you have a lot of parents -- we 13-year-old as if this were a get anxious when you drop your gun crime. >> considering all that's going child off at day care for the on in chicago. first time or school for the thank you, rikki klieman. first time. we even know where they are and always good to have you here at the table. who's taking care of them. we've been talking about the administration's zero tolerance it shows you the universal love immigration policy. language of parents when they ahead, john reflects on the see their children. outcry that pushed the president inexcusable, what's happening. >> it looks like a long-term to halt the separation of children from their parents. immigration solution may be even this story is not going further out of reach in washington. this morning, president trump tweeted republicans should stop wasting their time on immigration until after we elect . a warm day on tap about more senators and congressmen with the bay area with numbers and women in november. warmer than yey gop leaders are making changes with readings almost 1 to a bill that lets kids a b 20 e hi99, santa rosa 96, in the city 76 degrees, and child detentions. democrats say that could allow families to be held 90 in san jose, heat advisories indefinitely.> large crowds of posted for tomorrow, it will be even warmer, extended forecast calls for the warmest reading angry over a deadly police shooting shut down a major
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highway near pittsburgh saturday to be 104 degrees. overnight. it marked the second day of unrest following tuesday's shooting of an unarmed teen. cell phone video show s antwon rose jr. running from police before he was shot. jericka duncan is in pittsburgh. >> reporter: it was largely peaceful here thursday afternoon, but those crowds grew confrontational at times by nightful. present testers say he want justice for antwon rose as we learn more about the officer who opened fire on him. protesters faced off against police as they halted traffic on a major interstate for over five hours thursday night. it was the culmination of a day of rallies and demonstrations ss the city. >> i'm thinking that the cop should be held accountable. i'm thinking that antwon shoul
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lice was shot jr. running three times. police say the car rose was in matched the description of a vehicle involved in a drivy shooting tuesday night. two weapons were found in the car. according to the county district attorney, rose was unarmed, but was carrying an empty handgun clip. the driver of the car was questioned and released. another suspect is still at large. the officer involved had been identified as michael rosfelhe t d.about 90 minutes before the deadly shooting. but he had been on duty in east pittsburgh for three weeks and has been an officer elsewhere in the region since 2011. sources say he was hospitalized after the incident and later released. the family's attorney says the demonstrations are helping rose'ses heal. >> their family is really athurteling right now. part of the protest, it lets them know the community's
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hurting with them. >> reporter: officer rosfeld is i'm april kennedy and i'm an arborist with pg&e in the sierras. on paid leave as authorities since the onset of the drought, conduct independent more than 129 million trees have died in california. investigation into what exactly happened. a local station did speak to pg&e prunes and removes over a million trees officer rosfeld and he says he's every year to ensure that hazardous trees received a lot of support from fellow officers and also that he can't impact power lines. shooting, gayle.aptud the kno ac and since the onset of the drought we've doubled our efforts. i grew up in the forests out in this area and honestly >> jericka, very troubling story it's heartbreaking to see all these trees dying. with a lot of questns still to be answered, thank you. what guides me is texas governor greg abbott ensuring that the public is going to be safer has declared a state of emergency in six counties after and that these forests can be sustained and enjoyed by the community in the future. days of torrential rains near the border. devastating flooding has pummeled south texas all week. more than 100 people had to be rescued in mcallen yeste after more heavy rain fell rday there. in arby weslaco, the national guard carried people to safety in a helicopter. some areas have seen two feet of rain in the last four days, more than they usually get in an entire year. cable news pundit charles krauthammer died yesterday.
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he was 68 years old. friends and colleagues at fox news and "the washington post" remembered him as one of the generation's leading conservative voices. anthony mason is here with a look back at krauthammer's life and work. anthony, good morning. >> good morning. charles krauthammer had been battling cancer and had not appeared on fox news since last august. in a note to readers earlier in the middle of this this month, krauthammer revealed his cancer had returned and he nonstop news cycle, we want to reflect. we're calling this "reporter's had only weeks to live. notebook." writing, quote, this is the a great series for john final verdict. dickerson. my fight is over. this week he looks at the >> in the end, everything, all zero-tolerance immigration poli policy. >> politics has become so tribal the beautiful elegance things in in america that political conversations can now feel like life depend ultimately on getting politics right. the equivalent of the debate >> reporter: charles krauthammer over laurel v. janne. faced many battles throughout his life. a diving accident while in no amount of shouting changes medical school in harvard left what we want to hear. him paralyzed. shuture that wa this debate looks at the splitting of families crossing >> rep iorter: w he still manago the border. graduate at time and at the top the critics were the usual ones. of his class. he later gave up psychiatry. liberals, elites, and supporters >> you're betraying your hole of looser immigration. life if you don't say what you the president blamed democrats. >> that's the democrats' law. think. >> reporter: and followed his
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>> reporter: the attorney general said the bible approved, love of politics to washington. >> i thought, once i'm in and is secretary of homeland washington, isn't that where they do politics? security said the separations weren't happening at all. >> reporter: krauthammer was a leading advocate for the iraq none of this was true, and that felt familiar also. war. >> we have to attack them where mean while, the children that they are. >> reporter: he also didn't shy were officially not being away from challenging fellow separated from their parents kept being separated from their conservatives. >> i think denial is what you do parents. but then the pattern broke. for yourself as a way to get the president's allies in through life. i'm not sure it's a way a party congress abandoned it, religious ought to get through politics. leaders, even sympathetic ones, >> reporter: and he often expressed criticism of president were appalled. splitting families could not be trump. >> all our time is spent defended by splitting hairs. in the pulpits and at picnics, discussing this rodeo clown. purple momentarily replaced red >> reporter: a.b. stoddard has appeared on fox news special and blue. people whose elitism was defined report panel with krauthammer only by having children or since 2009. having once been a child all >> he just was calling them like agreed. but what did they agree on? he sees them and he was willing they agreed to oppose splitting to take that from people who families, the basic unit of love didn't like that. because the thing he couldn't bear was to not be honest. >> reporter: when he needed a break from politics, krauthammer that binds our commune champion. would unwind at nationals park. it did not split children from >> we need happy news like this. their parents as regular policy. that was the difference. this is why god created americans were objecting to
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baseball. their government as the author >> krauthammer is survived by of fresh misery for his wife robin, son daniel and his mother thea. ragged-sleeved, worn-thin, when he announced he had just fellow human beings whose only weeks to live, he said he had no shield against their misery was regrets. kinship and hope. writing, i am sad to leave but i >> do the right thing. leave with the knowledge that i treat these people as the human lived the life that i intended. beings that they are. >> and breaking families meant the nationals had a moment of silence for him last night in punishing children. the stories piled up. the stadium and i know he'd the young boy whose mother had appreciate that. >> i went to read his letter sewn notes with the phone after i saw he had written one. numbers of his relatives in his there's something -- the words clothes watching his father strike you very differently when you know the person's writing it being taken away. the boy who cried himself into knowing that they don't have much time left on this planet. convulsions. and a 6-year-old girl repeatedly >> it's not often you get a chance to write that letter saying her aunt's phone number which is fortunate he did. after her mother was taken away. >> i encourage everybody to go look at a tweet. he covered congr >> we're signing an executive order. >> in the end, the president had zihier aessaccide f.me" " he'd only met -- krauthammer hd zero tolerance for his own policy, because even in a time only met him once. of tribal shouting, the human tribe spoke louder. krauthammer wrote him a two-page letter basically saying i know >> wow. that's powerful that the what it's like and life will get president had zero tolerance for better. it's going to be okay. his own up the way you it's a very did too. i'm telling you, sister norma - he net'ver a wanted to be ju said you can't look at those by that injury which was another little faces and not feel you have to do something and know remarkable thing about him. this is just wrong. women in saudi arabia are >> it was the separation that
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set to drive legally for the everybody -- you know, that first time this weekend. moved everybody to this story, the separating families and that the government there lifted the it landed on the children. last ban on female drivers earliemonth. >> you know, gayle, you started this week talking about the they can take the wheel starting on r thsunday. statue of liberty. a reminder that people come to many give saudi crown prince this country because we are the country of civil rights, of mohammed bin salman credit for rights, of the constitution, the bill of rights. the change. all of it. they come here for that very holly, good morning. reason, so i think this was >> reporter: good morning. women here in saudi arabia have offensive to people's been waiting and protesting for understanding about what america the right to drive for nearly 30 really is. >> and we are going to start keeping count of how many kids years. but now just as they're set to remain separated from their get behind the wheel, the saudi parents. the count today is 1,842. government has begun arresting we will keep count. some women who dared to campaign it started with 2,342. for their rights. on sunday, for the first time, as of today, 1,842 kids still salma youssef will finally be remain sednd that's 1,842 kids too many. able to drive herself to work and her three children to in the hospital, norah, when your baby is born, they give you school. >> it will change my life. a bracelet with your name and it will change my family. his name. there has to be a system we can it's freedom. it's freedom. keep track and that has not yes, yes. happened. >> reporter: she passed her test we've failed these people miserably. last week and chauffeured us >> agreed. around the campus of this >> we will keep track. >> you were there on monday women's university where they shining a light on this story built a females only driving and the president reversed his
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school. decision days later. >> that's perfect. you nailed it. >> a lot of light shined. >> reporter: in this >> hear more on our podcast conservative islamic country, available on apple's podcast app where women still need a male or wherever you like to download relative's permission to travel your podcast. today dr. john lapook shares overseas or get married, brave insider information, what all saudi women fought for the right patients should know before to drive. visiting their doctor. illegally taking the wheel and this is a must-listen. shaming their government. and up next, "all that mattered" this week. you're watching "cbs this morn saudi comedians satirized the sexist attitudes behind the driving ban. and poked fun at religious conservatives who said driving could damage a woman's ovaries. but now with the saudi government finally allowing won to hit the roads, it's also begun arresting womens rights campaigners who demanded total equality. reportedly including this woman who we interviewed in 2014. >> the car for the saudi women have become the symbol of wanting our voices to be heard and our needs to be >> repter:e.
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gayle. >> all right, thank you, holly. there may be the first of many changes there, we'll see. >> yes, i'm so glad they're getting in the car. enjoy. thank you, holly williams reporting from saudi arabia. it is now 7:19. time to check your local weather. good friday morning. it will be hot today in the bay areas and the numbers climb from five to 12 degrees over yesterday's highs and a hot finish with a peek of the heat tomorrow and 99 in fairfield and 90 in san jose: extended forecast, as warm as 104 on saturday inland. relief is in sight but we have to wait until next week.
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♪ ♪ since the film "on the when it comes to snacking. waterfront" brought attention to ♪ ♪ corruption and organized crime that existed in the ports of new york and new jersey. now the commission charged with ♪ ♪ cleaning up that corruption and controlling the mob says very that's why he uses the chase mobile app, little has changed. to pay practically anyone, at any bank. that story coming up on "cbs this morning." life, lived victor's way. chase. make more of what's yours. this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota, let's go places. that does it for us. be sure to tune in to the "cbs evening news" with jeff glor tonight. as we leave you, take a look at all that mattered this week. >> they were in cages. >> cages? >> cages. they looked like animals. the 2018 camry. >> everyone is really weeping today. >> you were scared. toyota. let's go places.
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metastatic breast cancer is relentless, but i'm relentless too. they've finally found a way. >> check out this fan mbc doesn't take a day off, and neither will i. celebrating in the streets. i cannot stress this enough. and i treat my mbc with new everyday verzenio- england have won one game. the only one of its kind that can be taken every day. in fact, verzenio is a cdk4 & 6 inhibitor >> some influencers you find in social media feed are not real people. for postmenopausal women >> she was inspired by a barbie with hr+, her2- mbc, approved, doll. with hormonal therapy, as an everyday treatment >> how much of what's out there content-wise is real? for a relentless disease. verzenio + an ai is proven to help women >> let's hope anchors aren't next or we're all doomed. have significantly more me without disease progression, >> four young female mountain and more than half of women saw their tumors shrink vs an ai. lion, one of the blue-eyed kittens took a swipe at the camera. diarrhea is common, >> those eyes are stunning. may be severe, took your eyes, norah. and may cause dehydration or infection. >> those baby blues. rebefo tinakg verzenio, tell your doctor if you have >> your dog is talking. are you listening? a dog's sign. fever, chills, or other signs of infection. verzio may cause low rebefo tinakg verzenio, tewhite blood celly useserioun that can lead to death. serious liver problems can occur. if you raise your paw, that's symptoms may include tiredness, loss of appetite, stomach pain, let's play. >> did you though that? >> did you know today is national selfie day. >> if you go 300 feetz in the
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talk to your doctor right awayg air, that would be amazing. in your arms or legs, shortness of breath, chest pain >> this is a nerd's paradise. >> this is like your super bowl? or rapid breathing or heart rate. tell your doctor if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, >> yes, yes. >> a philly fanatic, a legendary or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include nausea, infections, mass cot lost a fan this week. he accidentally injured her with low red and white blood cells and platelets, a flying, up, hot dog. decreased appetite, headache, abdominal pain, tiredness, >> you would think -- i understand a baseball, but not a vomiting, and hair thinning or loss. hot dog. >> she's a big phillies fan. and my doctor and i choose to treat my mbc with verzenio. decreased appetite, headache, abdominal pain, tiredness, she's not going to sue. the phillys have apologized and be relentless. ask your doctor about everyday verzenio. offered her tiktds to a future game. i know this isn't funny. we can only laugh about it because she's okay. >> it is funny. come on. >> i know itz's funny, but -- > hot dog. >> they call it a frankhurter. >> john, that's good. be relentless. that's good. i love that. >> a frankhurter? i needthat's whenvice foi remembered that my ex-ex- ex-boyfriend >> a frankhurter. actually went to law school, i love that. ifour ex-ex- -boyfrnd so i called him.! didt ll caisn't a lawyere ,baatto. legalz oom. where life meets legal. ll caisn't a lawyere ,baatto.
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francisco... the festivities already in full swing, all leading up to the big parade on sunday. good morning. it is 7:26. it is pride weakened in san francisco and the festivities in full swing leading up to the big parade tuesday and more than a hundred thousand people are expected to attend. a series of earthquakes shoot the bay, all of them around oakley and a magnitude 2.8, a few smaller earthquakes shook the area earlier. stay with us. a look at traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning, it's 8:55, i'm michelle, one person in san francisco is dead after a shooting in the mission district. it happened at 24th and harrison overnight. it's unclear if a suspect has been arrested. in san jose fire tore through this vacant warehouse. it happened on macavoy streets. no one was hurt, and the cause of the fire is under investigation. it's pride weekend this weekend. 100,000 people are expected to attend and this year's theme is generations of strength. we'll have a look at we then arrest traffic in just a moment. good morning. we seeing the delays build along the east shore freeway making urio way to the --
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making your way to the bay bridge toll plaza where we are in the red. some slow downs around northbound 101. that's your cruising speed, 35- miles an hour as you make your approach to 680. we have a hot one. readings mostly in the 50s and that will change and concord is at 60 degrees but in 90 in san jose and freemont87 today. numbers inland reach as high as 104 degrees. heat is on in the bay area and another update in 30 minutes.
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good morning, the time is 8:57, a problem on the richmond san rafael bridge keeping it slow. this is an accident reported past the van, this is sluggish making it slow across the bridge there. they've included the lane that was already open. you can see a backup developing especially at the toll plaza ands you look further along the stretch of 580, east shore freeway, it's friday, we're not in the red we're in the yellow. over teammates we see delays in the redheading to san francisco you hadeand
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there's a crash coming in on 101 and trumbull. we have a warmup on the way for the bay area and big time. we'll have some of the warmest temperatures of the year in the next couple of days. ♪ baby give it up and the numbers will exceed 100 ♪ baby give it up ♪ baby give it up degrees inland as we look at a welcome back to "cbs this thin layer along the east bay morning." here are three things you should shoreline. know this morning. this hour it's up to 71 the european union is striking degrees, it will hit almost 100 back at the u.s. with tariffs on today. more than $3 billion worth of in the east bay, fairfield is american goods. that take effect today. up to 99 and livermore 99 and the european list targets imports like motor cycles, here in san francisco 76, bourbon and jeans. tomorrow heat advisories are posted for the bay area and for china, india and turkey are also the rest of the next week, things will begin to cool off. hitting back. the tariffs have collected $775 your next local newscast is at million so far. a new trial suggests a noon, right here on kpix5. common vaccines that's been around for decades could reverse advance cases of type 1 diabetes. a small group of people given the tuberculosis vaccine saw their blood sugar levels improve to nearly normal levels. the changes lasted for five to
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eight years. patients are also using one-third lose insulin. researchers believe it could treat other auto immune disorders. on the first full day of sum, a consumer watchdog is warning parents about potentially unsafe summer toys. water balloon sling shots top the list. the group also cautioned against lawn darts, low-riding wheeled toys, black yard swimming pools and all-terrain vehicles. it says more than 2.5 million u.s. children are hurt in preventable being an accidents each summer. >> for the first time, we're hearing from a border patrol agent involved in a dramatic scene that's come to symbolize u.s. immigration policy. picture of a honduran girl crying as she and her moth remember detained in texas has grabbed people's attention worldwide. "time" magazine put her on its cover. but the photo might be a little misleading. in an interview, you'll see only on cbs this morning, the border agent shows us what happened in the moment before it was taken.
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david begnaud is with us again from mcallen, david, good wayne (high-pitched): oh, oh, oh! jonathan: a trip to australia! tiffany: it's a diamond ring! morning. >> reporter: good morning. wayne: you got the big deal! jonathan: ha, ha. you may have seen the photo. even shared it on social media. tiffany: hello? open the box! there is some misinformation surrounding what happened and we wayne: you won a car! wanted to try to clear it up. you did it! all week we've been trying to - (screaming) get an interview with this agent jonathan: i'm vanilla pudding. wayne: dreams do come true! to get his account. now you're about to hear from jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." the agent and the photographer now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! who were together for nearly ten hours on a ride-along. a lot of you have asked us where wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal". i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. are the mother and child right who wants to make a deal, let's go. now. we can confirm that they are (cheers and applause) together. the federal government tells us they're being housed at a michelle, come on, michelle. facility in texas right now. hey. here now is the border patrol hey, michelle, nice to meet you. agthem. - nice to meet you! ne we were patrolling theent o i wayne: where are you from? - la verne, california. border. it was after 10:00 at night. wayne: la verne. (cheers and applause) >> reporter: that is border so what's la verne known for? patrol agent carlos ruiz who - oranges? says he was the first to encounter sandra sanchez and her young daughter after they allegedly crossed the rio grande river into texas illegally. >> we asked her to set the kid down in front of her. not away from her. she was right in front of her. so we can properly search the
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mother. so the kid immediately started crying when she sat her down. i personally went up to the mother and asked her, are you okay, is the kid okay, and she said yes. she's tired and thirsty. it's 11:00 at night. >> when i took this picture, i knew it would be important. i had no way of knowing that it would touch people quite on the level that it has. >> reporter: that's getty photographer john moore. who joined ruiz for a nearly nine-hour ride-along on the border. he was just feet from sanchez and the little girl. >> i asked her how long she'd been traveling. and she gave me this very weary look and said she'd been on the road with her daughter for a month. tha wh din choiildren. it's almost impossible to imagine actually. >> reporter: moore's image is now on the cover of "time" magazine next to a picture of the president. >> they're using it to symbolize a policy and that was not the case. >> as soon as the search was finished, she immediately picked the girl up and the girl immediately stopped crying.
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>> reporter: moore says ruiz and other agents acted professionally that night. but he is happy with the cover and the response to the image. >> oftentimes immigration is talked about in terms in stiscsti and when you put a human face and humanize an issue, you make people feel. and when you make people feel, they have compassion. and if i've done just a little bit of that, then that's okay. >> we are also fathers. we also have families. and we do care and we do our jobs and we treat these people as humanely and as best as we possibly can. >> reporter: we have more information about where the mother and daughter are being kept right now. aody ofi.c.e., immigration and customs enforcement, and they're being housed at the south texas family residential center in billy, texas.c. says e mother who you just saw in that story was encountered, detained
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and arrested by immigration officials in texas. she was transferred to i.c.e. custody in 2013 and deported to hondur honduras, so they're saying this is now her second time coming into the country illegally. again, she and the daughter are together and border patrol says at no point were they ever separated, not in the custody of border patrol and i.c.e. is saying they haven't been separated in our custody. we have not been able to talk to the mother. we can only go by what the government officials are telling us. >> thank you very much. >> great reporting. >> i agree with you. some 400 longshoremen hired to unload ships at new york harbor paidan work they rarely do. how the mob is blamed for making you pay higher prices and why cracking down on corruption is becoming more and more difficult. if you're on the go, as most people are, here's an invite from us to you. subscribe to our "cbs this morning" podcast available on
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apple's podcast app. here's the day's top stories and what's happening in the world in less than 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. >> real news every morning on "cbs this morning." you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. the 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. the 2018 camry. you finished preparing overhim for college.rs, in 24 hours, you'll send him off thinking you've done everything for his well-being. but meningitis b progresses quickly and can be fatal, sometimes within 24 hours. while meningitis b is uncommon, about 1 in 10 infected will die.
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because my body can still make its own insulin. and i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release it, like it's supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it comes in a once-weekly, truly easy-to-use pen. and it works 24/7. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don't use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes, or if you have type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, you're allergic to trulicity, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of a a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your low blood sugar risk. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and decreased appetite.
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these can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. to help lower my a1c i choose trulicity to activate my within. ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. wlet's do it. ? ♪ come on. this summer, add a new member to the family. at the mercedes-benz summer event. lease the glc300 for $429 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing.
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marlon brando stars in the 1954 movie "on the waterfront," as the dock worker who turned against corruption. 64 years later, the agency created to clean up organized crime on the real waterfront is fighting to survive. the port of new york and new jersey processes nearly 7 million cargo containers a year, delivering more than $200 billion in goods across america. new jersey recently passed a law to close the waterfront commission of new york harbor. an historic anti-corruption do where some say the influence of the mob hasn't changed. >> repor the cranes and docks are poised to get even busier. as giant new ships arrive from around the world.
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but this modern waterfront still hasn't shaken its criminal past. according to the watchdog group responsible for fighting organized crime on the docks. >> i like to say if you watch "on the waterfront," not much has changed except it's now in color. >> reporter: walter aresnault is in charge of a special bistate agency created in 1953. >> new york is blessed, if that's the right word, if quotes, with five organized crime families. >> reporter: all are connected to the port? >> absolutely. >> reporter: as a choke point in the global economy, the port has historically been exploited by criminals who force payoffs and other kickbacks by controlling who unloads the ships and how quickly. that's still the case, says arsenault. >> you tell pe they look at you and say, no, that can't be true, there's no way that's true. >> reporter: his organization has identified some 400 longshoremen getting special deals from the shipping
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companies worth $117 million a year. some for work they rarely do. there are people who, under the agreement, are getting paid 24 hours a day? >> 27 hours a day because they miss meals allegedly, they get an hour meal credit for breakfast, lunch and dinner, so they're actually paid 27 hours a day, 365 days a year. >> reporter: longshoremen paul moe held one such job, earning $493,000 a year, until he was convicted of fraud and sentenced to federal prison march. >> he collected his weekly salary when he was in aruba. he collected his weekly salary when he was in florida. he collected his salary when he was at the movies, when he was with his girlfriend. he collected his salary mostly when he wasn't there. >> reporter: the commission says these special jobs are almost always filled with favored individuals, and connected to union leaders oregon s or orga
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crime. who pays those costs? >> it gets passed on to the consumers. >> reporter: talking about tens of millions? >> easily. >> reporter: you grew up around here? >> yes. >> reporter: former new jersey state senator ray lesniak led the effort to shut down the commission. they sound like the good guys. >> but they're not. >> reporter: why? >> because they are corrupting the legitimate business practices and trying to interfere with them. that's un-american. >> reporter: lesniak wants to transfer the responsibilities to the new jersey state police. >> i want the money that's going to the waterfront commission, $12 million a year, to go to the new jersey attorney general's office where they have better tools to do what the waterfront commission is doing without interfering with the legitimate practices. >> reporter: how is it legitimate for somebody to not show up at work and be paid 24 or even 27 hours a day? >> it's wrong. how are you going to stop that?
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>> reporter: that's the waterfront commission's mission. >> no, it's not. they have no authority over the labor agreent. that's between the terminal operators, the shipping -- see, that's the problem. >> reporter: lesniak says this is a labor issue, not a criminal issue. how do you respond? >> our neighboring statute is to end corruption hiring practices and i can't think of a more corrupt hiring practice than discriminatory hiring. >> reporter: over the past year, the waterfront commission has revoked, denied or forced the withdrawal of work applications from people associated with all five of new york's notorious crime families. are you worried, taking this on? >> no. >> reporter: why not? >> i've been a prosecutor in my past life. when i was at the department of investigation, i did political corruption and organized crime. when i was at the manhattan's da's office, i specialized in violent drug gangs. what i do. >> reporter: nhe organizations
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representing the dock workers and the shipping companies. both declined to comment. so did the largest terminal operators. as for that bill to do away with the waterfront commission, that passed the new jersey legislature nearly unanimously but was recently blocked by a federal judge, nony, thank you, doing some great reporting out there. >> amazing. a lot of important questions. up next, a look at this morning's other headlines, including one airline's decision to ban some pit bull-type dogs from riding in the cabin. warm day on tap for the bay area with numbers went warmer than yesterday with readings almost up to 100 andlivermore hits -- and livermore hits 99 and along the shore dine in the
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60s. -- shore line in the 60s. the warmest reading is on saturday, 104 degrees. proximity alert. it's a t-rex, it's a t-rex, it's a t-rex. stop it. stop the t-rex. see, not a t-rex. ah! on. let's go. we made it. yeah! rated pg-13. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring.
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anif you've got a lifee. you gotta swiffer gorrr bears!!! indecisive? try salty and sweet snickers® yea i got it, what the hell is it? irritable? try espresso snickers® woman: it felt great not having hepatitis c. it's like a load off my shoulders. i was just excited for it to be over. harvoni is a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. it's been prescribed to more than a quarter million people and is proven to cure up to 99% of patients who have had no prior treatment with 12 weeks. certain patients can be cured
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with just 8 weeks of harvoni. before starting harvoni your doctor will test to see if you've ever had hepatitis b which may flare up and cause serious liver problems during and after harvoni treatment. tell your doctor if you've ever had hepatitis b, a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv or any other medical conditions and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni can cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni include tiredness, headache and weakness. ready to let go of hep c? ask your hep c specialist about harvoni. welcome back tocb ing." here's a look at some morning headlines. florida's sun sentinel said dozens of children got sick at a central florida summer camp. about 30 kids started feeling ill at clover leaf 4-h camp.
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they were taken to area hospitals, treated for symptoms like headaches and vomiting. officials say the illness was not serious but its cause remains a mystery. san jose's mercury news says delta will ban pit bull-type dogs from its flights. after two delta employees were bitten by a pit bull last week. some rescue organizations are challenging the situation because many veterans use service dogs of this type. the animal rescue foundation says pit bulls are the second most tolerant breed after golden retrievers. it says decisions to restrict a service animal should be based on individual behavior. "the wall street journal" reports that the house has nearly passed a farm bill. the republican written measure would pay for crop insurance and subsidies to farmers. it also includes a controversial proposal for adults in the food stamp program to spend 20 hours a week working or taking part in a state-run training the senate is expected to vote on its own version of the farm
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bill next week. "usa today" says that brett favre wants no more tackling in youth football to save kids from head injuries. the hall of fame quarterback puts his name behind a bill in illinois that would ban tackle football for kids under the age of 12. favre says he is still dealing with damage from concussions during his career which ended suddenly in 2010 after he was tackled so hard that his head bounced off the turf. and the "l.a. times" says cocoa, the famous griorilla, di this week at the age of 46. she learned to communicate with humans using gestures as part of a stanford university project in the 1970s. koko developed a vocabulary of more than 1,000 hand signs. she also loved kittens. koko died in her sleep -- there's the kitty shot. she died at a preserve in california. >> when i heard the news yesterday, i never met her, but it made me very sad because she did seem so gentle and kind.
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>> yes, beautiful. >> she tells me that koko's name in japanese is fireworks child because koko was born on the fourth of july. a new supreme court ruling makes it easier for states to tax internet sales. the impact on the decision to thompson wit influence on how much you pay when you shop online. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i mean wish i had time to take care of my portfolio, but..
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well, what are you doing tomorrow -10am? staff meeting. noon? eating. 3:45? uh, compliance training. 6:30? sam's baseball practice. 8:30? tai chi. yeah, so sounds relaxing. alright, 9:53? i usually make their lunches then, and i have a little vegan so wow, you are busy. wouldn't it be great if you had investments that worked as hard as you do? yeah. introducing essential portfolios. the automated investing solution that lets you focus on your life. shouldn't drive us apart. but when you experience sudden, frequent, uncontrollable episodes of laughing or crying that are exaggerated
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now underway...after a shooting in san francisco's mission district. at least one p it's 7:36. a homicide investigation is underway after a shooting in mission district. at least one person is dead. it happened in the area of 24th and harrison overnight and no word of any suspects or motive. we are two hours away from testing to begin on a bay area driverless shuttle. the livermore transit authority kicking off an event. new shuttles are battery powered and have no steering wheel or drivers inside. we will have traffic and weather in just a moment.
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when we see yellow censors. cruising speed around 45-miles an hour and likely to get slower. we are seeing slow downs on 237 to 101. you have an 11 minute ride. it's crowded around mccarthy. we have a little layer of fog draping the base of mount sutro, kiss it goodbye. it will dissipate and temperatures will warm up and i before 8:00. high pressure builds over west coast and temperatures climing to 96 in santa rosa and 99 in livermore. the hottest spots on saturday 104 degrees. we have heat advisories over the weekend.
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it's friday, june 22nd, 2018. we are ready. welcome back to "cbs this morning." attorney general jeff sessions says the trump administration never intended to separate parents and children at the border. that's a big shift from what he and other defenders have said about this policy. plus, in our what's working series, a texas city finds energy independence is, well, blowing in the wind. first, today's "eye opener." >> new information on what happened to more than 2,000 children separated from their parents under the trump administration border policy. >> roughly 2,000 children around the country who are staying in shelters, and the question is, when are they going to be reunited? >> she says she and her son were seeking asylum but she was detained and for more than a month she had no idea where her
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son was. >> it was largely peaceful here thursday afternoon but those crowds grew confrontational at times. by nightfall, protesters say they want justice for antoine rose. he had been battling cancer. he revealed he only had weeks to live writing this is the final verdict. my fight is over. the saudi government has begun arresting some women who have dared to campaign for their rights. >> the white house announced a plan. they have a new plan to combine the department of education with the department of labor. >> i assume that also means that education secretary betsy devos and alexander acosta will be merged into bexandersy acosvos? >> that's an interesting mash-up. >> sure is. looked like a very handsome woman when you look at a picture like that.
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okay. >> you are gayle king, john dickerson and i'm norah o'donnell. >> good morning, everyone. president trump is now telling republicans in congress not to bother with an immigration overhaul. he tweeted this morning republicans some stop wasting their time on immigration until after we elect more senators and congressmen and women in november. dems have no intention of doing anything to solve this decade hfs old problem. the house failed to pass one bill yesterday and another faces an uncertain future. >> during the past week the president has urged congress to take action on immigration facing strong public pressure. he signed an executive order temporarily ending family separations. but children can only stay in federal facilities with their families for 20 days unless a judge or congress changes a 1997 government agreement. cbs news confirms about 500 of the more than 2300 kids separated from their parents have been reunited. attorney general jeff sessions says the trump
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administration, quote, never really intended to separate families at the border. that's striking a very different tone from his hard-line defense of the policy. sessions told the christian broadcasting network the separations were not good optics for the administration. >> it hasn't been good, and the american people don't like the idea that we're separating families. we never really intended to do that. what we intended to do was to make sure that adults who bring children into the country are charged with the crime they've committed. >> sessions, the president and other administration officials have previously defended the policy as a deterrent to illegal immigration. >> but is it a deterrent, sir? are you considering this a deterrent? >> yes, hopefully people will get the message and come through the border at the port of entry and not break across the border. >> big name of the game is deterrence. if it's -- >> so family separation stands as a tough deterrent.
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>> could be a tough deterrent. would be a tough deterrent. >> when you prosecute the parents for coming in illegally, which should happen, you have to take the children away. >> the justice department says the attorney general has been clear about not wanting to separate families and urging people to claim asylum at a port of entry. tens of thousands more people are fleeing deadly gang violence in el salvador while some communities search for ways to defend themselves. one mayor created a network of informants to help push criminals out of his town. mayor mauricio villanova enlisted local people who were fed up with the violence. omar villafranca is in san jose guayabal whether they follow a no gang violence tolerance policy. >> reporter: the streets are filled with little boys and girls. shops now stay open late into the night. owners don't have to worry about being extorted. the credit goes to mayor
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villanova who, with the help of police, pushed gang members off the streets and out of town. villanova earned the trust of the town's people by promising them if they hear or see gang activity, he'll get police to help. if the police are too slow, he patrols the town with a pistol by his side. the town rules are posted high on a billboard. and everyone has to follow the zero tolerance gang policy. you need three things, he says, to control the territory, the trust of the people and to communicate with residents. the mayor also credits some american aid dollars that helped rebuild the town square. that attracts families and, so far, keeps gangs out. omar villafranca, cbs news, san jose guayalal, el salvador. the supreme court decides states can require online taers.
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extra to cover sales tax. they can now force online retailers to charge a sales tax even if the company doesn't have a physical presence in that state. the court estimates online retailers cost states between $8 billion and $33 billion every year by not collecting sales taxes. president trump tweeted that the victory for consumers and retailers. cbs news contributor nicholas thompson is editor in chief of "wire." he's at the table. nick, good to see you. how are consumers feeling victorious about this if now you have to pay sales tax where before you didn't. >> i think this is a good move. i didn't understand trump's tweet. i don't know why it's good for consumers. consumers will pay more taxes. >> you don't like paying more taxes? >> states will have more money and build better roads. that's how we'll benefit. >> that's surprising for a republican who tends to want lower taxes in all instances normally but that's not -- the question, what is this going to change for retataxes d more loc
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there will be more of a parity. one of the reasons amazon has done so well is that they haven't had to collect sales taxes over the last 20 years. amazon now does to a large extent collect them but this has been a real boon for online retailing. so you can see it's been one of the things that's helped push brick and mortar retailing. this will help brick and mortar stores at the expense of online stores. >> walmart says this decision is going to close that loophole. >> it will close that loophole and make it fair. we're now 20 years past the point where that was a big reason people shopped online. people don't shop online because they don't have to pay sales tax. it's a small benefit. the reason is convenience, data and all of that. it's a little late if your goal was to level the playing fileld. >> it's gre s that -- the states have to pass laws and now they can collect them. >> what am i doing if i'm paying online. am i now going to start paying more everywhere? >> you do probably pay some sales taxes on some purchases on
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some stores. you'll just pay higher percentage on more stores. one thing that's super interesting is why did this even go to the supreme court? this sd have aressl ma to sort this out over the last 25 years. that was the big thing the supreme court was debating was, do we even -- should we even be deciding this? does this violate the commerce clause? it's really interesting that this important legislative matter came to the court instead of congress dealing with it. >> you look at it as a fair decision. >> a reasonable decision that will make taxes clearer. i think stores should have the same tax burdens whether you're online or whether you're a physical location. it makes it clearer. it makes it fairer, but it does mean you'll pay more for the stuff. you'll have to ship stuff to your friends in new hampshire. >> nick thompson with a new loophole he's found. thank you to nick thompson, tax adviser. texas is considered a red state but it's becoming a pioneer inwe wen to see it.
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>> wind power. electricity from wind is on the rise in the united states. even here in the oil state of texas where we're going to visit an entire city powered by renewable energy, including these wind turbines. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." the 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember.
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our the labor department figures show solar panel and wind turbine technicians are the two fastest growing careers in the country. texas is where you'll find the most of those wind industry jobs. the traditionally conservative state is leading the way for renewable energy across the nation. renewable energy across the nation.
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steve inskeep has more. >> it's the largest in the city in america and surprisingly one person who made this possible was president trump's energy secretary rick perry. the guy who's now been ordered to promote coal. let's begin where the electricity does, at a wind farm in the texas panhandle. how many miles of wind turbins are we walking through here? >> from the furthest point of the project to back there, 13 miles. >> dave watkins oversees this wind farm. it's on route 66, exactly halfway between l.a. and chicago. bikers taking road trips on this historic roaay rumble p one historic wind farm after another. >> i heard someone in town say
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once this particular area doesn't have a lot of oil, doesn't have a lot of water, but it has one thing, wind. >> reporter: which means a job for wesley house. >> reporter: look at this. best office in the world. to me this is more stable. with oil, it's either hit or miss. >> reporter: a few years ago it was impractical to generate power in this remote spot. then texas spent $7 million on power lienld connecting windy north and west texas with cities south and east. it happened under energy secretary rick perry who was governor then. >> we can deliver power to san antonio, dallas, houston, you name it. >> where the people are. >> yep. >> reporter: including a city that uses almost entirely renewable power. it is 501 miles from adrian, texas, where the wind turbins
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are, down to georgetown, texas, where the power is going. we've been driving all afternoon through the permian basin. when we arrived in georgetown, people told us coal plants kept the lights on for generations. >> i think it's really cool. we're one of the leading cities when it comes to innovation. >> reporter: then dale ross knew it was changing. >> were you always a republican? >> always a republican. >> did you grow up in a republican family? >> i did. >> who's your favorite republican president? >> president reagan. >> he loves clean power so much he bought an electric motorcycle, but hoe approved wind and solar because it's
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affordable. >> if you win the business gum, then you're going to win the environmental argument. >> have the fact witness changing? ten years ago, 20 years ago, it's didn't. >> in the state of texas since january 1 std, four coal plants have closed. this is the economics of the matter. you buy wind and solar for $18 a megawatt. you buy coal for 25. you have a choice. which one are you going buy. >> you think o the art of the deal. >> the art of the deal. might be able to teach mr. trump something. as he has to do is invite me and we'll have a discussion very the president has hailed a few new coal jobs. >> the miners go back to work. >> reporter: but has not erased kohl's disadvantage against natural gas and renewables. >> my overall impression is that president trump has been able to do less damage than i feared
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that he would. >> reporter: former vice president al gore. featured georgetown's mayor in one of his climate documentaries. >> market forces are moving the entire energy marketplace toward renewable energy. i'm hoping they'll follow the lead of dale ross rather than donald trump. >> reporter: renewable energy has continuing growing since trump's election. >> so even though rick perry is with president trump and all about coal, he was swhats of a visionary on wind. >> he was. without his leadership, we wouldn't be having renewable energy here. now, he's shying away if there that and i need to be his p.r. guy. maybe he doesn't want credit for it because his boss is a big coal guy. >> we did reach out to energy secretary rick perry's office and they say that perry does
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ti s promotes r promoting wind it as energy pressure, but he is under pressure to do something to save traditional sources, especially coal. >> like that mayor ross. he said things are changing, we need to change with the times. what's the difference between the public debate and what's changing. >> it's about coal jobs and that's where president trump is driving it but there are only so many jobs and only so much going on. natural gas is much bigger. renewables are still a relatively small percentage but they're getting up there. >> thank you. i like that mayor ross. james corden took paul mccartney out for carpool karaoke in ng up, how their pere turned up as a surprise for lucky fans. we'll be right back.
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crews are investigating after a vacant building went up in flames in san jose. good morning. crews are investigating after a vacant building went up in flames in san jose. they say the two alarm fire broke out last night. firefighters eventually got it out. no one was hurt. another area code is coming to the bay area. this time and parts of the east bay. now anyone with the new number in the western portions of alameda and contra costa counties will get 341 as their area code. stay with us. a lookt weather in just a moment.
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good morning. we are tracking a motorcycle accident that had a couple of lanes blocked along the east shore freeway. here is a live look. this is not right near carlson and university. -- this is right near carlson and university. we are in the red with a 45 minute ride heading out of hercules to the maze where continues to be slow with an additional 20 minutes heading into san francisco. the ride along 101 is getting pretty sluggish northbound, especially on the lower deck of the bay bridge. and we still are seeing delays heading near sfo. the northbound side is sluggish. good morning.le lar of fog
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