tv CBS This Morning CBS April 19, 2019 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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behind us. have an awesome, fantastic weekend. >> chris is still driving around. we're waiting for our camera. >> you're almost at the station. >> look at the beautiful embarcadero. have a great day, everyone. everyone. good morning, to our viewers in the west, it is friday, april 19, 2019. good morning. >> we will talk with white house press secretary sarah sanders and how judiciary chairman jerry nadler. >> more man 40 million americans are in the path of a vicious storm system, that has already killed two people in the south. dozens of buildings were destroyed in the tornado outbreak. we will show you where the storm
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is headed as we begin this holiday weekend. >> medical apps help us track our diet and exercise, but is your information safe? see how these apps collect and share data and why that is a potential privacy threat. >> we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> i'm having a good day, too. it is called no collusion, no obstruction. >> accepting an apology for anybody who -- >> the republicans declare victory as democrats dig in. >> dishonest. unethical. >> immoral. >> this report is nothing less than a national scandal. >> it threw me into the wall and then out the window. >> a deadly storm is moving across the south. >> that whole line moved its way to the east, sweeping georgia, sweeping into florida. >> three world renowned mountain climbers are presumed dead after being caught in an avalanche in
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canada's rocky mountains. >> the pilot is dead. after a plane crash in california. the plane went down as it was leaving the runway. >> it shook the ground like it was an earthquake. >> federal regulators are reportedly considering whether to hold mark zuckerberg responsible for his company's data lapses. >> all that, and elmo paying peacemaker. >> we respect each other. >> all that matters. >> the mueller report is out. it is 448 pages long. it was delivered to members of congress this morning on cd-rom. >> do computers even have a cd drive? my mom has one. >> of course. >> on cbs this morning. >> attorney general william barr held a press conference right before the redacted report was released. the press conference was long and it was filled with legal jargon, it was hard to keep from zoning out. for example, take a look at deputy attorney general rod
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rosenstein. >> the special counsel's report goes on to consider whether certain actions -- >> this is how serious they are taking the report. even rod rosenstein's facial expressions have been redacted. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning," rod rosenstein was probably standing there thinking if i move a muscle the late night comedians are going to talk to me. >> i don't know him, never met him, but he didn't look like he was going to be there. >> you try not to say anything, but you say everything. >> exactly right. >> i will start by saying this, which is anthony mason is here because norah o'donnell is off. >> republicans say it is time to put the russia investigation in the past. democrats have a different plan now that robert mueller's report is out in the public. president trump claimed total
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exoneration and russia's government is dismissing mueller's finings but the special counsel 448-page report details the president's repeated efforts to stymie the investigation and how he was stopped by the people around him. >> mueller found no collusion with russian interfering with the election, but he did not decide the question of obstruct of justice. according to the report, if mueller's team could have definitely said the president did not commit a crime, they we have. paula has more from the white house. there is a lot to success today. good morning. >> there is so much to success. but we have to make clear, the president has not been charged with any crime. according to robert mueller, it is not for lack of trying. the special counsel's report yesterday laid out how often people around the president need to protect him from his worst instincts, and yesterday, in a press conference, his attorney general william barr often sounded like a defense attorney, offering a very understanding interpretation of the president's actions. >> in may, 2017, president trump
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slumped in his chair in the oval office, and said robert mueller would be the end of his presidency. according to the special counsel's blockbuster report. mueller describes, for the first time, an angry president reacting to the appointment of a special counsel. i'm f'd he told attorney general jeff sessions who related the news, this is the worst thing that has ever happened to me. but yesterday, the president declared victory over the investigation's findings. >> i'm having a good day, too. it was called no collusion, no obstruction. >> but that's not exactly what the report said. mueller concluded the president did not coordinate with russia's efforts to interfere in the 2016 election. >> one of the great memories of all time. >> mr. trump's written answers surrounding russia were considering inadequate. >> in three dozen instances, he
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says he could not remember events. mueller details three years of chaos in which president trump struggled to respond to the russia investigation and cites ten episodes that could possibly cite obstruction. in one example, the report states in june 2017, the president called former white house counsel don mcgahn at least twice and told him to have the special counsel fired. mcgahn recalled feeling trapped because he did not plan to follow the president's directive and did not know what he would say the next time the president called. mcgahn decided he needed to resign. the report says the president's efforts to influence the investigation were mostly unsuccessful. but that is largely because the persons who surrounded the president declined to carry out orders or cede to his requests. the special counsel concluded it could not exonerate the president on whether he on strucked justice, and it was mueller's boss, attorney general william barr, who cleared the president on that question. in a press conference yesterday, barr defended his hand link the investigation. >> what do you see to people on
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both sides of aisle for concerns you were trying to protect the president. >> the statements about his sincere beliefs are recognized in the report, that there was substantial evidence for that, so i'm not sure what your basis is for saying that i am being generous to the president. >> the report revealed prosecutors are pursuing 14 other matters referred by the special counsel. only two of those are known to the public. the investigation of michael cohen, as well as the separate investigation into a former obama administration official. but those 12 other mystery investigations ensure that even though this report has been submitted, mueller's shadow will continue to loom large over this white house. an hone? >> paula, thank you. attorney general barr yesterday decided to let congress to resolve the unresolved issue of obstruction. but the mueller report clearly shows that the lawmakers have the authority to determine whether the president's actions represent a obstruction of justice. the house judiciary committee
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chair nadler issued a subpoena for the full report, including the details removed by the justice department under the law, along with all underlying materials collected in the investigation. >> attorney general barr appears to have shown an unsettling willingness to undermine his own department in order to protect president trump. >> nancy cordes is on capitol hill with more. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. and congress, or at least a few key members, will get a look at a lot of that sensitive redacted material next week. because the department of justice is going to provide key congressional leaders with access to that sensitive information in special secure reading rooms here on capitol hill. and democrats are now vowing to pick up where mueller left off. they say that he gave them a road map of sorts to pursue their own obstruction of justice investigation. here is what mueller said on page eight of the report. this is what they're pointing to. quote, we concluded that congress has authority to
quote
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prohibit a president's corrupt use of his authority in order to protect the integrity of the administration of justice. democrats are also sounding off on attorney general barr, who they say, quote, deliberately distorted significant portions of special counsel mueller's report. while republicans on the other hand say that the bottom line is no collusion, it's time to move on. but frankly, her on capitol hill, it is going to be hard to move on. there are already multiple congressional committees calling on robert mueller to testify here on capitol hill, and barr himself is going to get grilled about his choices in early may. >> nancy, thank you very much. mueller's investigation noted several instances where president trump pressured his top aides to lie or mislead. one day after the president fired fbi director james comey, white house press secretary sarah sanders told reporters that comey no longer had the confidence of mr. trump and other people.
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>> bipartisan members of congress made it clear that they had lost confidence in director comey. and most importantly, the rank and file of the fbi had lost confidence in their director. i can speak to my own personal experience. i've heard from countless members of the fbi that are grateful and thankful for the president's decision. >> according to mueller's report, sanders told investigators countless members of the fbi was a slip of the tongue. we spoke with the president's chief spokeswoman a short time ago. >> you repeated the claims, a slip of the tongue, several times. what exactly did you mean to say, because you appeared to be reading, you appeared to be reading those comments on several occasions. what did you mean to say? >> look, i've acknowledged that the word countless was a slip of the tongue. but it's no secret that a number of fbi, both current and former agreed with the president's decision. let's not forget that james
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comey was a disgraced leaker who authorized spying into the trump campaign. he brought a tremendous amount of politicalization to the fbi and in charge of the agency that he was supposed to be in charges of leading and one of the best decisions the president made to get rid of him and i'm thankful that the president is supported by law enforcement across this country and most law enforcement are not like james comey who has turned out to be a dirty cop and shown time and time again, day after day, that the president made the exact right decision in getting rid of him and putting somebody else in charge of the fbi. >> let me ask you this. you say it was just one word. the reason, the importance is, you have a unique position in the system to tell the truth. you say it was one word. but the mueller report says sanders acknowledged speaking about this sentence and this claim of people at the fbi, sanders acknowledged that her comments were not founded on anything. that's not one word. that's saying you acknowledge --
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>> actually -- >> go ahead. >> those were mueller's words that they weren't founded on anything. >> mueller is incorrect in this regard? >> in the heat of the moment, that was, i said that it was in the heat of the moment, meaning it wasn't a scripted thing, it was something that i said, and which is why that one word has become a big deal. but the big take-away here is that the sentiment is 100% accurate. the fbi is a better place without james comey. he disgraced himself. and he undermined the agency that he was supposed to be in charge of. he made it a political operation and nothing could be more dangerous than that. >> in the totality of the 448-page report, there are a number of instances, one of which the president talks to the white house counsel and asks him to remember something differently than the white house counsel remembered it. in the course of your time at the white house, has the president ever asked you to say something that you knew not to be true? >> the president isn't asking
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people to break the law, he isn't asking them to do anything that is dishonest. if the president wants to fire somebody, he does. you've seen him do it before. this isn't a president who is afraid to go against the system. he's not a president that is afraid to step out and speak out. >> else that not the question. >> i answered it on the front end. >> you are saying the president has never asked you to say something you knew not to be true? >> correct, and he has never asked me to break the law and when the president wants to do something and make a decision, he does it. he is not somebody who sits around and ponders. i think you guys have seen that day in and day out and one minute you're running stories the staff can't control him and the next minute everything says thank god the staff could control him. due get to have it both ways. >> 234 tin the mueller report to say the staff thank god they could control him because a couple of times he wanted to do
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something so egregious. >> the influence of the investigation was largely unsuccessful because that is largely because those who surround the president declined to carry out his orders. >> and to say something that isn't so, he asked his white house lawyer, and the language used in the report is kind of amusing, it says that the white house lawyer, quote, refused to recede from his recollections, which is to say he didn't back down. >> all i can sayed to american people, if you haven't read the mueller report on this holiday weekend, you should pick it up, because it is very revealing. >> 448 pages. >> a little troubling. in the next hour, house judiciary chairman jerry nadler will talk about his plan to question robert mueller and the committee's next step in the investigation and the congressman will be here in the studio. we've been talking about the weather in washington. there is other weather. nearly 45 million americans are in the path of a deadly storm system tearing through the southern plains for three days. that system is blamed for at least two deaths. it spawned multiple tornadoes while dumping heavy rain and
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uprooting trees. omar villafranca is in morton, mississippi, the screen of wide spread damage. good morning. >> this home took a direct hit. i'm walking in used to be the living room of this home. and luckily the homeowner ran for cover in that closet behind me and the police chief pulled her out. amazingly, nobody here was seriously injured. emergency management officials tell us that at least 50 structure, everything from homes to garages, were damaged or destroyed, in this storm. a view from the sky shows the horror people endured in morton from a tornado. uprooted trees surround flattened homes. some homes are missing roofs or walls. others are destroyed. cell phone video from one homeowner shows the moment the entire front of her house was torn off. in nearby jackson, torrential downpours and strong winds
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snapped trees in half. >> we suddenly heard the big crack, and then a giant thud. >> reporter: and sheared off the brick siding of an apartment building, crushing cars below. across louisiana, winds ripped trees from the ground. in alexandria, one tree pierced the roof of this home. ripped trees. one home had a tree pierce this home. >> i heard the thunder d and the house shake and that's when i got up and noticed a tree in the kitchen. >> reporter: it left a trail of 100 buildings and shredded homes across texas including this one which rolled from its foundation with the young couple still inside. >> it kept on powerful those
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tornados were. gayle? >> yep, omar. mother nature, she is no joke. thank you very much. meteorologist megan glaros of our chicago station wbbm -- my apple phone -- my apple watch just did something. >> it's a weather alert, gayle. >> i don't quite know how to work it. i don't've known what that is. something's happening down there. megan glaros on our chicago station wbbm-tv is here with what to expect for the holiday weekend. save me, megan. >> i'll try. i throughout was a warning that popped up i was unaware of. we'll take a look at the storms pushing through the deep south. we still have tornado watches up for portions of georgia and the florida panhandle. as this works eastward, it's going to run into some atlantic moisture. that will help with the bend in the jet stream to fuel the potential for storms today. we've got the highest level of
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concern we've had over this multi-storm outbreak today across the carolinas and upper virginia. we're look liikely looking at t potential for flooding. we're going to have issues with travel pushing into this busy travel day today, anywhere from yam, orlando, all the killed. no one else was onboard. the people of littleton, colorado, will hold a vigil tonight on the eve of the 20th anniversary of the massacre at columbine high school. >> i felt it, the love and support of all those close to us and around the world who sent healing prayers and well wishes.
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>> ireland was shot but managed to escape through a window. two gunmen killed 12 students and the teacher on april 20th, 1999. tomorrow students and teachers are plans a day of service for the community as well and a remembrance ceremony. >> it's hard to believe it's been 20 years. jeff glor had a moving piece last night with the principal of columbine and the survivors. the principal said every day he cites the names of the happy friday to you. temperatures this afternoon will be cooler compared to yesterday, but still above average temps as we head through the day by five to ten degrees. 67 for a high in san francisco. 72 in oakland. san raphael. mid 70s, redwood city -- low 80s concord, livermore and fairfield. cooler cloudier for your saturday. and then warming
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good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. a suspect is dead after officer-involved shooting in fremont near bart last night. bart services is not impacted. an investigation is underway this morning. a standoff with police in benecia is over. it happened on east 8th street yesterday. investigateers say the suspect was involved in another recent standoff. police are preparing for the 4/20 celebration at golden gate park on april 20th. news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our
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let's start with our slowest spot and that's the richmond san raphael bridge. slow and go traffic. construction finishes up around 6:00, but slows things up. that's backing up westbound. it is in the green coming through the altamont pass and coming from south bay. if you're moving in from the stockton area or excuse me, yeah, stockton area, you're in the yellow and same thing with the e-shore freeway. mary. thanks, emily. you can see on our sails forest camera looking north, the fog coming in from the golden gate gap. the fog and parts of the bay, otherwise, mostly sunny to partly sunny skies. daytime highs cooler compared to yesterday. but still above average by 5 to 10 degrees. it's warming up inland into the low 80s today. much cooler for us tomorrow with more clouds slowly warming up for
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♪ >> welcome back to cbs this morning. here are three things you should know this morning. the trump administration is launching a $350 million initiative to combat the nation's opioid epidemic. a three-year research and treatment plan aimed to reduce opioid deaths by 40% in four hard-hit state, kentucky, massachusetts, new york, and ohio. researchers will test a range of treatment options, including the distribution of the overdose antidote naloxone, enhance law enforcement, and counseling services. the federal government estimates
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there were more than 47,000 opioid-overdose releted deaths in 2017. french investigators believe an electrical short circuit may have been the cause of the fire in paris. a police official says the charred interior is still unsafe to enter. about 40 people, including renovation workers and cathedral staff have been questioned by prosecutors about this. authorities have given tentative approval for the construction of a temporary place of worship in front of the cathedral while it remains closed. senate mar m&a jort leader mitch mcconnell is proposing new legislation that would raise the minimum age to buy tobacco products from 18 to 21 nationwide. the kentucky senator said the bill which he expects to introduce in may will also cover e-cigarettes. however, it will make exemptions for military personnel. a dozen states have already raised the legal age to purchase
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tobacco products to 21. poor weather is delaying the effort to recover three renowned climbers missing in the canadian rockies. josh, ross kelly and david llama and hansjorg auer are part of an elite athletic team for the apparel giant north face. all three men are presumed dead after being caught in an avalanche. the trio was climbing or attempting to climb the peak in alberta's banff national park. david begnow is here with the interview you will see only on "cbs this morning." david, very sad story. >> it is, john. apparently this avalanche was big enough to wipe out a small building or even cover a car. a three on a scale of five. the three athletes set out to tackle one of the most challenges climbs in the rockies. and on tuesday, they had not
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heard from the climber, and jeff's father decided to call the police. >> there are plenty of times when i'm cold, hungry, tired, and you got another ten, 12 hours to go. >> national geographic calls jeff ross kelly one of the most accomplished climbers of his generation. he was 20 years old back in 2003, when he became the youngest person to summit mount everest. >> i asked him if he wanted to go to everest, and of course, he did. >> his father is climbing pioneer john ross kelly. he says his son had never scaled the peak when he set out to tackle the nearly 11,000 foot summit with two other professional mountaineer, david llama and hansjorg auer. >> they had all done climbs more difficult to this. they l.i.e. liked to look to this route. >> that route up howse peak,
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approximately a 4,000 feet ascent of vertical ice and rock. and ross kelly says it is a challenge for only the most extreme climbers. >> this route has some of the most difficult climbing that you can find anywhere in the world. >> ross kelly says the three men wanted to complete their climb by tuesday night, but by thursday, canada's national park agency says the three climbers were presumed dead, because helicopter crews spotted signs of multiple avalanches and debris that contained climbing equipment. >> all three of them were really knowledgeable about avalanche conditions and dangers. >> he loved the people around him so deeply. >> jordan ross kelly is his sister and says his broth her a great sense of humor and an enormous heart. >> we've had an interest and outpouring of people who care for him, and he has a beautiful wife who adores him as well, and we're with her and doing the best we can. >> it is unclear exactly when the avalanche occurred.
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john ross kelly says bad weather is keeping the search and rescue teams of accessing the field of debris where the avalanche happened and the family is planning to ski to the area tomorrow in hopes of helping to find the victims. >> it is so difficult they can't get there. >> i can see why they want to be involved in the search, too. you just want an answer for sure. thank you, david. >> you bet. protest ners connecticut are calling for two police officers to be fired after they allegedly shot an unarmed black couple. >> freed. >> community members and yale students shut down the city streets last night in new haven as part of a third day of demonstrations. 22-year-old stephanie washington was wounded in tuesday's shooting. she is recovering in the hospital today. her boyfriend, paul witherspoon was not hurt. the video obtained by our cbs station in connecticut, appears to show one of the officers firing directly at the car. investigators say hamden police officers thought the car was
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connected to a reported armed robbery. the yale and hamden police deps have not released the body camera footage yet. >> a lot of us carry a huge burden on our shoulder, especially people of color and we see silence from people of power. it is hurtful. >> both officers are placed on leave pending an investigation. more protests are planned in new haven later today. the fight to contain the country's largest measles outbreak moves into the courtroom. ahead, how families challenging a mandatory vaccination order say their medical freedom is on the line. >> and if you're on the go, subscribe to our podcast. here are the day's top stories, and what is happening in your world, in less than 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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americans traveling for this weekend's religious holiday could worsen the growing measles outbreak. the cdc says there are at least 555 confirmed cases in 20 states. most are said to involve school-aged kids. a judge in new york dismissed a lawsuit yesterday that challenged an emergency declaration requiring residents of certain hard-hit neighborhoods to get vaccinated. mola lenghi has more. >> reporter: good morning. the mandatory vaccinations are still in effect, the criminal penalties have been removed from the order. the city has issued civil summonses for five, up to a $1,000 to three families in new york city, for failing to vaccinate their children. >> the only way to stop this outbreak is to ensure that those who have not been vaccinated get the vaccine. >> reporter: while new york city is facing the largest measles outbreak in the country --
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>> the measles vaccine works. >> this is against the civil rights act. >> reporter: some parents are suing the city over an order that bans unvaccinated people from public places. >> this is 2019. we should not be having to be forced to hide from our government. >> reporter: the outbreak is centered around the highly concentrated ultra orthodox jewish communities in williamsburg where more than 250 cases have been reported in the last seven months. >> they said we will not be bullied. these are very brave people who came forward. >> reporter: the attorney robert krakow represents the families in the suit. >> we are all for the appropriate measures to control the outbreak of disease but new yorkers are not going to accept criminal penalties for vaccination. that is not appropriate. people have the right to make the choice. >> reporter: the city has ordered people over the age of six months to live or go to school in parts of williamsburg to get vaccinated or face a $1,000 fine. in rockland county, those infected with measles must avoid
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public places and stay in their home for 21to comply could resu in $2,000 per violation per day. >> this is about consent and medical freedom. >> one of the parents involved in the suit, who did not want her identity revealed, says it is not about religion, but her rights, and she believes she is doing what is best for her child. >> i teach my child that our bodies are our own, we can say when and where, yes, and no, whether it's in the workplace, or in intimate moments. that doesn't stop because the government says you have to do x, y, or z. >> now, the mother i spoke with said she cares very much about the health of other children, but believes that hers is also healthy, and would not expose her child if they were not healthy. on wednesday, the washington state senate passed a measure that would remove an option parents have to not vaccinate
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their children against measles, mumps, and rubella. john? >> thank you. up next, a look at this morning's other headlines, including a big new development in the search for a father and daughter pictured dancing in front of the notre dame >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places.
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otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ready to treat differently with a pill? otezla. show more of you. they say what redaction is. we put together this informative and musical explanation that i hope will heclp you out. >> what are you doing, young lady? >> i'm delivering the mueller report to congress. >> you have to let me look at it first. >> who are you? >> i'm redaction jackson and this report needs some
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heavy-duty redaction. ♪ redaction jackson what's your action? ♪ blacking out words and phrases and clauses ♪ ♪ white house rock >> i'm feeling some kind of way about that. i don't know. i don't know if i like that. >> boundless enthusiasm is not what i'm getting from you, gayle. >> i thought very quickly. i don't know. but i love him, so, okay. >> welcome back. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> there are no redactions here. and here is a look at some of this morning's headlines. palm spring's desert sun is reporting a california couple is expected to be sentenced to lengthy prison terms today for abusing their 13 children. david and louise turpin will be sentenced for abusing their kids for years. they will spend at least 25 years behind bars.
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prosecutors say it's unclear if any of the kids will be at today's sentencing. minnesota's "star tribune" is reporting a virus appears to be behind the rash of polo-like illnesses that struck minnesota last fall. researchers from minnesota and the cdc say they found the virus in the spinal fluid of one of six children who suffered from acute fla sid myelitis. researchers describe their finding as a key development in addressing a mysterious national outbreak that has sickened more than 200 people in the last year. >> the "washington post" reports an investigation could hold ceo mark zuckerberg accountable for privacy issues and data lapses. investigators are waiting to seek new ownership. they want to settle the government's inquiry into
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privacy concerns. a facebook spokesperson said we hope to reach an appropriate and fair resolution. the "chicago sun-times" reports two deputies in the prosecutor's office that investigated the jussie smollett case are resigning. the chief ethics officer kim fox will leave next month. april perry was involved but her resignation is unrelated surrounding the dropped charges. mark rotert is leaving after a convicti. >> do you remember the father and daughter dancing in front of the notre dame cathedral before it went up in flames? guess what? it's been caught. the photographer tweeted this sweet moment in the hopes of finding the family. they put out a call including us
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on "cbs this morning." it quickly became an internet sensation. the father told the photographer he wishes to remain anonymous, but was grateful for the beautiful photo saying we will find a special place for it. he wanted to remain anonymous considering the circumstances which makes me like him even more. i think that's a very, very nice thing. i'm glad they have the picture. the release of the mueller report has many on capitol hill demanding much more information. jerry nadler is in our green room. his plans to get t s ts to issut the complete report. just without that annoying lactose. mmm, that's good. ♪ ♪ i can do more to lower my a1c. because my body can still make its own insulin. and i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release it,
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so, maybe an electric car isn't for you after all. or, is it? ♪ good morning, it's 75 #. i'm kenny choi. a high school student from heyward is presumed dead after he fell off a boogie board near half moon bay. the search for the 18-year-old was called off. here's a look at the hit-and-run wanted for an oakland mother and son. alan has a criminal history and driving a 2-door black mercedes and he's still at large. the california tax board says they have issued tax refunds without verifying whether the information was accurate. the problem, a technical glitch, but a spokesperson
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good morning, we have a new trouble spot that we want to tell you about. it's going into the city. so those who commute on 280, you might need extra time. things aren't too stacked up this morning, however, it's northbound 280. it's slow and go into san francisco. your most of your travel times in the green through the tracy triangle. 101, you're good to go. slow making your way from the antioch area and the e-shore freeway to the bay bridge. emily. tracking areas of fog in parts of the bay and drizzle along the coast. here is a live look with our sutro cam of a san francisco view of the golden gate bridge and the marine layer. mostly sunny to partly sunny skies and cooler compared
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, april 19th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, house judiciary chairman jerry nadler will be with us in studio 57. his plans to investigate what's in the mueller report. plus, the ways health apps are sharing your personal information and how you can protect your privacy. but first, today's eye opener at 8:00. >> republicans say it is time to put the russia investigation in the past. democrats have a different plan now that mueller's report is out in the public. >> special counsel's report laid
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out how often people around the president need to protect him from his worst instincts. >> congress or at least a few key members will get a look at a lot of that redacted material next week. >> you repeated the claims, slip of the tongue several times. >> the word countless was a slip of the tongue, but let's not forget james comeys wi was a disgraced leader. >> this home took a direct hit. 50 structures were damaged or destroyed in this storm. >> atlantic moisture that will help. in addition to that bend in the jet stream, to smooth the potential for storms again today. >> it is an apparent victory. president trump tweeted out a video. have a look. >> report, no collusion. >> the russia investigation is finally over. the news caught many people by surprise. by the way, trump didn't include my punch line to that joke and i just can't understand why. roll the tape. it is never a good sign when
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after two years of presidency, the whole world is shocked because you didn't do something illegal. oh, now i know what they're talking about. now i know. a lot of comedy material to come certainly after the release of the mueller report yesterday. i'm gayle king with john dickerson and anthony mason on "cbs this morning." >> saturday. >> it is tomorrow. >> six day week for you, yea! >> you know, he was just saying that earlier. >> you were just inside my head. >> yea! norah is off today. lucky her. we begin with this, democrats in congress are debating how to pick up robert mueller's russia investigation where he left off. and they are bashing attorney general william barr again for deciding that president trump did not obstruct justice in ten separate cases, cited in the mueller report. barr is also being challenged about his characterization of alleged campaign collusion with russia.
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>> the special counsel's report states that his, quote, investigation did not establish that members of the trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the russian government in its election interference activities. >> the attorney general left out an earlier part of that sentence that reads this, the russian government received it would benefit from a trump presidency and the campaign expected it would benefit electorally from information stolen and released through russian efforts. >> the report details repeated contacts between russians and people close to mr. trump, one the now infamous trump tower meeting with donald trump jr., jared kushner, paul manafort and a russian lawyer. the report says mueller considered charging the participants with campaign finance violations. he decided against it in part because he couldn't prove they knew their actions were illegal. >> the report also reveals the former trump campaign chairman
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shared polling data and other campaign information with konstantin kilimnik, a former business partner with ties to russian intelligence. the report says manafort's deputy rick gates told manafort he thought kilimnik was a russian spy. while mueller found the trump campaign did not collude with russia, he did find that, pardon me, he did find the campaign expected to benefit from the russian efforts. one highly redacted passage refers to a russian financier receiving a message from someone after hillary clinton conceded the election. the note said bluntly, putin has won. the president still says, though, the report is a total exoneration. but the experts say not so fast because the actual report paints it very different picture on the issue of obstruction of justice. mueller does not draw conclusion on that, though the attorney general did clear the president of criminal wrongdoing. the report says this, while this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.
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the president told the white house event yesterday that he's been vindicated. >> i'm having a good day too. it was called no collusion, no obstruction. there never was, by the way, and there never will be. >> the president faces no criminal charges, but the mueller report opens the door for congress to take action. the mueller report says, quote, congress can permissibly criminalize certain obstructive conduct by the president because those prohibitions raise no separation of powers questions. >> with us now is democratic congress jerry nadler of new york, chairman of the house judiciary committee. chairman nadler, good morning, welcome. thank you for being here. as you read this report, do you see obstruction of justice? >> i see considerable evidence of obstruction of justice, which is what mueller said. mueller said there was considerable evidence of obstruction of justice, the report concluded there was substantial evidence that president trump attempted to prevent an investigation into his own cam -- his campaign and
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his own conduct, cites 11 instances. he doesn't pursuit -- he doesn't make the charge essentially because justice department guidelines he believes prevented him from doing so. but he lays it out for congress and he practically invites congress to pursue that. so, yes. >> have you issued a subpoena to get the full report? >> yes, this morning. barr seems to have acted over the last four weeks including yesterday not as the attorney general of the united states, but as the president's personal attorney. he lied about what was in the report. he misrepresented it. for instance, he said four times no collusion. the report specifically says that collusion is not a legal term. it showed any number of instances which you showed, mentioned of cooperation between the campaign and the russians, that's what's commonly conceived
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as collusion. but they couldn't charge criminal conspiracy, they didn't have enough evidence to charge criminal conspiracy, not collusion. one of the reasons it says they didn't have enough evidence to charge criminal conspiracy was that people in the campaign, various people, destroyed evidence, lied, committed perjury, lied. on obstruction of justice, they didn't clear the president, they specifically said that an fbi -- if we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that he did not commit obstruction of justice, we would say so, based on the facts and however we -- we're unable to reach that judgment. and the invited congress, specifically to pursue that. barr took it upon himself to announce that he decided to clear the president. not up to him. >> the republicans now say, listen, the report is out, it is time to move on, why do you feel
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it is not time to move on. >> because the report is very damning. it paints a picture of a president who lies all the time, demands his staff members lie, who tried to obstruct justice, prevented from doing so on several cases by the refusal of his own staff members to violate the law, even though he told them to. it paints a picture of a campaign that was in bed with -- completely in bed with the russians. >> why didn't mueller come to a different conclusion if what you're laying out is true? >> that's what i'm saying is exactly the conclusion he came to. he said he couldn't find enough evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt criminal conspiracy, partly because people lied and refused to testify. the president, barr says the president wanted the evidence why the president didn't obstruct investigations, because he cooperated totally. he didn't cooperate totally. he refused to testify. he refused to answer questions
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about obstruction of justice at all. and most of the questions about the russians he didn't remember. the bottom line is we have to hear from barr, that is the judiciary committee, has to hear from barr, which we'll do on may 2nd and from mueller. we need the whole report. we need the whole report, including the underlying documents, unredacted, as has been the case in every previous situation similar to this where congress got it all. the american people need the whole report, minus some redactions, which congress should decide on. >> where are we headed with all of this, the political remedy, impeachment, is that where we're headed? >> we're headed to find out a lot more to hold proper hearings, to educate ourselves and the american people and we'll see where the evidence leads. >> you make a strong claim about the attorney general saying he's basically behaving like the president's lawyer and not the attorney general. that seems like -- that seems like grounds from some kind of action from you as well. you're saying he's doing the
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opposite of his job. >> yeah, but it is not up to -- yes. i think he's not doing his job properly or i think it seems he's not doing his job, acting as the president's personal attorney. certainly seems that way. we will invite -- we have invited him to testify and let him justify his actions before the committee. >> you're one of the congressmen who will get the opportunity to read the less redacted version of the report. when do you intend to -- >> no. we have been -- >> no? >> i've been invited to read the less redacted version of the report on condition that we take no notes and tell nobody about what we read. what's the point of that? congress is a collective body. and if i read something and i can't tell the other committee members about it, or the other members of congress, it is useless. that's frankly -- it is insulting to congress, insulting to congress. we will work to have an
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accommodation with the attorney general, but in terms of seeing the rest of the report and the underlying documents, but it cannot be under such restrictions we cannot function and that's why we need the subpoena. >> your colleague adam schiff says about impeachment, you don't bring a case if you don't think you're going to be successful just to try the case. do you believe with that general principle? >> not necessarily. as a general rule, that is certainly prudent action. but i can imagine a situation in which to vindicate the rule of law and protect the constitution you have to bring a case, even if it is not going to ultimately be successful. but -- >> i'm not advocating that, but i can imagine a situation in which that may be the necessity to vindicate the rule of law and protect our democratic process. >> all right, chairman nadler -- >> as a general -- i laid out a
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three part piece for -- and i'll say this, two of them are really from, i think, established in the record. you don't impeach somebody, you don't bring impeachment procedure unless one, you think you can prove the president completed impeachable offenses. two, they're serious impeachable offenses, and, three, i don't think you should bring an impeachment proceeding unless you believe at the beginning of that proceeding, when you are starting, that you have such strong evidence of such terrible deeds that once that is laid out to the american people, an appreciable fraction of the people who supported the president will agree reluctantly you had to do that. otherwise you get a situation where the country is divided the next 30 years. >> the computer will c you off. so i'm going to. thank you chairman nadler for coming. it is
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south bend, indiana, pete buttigi buttigieg's decision to run for president was a surprise to his husband. he would be the first openly gay nominee and become the first ever president. he'll be 38 years old in november 2020. we spoke with buttigieg and his husband chastain in an interview for "cbs sunday morning." >> so chastin, when did the word "president" come into the conversation. >> i remember getting ready for bed, folding laundry, going over his political day, what had happened at his retreat and he
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mentioned thinking about maybe running for president. i said, president? like for real? you're really thinking about that? and that was last year? late summer i think when we really started cooking up the idea. >> you can watch our full interview with mayor pete buttigieg here. >> i'm really looking forward to it. i keep hearing a lot about mayor pete. i'm interested in hearing where it started. chastin is amazing on twitter, he's hilarious. >> you say pete buttigieg's. >> it takes a lot of work. >> doesn't roll off lake mason or king. monday did you know it's earth day? we're going to have a special
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series called "earth matters." we'll look at things around the world including the air in india and australia's world-famous bondi beach to hear a company's plans on cleaning up the ocean and look at the waters off antarctica. but we'll start with vladimir duthiers who's above the rainforest. very from this point scientists are gathering to see how it affects climate change. we'll tell you what they're learning. that's coming up monday on "cbs this morning." >> can't wait, vlad. you can see it all monday here on "cbs this morning." and we'll be right back. ve . men's nike polos... kids' nike tees - just $14.99... and - converse shoes for the family.
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a remarkable discovery on an indiana farm gives us a look at prehistoric life. look at theseok massive bones. these are aen malls that once good morning. it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego. a suspect is dead after officer-involved shooting in fremont. bart service is not impacted. an investigation is underway. fire crews under way at a strip mall. it broke out at sweet honey dessert and the fire was knocked down. no one was inside at the time. and no injuries were reported. >> a sinkhole in marago is growing and it appears to be apart of a bigger problem. it's on center street. it's caused by the same storm drainpipe that caused another sinkhole three years ago.
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well, good morning, at 8:27. we're tracking trouble spots and those coming from antioch and pittsburgh, you're going to be dealing with traffic. give yourself extra time. willow pass accident has been moved. but it's slowing things down. backed up to bay point. down to 22 mile an hour. let's check our trouble spot, westbound 237 at north first street. one lane is blocked. it's slow and go as
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you get off 880 onto 2 -- this is a slow spot and has been all morning. the richmond san mateo bridge has been backed up and it's backed up at the toll plaza because of construction that's in effect until 3:00 p.m. this afternoon. most of your travel times with the exception of the e-shore looks good. mary. a foggy start. you can see that marin layer and the fog and the golden gate. a cooler day compared to yesterday, but above than average temperatures. 67 in san francisco for a high. low 70 from san raphael. check out fairfield, con court and livermore, low 80s. cooler for all of us tomorrow. i'll more clouds for your saturday. warming up with more sunshine for easter sunday and a big warmup for next
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning" on this good friday. right now it is time to show you some of this morning's headlines. "the washington post" reports dna testing company ancestry took down a controversial ad after it was accused of romanticizing slavery. >> we can escape to the north. there's a place we can be together. >> the ad depicted a mixed race couple during the era of slavery and seemed to be targeting people curious about their mixed race heritage. social media users criticize it of interracial relationships at
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the time and disregarding history of, quote, sexual exploitation. the company says it apologizes for any offense that this ad may have caused. south carolina's post and courier reports uber is unveiling new nationwide safety alerts following the death of a university of south carolina student samantha josephson. she was killed after gettinging into a car she thought was her uber. the ride sharing company will now send reminders of safety steps riders need to take each time they order a car. those include cross checking license plates, and car details before entering a vehicle. and the seymour tribune reports crews installing a sewer line on an indiana farm made a gigantic prehistoric discovery. they found the massive bones of a mastodon, a distant relative of the modern day elephant. this one died between 10,000 and 13,000 years ago. and weighed around 12,000
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pounds. it likely stood around nine and a half feet tall. the indiana state museum may add the find to its collection. >> tomorrow marks 20 years since the tragedy at columbine high school. you're seeing just some of the names of those who died at columbine. and in mass shootings at schools since april 20th, 1999. today we pay tribute to them. and as we look back, we also remember the survivors who still carry the trauma with them every day. we first met josh lapp 20 years ago in an interview with "48 hours." the magnitude of the columbine shooting was just beginning to sink in for the then sophomore. now lapp tells cbs sunday morning correspondent lee cowan how he's managed to move forward with his life, even though he's
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never forgotten the past. ♪ >> whoever said time heals all wounds couldn't have imagined a wound as gaping as columbine. but unlike so many tales from that day, this one begins on a happy note. >> i love you. >> hello? >> reporter: josh lapp, a sophomore at columbine, all those years ago, is now a husband and father of two, stetson and j.j. >> i was always looking for something good, trying to find the silver lining. >> reporter: did you find it? >> i think i did. i have a happy family. >> reporter: josh's dad randy is also beaming. he's the proud grandfather after all. it is a home full of light and laughter. >> are you doing okay? >> yeah. >> are you sure? >> reporter: 20 years ago, it was anything but. >> it is hard seeing that your 16-year-old son seeing something that nobody should ever see.
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we remember that day like yesterday, or i do anyway. >> reporter: it was just a day after the columbine massacre when 48 hours correspondent bill lagatuta caught up with josh and his dad. >> what did you think was happening? >> i was so scared. i ran underneath my desk. >> reporter: josh hadn't seen that interview since the day it aired. >> when i first walked in, they said, any jocks stand up. >> reporter: his wife ashley had never seen it. >> it just breaks my heart for him. >> makes the tears roll again. >> reporter: i know you're afraid, but what's going through your mind? >> i was waiting for a sharp pain just to hit me. i would close my eyes, cross my fingers and, you know, talk to god. >> some of it i remember, some of it i don't. the sharp pain. >> reporter: of everything that happens, why does that stick out so much? >> probably because that's what i really expected. >> reporter: ten students were murdered just feet away from him in columbine's library that day.
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not an experience that exactly fades. you really didn't want to talk about it at first, right? >> no. not at all. parents kind of forced me. >> told him we had to take him to every counselor in the state until he found one he liked, he was going whether he wanted to or not. >> reporter: can you tell when he's gone to a dark place? >> yeah. i try to check in with him a lot. i try to be, like, proactive and giving him a safe space to talk about it. >> reporter: all that talking has helped ease the past. but what about the future? >> how is being a dad changed how you think about all this? >> scares me. just the thought of your kids going to school? >> in my heart it scares me. in my brain, it tells me it is slim -- the chances of it happening are super slim and i understand that, but my heart says should they? i don't know if i can handle it. i honestly don't.
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>> reporter: ygives you a sense of what your dad went through that day. >> i can't imagine. >> oh, man. >> reporter: it was raw then and it is still raw. >> your kid, your son, why? >> reporter: that why is still unanswered. it is never answered really, in the wake of any mass shooting. but for all those survivors, josh has a message. >> i can be a voice to tell them it does get better. it will never go away, it will get easier, i'm will be to be that voice in some way. >> reporter: time doesn't heal much, but it does offer perspective. for "cbs this morning," lee cowan, denver. >> 20 years later, you still feel the pain and he's one of the survivors. >> he's one of the survivors.
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>> yeah. on the podcast, cbs evening news anchor jeff glor talks with dave cullen, author of the book "columbine", talking about the lessons we learned and how our understanding of school shootings has changed in the two ♪ (vo) i know what you're thinking. electric, it's not for you. and, you're probably right. electric just doesn't have enough range.
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♪ in today's morning rounds, apps are being used for everything from tracking your diet to your daily steps and even your pregnancy. but that health related data may not be as safe as you expect. recent research published in bmj found 79% of the top medication related mobile apps shared user data in ways that may compromise sensitive information. the study said the apps could pose a, quote, unprecedented risk to consumers' privacy. wired senior writer and cbs news contributor issie lapowsky is here. good morning. what kind of data is being collected? >> it depends on the app. it could be an app that helps you lose weight, it is tracking what you're eating and tracking your exercise. could be an app that is helping you get pregnant, it is tracking your menstrual cycle. could be an app helping you monitor what medications you're taking. and the thing is, all of these
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security protocols in place, they all share data in different ways, and not always obvious to the end user what they're doing with that information. >> your information in a hospital is protected. why isn't this protected? >> the easy answer is the rule that govern how our health data is protected was written in 1996. in 1996 most of us were still using dial up internet. and we never dreamed we would be carrying these computers in our pockets and telling them our most sensitive information. so really the regulations that govern health data need to be modernized. not just help data, data across the board. >> what is the downside, who is getting this private information? >> it depends. really privacy conscious apps may not be sharing it with anybody. some apps are trying to make money off of it, they're selling it off to whoever wants to buy it. maybe an insurance company, maybe an employer that wants to tap into it. and a lot of these companies are sharing it with facebook because they want to use it to further target the people who are
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already in those ecosystems. but once that information is in there, that means that facebook can use that data and everybody else gets access to it too. >> here is a further complex part of it, some companies health apps because they want them to do the exercise or do the whatever, so they're more healthy, the insurance premiums go down. ten the company gets involved. whose information really is it if someone gives me a wristwatch that tracks this stuff. >> exactly. employee data is really tricky because employers have so much authority over how they can monitor their employees. and are incentivizing employees let's lose weight together or let's use this app and get some discounts if you're having a baby. that really mostly benefits the employer. then the employer is the one who can maybe predict their health care costs for the next year a little bit better. for the women who are trying to get pregnant, you're getting some very sensitive information to your employer that you maybe didn't want to divulge yet. >> give us an example of
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something super sensitive or egregious you would think i don't want somebody to know that. >> there was an app with a big issue called flo. it is a fertility tracking app. and it wasn't necessarily disclosing how much information it was giving away to facebook. it turned out that every time a woman logged her menstrual cycle, it automatically triggered a notification to facebook. and facebook in fact after this was discovered and reported said we don't want this data, this violates our policy. >> no thank you. >> what do you do to protect yourself? >> there is a privacy policy. >> the privacy policy a lot of companies thinks it covers them, it is all in there. but it is not always in there. in the case of the app flo it wasn't in there. who is reading the privacy policy anyway? we need some more regulatory oversight of this data. it needs to be modernized and needs -- we need a framework so that --
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>> what do you do if you want to use one of these? >> there are a few steps you can take. you can make sure you're careful about what apps you login to with facebook. you can make sure you're careful about what apps you get access to your location to. but ultimately there is only so much within our control. >> that's concerning. >> whatever you do, whatever you log, somebody could get it. >> yes. there is always a trade-off between convenience and privacy. >> thanks so much for being with us. up next, we'll look at all that matters this week. you're watching "cbs this morning." next, "all that mattered" this week. you're watching "cbs this morning." ching "cbs this morning." it's on! get to the ross spring shoe event to score the latest styles for the whole family... ...and something for you. oh yeah. that's yes for less. you heard me - 20 to 60 percent off department store prices! at the ross spring shoe event.
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let's celebrate indeed because at cbs, we're celebrating three new additions to our cbs family starting you. welcome baby imani. tony dokoupil and his wife katy tur, she's at msnbc. they welcomed teddy and. also rafael thiha kass. >> baby boom at cbs. >> we've had a good week and a lot of good babies.
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that does it for us. as we leave, we take a look at all that matters this week. no collusion, no obstruction. >> the evidence does not support accusations that the president obstructed the mueller probe and found no collusion with russia by any american. >> it has emboldened him, given him all the vindication he's been looking for for the past two years. >> if anyone thinks this is the end of the headaches, the redactions i'm seeing suggest otherwise. one of the great symbols of paris is still standing after a fire nearly destroyed it. >> this headline reads "tears." this one reads "disasters." >> to see that reduced to ashes, my, oh, my. >> lawrence turino is the men's winner. what were you doing yesterday. >> ran the boston mary than. >> what was your time. >> 2:34.
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>> 2:34. your average was. >> 5:58. >> that's the time it takes me to get from my bed to my refrigerator. >> the return to glory. >> tiger woods. >> a comeback for the age, redemption. >> if that doesn't bring a tear to your eye if you're a parent, you're not human. >> yes, tiger's back. >> the walk across america. let's get into it. >> they've called you before the most unfamous famous musician. >> i've never heard that before. >> i have to get used to your new look, but who's cooler than you, mike poser? nobody. >> thank you. >> i could have been a contender. >> station wbbm -- my apple watch just did something. >> i don't know quite how to work it. >> subscribe to our podcast. you can hear today's stories.
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i was listening to one last night. it was so good. >> your podcast? >> yeah. >> you can say you're biased. >> i listen to myself all the time. in the mirror actually. >> game of tloens drew 17.4 million viewers. >> i'm waeting for her to come back. >> "time" is revealing its list of the 100 most influential people in the world. one of them is our girl sitting right here. gayle king is being honored with her own cover. filmmaker ava douvernay wrote i. >> a few decades overdue. >> i was so touched to read her words. this is what i don't want to do. i was so touched to read her words. put that cover back up. i never looked that good.
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when it comes to reducing the sugar in your family's diet, coke, dr pepper and pepsi hear you. we're working together to do just that. bringing you more great tasting beverages with less sugar or no sugar at all. smaller portion sizes, clear calorie labels and reminders to think balance. because we know mom wants what's best. more beverage choices, smaller portions, less sugar. balanceus.org
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good morning. it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego. a suspect is dead after officer-involved shooting in fremont near bart last night. bart services not impacted and an investigation is underway. a standoff with police in benecia is over. it happened yesterday afternoon on east h street. investigators say the suspect was involved in another recent standoff. and police are preparing for the annual 4/20 celebration at san francisco's hippy hill. it happens every year at golden gate park on april 20th. news updates throughout the day
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good morning. we have several trouble spots to tell you about this morning. one is making quite a mess for those of you trying to make your way towards the golden gate bridge. this is westbound 580 at 24. it's stretching. not affecting 24, but it's affecting 13. taking a look at the maze or excuse me, at the richmond san raphael bridge. this is another slow and go spot.
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there's emergency construction happening on this bridge until 3:00 p.m. this afternoon. so just be aware. it's going to be slow and go as you make your way into marin this afternoon all the way through the afternoon hours. this is a crash westbound 4 at willow pass and moved to the center divide and slowing down at bay point toward 680 or the e-shore freeway. it's going to be slow as you make your way westward. south bay, one accident, but not too bad. mary. we are tracking areas ever fog along the coast and parts of the bay. you can see on our sutro cam, san francisco view of the golden gate and the marine layer. we're going to see temperatures cooler compared to yesterday, but above average. 67 in san francisco. 72 for san raphael, oakland, mid 70s, redwood city, upper 70s in santa rosa and san jose. low 80s for fairfield, concord and livermore. much cooler and cloudier for saturday. could see drizzle and sprinkles along the coast tomorrow. warming back up for
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wayne: wow. - yeah, boy! wayne: tiffany, what's behind the curtain? jonathan: it's a trip to italy! - i'm here to win big today. jonathan: it's in the bag. (grunts) wayne: go get your car! give him a big round of applause. you did it, you got the big deal of the day! and this is how we do it in season ten. jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." wayne brady here, thanks for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? (cheers and applause) flamingo. lanette? come on, lanette. everybody else, have a seat. (cheers and applause) hello, lanette, how are you? - i'm wonderful, thank you. wayne: now, what do you do?
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