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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  May 13, 2019 7:00am-9:00am PDT

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kpix5 news this morning. cbs this morning is coming up next. have a great day, everyone. up next. have a great day, everyone. . >> the white house chief economic adviser appears to contradict president trump says americans will suffer with higher tariffs on chinese imports. >> drug makers are pushing up prices, accused by billions of dollars. and the attorney general leading that challenge comes here to studio 57. >> the airline pilot arrested in his uniform just before a flight and charged with murdering three of his neighbors in 2015. >> and washington's international spy museum reopens on a new site, with powerful messages.
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positive and negative about espionage. >> but we begin this morning, with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. if it is a tariff on goods coming into the country, the chinese aren't paying. >> i don't disagree with that. again, both sides, both sides will suffer on this. >> the trade war with china heats up. >> china announced tariffs on $60 billion of u.s. imports. >> doomsday. >> a major storm system has caused chaos across the south. mississippi is now under a state of emergency after severe flooding. >> i lost everything, sir. i lost everything. >> in texas, the man who reported a 4-year-old girl had been abducted is now in custody. derion vence was arrested on suspicion of tampering with evidence. >> he did this to hurt the mother. >> some sad news from the entertainment world. actress and former model peggy lipson has died. >> you have your own life to worry about. >> desperate housewives star
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felicity huffman is expected to enter a guilty plea in the so-called varsity blues scandal. >> myanmar airlines jet made an emergency landing. >> the landing gear under the nose of the plane failed to deploy. >> all that. liverpo liverpool star was getting an award but his daughter stole the show. >> texas a&m hurdler, hurdler gone viral to win the s.e.c. title. superman style. >> that's all that matters. >> the jumper is good. >> portland toppled denver in game seven. >> the portland trailblazers are going to the conference finals for the first time since 2000. >> on "cbs this morning." >> kawhi leonard. defended by simmons. is this it? score! game series, toronto has won! the ball is suspended in air. kawhi leonard with the game
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winner! >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places. an epic buzzer-beater. it was tough love for philadelphia. but oh, what a good game. >> what a good game. >> and the guy running over the finish line, diving over the finish line. i didn't know you could do that. >> i don't know that you can. well, i mean you can now. superman finish. >> no doubt about that. welcome to "cbs this morning." lots of news today. we are going to start with this, wall street is bracing for a u.s. trade war with china, that would hurt american companies, farmers and consumers. the dow jones industrial average opens the week lower this morning after china revealed plans to retaliate against new u.s. tariffs that began on friday. >> the trump administration is already preparing more tariffs on nearly all chinese goods. president trump tweeted yesterday, quote, we are right where we want to be with china. and ben tracy just returned from a two-year assignment in
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beijing, so he is just the man to have at the white house following the trade battle. ben, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, the chinese have decided on the retaliation. they are going to raise tariffs on $60 billion worth of u.s. goods as of june 1. is morning, in a series of tweets, the president seemed to double down on his belief that china is the only one that will actually be hurt in this trade war. but now, even his own economic advisers are contradicting him. >> both sides will pay. >> white house economic adviser larry kudlow admitted sunday what nearly every economist knows to be true. the tariffs president trump is putting on chinese goods brought into the u.s. are not solely paid for by the chinese. >> it is u.s. businesses and u.s. consumers who pay, correct? >> yes, to some extent. again, both sides, both sides will suffer on this. >> on friday, president trump slapped a 25% tariff on approximately $200 billion worth of chinese imports. and is now ordering his trade
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representatives to start the paperwork to tariff an additional $300 billion. basically, everything china sends to the u.s. from cell phones, to furniture. it is a fight the president says is worth having. >> so our country can take in $120 billion a year in tariffs. paid for mostly by china, by the way. not by us. >> tariffs do make chinese goods more expensive which can hurt china's economies but the actual tariffs are a tax paid by u.s. companies that import chinese or products, companies can either take on the costs and make less money or they raise prices on u.s. consumers which is what often happens. but president trump isn't just battling china on the world stage. he's also at war with congress. democrats have launched more than 20 separate investigations into president trump. his actions as president, his personal finances and his administration's policies. >> the democrats are more interested in subpoenas than solutions. >> on fation the nation, face
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the nation, kevin mccarthy is criticized democrats on what is not getting done. >> we want to get somewhere on health care and we got trade and crisis on the boarder. >> while democrats say we can multitask. >> don't think we cannot do both. >> even on a bipartisan issue like infrastructure, so far, there has been no concrete legislative progress. president trump seems to be relishing the fight. it was a cold and rainy sunday here in washington. and that may be why he sent out more than a dozen tweets. he called democrats crazed lunatics and said the real constitutional crisis is democrats refusing to work. >> ben tracy at the white house. thank you, ben. in the next hour, cbs news business analyst jill schlesinger will be here to look at who really pays when there is a trade war with china. that's ahead, on "cbs this morning." seven million people in the south are under a threat of flooding this morning after another round of powerful storms rocked the region over the weekend. heavy winds and severe flooding knocked down trees and damaged
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homes. some areas got more than a foot of rain. yikes. chief weathercaster, that's loni quinn, our new york station, wcbs-tv is watching the conditions in the south, and joins us with the latest. loni, good morning to you. >> good morning everybody. if you take a peek right now at the area we're focused 0en this weekend from texas, all the way over to portions of louisiana and mississippi, it is pretty quiet. as of right now. there is some long-needed relief after all of this rain. you focus on the dark blues, okay? zoom in tight, around baton rouge, and this dark blue color, like you were saying, a foot of rain or more, but then there is this color, see that little orange color south of hatysburg? that's over 14 inches. 17.9 inches of rain over a five-day period. you've got to see and take a look at this, what that kind of rain can do to a community. >> in the south, communities are sorting through debris after heavy rain and strong winds pummelled the region throughout the week. sheets of rain sent trash cans
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flying down the street in gulf shores, alabama. cars made waves in water-logged new orleans streets. littered with floating garbage after the storm. state of emergency is in effect for louisiana. and rising flood waters in mississippi were so severe, the governor declared a state of emergency yesterday. >> the water was going down, and all of a sudden, it just rose and it just overtook the park. i lost everything, sir. i lost everything. >> flooding forced evacuations. and hundreds of overnight rescues like these. >> it was definitely, definitely terrifying. i think we were like screaming and i was praying out loud. >> the coast guard saved these men and their dogs by helicopter after flash flooding trapped them on a bridge. in biloxi, river road, well, it lived up to its name, and in stone county, stretches of highway shut down, as water made them impassable. flooding is also a potential factor behind the pile-up of at least 20 derailed train cars in hillsdale. luckily, no one was injured.
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>> boy, the power of water, right? now, the question is, is there any more rain in the forecast for that particular area of the country, the good news is, you know, for the next workweek, i really don't see too much in terms of big totals, ironically the west coast and the rainy season should basically be over for you but it is not. places around big sur, you could be seeing two to four inches of rain, in the mountains, it's snow we're talking. now, check this out. we see this pink color. that's a foot and a half, maybe more than that, at the mountain peak, mammoth mountain, they will end up with 57, maybe 59 feet of snow this season. amazing stuff. john? >> the power of water indeed. thank you so much, loni. a pilot is being hailed as the hero after safely makes a dramatic emergency landing without the plane's front wheels. the video captured the nose tilting down, and setting off sparks. the plane skidded to a stop yesterday in myanmar, formally known as burma. inside, passengers recorded the chaos. smoke could be seen rising from out of the seat.
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the pilot from myanmar national airlines told the control tower before landing he was unable to pull down the nose wheels. all passengers and crew members evacuated the jet without any injuries. rape case against wikileaks founder julian assange is reopened in sweden. he is in a british prison after being removed from the ecuador embassy in london. and he took refuge there to avoid prosecution. swedish prosecutors say they want to question him again in a case that began in 2010. assange faces computer hacking charges in the u.s. british officials say he must serve a 50-week sentence before he can be sent anywhere else. following breaking news from the middle east, where a series of sabotage attacks are targeting critical oil supplies. the attacks are reportedly aimed at oil tankers owned by saudi arabia, and other countries. they come amid warnings from the u.s. about a growing threat from iran. and imitiaz tyab is monitoring
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these developments from london. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we have a tense situation in the persian gulf right now. according to the united arab emirates, four vessels in the persian gulf were in their words sabotaged. saudi arabia also says that two of its vessels were also targeted. now, this is one of the vessels that was apparently sabotaged, but it showed no signs of damage. however, a spokesperson for the saudi-owned bahri oil company confirmed that a vessel it manages had been hit by an explosion. no one was injured. and the ship is stable. we've also just learned a norwegian registered tanker is in the area, was also damaged by a floating object. what's going on now follows warnings from the trump administration that iran or its quote proxies are allegedly threatening american interests in the gulf. iran said the attacks were quote worrying, and called for a full
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investigation of a possible, what it described, as a conspiracy orchestrated by ill-wishers. whatever the case, the tensions here have only risen since president trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal, brokered between tehran and world powers. >> imitiaz tyab in london thank you. one of the most well-known figures in the college admissions scandal is due back in federal court today. actress felicity huffman is expected to plead guilty for her role in the largest college admissions scheme ever prosecuted. carter evans is at the federal courthouse in boston. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. huffman is accused of paying $15,000 to have a proctor correct the answers on her daughter's s.a.t.s. but she was also one of the first parents to agree to plead guilty and analysts say that could work in her favor. >> felicity huffman is expected to admit to a federal judge today that she broke the law. in a statement, the actress had
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expressed deep regret and shame. my daughter knew absolutely nothing about my actions. this transgression toward her and the public i will carry for the rest of my life. prosecutors have recommended huffman pay a $20,000 fine and serve four to ten months behind bars. >> felicity huffman has been the model defendant in this case. the judge has every right and ability to give her less than that, including probation and community service. or more than that. >> another parent expected to plead guilty today is devon sloan, prosecutors allege the los angeles businessman paid the scheme's mastermind rick singer $250,000 to get his son into usc as a water polo recruit, even though the teen didn't play the sport. when a high school guidance questioned the sports credentials one of singer's alleged accomplices at usc stepped in. prosecutors say she then lied to the admissions office in an
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email saying sloan's son was an attack perimeter player who competed in summer leagues. and a guidance counselors will raised red flags about the applications for lori loughlin's daughters admitted to usc as crew recruits but iganulli allegedly met with the counselor and shut down concerns. >> what this shows is that people who feel they have rank and privilege and money think that they can do anything. and that's what makes people so upset about this case. >> loughlin and gianulli plans to plead not guilty and while their futures are uncertain, this story could live on in hollywood. a production company is already preparing to produce a mini series. >> carter, thank you. a man police describe as the stepfather of a missing 4-year-old texas girl is in court this morning. in connection with her
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disappearance. derion vence is accused of tampering with human remains even though no body was found. maleah davis has been missing for more than a week. >> reporter: good morning, the assistant district attorney here in harris county says there is a substantial likelihood that derion vence will face additional charges possibly including murder but so far investigate verse not said whether they believe vence actually killed maleah. this morning, investigators will once again scour areas of houston for maleah davis, and tim miller is helping lead the search for the missing 4-year-old. >> i would like to hold on to that hope that she is alive out there somewhere. >> reporter: derion vence reported maleah missing more than a week ago. the 26-year-old was arrested on saturday, after investigators found new clues inside the southwest houston apartment, where he lived with maleah and her mother. drops of blood linked to maleah and evidence someone tried to clean it up.
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a houston tv station says these surveillance photos show vence entering the apartment april 30 with maleah steps behind him but she was never seen coming out. more photos reportedly show vence leaving the apartment three days later, while carrying what prosecutors describe as a blue laundry basket with a garbage bag, and bottles of bleach. prosecutors say investigators found a blue laundry basket and a gas can inside the car vence claims was stolen from him by three men with maleah inside. prosecutors also say cadaver dogs detected the scent of human remains inside the car. civil rights activist represents maleah's mother and describes vence as bowen's ex-fiance and she recently called off the engagement. >> when that happened, i believe that he psychologically snapped.
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already on top of being abusive to maleah. he did this to hurt the mother. in a way that she would never recover. >> vence is in jail on a $1 million bond and he has a court-appointed attorney. court documents obtained by our cbs partners here in houston, khou, actually report that maleah was removed from the home by child protective services temporarily last year, after they suspected abuse might be happening in that apartment. police also say that vence has changed his story multiple times about the disappearance. >> thank you, the story makes me so sad and so angry, too. >> yes. >> we thought at the beginning there was something fishy when he told the story about his little boy was found and the little girl was missing and you see the pictures of her going in, after him, and appearing to come out, but what looked like a laundry basket. >> there are security cameras everywhere. >> everywhere. very, very upsetting story. the suspect in a deadly machete attack on the appalachian trail in virginia
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will appear in federal court later today. police arrested 30-year-old james jordan saturday after he allegedly attacked a pair of hikers along the trial. the man was killed and the woman was severely injured. she managed to escape and she walked six miles to find help. witnesses say other hikers had been sharing stories about the suspect's menacing behavior in the weeks before this attack. >> there were some people, that were basically calling for help and saying this guy is mentally unstable and we are not safe. but nothing happened. >> the injured woman is said to be improving and is expected to recover. >> one of the most popular actresses in movie history, doris day, died overnight at her california home. ♪ que sera. snoet ♪ whatever will be will be. >> she started her long career as a big band singer in the 1940s before she started acting.
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and she was hollywood's best known girl next door. had relationship in rock hudson's "pillow talk" made her a box office star and then a television series on cbs that ended in 1973. day spent her later years working to support animal rights. doris day celebrated her 97th birthday last month. an iconic figure in television. and she will be missed. amazon is rolling out high-tech machines to box some orders now handled by humans. ahead, we will look at how many jobs could disappear, as amazon pushes to cut labor costs. but first, it's 7:19 and time to check your local weather. 7:19, it's time to check your local weather.
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we have much more news ahead for you. "60 minutes" shows the evidence from a lawsuit accusing generic drug makers of taking millions from consumer, we will talk to the attorney general leading the challenge. >> and why the organizers are going to court to try and continue the woodstock music festival. you're watching "cbs this morning." before i ask her. may i have your permission to marry her? you're marrying her and her whole world. shop neal lane diamond engagement rings. at kay.
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this is beyond wifi. this is xfi. simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. this is a kpix5 news morning update. >> good morning. it is 7:26. i'm michelle griego. richmond police are investigating three separate shootings that happened overnight. four people are in the hospital this morning. the extent of the injuries are not clear. but we are getting reports one person was shot in the head. today a big decision on the as' plans for a new waterfront ballpark in oakland. port commissioners will be voting on a preliminary term sheet with the team, essentially a framework for the negotiations over the property the as want to lease at howard terminal. today students at a fremont high school will hold a candlelight vigil for 16-year- old armando canalis, he died on saturday after a suspected
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drunk driver crashed into the car he was in on highway 17. news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website, kpix.com. including our website, kpix.com.
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good morning. here at 7:28 we have a traffic alert. this is going to really slow things down. the east shore freeway is a part of your commute, you can see the drive time from highway 4 to the maze an hour at this point. that is the result of an accident westbound 80. there are several lanes blocked due to a motorcycle injury accident there. taking a live look at the richmond san rafael bridge it is backed up there too. mary. >> thanks. it's going to be a beautiful day across the bay area with clearing and afternoon sunshine, daytime highs on the mild side, 62 in san francisco, 66 in oakland, 72 in fremont, 76 in concord, 77 in san jose. today the warmest day out of the weekend, temps cooling down, the rain chances beginning wednesday through the weekend. beginning wednesday through the weekend. ♪
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things you should know this morning. president trump will welcome hungarian prime minister to the white house today. he is one of europe's most prominent nationalists. both he and mr. trump have hard line views on immigration and both have spoken positively about russian president vladimir putin. republican and democratic lawmakers have expressed concerns ove his visit, citing what they call his anti-semitic and xenophobic comments.
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the pentagon is pulling $1.5 billion from ballistic missile and surveillance aircraft programs to help fund president trump's border wall. the trump administration plans to build about 80 miles of the wall with these additional funds. shanahan says this will not affect military readiness or service member benefits. the news comes amid a surge in the number of migrants apprehended at the u.s./mexico border. and a new study finds patients are more likely to be referred for cancer screenings in the morning than later in the day. researchers believe this may be partly due to doctor decision fatigue and falling behind on appointments. for example, doctors order breast cancer screenings more often for patients seen in the 8:00 a.m. hour has compared to those seen at 5:00 p.m. there was, however, a brief spike in screening orders for breast and colon cancers immediately after lunchtime. 20 of the biggest generic
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prescription drug makers are accused of committing a multibillion-dollar fraud on people in the u.s. 43 states and puerto rico filed a complaint friday, alleging the companies coordinated to inflate prices and reduce competition on more than 100 generic prescription drugs. last night on "60 minutes," bill whitaker talked to investigators who say the evidence is in company emails, texts, and phone records. >> we can see that competitor kwtd "a" is talking to competitor "b" five times in one day. we can look at that day on what they were saying. >> reporter: it all snapped into sharp focus when he matched phone logs to thousands of text messages from heritage pharmaceuticals. ne neilson says this exchange with their competitor showed collusion to increase price of a diabetes medication. the text messages implicate two
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other companies, aurobindo and teva, the world's largest drug maker. the national accounts manager at heritage wrote, we are raising the price right now. just letting you know, teva says they will follow. aurobi i aurobindo agrees too. they respond, we are definitely into raise pricing, are doing this immediately. >> we reached out to the association for accessible medicine, a trade group which represents generic prescription drug companies. those companies deny in engaging in any illegal collusion. in a statement, the association says it is committed to supporting policies that promote competition. it also notes prices have declined overall in the last three years. connecticut attorney general william tong was featured in the "60 minutes" report. he's league the coalition against the generic drug companies. good morning. >> good morning, john. >> so the complaint is 34 counts, 20 companies, 15
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individual. that seems like a broad scope. >> it's what we believe to be the biggest corporate cartel in history and probably the biggest anti-trust price fixing case in this country, certainly right now, and maybe in our nation's history. >> you say these companies are too big to care. what do you mean by that? >> you said not too big to fail but too big to care. that gave me chills when i heard you say that. >> and what's really troubling is it's clear that they're just going to break the law as long as they can afford to do so. these are extraordinarily powerful forces that got away with price increases as high as 1,000, 2,000. last night on "60 minutes," they reported a drug i take increased 8,000%. that's why it took more than 40 states coming together and taking them on. >> but why have they gotten away with it? >> you know, it's just that they're so powerful, and there's
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so much money to be made. nobody has held them accountable. we took the first step in 2016 in filing a case focused on a company called heritage. but this case now that we filed on friday is ten times bigger. hundreds of drugs, you know, almost 20 of the generic drug manufacturers. 16 individual corporate defendants. we're blowing the lid off this whole thing because, you know, this is an attack on the american people. it's a massive fraud that focuses on the drugs that we take every day. >> anybody who's on medication will say, gosh, the price of drugs has gone up a lot. or it's affected people in their family a great deal. how did you find out and discover that there was this alleged collusion? >> so i really have to hand it to mike cole and joe neilson in my office. they read an article about a drug five years ago. they said, something's not right about a huge price spike that
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isn't explainable by the market or market forces. so they started asking questions, but really what blew this whole thing wide open is -- are the phone records. we've gotten i think 11 million phone records, 7 million documents. they started piecing it together. >> what do those phone records show? >> what they saw is that around price increases, kpecompetitors started calling each other at a high rate. high frequency contacts between competitors sometimes for a minute, two minutes, 45 minutes. teva talking to myelan, back and forth, representatives of these companies having conversations, which are highly illegal when you talk about price fixing. >> illegal because a market is supposed to exist without people whispering behind the scenes, exist with competition, buyers, and sellers. >> right. congress created the generic drug market so there would be
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competition after patents expire. >> what disturbs you most about all of this? >> what disturbs me most is this was undertaken utterly without shame. it feels like it's just a routine feature of the industry. these folks live in new jersey, delaware, pennsylvania, not far from this studio, and they go in in the morning and break the law. then they go to lunch. then they go home. they watch tv and make dinner. then they get up in the morning and break the law. it's this routine, every dayedness of it that really bothers me. >> what could be the outcome, criminal charge, people go to jail? what's going to happen? >> sure. i think there's a criminal investigation being undertaken by the department of justice. we have civil jurisdiction along with our sister states and 44 other states. we had a previous lawsuit that had 49 states and territories. we want to hold them accountable. as i said last night on "60 minutes," we want to claw back
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the money that they stole from the american people. >> many of the companies say, teva for instance, that they've done nothing wrong. the drug companies say prices go up with drug shortages and the market forces. >> this also bothers me. we have emails. we have text messages. we have cooperating witnesses. we have high-frequency records of phone calls that happened on the days that price increases happened. you have competitors talking to each other over and over and over again. and then to look us in the eye and say, never happened, we didn't do it, nothing wrong has occurred, and we're not fixing prices or allocating market share amongst each other. it's just not credible. >> all right. attorney general tong, thank you so much for being with us. an airline pilot taken into custody right before a flight is accused of killing three people. ahead, how the pilot was arrested while stunned passengers waited to board the aircraft. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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with our famous pastrami and a bigger soft pretzel roll. and try the new turkey bistro with warm turkey and smokehouse bacon. or the new hot club chicken dijon with dijon mayo and black forest ham. how far would you go for a togo? an airline pilot arrested in
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kentucky could be in court as early as today in connection with a 2015 triple homicide. christian martin was taken into custody just before his flight on saturday at louisville international airport. he faces nine charges including three counts of murder and one count of arson. kris van cleave is at reagan national airport just outside washington with more on this story. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that mugshot certainly is eye-catching. you're at the gated ready to board your plane when the pilot is being handcuffed and led away. this happened on saturday. the cops swooped in. christian martin was still in his pilot uniform when police snapped this booking photo after arresting him for triple murder. >> these are three individuals that are gone, that are never coming back and that deserve justice. >> reporter: kentucky attorney
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general andy beshear says in 2015 martin killed calvin and pamela phillips and their neighbor edward dansereau. >> martin was dishonorably discharged. >> reporter: in an interview with cnn, matt phillips said his father was killed before he could testify in a court-martial trial against martin. >> my father had a lot to do with that. >> reporter: in a 2016 interview with a local tv station he denied being involved. >> i don't know why anybody would want to do something to them. >> reporter: martin was hired as a first officer by tsa. in a statement american airlines says pilots undergo a criminal background check. in a statement they add martin did not have any criminal history that would disqualify
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him from being a commercial pilot. martin is behind bars this morning. it's unclear if he has a lawyer yet. we were unable to reach martin. american airlines has put him on a suspension until his court case is resolved. norah? >> what a story. kris, thank you. >> you're painting quite a picture. you're standing there as a passenger and your pilot is being led away in handcuffs. a big shock a rew. a series of abortion laws are drawing backlash from hollywood and 77 for a high in san jose. cooler tomorrow. also increasing clouds and rain chances in the forecast,
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beginning wednesday through the workweek. also cooling down and rain chances even into the weekend. chances even into the weekend. the. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by astrazeneca. visit astrazeneca uz suzuki.com. . brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study, brilinta worked better than plavix. brilinta reduced the chance of having another heart attack... ...or dying from one. don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor, since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." cbsnews.com is reporting that the white house asked former counsel don mcgahn to publicly state president trump did not obstruct justice. the request was made by emmet flood. mcgahn did not reply. there are reports of ten incidents of obstruction. one asking mcgahn to fire the fbi director. saturday he tweeted he never wanted to fire mueller. there's an outcry over the killing of an activist and journalist. mena mangal was shot and killed. she reatedly posted on facebook she received threats and feared
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for her life. they're calling for a thorough investigation. since her death, afghan media has been vocal about the level of violence against women in that country. another journalist specifically targeted. >> while doing her job. the reuters news agency says amazon is rolling out machines that replaces machines and adds jobs. they scan goods and box them. amazon has considered installing more machines. it would amount to more than 1,300 jobs cut across the u.s. in its quest, amazon is looking at improving safety and increasing times. they say the savings will be reinvested and new jobs will continue to be created. "usa today" reports a hearing over an $18 million lawsuit over woodstock 50 scheduled for today.
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a u.s. supreme court has ordered the appearance of representatives of dent sue, the former investor of the event. woodstock 50 claims more than $17 million was miss appropriated by dent sue. they deny the accusations last month. they with drew itself support from the milestone event. one man's collection of historical spy gear was enough to build a whole new museum. ahead, the museum just reopened at a new site in washington, d.c. you're watching "cbs this morning." hmmmm. ♪ rub-a-dub ducky... and then...there's national car rental. at national, i'm in total control. i can just skip the counter and choose any car in the aisle i like. so i can rent fast without getting a hair out of place. heeeeey. hey! ah, control. (vo) go national. go like a pro.
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this is a kpix5 news morning update. it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. richmond police are investigating three separate shootings that happened overnight. four people are in the hospital this morning. the extent of the injuries are not clear but we are getting some reports that one person was shot in the head. that amber alert over the weekend was based on a lie. oakland police say that a father filed a phony report claiming that his 3-year-old daughter was abducted in order to retrieve his stolen car faster. and a free street rally for all die hard san jose sharks fans today. it is happening outside the s.a.p. center ahead of game two tonight against the st. louis blues. gates open at 3:30. puck drops at 6:00 tonight. san jose leads that series one
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game to nothing. news updates throughout the day on your favorite platforms including our website, it's kpix.com. our website, it's kpix.com.
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good morning here at 7:57 it is slow ago across the -- slow and go across the bay bridge. in the eastbound direction headed in the opposite direction, you are looking at there is a stall at treasure island backing things up, as well as it's backed up at the toll plaza and it's pretty much going to be this way throughout the morning. drive times, they are in the red with the exception of those of you coming out of the south bay, you're interest 70 miles -- excuse me, 70 minutes getting out of san jose to the airport. everywhere else you are in the red especially the east shore freeway, you are going to need that extra time this morning so head out the door. starting off the day with the low clouds and patchy fog this morning along the coast and parts of the bay. live look at our treasure island camera. as we head through the afternoon, clearing and afternoon sunshine, enjoy it. 62 in san francisco, 66 in oakland, 72 in fremont, 76 in concord and 77 for san jose.
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today the warmest day out of the week, we are going to cool down as we head through the workweek, rain chances beginning wednesday. week, rain chances beginning wednesday. [ dramatic orchestral music ] [ announcer ] tiger woods. [ tap of the putt ] expect anything different? [ waves crashing ] probably the most important shot dustin johnson has ever hit right here. [ crowd cheering ] what a gem! now keopka, down there into the wind. [ club thwacking ] how about that? back to back united states opens. [ tense elegant music ] just awesome.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, may 13th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, republican senator tom cotton will be in the studio. his view of the u.s. trade fight with china, the president's fight with democrats and his new book on a historic army regiment. and jeff daniels will be with us to talk about "to kill a mockingbird" and how it changed on its way to broadway. first, today's eye opener at 8:00. >> wall street is bracing for a u.s. trade war with china that
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would hurt american companies, farmers and consumers. >> china decided on retaliation, raising tariffs on $60 billion of u.s. goods. >> 17.9 inches of rain over a five-day period. you got to see what that kind of rain can do to a community. >> got a really tense situation in the persian gulf now. according to united arab emirates, four vessels were in their words sabotaged. >> there is a likelihood that dereon will face charges. but investigators have not said whether they believe he killed maleah. huffman one of the first parents to agree to plead guilty. and analysts say that could work in her favor. >> they are where they need to be! >> manchester city claimed the championship for a second straight year. and four trophies in the last eight seasons. >> 2012, 2014, 2018, 2019!
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>> people get so excited in sports. i'm gayle king, he's john dickerson and she's norah o'donnell. china is retaliating with a hike of its own, starting june 1st, china will put tariffs as high as 25% on another 6 $0 billion in u.s. products. three days ago, president trump raised tariffs to 25% on about $200 billion of chinese goods. >> mr. trump fired off a series of tweets this morning saying u.s. companies and consumers should not pay the tariffs. they should buy from a nontariff country or from a u.s. company. the president he's chief economic adviser admitted americans will be affected by the tariffs. >> both sides will pay and it --
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>> if it is a tariff on goods coming into the country, the chinese aren't paying. >> no, but the chinese will suffer gdp losses and so forth with respect to a diminishing export market and goods that they may need for their own -- >> i understand that, but the president says china doesn't -- china pays the tariffs, they may suffer consequences, but it is u.s. businesses and u.s. consumers who pay, correct? >> yes, to some extent. i don't disagree with that. >> cbs news business analyst jill schlesinger is with us. so let's just button this up here. the president has said the chinese will pay these tariffs and they'll go right to the treasury. is that the way tariffs work? >> no. so the way it works is that the importer, the u.s. importer pays the tariff. who is the importer, retailer, wholesaler, manufacturer of other products. what happens or what has happened is they'll absorb some of that fee in terms of lower
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margins, or they'll increase prices to consumers. and so it is some combination of that. the problem with these new tariffs is many of these folks who are the importers cannot absorb a 25% tariff. they will likely pass a lot of that on to consumers. >> so what are we as a consumer out there, what are we paying more for in. >> okay. furniture is a big one. building supplies is a big one. shampoo, dog collars. the list goes on. >> dog collars? >> we're very upset about this. baseball mitts, backpacks, luggage, leather handbags, the fabric that goes into fleece. there are thousands of items on this list and, you know, if you like some of the food that comes in, beef, carrots, kale, just like an enormous number of products that could be impacted. >> how quickly will we see the prices increase? >> some people are saying it is just a few weeks. i'm hearing more like 90 days. 90 to 120 days because, again, the tariff went into effect 12:01 friday, did not impact anything already en route here.
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>> previous tariffs that people have been paying higher prices for already. is it realistic for the president to say, this is a shift we should note today before we have been saying chinese paying to treasury, now we're saying moving past that and saying we should buy from other countries or u.s. goods that are made here. is that possible? >> i think we should look at the example of washer and dryers. a tariff put on washers last year and the average washing machine went up by 86 bucks, both domestic produced and the ones that were imported. also, dryers went up by $92, there was no tariff on a dryer. so what we know is that u.s. and international manufacturers use the opportunity to jack prices on both types of goods. everyone better be making more money because these things are going to cost us more money. >> people are taking advantage of the situation. >> absolutely. >> why free marketeers have been against this. >> things will rise. >> thank you so much.
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legislators are making a new push to limit abortion rights. and hollywood is fighting back. actress alyssa milano just proposed a sex strike in response to a recent wave of state laws restricting or abolishing abortion. she posted this tweet asking women to give up sex until they have legal control of their bodies. some critics say that would turn women into objects. at least five major movie production companies say they will stop producing films in georgia for an anti-abortion bill was signed into law last week. jan crawford is cracking this new campaign by abortion opponents. jan, good morning. >> good morning. >> we're talking about a number of abortion cases across the country. if the supreme court takes up an abortion case, what are the chances they could overturn roe v. wade? >> i mean, let's get that out of the right way off the front. it is slim that this new conservative supreme court is going to overturn roe v. wade at this point.
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these state laws are just coming too fast and they're too extreme. what you're seeing is that this court now does have that more solid conservative majority, a lot of these republican states are passing these highly restrictive abortion laws and in some cases almost outright bans hoping that this new court will allow them and eventually overturn roe v. wade. so, tomorrow, in alabama, lawmakers are scheduled to continue debating and will probably pass what will be the strictist anti-abortion rights on the country, ban abortiborg t every stage of pregnancy. this comes after mississippi, ohio, kentucky, like you said, just last week, georgia, already passed bills banning abortions once a fetal heart beat is detected. that's usually about six weeks into a pregnancy before many women even know they're pregnant. now, by comparison, roe v. wade
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and court rulings say states can't ban abortions outright. none of these recently passed heart beat bills have gone into effect yet and they're all facing or will face legal challenges. supporters of the anti-abortion rights measure say those challenges are exactly what they want because that could be the path to the supreme court, a chance to overturn roe v. wade but at this point, those odds i think are pretty slim. >> just follow up on that quickly. what is the likelihood that any of these restrictions will make it to the supreme court? >> that's the thing. they are so at odds, they're so restrictive with supreme court precedent that they're getting struck down in the lower courts. courts are blocking them from even taking effect. and then when the lower courts look at them and look at tsupree court precedent, pennsylvania versus casey that casey decision, they're striking them down. these laws may not ever even get
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to the supreme court. like i said it almost too much too soon. >> jan, any reaction to aliyssa mila milano's call for a sex strike? >> some people are saying that objectifies women. other people saying well, she's advocating abstinence. >> i hear many women going, no thank you. thank you very much, jan. ahead, errol barnett takes us behind the scenes of the new international spy museum in the nation's capital. >> shedding new light on the shadowy world of global espionage. i'm at the international spy museum here in washington, d.c. coming up on "cbs this morning," we'll show you how this place is reimagining what it means to be a spy.
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there is much more news ahead. republican senator tom cotton will join us here in studio 57. we'll find out if he thinks the president's growing trade dispute with china could hurt american consumers. jeff daniels will be here to tell us about taking on the iconic role of atticus finch on broadway. and we'll show you how prince harry and meghan celebrated her first mother's day. you're watching "cbs this morning." markle celebrated her first mother's day. you're watching "cbs this morning." go around. panera. food as it should be.
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♪ visitors to the international spy museum in washington, d.c. have a completely new experience after a nearly three-year upgrade. the brand-new 140,000 square foot space opened to the public over the weekend. the museum is packed with nearly 10,000 artifacts and interactive exhibits. they include this pixilated disguise max that prevented real life spies from being identified by overhead surveillance. errol barnett is inside the museum. good morning. >> good morning. i'm loving the background music there. surely you recognize this gentleman to my left, the country's first president george washington. take a look at what is in this enclosure to my right. an actual letter he wrote in 1777, difficult to see, but it effectively establishes the country's very first spy network to take on the brits. this is where america's spy story begins and this $162 million museum is reimagining
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what it means to be a spy. >> you'll be assigned a cover identity. >> reporter: this wouldn't be a spy museum without a covert alias assigned to every visitor. nico from mexico. >> i'm a photographer. >> reporter: alexis showed me one exhibit pulling back the veil on the lives of international spies, like the so-called matahari, dutch spy and exotic dancer. >> she didn't spy for very long, only a few months. she ended her life really tragically. she was executed during world war i for espionage. >> reporter: you'll also find a ail high altitude flight suit. >> they could capture imagery from the sky. >> reporter: this ice pick used to assassinate a soviet exile. >> you can still see actually the rust mark right on the blade there with the bloody fingerprint of the assassin.
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>> many if not most of the artifacts here in the new museum originated in my personal collection. >> reporter: intelligence historian melton spent 45 years tracking down what he calls history's obscure artifacts. he now has 7,000 of them. >> there is a hidden world behind every newspaper headline, every television story on international relations. the true stories are even more fantastic than the fiction. >> reporter: like that of the so-called russian ten, a group of russian spies living as suburban couples, inspiration for the tv program "the americans". >> my wife, elizabeth paige. >> reporter: for which melton served as a consultant. >> this is their greatest counterintelligence success in history. >> reporter: computer images of flowers which the russians embedded with secret messages are on display. ne good spying, melton says,
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prevents conflict. >> more wars are fought because of faulty information than good information. >> reporter: this colonel is a former military intelligence officer in the museum's executive director. he explained why american intelligence failures like those which preceded 9/11 and the iraq wars are also on display. >> we don't always get it right. and learning comes from success as well as failures. >> reporter: the key question being what? >> why was there an an lalytica failure? that's why we spy. >> reporter: one exhibit comes with a warning. enhanced interrogation, a practice now banned by the u.s. government. >> we show the evolution from current day backwards throughout history. >> reporter: the colonel emphasized that spy craft is not for everyone. >> it is a quiet profession. our work is not lauded. we're happy working in the shadows. but in the case of the spy museum, we have a gift and that
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is the gift to educate the public on what this work is all about. >> reporter: and interestingly enough, everything on display here including this infinity room is not in position to convince people to want to join the world of espionage and surveillance. in fact, the lead curator i spoke with said it is active about seeing everything in this museum, the risks, the failures, people realize they do not want to become spies, she said she would look at that as a success because the world of deception, she says, is not for everyone. norah? >> i love that. thank you. that line, the deed is all, not the glory. >> another good place to visit in washington, d.c. >> thank you. michelle obama shares the power of big dreams in a candid conversation with gayle. ahead, the former first lady reveals how she bypassed people who doubted her. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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>> hey, michelle obama. >> all right. gayle got a big warm welcome when she was at michelle obama's sold out book tour. the two discussed the first lady's life in the white house and how one high school counselor didn't see her potential. >> you shouldn't want that much. don't dream that big. you know, it's part of the game of pow eric gayle. you know this. >> i know this. i know this very well. >> if they want the pow e they want us not to want it. so what better way to keep us small than to continue to underestimate us. >> wow. what a good point she makes there. michelle obama's memoir, "becoming" could turn out to be the best-selling autography
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ever, ever, ever. the book has sold more than 10 million copes since it came out in november. >> it's heading to 11 million people. i love mic this is a kpix5 news morning update. good morning, everyone. it is 8:25. i'm michelle griego. richmond police are investigating three separate shootings that happened overnight. four people are in the hospital this morning. the extent of the injuries are not clear but we are getting reports of one person was shot in the head. the ghost ship warehouse trial continues. testimony resumes at 9:30 this morning. master tenant derick almena and creative director max harris charged with 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter for the fire in december of 2016. and in just a few hours a big vote on the as' plans for a new waterfront ballpark in oakland. port commissioners voting on a
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basic framework today, lay out how the as want to lease the 50- acre site at howard terminal. news updates throughout the day on your favorite platform including our website kpix.com.. our website kpix.com..
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good morning here at 8:27. we have a traffic alert to tell you about and this is on the bay bridge. not in the westbound direction. it is in the eastbound direction. let's zoom into what i'm talking about right here. if you are headed in eastbound out of san francisco this morning right at bryant there is a big rig stalled. it is blocking three lanes, the three outside lanes as you're
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trying to get out of the city. all of that red in the eastbound span of the bay bridge. as a result we are also seeing some delays in the westbound direction as well as you're coming into san francisco, that's normal. but that backup in the eastbound direction is all the way past the bridge, pretty much down to the bayview district. coming across the richmond san rafael bridge we are seeing delays in the westbound direction, eastbound direction is looking good. here is the east -- excuse me, the westbound direction of the bay bridge at the toll plaza. it is backed up. seems to be moving along once you're through there. we are starting off the day with low clouds and areas of patchy fog, here is a live look with our charger island camera. as we head through the day clearing and afternoon sunshine. enjoy it. today will be the warmest and nicest day out of the week. big changes ahead. 62 in san francisco, 66 in oakland, 77 in san jose, 76 for concord and livermore. there we go with that cooldown beginning tomorrow. rain chances beginning wednesday through the workweek
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and into the weekend. ek and into the weekend.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. kgmb reports maui police are no longer searching for missing hiker amanda eller but will follow up on potential leads. volunteer searchers are refusing to give up. the 35-year-old was last seen wednesday on a trail in maui. it's feared she may be lost or injured. her family is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to her safe return. "the wall street journal" reports that hospitals rattled
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by cyber attacks are pushing medical device makers to improve security. they're conducting tests to determine vulnerabilities such as infusion pumps and biopsy imaging tables. as a result, they're demanding proprietary software information from manufacturers. some hospitals have canceled orders for devices that lack safety features. more than 150 million health records have been breached since 2009. the "washington post" reports an actress was crying when she found her show was renewed. people on social media accuse the actress of being tone deaf given how many struggle to make a living. she later said she had to give another project she was passionate about. she tweeted to say some made it
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worse. she said it's meaningful when you make the choice to believe women. the duke and the duchess of sussex shared their new baby's feet. meghan celebrated her first mother's day as a mom along with little archie's toes. the instagram read in part, paying a tribute to all mothers past, present, mothers-to-be and those lost yet remembered. and the flowers are portedly the favorite of late princess diana. the changing of the guard at the tomb of the unknown soldier is one of the oldest duties. they conduct over 6,000 services
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a yeardley. senator tom cotton gives us a look inside in his new book "sacred duty at arlington national cemetery. yts senator cotton, good to have you here. >> good go be with you. >> we're going to talk about the old guard in a bit, but first, happy birthday. >> thank you. >> birthday is it? >> 42. >> 42. >> how old do you feel? >> starting to get up there. >> security, there's a crazy man at the table. >> i will say this. i spent much of last year at arlington cemetery and many of those guarding are 19, 20 years old. i do feel a little old when i'm back at cemetery and back there with soldiers of the old guard. >> senator, i want to ask you about the trade negotiations going on right now. there's a study that says retaliatory efforts by china
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could end up hurting many farmers in your state. is president trump hurting the americans he promised to help? >> these tariffs are going to end up hurting the chinese and americans, i'll grnlt you that. i think it's going to hurt china more because they've been cheating for so long. there will be some sacrifice on the merns. but i would say the sacrifices are minimal compares to the fall ensoldiers. >> you can't compare those two. >> when i'm here and hear from farmers about the market, they also understand that china is a serious competitor of the united states and wants to displace us around the world and they look at sacrifices that soldiers, airmen and others make around the world. they hope to make those sacrifices to ensure our long-term pros conspiracity and security. >> why not tell them on the
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front end that it's part of this conflict as opposed to says what's not true. >> china will ultimately be paying a price to this because america may be shifting their consumption away from chinese products. you know, we have our candidates benefiting from these tariffs as well. in eastern arkansas, we have one of the largest steel production companies in the country. they're doing very well. again, i'm not going to say no one is going to sacrifice but they'll be a super power in the economic -- >> but in dollars and cents it seems to translate to around $700 per american family, which is a lot. is it worth that cost? >> if we remain the largest economy and super power, i would say it is worth that cost. they're willing to bear that short-term price. >> why not be straight with
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that. you have -- obviously walmart matters a lot in your state. largest retailer in the state. they say it's going to create a serious burden. people don't like politicians because sometimes they don't tell them what's coming. >> i don't know many farmers or ranchers in arkansas who are confused about what was going to happen here. >> really? >> they from the very beginning -- 200 years ago when they started farming in arkansas, they knew overseas markets would interfere. they also know we cannot continue to let china cheat as they have for 30 years. >> we've talked to farmers who seem to disagree with that. i'm curious about your definition of "short term." what does that mean? >> i hope sooner than later. the president said they started
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to have an agreement. i think it's the rye thing to do, hold china to their end of the bargain. i think a lot of people criticizing the tariffs nould would. >> you were a part of that. what was the hardest part of that training and being in that part of the service. >> performing funerals is a pressure packed job. it's also very humbling. he's a veteran, he served five overseas combat tours and he said about his time in arlington, i never felt pressure like this anywhere. that's because even though we might perform 20 to 30 funeral as day, over 100 a week, for that family, that is a once-in-a-lifetime moment. that is truly a no-fail zero
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defect mission. >> give people a sense of the amazing discipline. >> as i describe, soldiers spend hundreds of hours learning their craft, which is different than most of the army does, ironing their uniforms, shining their metals and their shoes. it's to show the last indelible image of honor to the family. i think most readers of "sacred duty" would be able to takeaway an inspiring story. it's an inspiring ethos that these soldiers in the old guard show for our nation's fallen. >> the time and care and respect that goes into it is really remark aboutle. you have one line. history lives inside the old iron gates. >> yes. every single day there are funerals, but history is being made as well. the day i turned in the
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manuscript is the day george h.w. bush passed away. i kind of lived with the old guard in real time. that's one of the rarest events they perform. it's also one of the highest steak stakes. that's why when i was there, they'll train to prepart for it. >> having watched it, it's the most amazing thing and such a testament. so glad you wrote this book. >> thank you, senator. >> thank you. it goes on sale tomorrow wherever you like to buy your books. >> actor jeff daniels says playing atticus finch in the broadway adaptation of "to kill a mockingbird" is a role of a lifetime. i'll say.
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man, that's a cool looking hot tub.
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guys, i've got the best job in tell vichlgs i'm going to make sure you know how important each one of you are to me. this isn't our control room. >> no. >> then screw it. >> he portrays a news anchor in
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aaron sorkin's "the newsroom." he stars as a small town lawyer atticus finch, the adaptation of the classic "to kill a mockingbird." it focuses on finch's defense of tom robinson, a black man wrongly accused of assaulting a white woman in 1930s. >> we have to show tom robinson justice in this courtroom. now, we can start gathering the animals two by two, because we'll be showing god's justice in a hurry. we can't go on like this, we know that. so let's hasten the change. let's hasten the end of the beginning. let's do it right now, in macon. let's begin by restoring this man to his family. let's begin with justice. >> that's just one of the reasons he was nominated for a
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tony. good morning, jeff daniels. good to have you with here. at kiticus finch was flawless. in this book, he's not so flawless. >> he's a human being. he wanted to take the stay you down. in the book it's scout looking up at the great father, and we wanted to get on eye level with him. we always took the approach he was a small town lawyer who got paid in vegetables at times. he handled band cases and foreclosures. the judge came to him one day and that's what changed his life. >> you called it the role of a lifetime. >> yeah. >> difficult role to play? >> no because i've been waiting for something like this forever. i've had great roles throughout my career, but the stars
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aligned. you've got sorkin writing it. bashir directing it, shubert, atticus lived. certainly in the first month of the run, people came to the show with a book against their chest going, please, don't ruin this, please, don't ruin this. it's beloved. so to get the chance to play that kind of hero, that kind of iconic guy, and then to pull him off and make him a human being where he has to change. he has to go through. he has to deal with his own beliefs. it's a really -- it kind of peels the layers back of atticus. >> atticus has these beliefs of everything that surrounds him. that's what makes him a hero it. feels so contemporary even
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though it was written in the 1930s snoochl sorkin did it so beautifully. it was made in the 1930s, but he did it for today. atticus follows everything he believes in. that's up for grabs now. >> the view is it ends up hurting people more. >> black characters back then did not have a voice. >> no. it's hard to say what cal person ya and atticus were brother and sister. they didn't do it in the book or the movie, but could that have zpifted, sure, but in the play she definitely has something to say, and she calls atticus out. she's the one who goes, wait a minute, hang on, you're wrong. >> nine tony nominations. i think "to kill a mockingbird" has been named the highest grows broadway play of all time. what is it you think about this
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cast that makes it such an incredible production? >> we -- it's hard to do a play eight time as week month after month after month. we're in our seventh month. there's a way to do it where i call it the mule on the trail. you're going down to the bottom of the grand canyon again and you're saying the speech, but you're really thinking about where you're going to eat. and there are people who look like that. but we keep it alive. we stay in the same lane, heading to the same place. we don't deviate. alive. if you throw it at me different today, i'll be like, oh, i'll be over here. let's do it. the audience feels a vibrancy and an urgency. it's a little less than we're going to go to you on broadway. we're going to go to you. instead it's here. it's here. you come on here, you come on
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stage with us and we pull you in so that you watch the movie, you read the book, you feel the play, and i think that's the big takeaway for mockingbird on broadway. people walk out changed, but they definitely are feeling something. >> they're thinking. >> i went to it alone and walked out like i had been hit by a train and insist everyone else in the family see it. to weep in the seats is an amazing kind of thing. where the audience can react like that, that's amazing. >> we hear the weeping. very annoying. shut up. we've got a job to do. >> when your name was called, it meant something. >> i tried to, but hi had to si there and think is my name going to be called or not.
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good morning, everyone. it is 8:55. richmond police are investigating three separate shootings that happened overnight. four people are in the hospital this morning. the extent of the injuries are not clear. we are getting reports that one person was shot in the head. students at fremont high school will hold a candlelight vigil for 60-year-old armando canales . he died saturday after a suspected drunk driver crashed into the car he was in on highway 17. a free street rally for all diehard san jose sharks fans head of game 2 tonight against
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the st. louis blues. the gate open up at 5:30. go to our website, www.kpix.com .
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wayne: season ten! hit it! - i'm taking the money! jonathan: it's a trip to sweden. big deal of the day! wayne: what's in the box? jonathan: what? tiffany: selfie. - oh, my god! wayne: smash for cash. $20,000. let's go. "let's make a deal" season ten, baby. 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. i need a couple to make a deal with me. who wants to make a deal right now? you guys right there, are you guys a couple? no? you could be. you guys, come over here. (cheers and applause)

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