tv CBS This Morning CBS September 23, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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good morning. it is friday, september 23rd, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." new protests in charlotte overnight. demonstrators chant "we want the ta police shooting of a black man. hackers attack at least half a billion yahoo! accounts. the fbi is now investigating who is behind what could be the largest cyber breach in history. and only on "cbs this morning," oprah winfrey joins us from the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture before its grand opening. she will share her personal mission. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90
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>> our streets. >> who's streets? >> our streets. >> hands up? hell no. >> tensions remain high in charlotte. >> despite a curfew, demonstrators took to the streets for the third straight night. >> the family wants the police to release both of the videos that we saw today, and we want the public to draw their own conclusions. >> officer betty shelby is free on bond after being charged with manslaught i an unarmed black man in tulsa, oklahoma. >> nothing will bring back our father, our son, our brother. >> fbi agents are still waiting to speak with bombing suspect ahmad rahami. >> he remains in the hospital and is currently incapacitated. >> hillary clinton behind closed doors preparing for the debate. >> where is hillary today? they say she's been practicing for the debate. some people think she's slipping. >> the secret service is looking into whether hackers accessed
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of michelle obama. >> we take any reports about a cyber breach seriously. >> at least half a billion yahoo! accounts were hacked. the company says it believes a state-sponsored actor was behind the breach. >> major amounts of recent rainfall in the midwest. >> in utah, severe weather spawned a tornado and golf ball-sized hail. >> all that -- >> the dalai lama ridiculed the republican nominee. >> he's small. >> the rookie takes it home for the touchdown. >> a shutout >> and all that matters. >> six members of the cast of "the west wing" will campaign for hillary clinton. >> the people who are excited about this are the same people who are freaking out about their yahoo! e-mail getting hacked. >> on "cbs this morning." >> are you excited to be the first girl president? what happens if you become president, let's talk about trump. when he's elected president and kid rock becomes secretary of state, are you going to move to
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we should stay in touch. what's the best way to reach you, e-mail? >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is off so jeff glor is with us. good to have you. demonstrators in charlotte marched for a third straight night to protest a deadly police shooting in the city. at one point officers used ba people who blocked a highway. marchers ignored a midnight curfew ordered under the state of emergency and demanded to see video of the shooting. >> the latest demonstrations were mostly peaceful. david begnaud is in charlotte watching the protests. >> reporter: gayle, good morning. police decided to take a wait-and-see approach. the people who stayed were allowed to remain so long as they were peaceful. we had producers, camera
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the marchers last night and we never saw any violence. before the march started, the family of keith lamont scott was able to watch two of the police videos that we are told show the shooting. once they saw it, they made a public statement saying they want the public to see it. >> we want the tapes, we want the tapes. >> reporter: hundreds of protesters chanting "we want the tape" marched through charlotte downtown overnight. >> i have been doing this too damn long. this needs to be stopped. >> reporter: walking under a banner declaring resistance, these protesters kept the peace while setting out to disrupt normal life in the city. >> i fought for this damn country. i've got to come home to this. >> reporter: large crowds briefly blocked an interstate. police in riot gear pushed them back using pepper spray. the charlotte-mecklenburg police department is facing increasing pressure to release their
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death. >> we release it when we believe it is a compelling reason, but i'm not going to jeopardize the investigation. >> reporter: scott was shot tuesday afternoon outside of his apartment complex. police say the 43-year-old father of seven had a handgun. family attorney, justin bamburg. >> my understanding in talking with his family is that he did not own a gun. >> reporter: on thursday, scott's wife and family members watched police footage of the confrontation. they described what they saw in a statement. scdi approach or raise his hands at members of law enforcement at any time. when he was shot, his hands were by his side and he was slowly walking backwards. >> i can't stand with people who are not standing up. >> reporter: moves to join the protest. a minister was on the freeway when police began pepper spraying to dispense protesters. >> dr. king had to go through similar stuff.
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open your eyes, open your eyes, open your eyes. >> reporter: businesses that were vandalized by rioters two nights ago, just like the omni hotel behind me, have boarded up windows and are preparing for another night of protests. there's going to be a curfew tonight at midnight going into 6:00 a.m. saturday morning and that will happen every night until the state of emergency that is in effect right now is discontinued. >> david, thank you very much. the police officer involved in the shooting death of an unarmed turned herself in overnight. she shot and killed 40-year-old terence crutcher last week. 42-year-old officer betty shelby was charged with first-degree manslaughter yesterday. manuel bojorquez is outside the tulsa county jail with reaction from the victim's family. manuel, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. shelby was immediately released from the jail here after posting a $50,000 bond. the district attorney's decision
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case like this following demands for a transparent investigation. >> in the matter of the death of terence crutcher, i determined that the filing of the felony crime of manslaughter in the first degree against tulsa police officer betty shelby is warranted. >> reporter: tulsa officer betty shelby turned herself in to police less than a week after she shot and killed terence crutcher. >> shots fired! >> each of us at the end of our days will have to account for our own actions. >> reporter: shelbs shooting crutcher following his refusal to comply with her lawful orders. prosecutors say the defendant's fear resulted in her unreasonable actions. crutcher's twin sister is grateful for the decision but says it's not enough. >> we know the history of these cases. we know she's been charged, but then we get no convictions. we're demanding full prosecution. >> reporter: shelby was
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encountered crutcher's abandoned vehicle. video from a police helicopter shows crutcher walking toward his suv, hands in the air. >> this guy is still walking. >> reporter: according to an affidavit filed thursday, crutcher was not responding to any of officer shelby's commands to stop and reached in the driver's side front window. but lawyers for crutcher's family say images show that window was up. >> the prosecutor brought the case that he felt that he could get a conviction going to hold him to that standard. >> reporter: defense attorney scott wood says he's surprised how quickly the charge was handed down. >> what will her defense be? >> her defense will be that she was reasonably in fear for her life at the time she used deadly force. >> reporter: shelby could face a minimum of four years in prison if convicted. the funeral for terence crutcher is scheduled for tomorrow. >> manuel, thank you so much.
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investigating what may be the biggest hack ever. yahoo! announced yesterday that personal information associated with at least 500 million users was stolen. josh elliott of our streaming network cbsn shows us how it took about two years for the company to disclose the hack. >> good morning. the unprecedented breach is likely the largest of any single company's network ever. yahoo! says the information taken from some of those 500 million accounts may include names, e-mail telephone numbers, dates of birth and perhaps most important security questions and answers. now, this hack happened in late 2014. yahoo! is not saying why it took so long to alert its customers to the theft, but it believes a state-sponsored actor is behind this attack. the company has not named the country it thinks is involved but it's now working with the fbi. in a statement, the fbi told us, and i quote, the compromise of public and private sector
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we will continue to investigate and hold accountable those who pose a threat in cyberspace, ends quote. yahoo! is the third largest e-mail provider in the country with roughly one billion monthly users of their site. it is encouraging anyone who has not changed their e-mail password over the last two years to do so now. >> change the password. >> immediately. the fbi is looking into a cyber breach that exposed sensitive information about first lady michelle obama, the vice president and hillary clinton. thousands of e-mails were posted online from the personal e-mail account of a former white house contractor. the posts revealed travel details for vice president biden and hillary clinton. they also include what appears to be a scanned image of mrs. obama's passport. margaret brennan is here with the administration's response to that. margaret, good morning. >> good morning. well, this reported hack has
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secret service. it shines a light on just how common it is for white house staffers, secret service and clinton campaign workers to share sensitive information through their personal e-mail. >> we're aware of those media reports, and it is something that we're looking into but i don't have any specific information for you at this time. >> reporter: attorney general loretta lynch said federal investigators are working to determine the authenticity of documents posted on d.c. leaks.com, including what appears to be the passport image of first lady michelle obama and detailed travel plans of vice president joe biden, right down to his hotel room during a july trip to los angeles. >> certainly this is something that we're taking a close look at, as we do with any report of a cyber intrusion. >> reporter: d.c. leaks calls itself an anti-secrecy site but is expected to have links with russian hackers. last week it posted hacked
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the latest documents came from the personal g mail account of ian maluel. one leaked e-mail included a schedule for clinton's trip to the 2015 urban league conference in florida. it showed everything from her motorcade schedule to which hallways she would use at the event. >> our recommendation to white house staffers and to employees of the federal government, that theyho government e-mail for official government business. >> well, it's unclear whether the use of a personal g-mail account violated any policies because he was a contractor. he's one of hundreds of individuals over the last eight years who was hired on a short-term basis to assist in travel logistics. it's embarrassing, though. >> very embarrassing. it just makes me think it's just a matter of time before everybody is hacked.
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>> be very, very account. >> and why this stuff is in personal accounts, by the way. cbs news has learned that ahmad rahami may have checked out his targets before allegedly planting bombs in manhattan. rahami is still hospitalized four days after a shootout with police in new jersey. he is unconscious and hooked up to a breathing tube. there are new concerns about members of his family. jeff shows us what investigators are learning. >> good morning. investigators now believe rahami plot during the summer, buying bomb-making components, a gun and scoping out the chelsea neighborhood. investigators of vetting the accounts of witnesses who say they saw the 28-year-old in the area two days before the attack. investigators still do not know where ahmad rahami built the bombs, but they did find bomb residue at a location where rahami once lived.
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told investigators that he changed after a year-long trip to afghanistan in 2014. they said he became more religious and started distancing himself. >> i called the fbi two years ago. >> and what did you tell them? >> reporter: in an interview with "the new york times," his father said he warned federal agents in 2014 about some of his son's suspicious activities. al qaeda, taliban, he watches their videos, their poetry, he said. but the fbi told cbs news at no interviewing agents of any radicalization or alleged links to al qaeda, the taliban or their propaganda. other members of rahami's family may have also had pro-jihadist views. site intelligence group published facebook posts allegedly shared by rahami's sister. some quote anwar al awlaki. in other posts she appears to praise terrorists and use
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brotherhood. >> it seems like the family may have adopted some of the same viewpoints as he did, but again, it's too early to say if they were directly involved with the attack itself. >> reporter: police still want to speak with these two men. investigators describe them as witnesses who stumbled upon a pressure cooker bomb on 27th street on saturday. this surveillance video aired by nbc news new york shows the unidentified men removing the device and walking away with rahami's luggage. to determine whether rahami was conspiring with someone else to carry out the attack. the day of the bombs in seaside park, new jersey, and chelsea. investigators believe the 28-year-old covered a large amount of ground in a relatively short amount of time, suggesting there may be someone else helping him. new poll numbers show donald trump is gaining ground in key battleground states.
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clinton holds a seven-point lead in virginia. donald trump played the "rocky" theme as he campaigned near philadelphia for the second time in two weeks. he's had a packed campaign schedule while hillary clinton has taken time to get ready for the first presidential debate. trump took note of that yesterday. >> i have been all over the country. you probably noticed, right? where is hillary today? >> bothdi public events scheduled today ahead of monday's matchup. nancy cordes is tracking the preparation. >> the clinton campaign believes that this debate monday night will be the single most consequential event leading up to election day. she's spending four days off the campaign trail holed up with her top advisers and one mystery participant. >> debates are stupid. >> reporter: there's no shortage
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playing trump. >> and i will be elected. >> reporter: but the clinton campaign says the person playing him in debate prep is not a comedian, nor is it senator al franken, actor alec baldwin, strategist james carville or businessman mark cuban, all of whom were seen as likely suspects. finding the right stand-in isn't easy. secretary of state john kerry played his fellow massachusetts native, mitt romney, in president obama's 2012 prep.ge 2000. trump says he isn't having anyone play clinton because he doesn't want to overprepare. >> i've seen people do so much prep work that when they get out there they can't speak. >> clinton's running mate, tim kaine, said he and clinton have been trading debate tips, but more on style than substance. >> hillary clinton does not need to know one more fact. she is factually so far over any
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>> like athletes preparing for a game, trump and clinton are already doing a little trash talking. >> they say she's been practicing for the debate. some people think she's slipping. >> that was trump in pennsylvania last night. this was clinton on the satirical interview show "between two ferns." >> do you wonder what your opponent might be wearing? >> i assume he'll wear, you know, that red power tie. >> or maybe like a white tie. >> that's even more appropriate. >> clinton says she likes to do her homework so she's been poring over briefing books for several weeks. trump, on the other hand, says he's opting for more casual sunday prep sessions at his home or golf course. he says he's going to take his cues from clinton and will behave respectfully if she does. >> nancy, thank you so much. in our next half hour, a look at how to make a winning
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two former campaign operatives tell jan crawford why eye contact and endurance are important tools. >> like what your mom used to tell you as a little kid, look me in the eye and have a conversation. also ahead, did top military intelligence officials withhold important information from the president? cbs news investigates central command and why a negative
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by aarp, real possibilities. the smithsonian's newest museum is about to open after 100 years in the making. >> ahead, oprah winfrey joins us from the national museum of african-american history and culture. how she hopes it will jump start a dialogue. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this
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investigation into his suggestive texts. and on monday bill good morning happy friday. 7:26. i am chris mckinnon. barry burbank has a check of the forecast. >> mostly 60s. south of mass pike it's clear we have 50s this. but some of the clouds are starting to show up there. thicker clouds in northern massachusetts north war. showers for the most part are going across northern new here in southern new england late this afternoon and evening as the clouds thin we may go up to low and middle 80s. feels like fall this weekend. hi breana. >> reporter: a accident blobbing 128 south and woburn before exit 37 at 9 3. stop and go traffic from exit 41 at main street that accident on route 3 south in burlington has not cleared and neither has the accident in wilmington on 93 south. a busy morning north of the
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developing news in stoughton police are searching for three suspects right now after a teen was shot inside a cvs. a witness told police that the 18-year-old was standing in the check out line when three men walked in and started to argue with him and shot him. the victim was hit in the upper arm and shoulder area. but is expected to be okay. coming up on cbs this morning, the historical aspects of monday's presidential debate and why it will be different than all the others.
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mark zuckerberg, the ceo of facebook, and his wife have announced that they're planning to invest $3 billion with the goal of eliminating all disease in the world pby the end of the century. >> however they include whatever disease it is that makes my aunt think i want t saga. you're sick. >> i feel like, i feel like it probably started with mark zuckerberg saying i'm going to cure one disease and then justin timberlake was like, you know what's really cool? >> that was a pretty good imitation. after that i thought trevor noah made a good point. he said on the reel, a real shotout to mark zuckerberg and his wife, billionaires doing something to make the world a better place. that's the most important thing.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, donald trump and hillary clinton prepare for one of the most anticipated presidential debates in history. they say over 100 million people will watch this monday night. political strategists walk us through what it will take to win from the firsthand shake to the one-liners. plus the cbs news investigation into central command. sources say top intelligence officials altered assessments of iraq's security forces. ahead, jim axelrod looks into how a top general also blocked president obama. the first time to show you some of this morning's headlines. "the new york times" said federal officials subpoenaed records related to new allegations related to anthony weiner. he exchanged sexually explicit messages with a 15-year-old girl. the new york city police department is investigating. he resigned from congress five years ago in a sexting scandal. the stanford advocate reports on marriott finalizing its ak situation of starwood
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the $13 billion merger creates the world's largest hotel chain. it has more than a million rooms worldwide. marriott plans to combine the two companies' loyalty programs. that's good. "the wall street journal" has details of hillary clinton's estate tax plan. she proposes a 65% tax on the largest estates. overall, clinton would increase taxes by about $1.5 trillion in the next decade. tax and other proposals she announced would generate $260 billion over ten years. monday's first presidential debate between hillary clinton and donald trump could be one of the most watched events in tv history. analysts expect it to beat the record set in 1980 when 80 million americans watched jimmy carter and ronald reagan's only debate. monday's audience could even come close to the most watched sporting event in u.s. history.
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the 2015 super bowl. jan crawford has been learning how candidates get ready for primetime. jan, good morning. >> good morning. getting ready for a presidential debate usually involves hours locked in a hotel conference room. you're just trying to run through every possible scenario. so we set up our own kind of makeshift debate prep headquarters to talk to two veteran strategists about how it all works and what each candidate needs to do to win. before the first held a narrow lead. >> i don't want to cost jobs. >> after a debate where many saw the president as distant and disengaged, republican nominee mitt romney pulled ahead. >> you saw romney, who seemed to be sort of brimming with energy and upbeatness and ideas, and obama seeming to be unhappy to be there and sort of annoyed that he had to be there. >> republican strategist dan senor helped romney prepare for that debate.
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democratic strategist michael feldman who represented al gore's presidential run to find out what goes into a winning debate. >> of all the big moments in a campaign, this is the only one where the american people are judging both candidates side by side and next to each other. >> the best performers are the ones who say i'm not going to win or lose this debate on this detail or that detail, it's the general impression i make. >> in monday's debate between donald trump and hillary clinton, two candidates with historically high disapproval ratings, one strategy may involve showing a softer side. >> candidates to use self deprecating humor as a way to defy the caricature around them. reagan did it in '84. >> i am not going to exploit for political purposes by opponent's youth and inexperience. >> sometimes coming in with a line you've practiced can back fire. >> secretary clinton in 2008 had a prepared line that she delivered against at that time senator obama.
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someone else's speeches is not change you can believe in, it's change you can xerox. >> a couple of people beooed, i was awkward. >> to prepare, candidates often hold full-length mock debates in hotel conference rooms set up to replicate the actual stage and prepare for every move, even the handshake. >> watch the handshake at the beginning of the debate. taller candidates will spend more time trying to the handshake. i know this sounds ludicrous, but there's all this psychology behind who seems more in control of the handshake. >> replicating the physical space also helps prepare for how your opponent may use it. >> in 2000, vice president gore walked into the podium space of governor bush. >> and i believe i can. >> bush wasn't rattled. he wasn't sprurprised by it ande gave an expression in that many respects defined that debate.
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calmer, more presidential moments, trump is difficult to predict. >> there are certain subjects that set him off, there are certain words that set him off. >> such as? >> any time you talk about his wealth and what portion of his wealth has gone to charity. >> that happened during this republican primary debate in february. >> if he hasn't inherited $200 million do you know where donald trump would be right now? selling watches in manhattan. >> no, no, no. >> over nearly a dozen primary debates, trump also became not like a president, he's setting himself back so he's got to be practicing standing at a podium having a sort of default facial expression. >> also eye contact is really important. candidates practice eye contact with the moderator and the camera, because they're speaking to tens of millions of people at home. >> at the end of the debate if trump appears presidential and is not ralttled, then that's a victory for donald trump. >> if he can get through this debate looking like it's
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by side with her on the stage. >> and potential president of the united states -- >> he's won. >> for trump the challenge is to capitalize on clinton's vulnerabilities. >> his best lines of attacks are anything to accentuate her trustworthiness challenges and global disorder. >> and turn her experience into a weakness. >> an overwhelming number of the american people think the country is headed in the wrong direction. he has a huge advantage there. >> these strategists predict mnday's debate could change the >> it's a show of epic proportions. >> maybe unlike anything we've ever seen? >> yes. >> one thing that our experts how physically exhausting a 90-minute debate can be. trump has never participated in such a long debate against just one other candidate, and clinton, of course, she's recovering from that recent bout of pneumonia, so it is possible that fatigue could be a factor for both of them. >> jan, thank you. it seems like it's not only the
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also managing the expectations and it seems like the different -- already there's a different bar for each one of them about what constitutes success. >> but i love the little nougats from dan and mike. i never paid attention to the handshake or how they approach each other. now we have so many things to look out for. it's going to be very interesting. i think they'll both be ready in their own way on monday. >> i agree with you. and a reminder, you can watch monday night's debate right here on cbs. liov 9:00/8:00 central. central command staff are accused of distorting key information about the fight against isis. ahead on cbs news -- cbs news, rather, investigates why senior officers altered reports about the progress of iraq's security forces. and if you're heading out the door, you don't have to go alone. why? because you can take us along. watch us live through the cbs all access app. it's right there on your digital device. we're thinking you don't want to
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the opening of the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture. she's very excited about this. we'll be right back. ? it's a tangle of multiple symptoms. ? ? trintellix (vortioxetine) is a prescription medicine for depression. trintellix may start to untangle for me, trintellix made a difference. tell your healthcare professional right away if your depression worsens, or you have unusual changes in mood, behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. trintellix has not been studied in children. do not take with maois. tell your healthcare professional about your medications, including migraine, psychiatric and depression medications to avoid a potentially life-threatening condition.
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two federal investigations are under way at u.s. central command in tampa, florida. they are trying to get to the bottom of allegations that intelligence reports on the fight against isis were intentionally distorted. now a cbs news investigation reveals a top general also blocked information from getting to the president. jim axelrod has been looking into this. september, 2014, president obama paid a visit to u.s. central command at mcdill air force base in tampa for a briefing from general lloyd austin. among the topics, training and equipping the fragile iraqi security forces to stop the explosive growth of isis. the cost of the program, $1.2 billion. >> i just received a broiefing from general austin and met with
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representatives from more than 40 nations. it is a true team effort here at mcdill. >> reporter: but at the time, centcom's intelligence operation was anything but unified. sources tell cbs news critical assessments of the iraqi security forces were regularly being altered by top intelligence brass. words like slow and stalled changed to deliberate. flee and retreat changed to repositioned and relocad, a rosier picture in final reports delivered to general austin and his staff. but it didn't stop there. in one instance, major steven r. grove blocked a negative assessment of iraq's military from the president's daily brief. a top secret intelligence summary viewed only boy the president and his closest
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concluded iraqi security forces wouldn't be ready to retake mosul, iraq's second largest city, before the end of the year. in tampa, centcom's iraq analysts agreed. but according to sources, general grove ordered the assessment kept out of the president's brief until after his boss, general austin, testified to congress about the iraqis progress. >> isil is losing this fight. >> reporter: making theas an additional $715 million for the program. to stall the negative assessment from getting to the president, centcom's senior staff asked for revisions. >> we're about where we said we would be in the execution of our military campaign plan. >> reporter: and on march 3rd, austin told congress the train and equip strategy was working and that isis was on the run. >> the fact is that he can no longer do what he did at the outset, which is to seize and to
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crouch in iraq. >> reporter: last fall, after the pentagon began its investigation into allegations of intelligence manipulation -- >> i don't want intelligence shaded by politics. >> reporter: the president laid out his expectations that intelligence never be distorted. >> we can't make good policy unless we've got good, accurate, hard-headed, clear-eyed intelligence. >> reporter: cbs news has also learned after the general's office began its investigation, three months worth of the original unedited assessments went missing from centcom's shared server. general austin retired earlier this year but in a statement to cbs news says he never directed anyone at centcom to adjust or delay intelligence, nor would have tolerated such actions. his director of intelligence, general grove, declined to comment. he was rotated out of centcom
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the dalai lama do that. does he know he's on camera? you just think he's above that. >> people keep asking the questions, though. >> i think he would have another answer. that surprises me. >> did pablo picasso give his electrician works of art now valued at $100 million. bill whitaker talks to the electrician and the revolution that has stunned the art world. bill whitaker joins us with his "60 minutes" report. drated... ...day... ...after day. with hydrating hyaluronic acid, which retains up to 1000 times its weight... ...in water. this refreshing water gel... plumps skin cells with intense hydration and locks it in. for supple, hydrated skin that bounces back. hydro boost... from neutrogena?. see what's possible. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c.
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for the content of this advertising. good friday morning 7:56 i am chris mckinnon. we want to check in with bauery for the forecast. >> good morning. temperatures are going up a little bit but there's cloud cover in place right now. and it appears that you would think we might not warm up that much. but showers move across northern new ela temperatures going up to 80 to 84 today. cloudy to occasionally partly sunny. most showers will be a very late this afternoon and evening and a crisp cool fall weekend with temperatures mostly in the 60s. traffic and weather together breana. >> reporter: earlier accident in burlington on route 3 cleared. so has one in wilmington but we are dealing with a lot of backups from it. 39 south is backed up to 495 up top from a crash in wilmington at route 62 that's slowing you down 15 minutes.
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and it happened at 93. there's slight backup there as well. thanks very much. new overnight a civilian traffic officer working a construction detail in lexington was hit by a vehicle. this happened around lev:30 lft night at -- 11:30 last night. thankfully the vehicle was not going fast and the driver stayed at the scene. man is expected to be okay. we will see you in 30 minutes.
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one in eight women will face breast cancer. early detection can mean the difference between life and death. planned parenthood gives new hampshire women access to life saving cancer screenings. but ayotte voted to defund planned parenthood six times. why? because ayotte opposes a woman's right to choose. in her relentless effort to overturn roe v. wade, hurting new hampshire women. kelly ayotte: putting her personal interests ahead of your health care. independence usa pac is responsible
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narrator: over and over it's been their agenda: anything to defund planned parenthood. kelly ayotte and washington republicans voted 6 different times to defund planned parenthood. they're on a crusade to block services new hampshire women and families depend on: cancer screenings, basic women's healthcare. kelly ayotte and washington republicans have put defunding planned parenthood at the top of their agenda... and it's time for that to change. i'm maggie hassan
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good morning, it is friday, september 23rd, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead, including the opening tomorrow of the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and only on "cbs this morning," oprah winfrey. she's been working a long time to help get to this moment. we get to talk to her. but first here is today's "eye-opener" at 8:00. >> before the march started, the family of keith lamont scott was able to watch two of the police videos that we are told show the shooting. >> shelby was immediately released from the jail here after posting a $50,000 bond. >> the information taken may
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dates of birth and security questions and answers. >> this reported hack shines a light on how common it is for white house staffers and secret service and clinton campaign workers to share sensitive information through their personal e-mail. >> investigators now believe rahami ramped up his planning of the plot during the summer, buying bomb-making components, a gun and scoping out the chelsea neighborhood. >> the clinton campaign believes that this debate on monday night will be the single most to election day. >> if trump appears presidential and is not rattled, that's a victory. >> if he can get through this debate looking like it's appropriate for him to be side by side with her, he's won. >> media experts say monday night's presidential debate will have a super bowl-sized tv audience. yeah. of course the super bowl audience drinks for fun, but monday's audience will be
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>> gayle king with norah o'donnell and jeff glor. charlie rose is off today. crowds of protesters marched for a third night in charlotte, north carolina. this time demonstrations over the police killing of a black man were mostly peaceful. but at one point, some protesters blocked a major highway. police in riot gear dispersed them with batons, pepper balls, pepper spray and shields. dozens of marchers stayed out after midnight curfew but were not arrested. charlotte is still under a state of emergen the family of keith scott, the victim of the police shooting, was allowed to see video of the incident yesterday. they said it's impossible to see if there was anything in scott's hands at the time. police say scott was holding a gun. witnesses say he had a book. the family asked that the footage be released to the public immediately. the police officer who shot and killed a black man in tulsa, oklahoma, turned herself in overnight to face a manslaughter charge. 42-year-old officer betty shelby was released on $50,000 bond.
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terence crutcher last friday. video of the incident shows crutcher's hands in the air. he was unarmed. shelby's defense attorney told cbs news the officer was, quote, reasonably scared for her life at the time she used deadly force. crutcher's family is grateful for the decision to prosecute but says it's not justice without a conviction. an aide to hillary clinton says she spoke to charlotte's mayor yesterday and emphasized the need to come together here. donald trump said he spoke to north carolina's governor and campaigning in pennsylvania, trump said he'll work with mayors across the country to make cities safer and he partly blamed hillary clinton for the country's unrest. >> we must work with our police not against our police. they are great people and they do a great job. those peddling the narrative of cops as a racist force in our society, and this is a narrative
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my opponent. you see what she's saying and it's not good. share directly in the responsibility for the unrest that is afflicting our country. >> clinton said on tuesday, quote, we've got to do everything possible to improve policing, to go right at implicit bias. there are good, honorable, cool-headed police officers and we've got to have law enforcement respect communities and communities respect law enforcement because they have to work together. >> mar national correspondent for "the new york times" magazine and a cbs news political contributor. mark, good morning. >> hi, norah. >> interesting divergence in how they addressed this issue. >> i do think for donald trump to say that hillary clinton is nodding to the notion that all cops are racist is unfair, but it's consistent with the painting of the broad brush that we see consistently whenever there's a tragic incident in the course of this campaign. so, yeah, and hillary clinton
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she's trying to be to both sides and see this is an ongoing issue and clearly it's delicate. >> turning to the debate on monday night, how much is at stake here, mark? what does it say about the way they're each preparing on what we can expect from each candidate? >> i think there is always a tendency to overstate the importance of an event like this. i think that an event like this in this case is actually appropriately large. this is going to be an event that perhaps 100 million people impression a lot of people have not with these candidates because they are very, very well known but considering the race. >> you know what i think is important and there will finally be a discussion about real issues. >> we would hope. >> maybe. >> perhaps there will be judgments afterwards by people about, you know, the personality and other about the candidates but largely it's 90 minutes. they have to talk about substance. >> you would think. the sheer time, the sheer relative emptiness of the stage
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we saw during the primary will certainly ensure that these candidates are going to be called to talk about specifics and issues you would think. it's harder to hide, put it that way. >> the expectation game is very interesting heading in here, right? it was in jan's piece, rich lowry wrote a piece in politico saying trump can win by clearing a bar of acceptability but clinton has to take trump down or make a stronger case for herself. a, is that the case? b, what does it say about this ra >> and expectations? >> there's always an expectation setting going into a debate. they are kernels of truth in that. i think the hillary clinton campaign has pushed back very, very hard in the last few days over the notion that donald trump must clear a very minimal and low bar. i mean they are saying that, no, this is like -- this is the big leagues. you can't just say he has to stand up there and appear presidential for 90 minutes. there are larger forces here. but clearly people are going to -- a lot of people will judge
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criticism session. a lot of people will look at this and they're not going to be analyzing the tax policy. so it's obviously an expectation setting and we'll see -- >> i disagree with that. i think reporters may be. but i think issues like taxes and health care and education affect real people's lives, i really do. >> the clinton campaign hopes that you're right and i think that's what they're banking on. >> everybody i know will be watching. >> that's true. >> it isn't theater, by the way. to a >> there's absolutely an element of theater to this. >> mark leibovich, thank you so much. sunday on "face the nation" john dickerson talks with both vice presidential nominees. plus speaker of the house paul ryan and bernie sanders. that's a lineup next sunday morning here on "face the nation kwt " on cbs. the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture opens tomorrow. oprah will be here.
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one in eight women will face breast cancer. early detection can mean the difference between life and death. planned parenthood gives new hampshire women access to life saving cancer screenings. but ayotte voted to defund planned parenthood six times. why? because ayotte opposes a woman's right to choose. in her relentless effort to overturn roe v. wade, ayotte puts critical cancer screenings at risk, hurting new hampshire women. putting her personal interests ahead of your health care. independence usa pac is responsible
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president obama will attend a dedication ceremony tomorrow to open the smithsonian national museum of african-american last week we gave america the first live look inside the museum whose mantra is a people's journey, a nation's story. it holds an unsurpassed collection of african-american artifacts and one of the museum's earliest supporters is oprah, as in winfrey. she donated more than $20 million. i have to say she's the largest museum donor privately. she would never say it but i'll tell you. she's a member of the museum's council and we are pleased to have oprah joining us on the front lawn this morning.
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you saw it for the first time. last time you were there it was a construction site. i wanted to be with you to see what it was like for you. you must have had some moments, must have. >> well, i'm kind of glad you weren't here with me, gayle, because i would have definitely gone into the boohoo cry. i was literally doing everything i could to hold myself together because i was walking through with, you know, two of the great curators and i, on that first floor, looking at the story of how we came to be here, juxtaposed against european commerce and, wow, i was just trying to hold it together. everybody is walking around and wanting selfies, so it was emotional. i was like trying to -- yes, this is very lovely. but it is moving and profound. i'm just -- i'm actually a
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i'm so happy! >> the girl in the red dress. listen, at your house you have the framed documents of slaves, their names, their ages, the prices they were sold. so to be in that museum, what touches you most about the story of slavery? that's the one thing that i can't help but reflect on when i was there. >> well, i live with it because, as you know, one of my favorite poems from maya is the poem to our grandmothers, which speaks holds for us. and in that poem she says i come as one but i stand as 10,000. and for me and i think the members of the council, because this was a bipartisan effort. there were a team of us who sat through multiple, multiple meetings since 2004. last night i ran into ken chenault who is the driving
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linda johnson rice and dick parsons and of course lonnie bunch, who is -- you know, was our team leader. and i said, wow, all those meetings paid off! but what is so amazing to me is that that poem, i come as one but i stand as 10,000 actually has its own voice through this museum because the tens and tens and tens of thousands of people who represent the culture of african-american history are represented in this museum. it's profound. >> oprah, you said that voice, the voice, and lonnie bunch said that to us. there are 487 quotes on the wall, and one of them, idab. wells that reads the way to right wrong is to turn the light of truth upon them. >> yes. >> and we didn't get through all of the museum because it's so rich and there's so many stories
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love. >> well, ida b. wells has always been a shero of mine. and i could start crying right now but i don't want to. walking through -- >> oh, go ahead, oprah. >> no, really. >> i feel it. >> walking through the museum is like touching the face of the past that has allowed you to be who you are. and i just think that for all of america, this helps elevate the narrative o contribution to our country. i mean this is america's museum. and, you know, we wouldn't be here had not former president george w. bush said this museum needs to go on the mall. and it was a bipartisan congress that gave us $270 million and then said go out and raise the rest. and we, you know, headed by ken
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there were large donors, but it's the $25 and the $100 and the $15 and the alfred streep baptist church that gave a million dollars through all of their members that makes this really america's museum. >> i thought about that too, oprah. i thought it was over 100,000 people gave $25. it's the people's museum, more so than any other museum on the mall. >> and you always say you have to know your history in order to move forw important that people know it's not just an african-american museum. there is really something for everybody in that building. >> well, it emphasizes african-american history and culture and the contribution that african-americans have made, but obviously that did not happen alone. >> right. >> so it's about the cooperation between all of us that has
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here. i have to say that for years i've said our generation, my generation failed in passing on the story of who we were to the next generation. but we have been redeemed through this museum. the narrative has changed for the rest of the world forever as a result of what is here. >> oprah, it's jeff glor. so there is an auditorium named after you inside the museum well. as well as a set recreation of the first episode of "the oprah winfrey show." when people go into that auditorium, what do you hope they think about? >> well, first of all, it's very beautiful. >> if you do say so yourself, missy. >> yes, it's very beautiful. what i hope is that this will be
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and conversation that elevates who we are, where we've been and where we're going, as a people, as a culture, as a nation. so i think when i think about the kinds of conversations and concerts and art exposure that will happen in that theater, it makes me proud. >> me too, oprah. it's visually stunning inside and out. i'll see you this afternoon. nice job. thank you so much for getting up to be with us this morning. we really appreciate it. >> i'm a are you kidding? i'm that excited. the museum opens tomorrow and it's always free. >> the museum officially opens tomorrow. that thank you sign behind oprah's shoulder, they were thanking donors. there was a big party there last night so they were saying thank you, donors. we do, we say thank you. honoring a lifetime of laughs. mel brooks puts on a show as president obama honors him for his comedic work. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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kelly ayotte voted to block consumers from buying safe medicines from canada. and voted against lower cost generic drugs. kelly ayotte gets all that money from the big drug industry. hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions. when you take all that money it just changes you. kelly ayotte's not working for us. dscc is responsible for the content of this advertising. mel brooks once said to his writers on "blazing saddles," which is a great film, write anything you want because we'll never be heard from again. we will all be arrested for this movie. >> president obama awarded comedian mel brooks the national
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23 other recipients included berry gordy, audrey good friday morning it's 8:25 i am kate merrill. top stories in a minute but first the friday forecast with barry. >> good morning. it's rather cloudy out there in most locations he can september the new england south coast. middle 60s. hard to imagine it's going to be a warm but cloudiness will thin but we penetrating through later this morning into the afternoon while the showers to the north most of them going to the north some into southern new hampshire but will end and we will get more showers late this afternoon into massachusetts and southern now ham sure this evening and a crispy cool fall weekend 68 tomorrow and mix of clouds and sunshine. 64 to 68 on sunday. monday, traffic and weather together breana. >> reporter: good news an accident on 128 south at route
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wellesley just cleared. it was causing minor delays in the area-you can see red in the area. also good news the earlier accident on 128 south and woburn chaired and there's no backups. kate. thank you. developing news in stoughton police are searching for three suspects after teen was shot inside a cvs. witnesses told police the 18er ol was standing in the check outline when three men walked in and started to argue with him and shot him. the victim was hit in the upper arm expected to be okay. police are searching to are the driver of a four dore mercedes hit and killed a motorcyclist in lawrence. the terrible chain of event started when the motorcyclist hit two pedestrians on route 114 and then the motorcyclists was hit by car that didn't stop it's possible the driver didn't realize they he hit someonech the two -- they hit someone. the two pedestrians are expected to survive.
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i'm a public school teacher in massachusetts, and i've reviewed question 2. it will make public education even stronger, because question 2 would allow more access to public charter schools, so parents have more choices for their kids' education, and public charter schools don't take funds away from public education. in fact, question 2 will result in more funding for education in massachusetts.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." live pictures from washington, d.c., from the amazing museum. coming up in this half hour, cyber thieves have hacked the personal information of at least half a billion, half a billion with a b yahoo! accounts in what may the biggest data breach of its kind. dan ackerman is in our toyota green room giving out tips on what you need to worry about and who could be behind this attack. and bill whitaker of "60 minutes" is here with a preview of sunday's season preview. he speaks with the electrician of pablo picasso who says the artist gave him a treasure trove of paintings. ahead, why picasso's family
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says facebook vastly overestimated how much time users watched video ads on its platform. they admitted a flaw in its counting method. video viewing time may have been overestimated by 60% to 80%. marketers are upset their ads did not reach as many people as they thought. facebook plans to introduce a new measuring system. "the new york times" explains how climate change threatens coffee. crops more vulnerable to pests and disease. other researchers say rising temperatures will eventually make about half of the world's coffee farmland unsuitable for growing beans. as we reported earlier, yahoo! has an urgent message for users. go online immediately and change your password and security questions. it follows a massive hack of accounts. yahoo! believes information associated with at least 500 million user accounts was
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may be the biggest hack ever. dan ackerman from our partners at c-net is here. dan, what are we to make of this so far? >> yeah, this is a big number. when you hear 500 million, that's a lot of people but a lot of these are probably older accounts or deactivated accounts or duplicate accounts. how many times do you forget your user name and password and want to use yahoo! photos and just make a new account. so that 500 million is a big headline number but i wouldn't take that muo in 2014 and we're just hearing about that now. >> we hear about this a lot with big corporate hacks. if somebody goes in and steals some data, they don't leave any footprints that are too obvious and you don't find out about it until later when somebody tries to sell that information, bundle it and sell it on the black market. >> there's a lot of people who are just finding this out who have migrated over to g-mail or inbox over the years and a lot of people went back into their
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yahoo! accounts just yesterday and discovered some of these odd messages. >> i never had a yahoo! account. >> never? >> no. >> gayle? >> huh-uh. >> i should probably check it at some point, right? i mean to those people who used to have yahoo! accounts or still have one now, what else might we do now? >> that's exactly what i did. i hadn't used it in many, many years but i went in and changed my password. it suggested that i erase my security questions, those goofy questions, like what city did you have your honeymoon in. >> what's the name of your dog. that data was in this hack, some of it unencrypted and that stuff if somebody wants to social hack you, they can probably make a guess at it so just get rid of the questions. >> what's the purpose? >> it's just bulk data. if they have a password, user name and password combination that works -- >> who's they?
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state-sponsored group. that's a very broad umbrella. you can use that to paint a lot of people. a lot of countries, government groups and private groups work together. sometimes russians, chinese, you know, the guys doing the actual political hacks, they're not state employees in an office somewhere, they're shadowy private groups. >> anything we can do to avoid it? >> follow password 101. use a different password for every site and service. i hate to say it, but it's true. come up with a password formula so you cand passwords without making them too crazy. our password infrastructure is unsustainable. something has to change at some point in the future. we just can't handle this anymore. >> thank you, dan. on sunday, the season premiere of "60 minutes." bill whitaker brings us a story about pablo picasso's electrician and his wife who came forward with 271 never-before-seen pieces claiming they were a gift from the parent but was this trove
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>> daniel and pierre are a retired couple living in the south of france. back in 1971, he was an electrician hired by pablo picasso and his wife to fix their american-made stove. the picassos were so pleased they had him do other odd jobs on their properties, including installing burglar alarms. >> how would you describe the relationship? was it employee-employer? or did you have a >> translator: i believe that he had total trust in me, particularly because of my discretion. >> reporter: his discretion might be the only thing in this tale that isn't in dispute. as handyman, he had the run of picasso's houses for 15 years starting before and stretching beyond the artist's death in 1973. one day in the early 1970s, he
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>> translator: madame called me into the hallway and said come here, this is for you. she handed me a box. i said thank you, madame. i left and brought it back here. >> translator: there were plenty of drawings that were repeated. for example, there was the body of a horse without the head. the second part was only the head. >> reporter: danielle says in general she's not a big fan of picasso's art. don't know if the character is looking at me, not looking at me. the head is upside down, it's on the side. that's what made him famous. i'm not saying it's ugly, but i don't like it. >> wow. bill whitaker is here. now, she may not be a fan of the art, but the picasso family is not a big fan of them. what makes them think that they stole the pieces? >> well, the family says that
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employee, he might give that employee a picasso. he might even have given some of his family members a picasso. but 271 pieces valued at up to $100 million? the family just says that's impossible. >> maybe he was a really good electrician. >> a terrific electrician. >> so how does the family -- how does the couple justify getting a gift so large? >> the family says that they were that madame said she was a friend of picasso's wife at the time and he says he did work for picasso for a number of years and they just became very, very close friends and so this was a gift. >> and then they forgot about it? >> you forget about 271 picassos in your garage? >> go figure. as his wife was saying, she
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kno nose coming out of the side of the face, she didn't think it was anything worthwhile so they just put it in the garage. >> i hate when you give somebody a gift and they don't appreciate it. >> now it's going to be quite a garage sale now. bill whitaker, so great to see you. >> good to see you guys. so what does a trove of artwork valued at $100 million look like? well, tune in sunday to see the full report on "60 minutes." that's right here on cbs. >> and i want to know where do things stand now. tune in on sunday. this weekend's special broadcast of sunday morning celebrates charles osgood. >> it's been a great run. >> what's your problem? your watch stopped and you need the time? >> charles osgood, cbs news. >> including the last 22 years here on sunday morning. >> we'll be in the good hands of charles osgood.
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farewell. >> wow. we're going to remember charlie. don't forget, he will still be on cbs radio. ahead, anthony mason looks at the musical side of sunday morning's long-time everyone's needs are different. i've made sure i'm ready for an emergency. we made an emergency kit with water, canned foods, a flashlight, and important papers. emergencies can happen at anytime.
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access to life saving cancer screenings. but ayotte voted to defund planned parenthood six times. why? because ayotte opposes a woman's right to choose. in her relentless effort to overturn roe v. wade, ayotte puts critical cancer screenings at risk, hurting new hampshire women. kelly ayotte: putting her personal interests ahead of your health care. independence usa pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. oh, its captain chaos! let's see them handle flasoo what?! what about the flu! emergencies can happen at any time. download a preparedness checklist today.
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legend charles osgood will anchor cbs sunday morning for the very last time, single tear, for after two decades. he's known for his poetic way with words and sometimes he treats viewers to a performance or two on the piano or sings a few bars of a folksy song. anthony mason talked to charlie about his passion for music for this sunday's broadcast. it will be a celebration of his illustrious career, and here's a preview. >> reporter: for the past 22 years, sunday morning hasn't needed a house band. >> you know the song. ? you are my sunshine, my only sunshine ? >> reporter: we had charlie. he was his own accompanyist. even in his office you could catch charlie at the keyboard. >> you've been known to step
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time to time. >> yes, indeed. >> reorter: charlie, who owns three steinways, fell in love with music hearing his mother play piano at home. >> piano was your first instrument? >> yes. well, towards the end it was my first instrument. i started playing by ear before i started taking lessons. ? you are my sunshine, my only sunshine ? >> reporter: as host of "sunday morning" charlie was able to explore his ? >> anthony mason joins us at the table. >> how great to do that, play the organ at yankee statdium? >> so many people know him from sunday morning but you said there's so many cool things people don't know. >> in the musical world, did you know charlie had a top 40 hit in the '60s that he wrote?
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yep, he wrote the lyrics for it. >> what's the name? >> it's called "gallant man. " it was done by senator everett mckinley dirkson. and when he was in the army for a period of time when eisenhower was in walter reed army hospital, he was eisenhower's personal disk jockey. >> wow! >> he was employed to play songs for eisenhower while he was recuperating. >> a man of many talents. >> and a broadcasting career that stretches 60 years. there have been so many chapters and so many >> there is the broadcasting and then i've been lucky enough to be in the room when he's -- it's a magical moment to see him at that piano. >> well, i mean my view of charlie is i've always been a big broadcasting fan, as a kid i love great broadcasters, and he is one of the great broadcasters. i don't mean in a superficial way at all to say that i've always loved his voice. people say, you know, you have a twinkle in your eye. charlie has a twinkle in his
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>> yeah. >> that's such a good way to describe it. and the fact that we'll still get to hear him on the radio, but sunday is going to be a really big show. really big show. >> thank you, anthony. >> thank you very much. you can see the celebration of charles osgood's accomplishments this weekend on a very special edition of "sunday morning." where, anthony mason? >> on "sunday morning". >> on cbs.
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my prescription costs keep going up. it's more expensive every year. it would be a lot cheaper to buy my medication from canada. kelly ayotte voted to block consumers from buying safe medicines from canada. and voted against lower cost generic drugs. kelly ayotte gets all that money from the big drug industry. hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions. when you take all that money it just changes you. kelly ayotte's not working for us.
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always fun to have jeff glor sitting here. that will do it for us. we invite you to tune into the cbs evening news this evening. as we leave you, let's take a look back at all that mattered this week. it was a good week. have a good weekend. >> our streets. >> hundreds of demonstrators flooded charlotte over the
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national guard to move in. >> tensions rose, officers were hurt, vehicles were vandalized. >> the police officer involved in the shooting death of an unarmed black man in tulsa, oklahoma, turned herself in overnight. >> the district attorney's decision came relatively quickly for a case like this following demands for a transparent investigation. >> what authorities are learning about rahami is coming from evidence he allegedly left behind. >> what's your biggest worry or concern right now? >> that we get to the bottom of out if he did act alone. >> have you been able to talk to him? >> i can't get into that right now. >> yes, you can. >> how much does the debate really matter? >> we cover them a lot and go over every little thing. in the end they often don't matter. >> where will you be watching the debate monday night? >> probably at home or in a bunker somewhere. >> rome has drawn up a wish list of monuments to help protect. >> you look like something out of a movie.
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devices that aim to tell you if your luggage is coming to that baggage carousel near your view. >> what happens if you're like me and with your three kids and you leave your bag on the plane? >> as long as you don't leave the kids. >> that's right. >> a pioneer has to be a risk taker. >> you're going to go through some pretty rugged country. >> all of this has made this country, i think, a better place. >> one of the themes of the museum is making a way out of no way. it's like that drake song, started from the bottom, now >> i'm actually a dancing emoji today, i'm so happy! >> this is so exciting. >> being here or being the librarian? >> both. >> jeb exclamation point. >> were you sitting in my chair while i was away on vacation? >> charlie, it's good, but i am way, way, way too small to sit in that chair. >> i have to report some devastating news.
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gonna be this way. >> there is always one weird guy in the office but we don't have any here. >> really? >> speak for yourself. >> how is swagaliciousness achieved? >> as a person that has a lot of swag. if you don't know what swag is, you definitely don't have it. >> i wanted to be great, you know. that was all that mattered to me. >> what makes a good band? >> the band has to be at your fingertips. you've got to know how to arrange an entire show. how to start way up here and then take them way up there where people can't believe they have gone. >> anthony, your interview on sunday was so good. >> 67 on friday, he is. >> anthony, your interview on sunday was so good. i'm not going to let you ignore
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good friday morning 8:55 i am kate merrill with headlines in a minute but the forecastwith barey first. >> good morning. happy try. miel # 0s for most part. there are a couple exemptions a lot of cloud cover in place. it's not going to be a warm day but it look should thin out after the first batch moves by and a second batch appears. the second batch is a batch that's going to redevelop in northern massachusetts. late this afternoon early this evening that's when we will get the showers. the showers up across new hampshire maine ending this morning and we may get up to early 80s cool off by early this evening and it's fall like this weekend. 68 tomorrow and 64 sunday and 68 on monday and partly cloudy
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out in worcester this is northbound on route 122. that doesn't show up on the maps but it's west of 209 a suv rolled over into a pole. so stay off the section of the route. kate the. thanks new overnight a civilian traffic officer working on a construction detail in lex hington was hit by a vehicle around 11:30 at fallen road and pleasant street. thankfully the vehicle was going very fast and the driver stayed to get help. man went to the hospital with a leg injury. extreme drought conditions are causing private wells to dry up. one town is getting through ittogether. elation hair salson is offeringfree hair washes. a high school and ymca are offering showers to the public.
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with major league place ball playoffs urned the corner he tickets are on sale starting at noon buy tickets for any american league wild card and division series that might be played at fenway but you can only buy them online. tickets range from 50 to $91-- 1 dr $195. get news weather and traffic on cbsboston.com.
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one in eight women will face breast cancer. early detection can mean the difference between life and death. planned parenthood gives new hampshire womenmen access to life saving cancer screenings. but ayotte voted to defund planned parenthood six times. why? because ayotte opposes a woman's right to choose. in her relentless effort to overturn roe v. wade, ayotte puts critical cancer screenings at risk,
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>> judge tanya: your mother passed away, and you were hospitalized for depression. she gives you her card so she can get some medicine. >> announcer: her friend's worst day became her payday. >> she copied my card. >> judge tanya: $10,000. >> i didn't think it was a big deal. >> announcer: "hot bench." >> judge tanya: stay on this path, you will end up in handcuffs. >> announcer: judge tanya acker. judge larry bakman. judge patricia dimango. three judges. three opinions. one verdict. >> judge patricia: we've reached our decision. >> announcer: in a court of law, it's called a "hot bench." 20-year-old siani robinson is suing her former friend, 19-year-old brianna key-ransom, for making unauthorized charges on her debit card. >> judge patricia: all right. thank you, everyone. please be seated. sir, please sit. >> sonia: your honor, this is case number 72, robinson vs. key-ransom. >> judge tanya: thank you,
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