tv CBS Overnight News CBS March 21, 2016 3:05am-4:00am EDT
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[knocks on door] cia is here to pick us up. any last words? 24381. whatever. [clears throat] pin? 24381. good to meet you, agent dearborn. she been sanitized? looks like you got you don't know the half of it. laskey, it's simmons. go see your pal morozov. i think he needs your help. who are you? where's morozov? exactly alled you here towhat i c talk about.
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you counted the money you got from morozov? you think he's been skimming? boss, i've known morozov my entire life. he values hr. laskey. you're a rookie, so i'm gonna let you off with a lesson this time. you need to learn the difference between knowing someone and trusting them. see, this kid i can trust. because he values hr? no. it's because he's scared of us. you got it? yeah. thanks for the lesson, boss. oh, that ain't the lesson. old man morozov made the mistake of pulling a gun when i called him out as a thief. there's a shovel in the backseat. 6 feet, kid.
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(man) cells one through three secure, sir. [door opens] hope the voice in your head knows what it's doing. that's gotta go. sundown, ottawa. left, right, left, right, one, two, three. you say the sweetest things. agent dearborn? nick breckenridge. chief interrogator. little late to be checking in a new asset. we're prepping all prisoners for transport. transport? we just got here. you know the drill, dearborn. we move these guys every 72 hours. you get to interrogate indefinitely. now, i need some info. [radio static] encrypted radios always acting up. name of operation?
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ottawa. transport authentication number? should have gotten it from the operative guarding the pickup site. stress was high on this one. must have forgot. you noc types think you can just come in here and ignore all kinds of protocol, don't you? no authentication number, no access. does anybody know how to-- left, right. left, right, one, two, three. [beeping, radio static stops] we use them all the time at the farm. give that to the intake guard at the next site. and next time, remember your damn authentication number. (reese) still searching
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keep looking, mr. reese. none of the books you've found so far match the code. the kitchen's clean. no luck here either. [sighs] all right, it's gotta be somewhere. [heater turns on] scavenger hunt. what? it-- it's a game that jason and i used to play when we were bored. we would steal something from each other. then we'd hide it in the house, except jason would always lose because he always chose the same place. the heating vent. care to brush up on your history, finch? the american revolution: a concise history. why am i notpris sured? let me see. i've located a copy online. it seems to match
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the code is based on. i'll start deciphering. great. sloan and i will-- [faint ringing] where's sloan? grab him! hurry, we're on the clock here. get out of here! (finch) mr. reese? [gunshots] mr. reese? mr. reese, are you all right? let's go. shots fired. he with th'se guy in the suit. (finch) mr. reese. collier. [gunshots] (finch) mr. reese, [sighs] it's collier. sloan's gone. and we have no way to track him. i'm afraid it gets worse. i've deciphered enough of the code to learn its purpose. it's a plan to kill jason greenfield tonight. greenfield? you can't keep moving me like this. merican! i have rights.
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of activists, got squeamish when the group turned violent, cut a deal with the feds in exchange for a new life, and got screwed over by them and stuck in here. answer me. [chuckles] we're on a bit so let's dispense with the temper tantrum. to answer your qn, i trojan horfbse of 2009, the null worm. that thing infected over 7 million computers worldwide in less than a week. if you designed the worm, ou must be then y able to tell me how-- a self-executing attachment rewrites the os to infect nearby bluth devicesetoo and spread wirelessly. that was a long time ago. i'm more inter ested in you, jason. well, jason doesn't exist anymore. those cia liars faked my death. it was supposed to be for my protection. in return,
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about the group. ind, they brought mestea to this mobile black site. and now, they can question me forever. must have gotten bad for you to reach out to people you don't trust. the group murdered someone... a data broker. and it's my fault. i'm the one who told vigilance about him in the first place. vigilance? that's their name. "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty." i said we should scare the bastard, but collier convinced the group that it was time for more... aggressive action. i'm not a killer. (breckenridge) transport's here. prepare to move out.
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why you're here. simple, jason. i'm here for you. [indistinct chatter] i'll be right along. i'm not letting this one out of my sight. [engine starts] so sloan's dead brother is really alive? (finch) yes, it seems jason greenfield turned himself in to the cia. and now, collier wants to kill him for being a traitor. precisely. according to the plan, the assassination of mr. greenfield is scheduled to take place within the hour. they're probably going to interrogate sloan on the way to their mission. so if we can find where they're going to kill greenfield, then we still have a chance to save them both. just give me
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an intersection downtown. i'm sending you the coordinates. i'm on my way. so you're his brother. jason said he had no family. what made you choose to look into him now? [sighs] none of your business. you know what? we members of vigilance even if however, into jason's life, you also dug into ours, which brings me to some rather bad news. we took a vote as to whether we could possi blylet you live, and i'm afraid it didn't go your way. my options at this point are limited, but what i can is a quick exchange of words followed by an even quicker death. need to know exactly ho i w much you know out our group and who abyou've told. let's start with those two men
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feds? nsa? i don't know, okay? i don't know why they're helping me. i don't know why they care. all i know is jason made a mistake falling in with you guys. and when he realized it and he tried to get out, you killed him for it. seems you've gotten ahead of things, mr. sloan. jason greenfield is very much alive. you didn't kill him? no. but we are about to. and you're gonna have a front-row seat. (man) we'rre.e he things are about to get a bit hectic. we'll have to continue this conversation later.
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[gunfire in distance] (dj shadow) one, two, three, four, five break down, baby [gunfire] listen to this, just listen to this just listen to this, just listen to this just listen to this, just listen to this gsoood to hear your voice. just listen to this, just listen to this [gunfire] [groans] time to go, jason. [men groaning] [gunfire]
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let's have the countdown jason? just listen to this, just listen to this [gunshots] [groans] just listen to this, just listen to this shaw. reese. gotta save somebody. know the feeling. hey, i saw somebody out there. tim sloan. do you know why he's here? is he okay? did you see a man heading his way? tall, nice suit? yeah. he'll be fine. your new identity and the pass code to a bank account with $2.5 million. go to cartagena, find a bar called sol azul in boca grande. ask for ruiz. who's he? i have no idea. now go. why--
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i'm just following orders, but my guess is you're necessary. one, two, three, four, five there she is. [pistol clicking] i guess a software omniscience isn't much help if you're out of bullets. all right, bitch. where's greenfield? hmm. y whare you smiling at us? i'm not smiling at you. [gunshots] i knew you'd come back for me. mission accomplished? absolutely. good. that's far enough, assuming you'd like mr. sloan to survive this encounter. peter collier.
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my name, one of 'em, but i can't say the same about you. i'm the guy you shot in the back, and i'm here to return the favor. well, before you do, perhaps you'd like to tell me how it is you manage to keep showing up at vigilance operations. i'm persistent. and energy and persistence conquer all things. benjamin franklin. you guys got a thing for the american revolution, don't you? that's true. in fact, it may soon be time for another one. forget it, collier. it's over. but only for one of us. you can take me, or you can save sloan. [gunshot] aah! [tires screech] finch, collier shot sloan in the femoral artery. we need help. there's an ambulance on the way, mr. reese. hang in there. you're gonna be all right.
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[sirens approaching] [line rings] (simmons) you learn your lesson, laskey? (laskey) 6 feet. i didn't skimp. how was your night, laskey? sleep good? [panting] my name is mikhail lesnichy. on the force. so hr is seeding the nypd with cops they know and cementing their deal with the russian mob in the process. what about that money you got from morozov? hr's stockpiling it. i don't know what for, but whatever it is,
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hmm. it gets worse than last night, you know. what's worse than burying a friend? (finch) good to see you out of the hospital, mr. sloan. you're looking well. i can't thank you guys enough, not just for saving me but for helping me find my brother, even if it was for a second. you helped us as much as we helped you. indeed, you've proven yourself to be quite a fine detective, one worthy of raymond chandler. they're packing up jason's stuff for auction today, so i figure i'd stop in and take one last look around. maybe find a remembrance? already have one. it suits you. good luck, mr. sloan. [cell phone rings] excuse me. hello?
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where are you? you wouldn't believe me if i told you. listen, i've managed to create a secure stream, so we can talk, but it'll only last 30 seconds or so, and... i just wanted to tell you thanks. those guys i got involved with, i thought i'd found a new family, but i should've known. you're my family. jason, i want you to know that i have something of yours, and i'm gonna hold on to it until next time. that sounds good, tim. you'll always be my brother. [cell phone beeps] we're gonna have to keep an eye on him. collier may try again. if vigilance wants a revolution, these may only be
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the machine appears to have sent two teams into the same battle with different goals. why keep us in the dark about root and shaw? speaking of which, have you figured o what to dout with root yet? (finch) there are more comfortable chairs, if you'd rather... not to mention a padded bench, which doubles as quite a comfortable bed, albeit a small one. and all within the proximity radius programmed into my lovely new ankle accessory. i found out the hard way what happens if i cross it. just making sure you have everything you need. well, there's no shortage
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that's for sure, harold. keeps the mind occupied. you know damn well who's supposed to be occupying my mind. i'm afraid that's out of the question. i suppose that even if i managed to get access to a wireless device, the faraday cage you've constructed in here would prevent me from communicating with her. your powers of deduction are as ever impeccable. and your choice of pronoun-- illuminating. well, if there's nothing else... you're going against the machine's wishes by keeping me here, harold. you're only gonna make her angry. can you imagine what a being that powerful will do when she's angry? how can you be so certain, ms. groves, that the machine does not wish you to be precisely
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washed 12 weeks ago and still smell like springtime? unstopables in-wash scent boosters the more you pour, the more scent you'll savor. toss it in before your clothes for luxurious scent up to 12 weeks unstopables by downy. america's best scent booster. bernie sanders is looking for a big comeback in tomorrow's nominating contest. sanders trails hillary clinton by a wide margin in the delegate count, but isn't giving up the ship. sanders spoke with john dickerson for "face the nation." >> senator, we looked at the math here for the contest going forward. it looks like you would have to win almost 60% of the remaining delegates. so what is your path to the nm nation? that is a big number? >> it is, but the states that are coming up just on tuesday.
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arizona, we are heading out west. to washington. we have alaska. we have hawaii, and we are heading to new york. we think the father forward is a prtty good path for us. clearly secretary clinton did very, very well. in the deep south. not a strong area for us. are you going to see us doing and by the way. i think people are going to polls. bernie sanders does better against donald trump than hillary clinton does. in fact in the last poll we were 18 points ahead of donald trump than secretary clinton. i think that will play a factor in the coming states. >> secretary clinton won in the illinois and that's not the deep south. >> here's the point as you know -- she did. and we won in michigan. end of the day if you look at michigan, illinois, missouri, we come out almost the same in terms of delegates. >> hillary clinton has 2 million more votes than you have. the theory of your campaign and
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movement, to create momentum, to gather people. more people behind her message than you. isn't that a threat to the, to the theory of the sanders' campaign? >> no, no, no, no. john, not at all. about is she did very well in the deep south. she creamed us in mississippi, alabama, south carolina. now i wish i didn't have to say this, but everything being equal, no democrat right now, i will is going to win those elections, those states in the general election. we have now won nine states. i think in a couple weeks you are going to see us win more states. i think as we head to the west coast, which is probably the most progressive part of america, the ideas that we are fighting for, dealing with the wealth inequality, a national health care system through medicare, for all, raising the
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i think the people in those states really are not going to be voting for a establishment politics and establishment economics they want real change. i think we are going to do well there. >> one last tactical question, senator. there has been a report that you might go to the convention. if you are behind in delegates try to flip the superdelegates to win through using superdelegates. is that a strategy you are looking at? >> the whole concept of super delegates is problematic. i would say in states where we have won you know by 20, 25 points, you know what i think it might be a good idea for superdelegates to listen to the i just talked to -- a person the other day. who said, you know what. i am going to listen to my state. if my state votes for you, bernie, you will have my vote. i think that i would hope that a lot of the superdelegates take that factor into consideration. >> so yes that is a strategy you are pursuing? >> well, to say to a superdelegate. bernie sanders won your state by
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might want to listen to your state. i think that is common sense. i think superdelegates should do that. >> if they didn't come from a state that you won, they shouldn't feel compelled to go for you? >> well that's, legally they have their own decision. to be made. they have their own right to make the decision. but i would argue that many of the superdelegates for them, what is most important as it is for me and secretary clinton by the way, is making sure that no republican occupies the white house. and if people conclude by the end of this campaign, if we have the energy, and an if, if we win a number of states. that's also an if. but if that its the factor and it appears that i am the stronger candidate against trump, i think you are going to see some superdelegates saying, you know what i like hillary clinton but i want to win this thing. bernie is our guy. >> it's been months since south carolina's republican senator lindsay graham dropped his bid
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since then he has been an unofficial spokesman for the republican party establishment, opposing both donald trump and ted cruz. well, graham was singing a different tune when he sat down to talk with john dickerson for "face the nation." >> you once said that choosing between trump and cruz is like the difference between being shot or poisoned. so, how is your health? >> you know, maybe they will find an anecdote for poisoning, hard once you are shot to get over it. the bottom line i believe donald trump would be an utter disaster for the republican party, destroy conservatism as we know it, we would get wiped out and trump candidacy. stool of conservatism. fiscal, social, strong national security. donald has a four legged stool because he is the donald. got to be bigger. economic populism, xenophobia, race baiting, and religious bigotry are the stool that he
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that's his campaign. that is not conservatism. ted cruz in my view is a real republican who i often disagree with. i've am supporting ted i think he is the best alternative to donald trump. john kasich is the most electable republican. i don't think he has a chance to win. at the convention, because it is an outsider year. john kasich is an insider. most delegates are looking for an outsider. i love john kasich. if he stays in the race or they don't coordinate the efforts between cruz and kasich, we're going to wind up giving the nomination to trump. >> you say an outsider year. your description of trump's campaign. a very popular campaign. people turning up to the rallies. he is getting the votes. >> 35% to 40%, where he is going to be. a lot of people believe that illegal immigration is a real problem. playing on their fears. he says most of them are rapists and drug dealers, they're not. heres why we are losing the hispanic vote.
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about your economic plan or ability to defend the nation if you are going to depart their grandmother. i'm in the party of family values. i like that. there are 11 million illegal immigrants. 60% here a decade. many have american children. american citizen, children and what will happen to republican friend if our position if they take their grandmother, member of the military, who is illegal. how do we get the person to vote for us if we will deport their grandmother when all she has done is violate the immigration laws. this is why we are getting killed with the hispanics. mr. trump has taken every problem we have had with the hispanics and poured gasoline on it. rid-x helps break down waste. avoid a septic disaster with rid-x. in a world that's trying to turn you into someone new... ...one hair color wants to help you keep on being you. nice'n easy. natural-looking color...
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a virginia man traveled to the middle east to fight for the islamic state remains in the custody of kurdish forces in northern iraq. he is telling his story on local tv. jeff pegues reports. >> where are you from? >> united states. >> reporter: mohammad jamal khweis is one of the few isis foreign fighters we know of to walk out of isis held territory alive. >> i didn't agree with their ideology. he is now a prisoner of the kurds and being interviewed by the fbi a world away from the washington d.c. suburb where he grew up in this townhouse. he says his parents emigrated
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territories. his father, a limo driver, says he has spoken to state department and the fbi about his son. >> i have nothing to say. khweis graduated from thomas edison high school in 2007. where friend describe him as a normal guy. >> he wasn't an outcast. or anything like that. >> he says growing up, mohammad jamal khweis was known as mo or mike. >> there wasn't anything that would lead me to believe that this was on the radar that he is going to go join isis. >> khweis did join isis investigators want to know how and why. u.s. authorities say in december of last year, khweis left baltimore washington international airport for england there, he traveled to amsterdam, met a woman that took him to turkey and crossed into syria. he says, a month later, he decided a month later life with isis wasn't for him. and fled. >> our daily life was basically
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about the religion for, about eight hours. >> it is not only foreign fighters looking to get away from the islamic state. in syria, holly williams spoke to a young man who fought for isis to be turned away by the group's dark side. he is treated like a dangerous criminal. and says he was trained to kill by isis. before being captured by kurdish soldiers. but mohammad is a frightened 18-year-old and asked us to hide his face for his mother's sake. she often told me to leave isis, he said. but i never obeyed her. he grew up in a muslim family in syria, but told us he knew very little about islam until he was recruited by an uncle and a village elder. they recited verses from the koran to explain that muslims must fight here, said.
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learn about islamic law. gradually i became convinced. mohammad seems less a committed extremist than simply naive. it doesn't lessen his crimes. but shows the that isis which relies on fighters who kill die for the cause, has a weakness. mohammad told us he began to lose faith in isis when he witnessed one of the group's many public executions. saw that? real islam? >> no, he said. it was horrific. i wish i had never seen it. he also told us that u.s. coalition air strikes are taking a heavy toll on isis. he and other fighters recently had their food allowance cut. they told us the air strikes are hitting their oil installations, he said. and they aren't making as much money as before. isis its under pressure because of the u.s. coalition air
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>> yes, he told us. a lot. >> and one of the finest foreign correspondents in the business has filed his last story. allen pizzey is now officially retired. scott pelley looks back on his long and distinguished career. >> allen pizzey, cbs news, east berlin. >> over four decades allen has brought the biggest stories in world to you. often risking this life as one of the premiere foreign correspondents of his generation. >> looks like they might have a chance of making a deal with the bosnian serbs. >> wars in iraq and the balkans. >> did you see them kill the people? >> yes. >> the fall of berlin wall. >> they were streaming across the wall within hours of the announcement. >> the fight against apartheid, the bombing of the u.s. marine barracks in beirut and election of the first pope from the americas. along the way, allen won just about every award there is and
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you did know there was bravery. the sweet 16 of the ncaa championship gets under way thursday in houston. so since you're thinking about basketball, we have an update on one of our most heart warming basketball stories ever. steve hartman found it "on the road." >> hey! >> how are you? >> reporter: not many high school basketball managers got a party on their behalf. especially not, ten years after graduation. >> it seems like just yesterday, a magical night back in 2006. coach pointed his finger at me. i stepped on to the court for the first time in my varsity career. [ applause ]
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ten years ago he fetched water and mop up other people's sweat at greece athena high school. in rochester, new york. for the last game of his senior year, the coach let jason, minutes. that's him going in. for a lay-up at most. but jmac had other ideas. he stepped outside of the three point line and drained it. and he was just getting started. [ cheers and applause ] >> you caught fire. >> just caught fire. i was hot as a pistol. >> reporter: jmac ended up shooting six three pointers. one right after the other. he that 20 points total. and each time the shot went in, his teammates and the crowd went a little crazier. [ cheers and applause ] his last basket, right at the buzzer, created total mayhem. [ cheers and applause ]
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jmac. i mean big things. >> the country was captivated by an amazing story on the basketball court. >> reporter: president george bush requested an audience with him. jmac co-authored a book about himself. and perhaps the biggest change of all. >> gave me confidence that i can do anything. >> reporter: after graduation, jmac became assistant coach at his old high school. his passion for the game hasn't faded a bit. his connection to the students as strong as ever. the only difference is that now, above it all, number 52 hangs
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captioning funded by cbs it's monday, march 21st, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." history in havana. president obama touches down in cuba, the first sitting american president to do so since 1928. his first message to cubans who waited decades for diplomacy. trump trump heads to washington today. the republican front-runner is
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