tv CBS This Morning CBS February 20, 2016 9:00am-11:00am EST
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saw in this episode.arge cash payments before repair work is done. if you suspect a scam let us know. amanda: you might be a target but you don't have . captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's february 20th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning: primary push and the countdown to caucus. with two contests to be decided today, the candidates try to
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voters.ng the keys to crack the code. the justice department offers a gunman's cell phone. she changed american literature. a look being backat the legacy of harper lee. and saving the planet by drinking beer! is turning unwanted bread into a beloved we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> so it's crunch time, folks. it's crunch time. >> this election matters!ay for republicans in south carolina. >> jeb bush getting help from mom. >> jeb is one of my four favori caucus saturday in nevada. >> thank you! >> so let's go caucus. >> the big question in vegas is, lady tomorrow? or will luck be a cranky old man
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>> a funeral mass will be held for the late justice antoninhis morning. last week, he was found dead. he was 79. harper lee, the author of "to kill a mockingbird" died in oe, alabama. she was 89. >> pity does not extend so far. >> see what is happening in city lived up to its nickname today. gusty winds 70 miles an hour sent debris flying from two >> daytona. christopher bell! bell would walk away from this crash. >> all that. >> virgin galactic is back in thompany just unveiled its new spaceship. >> and all that matters. >> goal! jones fires it down the ice and scores! >> well, i bet you if you ask planned this. >> yeah, right he did!
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"the big noise" and you'll hear thatturday session. our top story this morning. a double kos dose to the race in the white house.rimary in south carolina and democratic caucuses today in nevada. a new poll shows senator ted cruz closing in on donald trump there will hand him a second win. >> the rest of the republicans are just hoping to keep their a good showing. major garrett spoke with the front-runner and he's in charleston south carolina, this morning. good morning, major.ing. we interviewed donald trump back stage before a noon rally in myrtle beach, the day before a primary trump believes could propel him to the republican on the other side of the curtain, a crowd of more than 5,000 waited and trump said he h those issues and the people who came to see him. >> i tell it straight. i tell it like it is and maybe why i'm doing so well. back. i think people want straightness today.
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response to our question, can you promise voters you will never lie to them? >> i on would be very, veryd just to say i don't lie. > reporter: it's been a day. where do things stand between you and pope francis? >> i heard he made thecomment this morning and i was honored by it and i think he is a terrific person. it's about illegal immigration. if we don't have a border, we have no >> reporter: trump no longer refers to the holy father -- ity. >> i think he was in a severe as the media let it be known, because i saw his statement somewhat later. but this morning, he was so nicereciated it. >> reporter: we also asked about trump's frequent claim he opposed the iraq war before it started. allble comments sew show that didn't happen until
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karl rove called that a ication. >> i don't think karl rove has said anything about me. he is an incompetent person. >> reporter: the rest of the gop field is scrambling and bashing the d trump has shown no interest in anybody other than himself. >> it's easy to say you want to make america great again. that on a baseball cap. >> reporter: marco rubio, trailing trump and cruz, campaigned with south carolina governor nikki haley andr tim scott. >> there he is! marco rubio!kasich, gaining momentum here after a second place finish in new hampshire, met voters where they >> yeah, come on, right here. >> reporter: trump predicted victory here and said when other republicans drop out, he will be there to scoop up the votes. >> they always say the field they add up 100% of everybody. i'm going to get a lot of those
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>> reporter: trump also told us crowds he draws is an inspiration but also a burden. burdensome in this sense. he knows many of the people whengiven up on politics and expecting him to accomplish things other politicians haven't. trump says he feels the treasure but, will, quote, people down. >> major, thank you. in nevada, democrats are holding caucuses today and the outcome could be a squeaker. the latest clinton and bernie sanders are neck and neck. clinton barely beat sanders in iowa and thumped by voters in new hampshire. nancy cordes has the latest. running out in nevada, clinton courted union workers in las vegas. >> i didn't say, my goodness, workers are being mistreated. >> reporter: while sanders stumped in rural nevada. >> let us go forward together. will be the first test of their appeal
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nevada is more than a quarter inton has tried to blunt sanders momentum here by portraying him as one-dimensional, focused only on income and equality.nk of secretary clinton calling you a single-issue candidate? >> well, obviously, she has not been listening to my hour and a half speech where i go over about 15 or 20>> reporter: both have campaigned here with one eye on the larger south carolina primary and democrats hold a week from today. >> she worked a justice in south carolina. exposed races in alabama schools. >> reporter: clinton released a new ad friday narrated by morgan freeman and won the backing of south carolina's james clyburn. >> i believe the future of the democratic party and the united l be best served with the experiences and
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>> reportr: clyburn is a long time clinton backer but had been planning to remain neutral in the primary. he changed his mind after d her in new hampshire and caught up to her in the polls here. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm nancy cordes, in las vegas. joining us now with insightsy's double-header is lauren fox, a reporter for the political website talking points. what has happenedary clinton had an early lead there and bernie sanders didn't open an office until october and now things have tightened up. >> certainly what we are seeing the rest of the country as hillary clinton has started campaigning. bernie sanders is gaining a lot of momentum with young people and he is starting to reallywith latino voters who are key demographicemocrats especially. i think bernie sanders coming off of a win in new hampshire and has momentum and keep moving with that. as hillary clinton wins or loses in
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close win in nevada, she has to move toally that has to be where her firewall is and where she definitively wins and be the leader in this race. >> you use the magic word is an important part of this. what do you think happens in south carolina depending on this outcome? >> well, i think that if bernie sanders starts to do well with t we see tonight he does well among young people and latino voters then maybe some of the black voters give him a closer look. what we have seen is hillary clinton really has a lock on minority voters in south carolina so far.o change if bernie sanders does well in nevada. >> nevada is such a different race, right? it's a 24-hour cycle. >> it is a long slog the caucus process works when you're going out and you're knocking doors and you're trying to convince people to stand in line for a long period of time, it's hard. you know? it's a low situation. and that does tend to benefit someone like hillary clinton, so tonight might be close. polls might show it being maybe
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actually be given the we expect. >> in the south carolina race, we had trump butting heads with the pope. do you think that will have an >> i don't think it will. with evangelicals in south carolina i don't think it would have the impact than if he was moving through the northeast right now.d trump is going head-to-head with anybody and he did start to soften his stance but i still think it was n his campaign showing how willing he is to go head-to-head with others. >> we have been watching this second place spot. they are going head-to-head.are this far along? it seems like it's shifting from cruz and rubio. >> i think the narrow field, not even just cruz and rubio andn new hampshire i think this is a large field and why we are starting to see the volatility we are seeing but this is crucial for cruz or rubio and set up the race who isg on trump moving forward.
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for jeb bush at this point? >> i think a make or break moment for him. he sayst of money in resources and spending a lot of money in advertising in south carolina and this has to be the moment he shows he could break through. nk you so much. >> thank you. i appreciate it. on "face the nation" tomorrow morning, john kasichlatest on the reports in the gop primary in south carolina and the democratic caucuses in nevada. funeral services set this n for supreme court justice antonin scalia. the funeral mass will be held at the basilica of the national shrine of the immaculateon. jan crawford is there. >> reporter: good morning. you know, who days of public mourning for justice scalia at the supreme court. the lines stretched around the block late into the night as
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their respects. arrived at the court for a final time. with his former law clerks there to see him up the steps of the for 30 years. his family looking on. waiting inside the great hall were his fellow justices. >> my brothers and >> reporter: the service was breven and brief and moving. his son paul led the the family flanked the casket. the justices and their spouses stoodces etched in grief. none of the eight justices have served on the court than the larger than life scalia. his sudden death will up-end theand some of its decisions. as the president gets ready to nominate his successor he took time away from politics friday his respects with the first lady.
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the great hall to stand before a painting of scalia.fternoon two of the leading candidates to replace scalia, patricia mallett and sri srinivasan attended. the court divided 4-4. its future hanging in the balance. a family without its patriarch. now father paul, will lead the mass here for the funeral. justice clarence thomas will do a reading. he will be the only justice to jan, thank you. in a case that could reach supreme court, apple continues to fight orders to unlock the f the san bernardino killers. the justice department now says apple could keep or destroy the software they would create to
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apple has until friday to decide. a legal fight has reached the presidential cam as axelrod reports. >> reporter: the battle over access to the san bernardino shooters' cell phone is far from an isolated case.d.a.'s office says it's investigating cases involving 175 apple products with encryption similar torook's phone from homicide to child sexual base. manhattan's d.a. >> it is very difficult to f crime that we cannot get the evidence that may identify the individual
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designer has decided that they know better. >> reporter: apple's ceo tim cook says he is fighting the order to device away past the iphone'stem to keep his consumers safe. >> the reality is if you put a back door in, that back door is for everybody. >> reporter: john miller is ner of the nypd. he says apple could develop a code to break into the phone genetic the information it needs and then destroy it.k says i'm doing this for the safety of my customers meaning we have an impregnable how many people who died on the floor in san bernardino and paris had iphones in their pocket as they were killed by the they are tim cook's customers too. >> reporter: a senior executive told cbs news, the following.tion
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mike morello is the former number two at the cia.ebody who currently works for the cia or the n sa who could do what the le to do? >> there has been so much advance in the last year, 18 months in the ability to protect information and these kind of devices, that the government haslen behind in its capabilities. >> reporter: the next chapter in the legal battle in this case will unfold march 22nd, when a arguments from both sides in a federal court in california.e plains of the midwest are cleaning up from the damage from strong winds. 60-mile-per-hour winds battered chicago on friday and causing debris to fly off of a building. office buildings were evacuated and cars and trucks were damageded but no injuries were reported. high winds andrass fires cross parts
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miles burned. residents were asked tohomes and one firefighter was injured. fiji is in the cross-hairs of cyclone winston. fiji the residents are warned to stay indoors and airline service has been suspended minister said he is thinking some are not taking the warning seriously. the book "name of the author has died. humberto eco has decide. he talked philosophy at the university of bolognay. eco was 84 years old. harperthursday night in her sleep at the age of
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president obama was a huge fan and so was his predecessor. >> reporter: when president bush middle of freedom in 2007ee was the author of "to kill a mockingbird." set in obama, a story seen through the eyes of young scoutose father defends a black man falsely accused of raping a white woman. >> what happened to you on the 1st of last year? >> reporter: she grew up in monroe, alabama, as shed on wqxr radio in 1964. >> nobody had any money. we didn't have many toys to plays that they lived in our imagination. >> reporter: that was the last extended interview lee ever
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>> she is the most private woman i've ever ter: friend wayne flint said lee's next project was helping her neighbor, truman te, research a kansas murder for his 1966 book. >> i think you can make a very good case for the fact there would be no "in cold blood" wereesearch she did. >> reporter: her only other novel appeared suddenly last year "go set a watchman" took her back to the top of the best all harper lee wanted, she said, was to be a chronicler of small town southern life. i want to be is a jane austen of south alabama.e became what many say is the towering american novel of the 21st century and one of the most widely taught books in american schools.f american schools have had it in their curriculum. >> i read it. a wonderful book. >> really wonderful book. some of the morning's headlines from around
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new york times two other inmates became known as the angola three for their decades long confinement in penitentiary in angola. their cases drew condemnation s groups. the times in london reports david cameron met with his cabinet this morning to endorse a deal that will keep britain inion. he is expected to introduce a referendum for voters to decide. he says the uk is better off being in the eu after a brussels on friday but he faces skepticism from his party. they are shaken by immigration . the star ledger of newark, new jersey, reports new jersey taxpayers have paid more than
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christie's traffic jam investigation. two of the governor's former allies have pleaded not guilty t they org straight the scheme to close lanes on a bridge as political payback. presidential campaign earlier this month. >> i was looking at this bill. 2.3 million to afirm. i would like to know exactly what that is. pop star lost her bid after claiming their toper abused her. a judge in new york says she has to honor her deal and pointed en an option to work with another producer. she is accused her producer dr. luke raping her and browbeating her to lose weight.ever been charged. entertainment weekly says comedy fans were treated to a double-header last night. 35 years,
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returned to stand-up comedy by opening up for jerry seinfeld.ff his ten-minute set joking never lose a bet to jerry seinfeld. last time he did stand-up was a while! fi coming up, a judge tells theaffluenza teen who killed four people and got probation and fled to mexico, he'll face trial as an adult. it's illegal to bet ons of sports in nevada and now other states want in on the action.
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>> pretty texas judge ruled that ethan couch, the so-called affluenza teen, will face justice as an adult after he turns 19 in april.s couch could face jail time for a drunk driving crash that killed four people. >> ethan couch is accused of violating probation by fleeing with his mother to mexico lastcember. the crash happened when he was 16 years old. the case grabbed national headlines after couch avoided jail time when his defense coddled upbringing left him without a sense of right or wrong. as david begnaud reports, his victims are still the consequences. >> reporter: for marie a maria, every moment she cares for her son sergio, she feels pain. the 18-year-old was left a er riding in a truck driven by ethan couch who crashed the vehicle into another stranded vehicle, limas was thrown out. >> it's not easy to see sergio e was a player, a
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now, you see him in one place. it's not r: outings are rare but liamas wanted ethan couch to see him in a wheelchair so she took him to couch's hearing.er son. >> can you try to smile and tell them that no matter what happens, you're still here, you still got dreams of playing soccer, man?eporter: it appeared sergio lifted his leg. the family insists he was trying to speak for himself. >> i just want him back! i don't care about re about anything. i just want my son back. >> reporter: ethan couch is now being held in solitary confinement for his own safetyere at the county jail in texas. the judge said ever since couch was moved from the juvenile justice system to the adult of what he did to those people seem more real to him. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm david begnaud,
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ransom. a california hospital is the most recent victim of cyber criminals who edical news in our morning rounds. including a new report on sleep that shows 1 in 3 americans are just not getting enough l tell you about the health risks. plus, jon lapook and about reading in a book club could help you live longer.
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it is time now for "morning cbs news chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook and cbs news contributor dr. holly phillips. zikasts say more research need to be done. jon looked at what expectant mothers need to know about the >> reporter: 30-year-old jessica is expecting twins in april and getting a blood test for zika virus, something she had never heard of a month ago. >> the zika element of anxiety. this my first pregnancy, i feel very anxious about a lot of things. >> reporter: last month, she and her husband drew took a vacationnowing it had just been added to a cdc list of places with zika transmission. then a friend sent her this textss, have you heard about zika? i don't want to scare you, but
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linked with microcephaly, babies born with abnormally small brain and those have lifelong medical problems. th patients are panicked. >> i think a lot of patients are very concerned that they could contract zika virus here in the united states. we d in the continental united states who have actually contracted the virus here. >> reporter: zika virus remains in the blood of an infected about a week. the cdc says based on current evidence of previous zika e a risk of birth defect for a future pregnancy. and men who live in or have traveled to a country with a zika outbreak should abstain condoms during sex with pregnant women. >> is there a chance that these mosquitoes could come to the uniteds what so many people are fearing. >> the virus they say will come
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the mosquitoes are already here. the qots are in florida and the south and in the panhandle. most experts i've spoken to think it's almost inevitable that the zikae into the united states probably in the south and why it's so important that we have control efforts to eradicate the breeding grounds right now and do it now so we can prevent it. new sleep research from the cdc may not surprise some of ourewers this morning. a report finds more than one-third of american adults areep on a regular basis. the cdc recommends adults get seven hours of sleep each night. holly, who are the most sleep-deprived among us? >>trengths of this survey was so many people were involved. right? more than 400,000 across the u.s.
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that were at the highest risk of not getting nonhispanic get thatnt. >> i'm shocked at why. the wonderful things you think of there. are there other factor that lead to the deficit? >> sure. ec and even marital status. we could see links and patterns . people who are employed, who have a higher education level, college or above, and are
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who are unemployed, lessre divorced, separated or widowed. these are simply associations in partners. we can't say that if you areployed that makes you sleep less or if you sleep less that raises your risks of being unemployed. i think from a big public health of these things are important. it helps health care to identify who needs sleep the most and identify people employers and help with education and focusing people on the amount of sleep we need. >> how are we affected by a lack of sleep, jon? >> we used didn't get a good night's sleep you were tired and you were tired and need to recharge your batteries and so many things happen when we are sleeping. we are repairing oursystem and if you don't get enough sleep you have increased chance of infection and colds.ave the risk of
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insufficient sleep. a lot of things are happening when you sleep. >> what do you tell your patients who sleeping? >> energy, fatigue, hence, getting good sleep is really a big focus of both my research and my practice.ortant thing can you do is to establish sleep hygiene hygiene. a group of habits you use every time you go to bed.rtant, go to bed and wake up at the same time every day. even on weekends. try not to make the difference hour. that helps to keep your cycles regular. create what we call a sleep oom should be cool, about 67 degrees, dark, quiet, minimal disturbances, if you can. perhaps most importantly, day and age, turn off all of your electronic devices. anything that has a light. that means cell phones, he tv set. we are starting to understand
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can affect thes secretion from the brain and slows it down and makes it harder for us to fall asleep. turn the devices off and keep them off overnight. too many people are awakened by their cell phone. another new study suggests a new key to a longer life. this one might even be fun. the study showed membership in aup after retirement like a book club or church group is linked to a longer life span. researchers say the health o regular exercise. >> i am not surprised by this. dan around the world where people live longer and one of the things they all had in common belonging. we know it can decrease the risk of dementia just being in contact with other peopleship it's so important in way wend that you can't measure scientifically. >> a lot of research shows somehow retirement can be bad
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and wehat the workplace provides which is a social environment as well. if you're not work to create a side of work can have health benefits. >> as we always say, call your parents!ou, doctors, so much. ahead the future of sports gambling. how states are sue looking for a nd how it could change big-time sports. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." know how you earn the title ... world's best mom? by starting each day with a perfectly balanced mug of... i've got this.pmom! to be on top of your mom game...vnailed it!ch. you need a balanced coffee you can drink throughout the day. good girl. brew a smooth for a taste that's not too
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with the basketball's march madness less than a month away, las vegas is gearing up for some action. last year, gamblers in nevada where sportsl, placed an estimated $240 million on bets on the tournaments. could other states see a piece of that action? a court battle jersey against the ncaa and major pro sports league could determine just that. a federal court heard the case this week. this from mike mccarthy, reporter and columnist for "sporting news" and covers the business of sports. >> good morning. vents states like new jersey from having legal sports betting? >> a 25-year-old federal law that outlaws legalized sports betting ands allowed to do it with the primary one nevada. new jersey chaled lenged this by passing its own law and the o make them imply.
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what is the argument? >> game fixing and tony soprano will lean on a referee or a player will throw a game. this is a worry. game fixing scandals through the years. when you see how little money nds. some college kids are bought for a couple of thousand dollars or a free car. >> right. at the same time, these leagues fantasy leagues essentially which is another form of betting, isn't it? >> it's getting lonely up on % that moral high ground. are against sports betting are actually investing in daily fantasy sports. they seem very similar to me. >> what exactly is new jersey's why do they feel they should not be included? u
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themselves and get the excitement around sports madness and we can do it in atlantic city and rebuild tlnth city atlantic city? >> there is a split among the ranks in the lead. adam silver has comeange things on a federal basis? >> adam silver is very forward thinking. he has been out there saying that legalized sports betting would be better. and he has a good point.r have the mob controlling sports betting or rather have the government? also, everybody wants revenue. this would be a new revenue stream for the would be especially new revenue stream to the states. >> at present, is there any regulatory in place or is this all operating as a black market regulation? >> the federal law is in place that basically bans it everywhere, except nevada and three other states where it's d to horse racing tracks. but if this law is overturned or
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passes a new law, we could see ng all around the country. >> so what do you think is going to happen in new jersey? >> it's a tough one. there was real heavyweights ng on wednesday. it seemed like the judges were pretty skeptical. so i think new jersey has an ct there to be a decision within six months. >> do you think ultimately a turnaround on this issue? >> i do think so. right and i think sports petting is inevitable and too many people are betting on sports and to be made. >> mike mccarthy, thanks so much. coming up, u.s. presidents may or may not be outstanding, but these presidents certainly are. they arestanding standing on a field. we will tell you about it coming up on "cbs this morning:
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>> the winner is the great but you probably have never seen this. 43 presidents standing tall in the middle of a virginia field. and how they got there is aning tale. the giant heads were originally part of president's park, an outdoor museum in nearby when the park went bust in '10 the presidential busts were set to be destroyed. that's when this man howard in and moving the nearly 800,000-pound sculptures to his nearby farm. l! >> reporter: right now they are just a unique personal collection, hankins hopes to find washington and the other former heads of state a new >> something that will attract the kids and get them to learn some history and what the country is really all about! >> you could see there a lot of them are not in there is something interesting
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back of his head missing, you know? people with their noses gone. >> i love them sitting in that st looks like a krob he yield crop he yielded. >> i like it the way it is. might be spooky at night!, mexico's deadly and ruthless drug gangs. the courageous new documentary called "cartel land" takes you inside the desperate fight to
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into the race to space. more than a year after a tragic crash, the space tourism company has a brand-new how about a foaming mug full of bread? we will take you to a london brewery that is using fresh o make its ale. a double-header in the race to the white house. republican voters in south c voters in nevada caucuses will make their presidential choices today. donald trump has the lead in a new poll ahead of today's republican primary. but the survey shows senator ted cruz closing in on trump. >> major garrett is in interviewed donald trump yesterday. he makes a lot of bold claims. did he talk about how he thinks he would get things done where there is so much gridlock inon? >> reporter: yes, we asked him about what his bedeviled most american president? the fact you're the most rld
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get things done rapidly. and congress can warning you andw moving. trump said i've dealt with politicians my entire life and i always get what i want. i said can you give me an is one. there are trillions of dollars of corporate assets, part offshore in american because es don't want to pay high corporatecome taxes. a man who overpromises on the campaign trail which it comes to presidential power and the speed they can be used trump is, again, >> major what is at stake for everyone notam trump in would certainly be a big move for his campaign. he has been organized in the state for many months, spending
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ilers, bow row calls and television ads. if he finishes a strong second he primaries with something. marco rubio wants to finish close to ted cruz to continue to say i'm an establishment or pragmatic republican and for jeb bush, if he does not finish in that top three, this could be the end of his campaign. maybe not immediately but down the road. john kasich just wants tons and since a week ago, they were about 1%, 2% in the poll and anything in the high single digits would be a good move for john major, thank you. on the democratic side, nevada. new poll shows candidates hillary clinton and bernie caucuses. while sanders was a victor in the hamp primary.as vegas on friday, clinton spoke about taking action on immigration. >> i will immediately begin working on the priority want the
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away, and immigration reform will be among those issues. >> senator sanders spoke about are concerned about income and equality. >> they should be concerned. in america today, people should not be working for nine or ten bucks an the democratic primary in south carolina will be held next saturday. the republican caucuses in nevada are tuesday.s in nevada can head to the caucuses with more reading material from hillary clinton's tenure as secrthe state department rah ha has released 500 more documents from her e-mail account. as classified at the time it was sent. the obama administration is expecting to finish making clinton's e-mails public9th, the day before the super tuesday primaries. bernie sanders' campaign confirms that an ar tif photo
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half a century ago. the arrest in 1963 took place at a civil rights protest when sanders was a student at the ago. the photo seems to support sanders' claim he was an activist for civil rights when he was young. the then 21-year-old sanders was charged with resisting arrest. the store said he was found guilty and fined $25. the funeral for supreme court justice antonin scalia is rning in washington. the service will be a mass at the national shrine of the immaculate cbs news chief correspondent jan crawford is there. >> reporter: thousands of people are expected to come to the funeral later this morning, ustices and the vice president. two days of kind of public official mourning started yesterday at the supreme court as scalia arrived atstitution he has served for 30 years for a final time. his son, the father paul scalia,
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court's great hall. all of the justices, their spouses were there. and you could just see the grief oney have never served on this court without the larger than life scalia. now later in the afternoon, the president and first lady came by to pay their respects. the president met withmbersscalia's family but not attending the funeral today. as i said, the vice president and jill biden will attend here today instead.l scalia, scalia's son, will also be leading the mass here. the justices and retired justices, they will be here.ce thomas,
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preventing additional lead pipe corrosion has not been completed and flint officials had no immediate ccess its own database. >> here to explain how it all worked and why it's worrying other institutions on who could be vulnerable is ryan of proof point, a leading data protection company. how were these hackers able to access the hospital? >> a simple three-step e-mail comes in. it purr purports to be maybe an vice you need to pay and everyone is worried they haven't paid their bills. it might be a package
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something shipped to you. and they always click on that. there will be an attachment to that e-mail is usually something like a word document and o be working with day in and day out. by clicking on that word document it pops up enable content yellow bar. if you click on that that is theis over! it begins to lock your files within a key that only the attackers, the cyber criminals have.'re notified that you need to pay this ransom typically in a currency like a bit coin to get your files back. ave said no patient or employee information was at risk. do you believe that, to start with? and, you know, what is to prevent these people fromal records? >> really nothing is to prevent them from doing that because they already had all of the access they needed on the the only reason they wouldn't have stolen information is because it didn't serve their purposes. if their purpose was solely to ransom.
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now i imagine the hospital is using forensic expertise on their own or outside party or not. >> the sad truth is we have all become accustomed to these hacks. i think what makes this nerve wracking is thatal. do you think they were targeted? is there a potential for hackers to want that personal sensitive information and to be able to hack into hospital files?tely. medical records are one of the most prized commodities on the identity. >> why? >> medical fraud is lucrative. it's hard to change a health record after the fact. is easy to change. >> why did the hospital decide to pay the ransom? was that the right choice? >> it was the easy choice. i wouldn't say it's the right en you pay this ransom you're funneling money to potentially organized crime and we have seen
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operations like usingime and ransomware and that is a questionable moral decision to make. that said, they had a duty to their patients and they needed these files. it affected actual system so they might have decided to pay the ransom to provide care to their patients. >> was this hospital attacked k? >> i wouldn't say it was random. what we have seen over the past week or so is massive, massive what we call e-mail campaigns. which we saw 11 million e-mails and we see a lot of the world's business e-mail but we don't see it all. campaign is going to catch a broad variety of organizations in its net. so it wouldn't say it was randomly targeted, but it was a et going on over the last couple of weeks
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cartel in mexico. [ speaking in foreign language ] "cartel land" is nominated for an oscar and just refed a prestigious award for documentary film.ns us now. matt, good morning. i don't want to say unprecedented access. you had scary access. how did you get in so so much coverage of the drug world and media and glorified in tv shows and movies. i wanted to put a human face on that subject and not talk about t in the middle of the action. so, you know, i reach out to the leaders of these two vigilante groupsk you trust -- thank you trust and spent live time down there.
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>> i thought i would be down there one or two weeks and it turned into nine months. at first, i thought a simple story of good versus evil of citizens rises up against the cartel and, slowly, over time, they became ever more blurry lines. n the film toward the end that, in fact, what looked to be the good guys, a group of mexicans who crer own militia group to patrol the area, they get sort of infected? >> yeah. i think, unfortunately, what we see in the film, without giving the movie, you know, those who are fighting evil. they sort of cross a path and they created this power vacuum and within this genuine distrust of government also. it helps you understand the narrative more so of the people
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>> yeah. when i first mexico i was struck by the suffering of the people down there living in this lawless world. a world in which government institutions have failed. this movement rose up is the government is failing to provide basic safety and security and allowing the cartels to operate with >> you also look at an american militia group on this side of the border in arizona. what sort of similarities did you see between the two?his movie are two men. the leaders of these two groups, tim kneeler on the u.s. side and manuel side and both 55 and both believe the government has failed them and they both, quote/unquote, taken the law in their own hands to believe in and the circumstances are quite different. mexico the violence is real and visceral. hundreds of thousand plus people killed and 25 disappeared since 2007. in arizona that violence is not
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fear that these mexican dug lords will seek their way across our border. >> how did yf detached? some scenes in this movie you're watching somebody get interrogated at gun point. there shouldhould i get involved or record this and it must have been tricky trert for you. >> it was terrifying for me. i'm not a war reporter and nevertion like this before but the film led me into pretty intense shootouts and meth labs in the dark desert nightorture and places i never imagine being in. one scene i'm in the back of a car as a man is getting h a gun possess his head. as a human being all you want to do is stop and grab that gun and stop the madness but my job was not there to police.ould have been dangerous and stupid to intervene and broken all sorts of journalistic lines as well. my job was to document and i
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>> one of the mexican subjects in the film ultimately says you can't stop the cartel. do you come to believe that is true?think, unfortunately, this cycle will continue and we see that very vividly in this film. i wish hi a different answer to but, you know, i think the elephant in the room is america's appetite for drugs. is a demand to fordrugs here and supply of drugs coming from mexico and - south america. with that the violence. it's more complicated than that obviou have failed policy on the u.s. side and guns and money that we are sending south, you know, corrupt government and institutions in mexico. base of all this is america's appetite for drugs. >> a thought provoking film and i can see why it's winning so good luck at the oscars. "cartel land" is now available
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back in the space tourism race. richard branson's off again replacing the one lost in a tragic crash. a look at the future of getting you out of this world is coming up next."cbs this morning: saturday." jane likes to mix things up. that' s why she loves new light & fit greek non-fat yogurt mousse. t' s her new 80 calorie obsession. light & fit feel free to enjoy. next item is a genuine "name your price" tool. this highly sought-after device from progressive
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private space travel, helping s become astronauts. >> together, we can make space accessible in a way that only has been dreamt of before now. and by doing that, we bring positive change to life on earth. >> reporter: virgin galactic founder richard branson's er was christianed friday at the star-studded event. unlike space x and blue origin testing. branson is focused on tourism and the shuttle is designed to blast from this airplane and blast into and 50 miles above earth passengers will be able to experience weightlessness. seven down deposits of $250,000 to reserve their seat. >> inside this space and cabin, hearts and minds will be transformed by the unique touches those who step away from earth's bands.
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time with their own eyes and new r: amid the celebration, the event also took a somber tone as the company addressed the deadly test flight in 2014.ation revealed the pilot unlocked part of the re-entry system too early. the company says the new ship has more fail-safes topilot error. branson says he questioned continuing the program after the crash, but felt that it was too important to walk away. >> what a great testament this spaceshipbe achieved against any background, when true team work, great skill, and pride are combined with a common purpose.r: for "cbs this morning: saturday," carter evans, los angeles. i'm not surprised to hear how many people are signing up with the n with that price tag. a lot of money but it's an extraordinary experience if it happens. >> you would go, wouldn't you? >> i don't know!
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>> they are trying to prevent own away and turning it into beer. johnathan vigliotti reports from london. >> here is the brewery. >> reporter: inside a craft brewery in east london's ood old-fashioned beer is paired up with another classic ingredient -- bread. >> beer is described as liquid beer is made our grains and yeast and baked rather than bread is made out of grains and swain and his partner trisstram stuart each getting a e for bread. each bottle contains one heel of bread. you know, the last slice of the loaf no one ever eats?dwich makers toss tons of fresh heels away which got stuart thinking. >> they were throwing away
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the way we are doing it, that is 13,000 bottles of beer that could come out of that factory every single day! >> breaking>> reporter: stuart is a global food waste activist. his organization feedback draws attention to the growing problem. ood goes to waste every year. bread is with one of the worst offenders and in the uk along 44% of good and now that waste is going to good use. smells like beer. swain took us on a tour of his brew house to tell me how toast moment the fresh bread arrives and collected and weighed and direct from sandwich shop kitchens. after boiling the kills any bacteria. >> like a really hot hot tub. >> yes. >> reporter: the recipe of bread hops and malt and yeast takes days to fermentts conducted along the way. i can drink it?
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very reporter: yuck! that's a bad beer! toast takes six days to fully inal product goes down much smoother. >> very early in the morning, it's still very nice. >> reporter: so it hits traditional beer. once it settles in, you taste the bread. all i want to do is drink beer for breakfast >> reporter: beer and bread.f the proceeds going directly to stuart's organization. >> we have had interests from peru, switzerland, republic, iceland. this works in so many different cultures. you have a culture thatd and one that drink beer
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why. dreaming up new ideas. >> we want to kick off aaft revolution and at the same time kicking off a food revolution. >> reporter: a message in a bottle served up, one slice time. all i want to do is drink beer for breakfast >> johnathan vigliotti, cbs i like that sentiment drinking beer for breakfast. >> a neat name -- toast!
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in gillespie has a deep love of all things southern and especially the food he grew you. some of his earliest memories is stove in his granny's kitchen and watching her kick.is way to becoming the award winning chef he is today. >> he is now chef and owner of two of georgia's hottest restaurants gun showal and released his second cookbook "pure pork awesomeness." he is named a semifinalist this week in the category for the third time. we are thrilled to welcome kevin gillespie to "the dish."e when he read that! >> the name came out, when it came out, i didn't a name. i went on a long awesomeness of pork and people
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i created awesomeness and it's written down somewh pork shoulder? >> yes. glazed in coca-cola. my mom loves that! >> wow! >> exactly. i had to do it for her. yeah, absolutely. we have on the dish? >> so on the left here, we have some cashage dumplings and stuffed with farmmething i grew up with. glas glazed vegetables and creamy grits this delicious beverage this morning. >> that is what we are here for. we call this peach party liquor on which basically means we have tea and put a bunch of moonshine in it. you are familiar with moonshine? >> it goes down really smooth. >> the problem it goes down too actually, the last time i drank a bunch of this, i got shot withou declared your intention to be a chef when you were 7?
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>> it is! what is crazy when i told people i want to be a chef, no one wasying chef when i was 7. i don't know where i got that from. i proclaimed to my parents that is what i wanted to do. i think i watched too many pbs time. they supported it and took me to the cia on vacation that year so i could see what being a chef looked like. irst chef i think that could have been a nuclear engineer. you were excepted at m.i.t. and full ride and it had to be difficult to say no and do this. >> it was challenging. my father was an engineer and i think myme to follow that path. a lot of pressure to go to school, especially that regal. i quickly realized who facts about m.i.t. if i went there i would be thet person at m.i.t. and the coolest. i wasn't prepared for that eventuality so cooking made sense to me at the time.
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bit of guilt from making that decision? >> there was a lot of pressure and i think self-induced up until thist was my responsibility to break the cycle. no one in pie my family had gone to college, muchless graduated and people looked at me to make that said my intellect was going to waste in not going to a university. i always approached my career i was letting my brain help me to nd writing books was a natural outlet and building restaurants that kind of make you think about things. >> your restaurant are so i have not been to gun show. how did you come up with the concept? >> the idea for gun show is one entirely too much pomp and circumstance in our industry. i didn't like the direction that the food world was going in and i wanted a restaurant where ally connect with the guests themselves. rather than having that
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not the person who made the dish themselves and it becomes a personal experience. the gun show model just happened frankly because we couldn't figure out any other way for people to keep kitchen throughout the night and able on serve anybody. now it's eight different chefs. joey ward who has been with me a runs gun show for me. you see the person who created the dish and they come to you cook it and prep it and serve it to you as well. >> this dish lives up to the pork awesomeness. as i get your signature on dish, if you have to have a meal with a real or not a real person, who would it be?as to be homer simpson. who else would enjoy a giant table full of food and he seems like a pretty fun guy to me. >> i think he would enjoy it!would. absolutely.
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