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tv   Today  NBC  March 6, 2016 8:00am-9:01am EST

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while its extended release medicine lasts for 12 hours. try delsym®. good morning. split decision. donald trump, ted cruz and bernie sanders each winning two states on super saturday, while a disappointing showing for marco rubio has his republican rival suggesting it is time for a two-man race. >> marco rubio had a very, very bad night. and personally i would call for him to drop out of the race. >> "snl" also weighing in, taking aim at the gop front-runner. >> i mean, everyone loves me, racists, other racists, people who didn't even know they were racists. >> this morning, where the roller coaster campaign goes from here. super soaker. at least one person is dead as el nino fueled storms hammer california and that
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the country this week. we'll tell you what to expect. breaking this morning, reports that nfl superstar peyton manning will announce his retirement tomorrow as we head into the next chapter fresh off that super bowl win with the denver broncos. and polar plunge. from fallon to von to gaga and now dreyer. dylan gets ready for a chilly dip this morning in chicago. why she'll be freezing for a reason today, sunday, march 6th, 2016. >> announcer: from nbc news, this is "today," live from studio 1a in rockefeller plaza. >> welcome to "today" on this sunday morning, i'm erica hill. >> i'm craig melvin alongside sheinelle jones. dylan dreyer in chicago for the annual polar plunge for special olympics. we're going do that live on television this morning. should be interesting. >> that
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chilly. our top story this morning, though, is the presidential race and those super saturday results. >> donald trump notching two more big wins in the south, kentucky and louisiana. ted cruz, strong showing as well taking kansas and maine. here is where the gop delegate count stands. donald trump 392. 305 for cruz. 130 for marco rubio. and 35 for ohio governor john kasich. >> as for the democrats, bernie sanders won more states than hillary clinton, he took kansas and nebraska. clinton meantime took louisiana . despite her two second place finishes, clinton extended her substantial lead. she's almost halfway to that total number needed to secure the democratic nomination. >> we have complete coverage of both races beginning with nbc's gabe gutierrez. gabe, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump seemed almost unstoppable after super tuesday, now, ted cruz is picking up
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marco rubio to drop out. hoping to emerge as the anti-trump this morning ted cruz is soaring after super saturday. >> we're seeing republicans coalesce around our campaign because ours is the only campaign that has repeatedly beaten donald trump. >> the texas senator pulling off decisive victories in kansas and maine. but donald trump still the front-runner, trouncing his rivals in louisiana and kentucky. >> i want to congratulate ted on maine and on kansas and he should do well in maine because it is very close to canada. let's face it. >> reporter: the billionaire trying to fend off the gop establishment. >> donald trump is a phony, a fraud. >> reporter: in the first contest since mitt romney's blistering attack. trump skipped saturday's conservative political action conference or c-pac and came in a distant third in its straw poll. >> as a party, we should come together and stop this
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>> marco rubio! >> reporter: marco rubio, a distant third in kansas and fourth in maine. today he's hoping to scrape up delegates in puerto rico's primary after campaigning there overnight. >> we knew this would be the roughest period in the campaign given the makeup of the electoral map. >> reporter: and now he's feeling the heat in florida, his must-win home state. trump is leading in the polls, but cruz is upping his ground game here, trying to squeeze out rubio and make it a two-man race. trump now calling on the florida senator to drop out. >> i would love to take on ted one on one. that would be so much fun because ted can't win new york, he can't win new jersey, he can't win pennsylvania, he can't win california. i won ted one on one, okay. >> reporter: here in florida, more than half a million republicans have already voted, either early or absentee. and, craig, as if this entire race wasn't already out of a movie, today john kh
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campaigning in his home state of ohio with arnold schwarzenegger. >> california governor is with him. gabe gutierrez in jacksonville, thank you. over to the democratic side, bernie sanders picked up some big wins in kansas and nebraska. hillary clinton countered with a landslide victory in louisiana which widened her delegate lead. nbc's kristen welker is in flint, michigan where the candidates debate later tonight. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you. senator sanders was looking for new momentum on saturday. and he got it with wins in those two key caucus states. but as you point out, secretary clinton did net more delegates than she was already far ahead in the delegate count, making her still very much the one to beat. >> senator bernie sanders. >> reporter: riding high off victories in nebraska and kansas, senator bernie sanders at a democratic dinner detroit saturday. >> we will win in november. if we have a large voter turnout. >> reporter: secretary clinton at that same dinner also had reason to celebrate, earning a victory in
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our pledge delegate count. >> reporter: punctuating her delegate lead, each candidate focused on what's ahead. >> i'm grateful to everyone who turned out to support us. but now all eyes turn to michigan. >> reporter: and with michigan voting tuesday, clinton isn't taking anything for granted. her top surrogates former president bill clinton and daughter chelsea will campaign here, sanders aides say a win in michigan would prove he can be competitive in larger more diverse states. sanders signaling a new focus on independence. >> the way to the white house is to win democrats and to win independents and to make sure trump does not win independents. >> reporter: both candidates preparing to face off tonight at a debate in flint, where sanders will likely take aim at clinton over her support of trade deals like nafta, unpopular in the west belt. clinton will continue to paint herself as at candidate with the realistic policies and there will be no shortage of jabs
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your hair out when you see that insult fest that goes on. >> on our worst day we will be infinitely better than the republicans on their best day. >> reporter: both candidates will spend much of the day getting ready for tonight's debate and the flint water crisis will be a central topic with residents demanding specifics from both of the candidates and this has been an issue that has resonated all across the country, particularly with african-americans. erica? >> kristen welker for us this morning, thank you. chuck todd is nbc's political director and moderator of "meet the press." good morning to you. good to see you, my friend. >> good morning, craig. good to see you. >> these were the first contests since romney's passionate plea for trump -- for folks to dump trump. we saw the piling on thursday night at the debate. how real is the possibility that these anti-trump forces are starting to pick up steam and that this is, in fact, a two-man race? >> well, i have to say i want a little more information.
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what happened yesterday. on one hand, yes, maybe this is a coalescing, maybe ted cruz has some momentum, splitting the four states and actually netting more delegates than donald trump. however, it is also four states that were closed republican contests meaning independents and democrats couldn't participate. and the one primary that cruz did caught up and did very well against trump, louisiana, was another state that touches the state of texas. so what happens tuesday? michigan, mississippi, those are places that trump's heavily favored. if we see him struggle there, then i think it is time to connect the dots back to thursday from romney to that debate to a coalescing. but i can tell you this, i think one clear piece of evidence from yesterday is that if there is an anti-trump candidate, it is cruz. marco rubio with three thirds and a fourth, i don't think it will be him. >> rubio focused on florida. but ted cruz is really focusing there too, opening a number of new offices in state, trying to steal that
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moving forward? is there something he can do between now and march 15th? >> you know, i don't think so anymore. i think florida is everything for him. he needed to win somewhere else, though, in this sort of in between week between the two super tuesdays and now it doesn't look like he has that opportunity at all. what he's got to fear, on tuesday, in mississippi, and michigan, john kasich has put extra focus actually on both states. what if rubio finishes fourth in both states, one week before he tries to win the florida primary? it could really zap momentum for him. i think there is a lot of pressure on marco rubio to show some life on tuesday in michigan or mississippi if he has any hope of catching trump in florida. >> let's turn to the democrats quickly. bernie sanders picking up two states yesterday, but, again, these states, like the others he picked up, largely homogenous. i want to show our viewers the delegate count now for democrats so they can see where this thing really stands. hillary clinton with literally almost twice as manyeg
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is there still even a path for sanders to victory at this point, chuck? >> well, it would mean hillary clinton would have to collapse, he would have to win more than 60%. we're now at the point -- he has to win more than 60% of all remaining delegates in order to somehow capture this nomination. yesterday was a prime example of why it is going to be so difficult. he won two states. she won one. guess who won more delegates for the night? she did, because she won african-americans by such a large margin in louisiana. she won the whole state by a large margin. and when she loses to sanders, she doesn't lose by the same margins he loses to her in states where she wins. this path is becoming less and less viable by the day for him. >> chuck todd, thank you very much, good to see you. we'll be watching when your guests this morning on "meet the press," former republican presidential nominee mitt romney. >> want to turn to that wild weather that we mentioned hitting northern california. it is the start of what is going to be a big storm system, which
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we'll have dylan's forecast in a moment. first, sheinelle has more details on the system. >> yes, after a relatively dry february, march is turning out to be a very wet one on the west coast with the series of storms moving in from the pacific. it caused massive flooding in northern california overnight, claiming at least one life. high winds up to 40 miles per hour blew across northern california from saturday into sunday, dumping heavy rains that should continue off and on throughout to the today. trees down, power outages across the city of sacramento. the storm drenching neighborhoods, submerging cars and homes. >> almost knee deep and it is really bad. >> reporter: california's highway 70 overflowing. the intense storm created a river below the highway 65 overpass, swallowing a car with two people who tried to circumvent a blockade. >> water was six, eight feet deep by the time we could get into the vehicle.
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follow it. >> reporter: the woman didn't make it. the male driver of the car was able to get out. the wet elements are expected to bring up to three feet of snow to the mountains. these stormy weather delays dozens of flights into san francisco for hours and could cause more problems on the west coast today. erica? >> a rough one. as we said, dylan is in chicago this morning where she'll be taking that plunge to the chilly waters of lake michigan for a great cause. we'll have more on that in a moment. but, dylan, talk to us about the stormy weather out west and what we can expect across the country. >> well, we are going to see another couple of rounds of this wet stormy weather out west. but each one will get easier, i'd say. we had the bulk of the heaviest rain yesterday where we did get reports of eight inches of rain. we saw wind gusts in the highest peaks in mount diablo of 88
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[ inaudible ]
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>> and i'm not not talking about the lake yet, hoping don't have to go in. we'll get to more on that and the special olympics in a few minutes, guys. >> sounds good. dylan, thanks. a report out just this morning that superstar quarterback peyton manning is about to announce his retirement. espn reports the five-time mvp and sure fire first ballot hall of famer is going to leave the game after 18 seasons. nbc news has not independently confirmed this report. manning expected to make that announcement tomorrow at the denver broncos headquarters. he goes out on top, of course, after winning his second super bowl last month. he is the nfl's all time leader in passing touchdowns and passing yards. he played 14 years with the indianapolis colts and won a super bowl with them in
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morning, the coast guard is searching the seas off florida for a missing cruise ship passenger. royal caribbean's navigator of the seas reporting a 46-year-old man fell overboard early saturday morning. the coast guard is searching an area about 40 miles south of key largo, a fellow passenger reported seeing the man fall from his state room on the tenth deck. that's 100 feet above the water. lena dunham, creator and star of hbo's series "girls" is in the hospital this morning. she needs surgery for a ruptured ovarian cyst. she's been struggling with endometriosis, more than 6 million women in the country suffer from the painful condition. dunham posted on facebook that she's lucky to have the support of the whole girls gang. a wild story out of florida to tell you about. a scuba diver who says he's lucky this morning to be alive after being sucked into a large pipe at a nuclear power plant. sar sarah dahlof has more.
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american waters are three submerged structures, a mystery they decided to investigate while diving last july in close proximity to the st. lucy nuclear power plant. >> i felt a little current and it got quicker and i said this isn't right. >> he got sucked in like a noodle, just gong. >> reporter: he was sucked inside an intake pipe that delivers hundreds, thousands of gallons of water a minute to reactors inside the plant. the terrifying ride lasted up to five minutes. he feared he would be chopped into pieces, devoured by machinery. >> all i could think about is these horror movies, you know, this big turbine coming and i'm coming for it, you know. it is going to chop me up and kill me. i just contemplated, you know, do i pull the regulator out of my mouth and just die? started thinking about my family, you know. how are they going to survive without me. ep
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>> fish everywhere, crystal clear water, the sun is shining, i'm, like, is this heaven? >> reporter: the journey took him a quarter mile along the 16 foot wide pipe, from the ocean intake, to a reservoir pool on plant property. he borrowed a phone from a surprised worker and called his wife, leaving her a miraculous voice mail. >> hey, it's me. i got pulled through a [ bleep ] pipe. i'm okay. >> reporter: and connecting with her moments later. >> something is telling me to pick up the phone. so i did. and it was him. >> she picks up. and she just goes, hello. i said, i'm alive. >> reporter: le cun filed a lawsuit alleging negligence. the utility company has not yet responded to the suit, but in a statement claims the diver intentionally swam into one of the intake pipes after bypassing a piece of equipment to minimize the entry of objects. he denies those allegations as well as florida power and light's claim that
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marking the area that day claimed the warning to stay back 100 feet. meanwhile, he's savoring time with his wife and kids. remembering how close he says he came to losing them. for "today," sarah dahlof, nbc news. >> can you imagine? >> no. >> no. >> being the wife on the other end of the call too. >> sucked into a pipe. >> okay. >> doesn't happen every day. >> meanwhile, it is the end of an era on tv tonight. the series finale of pbs wildly popular "downton abbey" but will it be the last time that fans get to enjoy the drama. kel kel kelly kobeila has more. >> you're not the only one watching. while tonight is the last time you'll see these characters on tv, the show's creator told me they may not be gone for good. after six seasons of
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downs, it is time to say good-bye to america's favorite aristocrats. >> the world is changing. >> reporter: the period drama with british humor, history, and manners -- >> presenting the lady rose mcclaire. >> reporter: is taking its final bow tonight. it was an unlikely hit finding an audience with the real royals, our own first lady, even p. diddy. >> i wasn't expecting the success we got, because i think if you expect that you're a mad person. you know. that happens very rarely in a career, if ever. >> reporter: the show won 12 emmys and three golden globes. incredible considering it almost never made it to america. >> remember being told by one american executive that no one in the united states would ever be interested in this idea. >> reporter: how wrong they were. it had something for everyone. romance, rivalry, and a grammy with great one liners. >> i take that as a compliment. >> reporteef
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american names were clamoring for a role. >> don't worry, i'm well prepared for cold baths, warm drinks and most of all the food. >> reporter: above all, "downton abbey" was about family, whether they lived upstairs, or downstairs. but how will it all end? will edith ever find love? will there be any happily ever afters? and are the doors of downton abbey really closing for good? the show's executive producer told me yesterday that these characters will never be back for season seven. his words. but a movie is a real possibility. but, first, of course, we have to see how it all ends tonight. the show already aired on this side of the pond. i've seen it. >> no spoilers. >> no spoilers for you. all i have to say is bring your tissues. >> oh, geez. thank you. >> thanks, kelly. >> i love the little one line
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remember she said, what's a weekend? >> we don't have weekends. >> perfectly applicable. >> coming up -- >> i just got that. nice. key players in the o.j. simpson case speaking out more than two decades after the trial of the century. prosecutor marcia clark, as she watched the guilty verdict slip away. cathy's gotten used to the smell of lingering garbage in her kitchen yup, she's gone noseblind. she thinks it smells fine, but her guests smell this... sfx: ding, flies, meow (after cat lands) music starts febreze air effects heavy duty has up to... ...two times the odor-eliminating power to remove odors you've done noseblind to [inhales] mmm. use febreze air effects, till it's fresh and try febreze small spaces... ...to continuously eliminate up to two times the odors for 30 days. febreze small spaces and air effects, two more ways [inhale + exhale mnemonic] to breathe happy. what's that, broheim? i switched to geico and got more. more savings on car insurance? yeah bro-fessor, and more. like renters insurance.
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still to come, a young rodeo star told she would never ride again, back in the saddle. and a sight in the sky, a hi i'm kristie. and i'm jess. and we are the bug chicks. we're a nano-business. windows 10 really helps us get the word out about how awesome bugs are. kids learn to be brave and curious and all kids speak the language of bug. "hey cortana, find my katydid video." oh! this is so good. if you're trying to teach a kid about a proboscis. just sketch it on the screen. i don't have a touch screen on my mac,
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for a cup of coffee just because you're a woman. so why does congress think it's ok that women get paid 20% lesshan a man for doing the same job? i'll fight for pay equity, to protect planned parenthood, choice for women, and expand paid and family leave. now some politicians will belittle this as a women's agenda. more proof that we just need more women in congress. i'm kathleen mathews and i approve this message. thanks for joining us. it's sunday, march 6. here's what is happening. we're waiting for an update from d.c. police on condition of a man shot in theft lashw
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columbia, but the vehicictim wa found at euclid and 16th. also we're officially saying good-bye to the paper fare card. starting today, riders can only use smart tria smartrip card. you can transfer the value to a smartrip card through june 30. petro sa metro says the change will make for a faster experience for
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lauren rick kyn ricketts, w break out the shorts? >> might not be today, but certainly this week. so what will you wear today? head out with a coat. we're off to a chilly start with temperatures in the 30s. we'll eventually warm up to right around 50. cloudy out there now, but we will get sunshine later on this afternoon. don't expect it until after about 2:00. and tomorrow we'll be around 60 by the time we head into monday. dry weather will continue until at least the end of the week. but definitely some shorts weather right here tuesday, wednesday and thursday. dry conditions. we'll have some sunshine and temperatures in the low to mid-70s. we drop a little bit by the time we head into friday and saturday, and again we'll have some rain
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normal. enjoy. 90 minutes of news and weather coming up at this guy loves me, don't you? wait, what's that? get him out. as i was saying, everyone loves me. i even got this got this piece of -- behind me now. isn't that right, chris? >> yes, sir, thank you, sir, plea pleas please, sir, may i have another. >> "saturday night live" skewering donald trump last night and that conference with chris christie. a great sunday morning crowd here on rockefeller plaza. >> she's from wichita, kansas. >> from wichita? >> i'll run over there and give her a hug. >> dylan dreyer standing by in chicago to jump into that frigid
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olympics. >> she's excited. >> she is very excited. it is a great cause. we'll get to dylan in a bit. >> it will be quick. we want to get you caught up on this sunday's headlines. let's begin with politics. ted cruz waking up with new momentum in the republican presidential race this morning. the texas senator won saturday's contest in maine and kansas. donald trump picked up victories in kentucky and louisiana. marco rubio finished no better than third in all four states voting on saturday, leading trump to call on rubio to end his campaign. >> every time he comes in third or fourth, he says you got to be able to win. and he has not been able to win and i think it is time that he drops out. >> rubio's campaign quickly rejected that call from donald trump. >> on the democratic side, bernie sanders topped hillary clinton, two states to one, taking both kansas and nebraska, but clinton increased her lead in the delegate count, fueled by her massive win in louisiana. and massive el nino fuld st
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flooding across california, heavy rains turning roads into rivers in this neighborhood as you can see in the northern part of the state. dozens of flights were delayed in san francisco the. there is more rain expected today and tomorrow. also this morning, renew ed attention on the o.j. simpson case, both in the headlines and on television. much of it fuld by that riveting series on fx. tonight, key players from the actual trial will speak out on "dateline." here's nbc's josh mankiewicz. >> los angeles, june 12th, 1994, two horrific murders, defined by just three words, the o.j. case. a collision of pop culture and legal drama that still fascinates us today. >> i want him to finish this day alive. >> reporter: a new dramatic series airing on fx, "the people versus o.j. simpson" is winning ratings and review s. tr
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of the stars who emerged in the trial, lead prosecutor marcia clark. >> we're taking him to trial. >> are you watching the miniseries? >> i am. i didn't think i could bear it, just reliving of the nightmare. >> reporter: the nightmare began when nicole brown simpson and her friend ron goldman were found murdered in the exclusive l.a. neighborhood of brentwood. kris jenner, nicole's best friend, remembers getting the horrible news. >> i was, like, what, what do you mean nicole died? it was devastating. >> reporter: then came the infamous low speed bronco chase, which had marcia clark watching and seething. >> we looked like the biggest idiots ever. >> possibly armed, use caution. >> it was surreal. it was -- could this get any worse? >> reporter: it did. simpson was soon arrested and charged. >> we do have sufficient evidence to convict him. >> reporter: evidence rich in
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but the defense would undermine the prosecution's case by suggesting that evidence was tainted when gathered by a sloppy police department. >> i had had so many days of going back up to my office and feeling like, we're toast. it's over. there is no way. >> reporter: eventually the so-called trial of the century became a case more about race than evidence. as defense attorney johnnie cochran preached to the jury. >> stop this cover-up. if you don't stop it, then who. >> reporter: the jury deliberated barely four hours. >> orenthal james simpson not guilty of the crime of murder. >> that was not justice. >> reporter: josh mankiewicz, nbc news, los angeles. >> clark moved to private practice after that trial and started winning. her latest book "blood defense" comes out later this spring. hear more from her, kris jenner, cato okkaelin and others tonigh at 9:00,
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dylan dreyer in chicago, getting set to take a polar plunge into a frigid lake
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and, guys, the plunge happens at 10:00 central time. so we're not going to get to do it on live tv, but we'll have it all on our website. check back there later today. and al roker and i have -- >> what are you going to wear? can you get some kind of warm suit or something? what is your strategy? >> they recommend not wearing too many clothes, though i will not be wearing a bikini by any means, but we have a t-shirt and shorts plan going, al and i do. >> good luck. we know you're going to knock it out of the park. thet
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only is it for a good cause, but it is quick. dylan, thanks. >> real quick. up next, our sunday stories from a rodeo star back in the saddle after being told that would never happen again, to a taste for freedom for a man who spent a decade on death row for a crime he says he didn't commit. harry smith is in the house, he visited a bird watching paradise in an unexpected place. it is all after these messages. does the smell of a freshly bound presentation fill you with optimism? do you love your wireless keyboard more than certain family members? is your success due to a filing system only you understand? does printing from your tablet to your wireless printer give you a jolt of confidence? if so, you may be gearcentric. someone who knows that the right office gear helps you do great things. and there's one place that has it all. office depot officemax. gear up for great. ♪
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back with a remarkable woman who can teach us a lot about overcoming obstacles. >> amberley snyder devoted her life to horses and rodeo. when a car accident tried to derail those plans, she wasn't going to let it get in the way. >> reporter: from the time she was a toddler, this is where amberley snyder has wanted to be. >> happiest place for me on earth is on my horse's back. >> reporter: a world champion barrel racer at age of 18, amberley was living her dream. then a car accident changed everything. >> i overcorrected my truck, and i was ejected and hit a fence post on the side of the road, which is what broke my back. >> reporter: amberley was paralyzed from the waist d
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doctors predicted she would never walk, and certainly never ride again. >> the very first day of therapy, when my nurse asked me what my goals are, i tell her, walk, ride, rodeo. there is not and if, there is not an and, there is not a maybe. this is what we're doing. >> what was her reaction? >> she thought i was crazy. >> reporter: one of the biggest hurdle for amberley, wasn't getting into the saddle, it was staying there. how was her balance initially after the accident? >> really bad. to the point where even if she was sitting in bed and raised her arm to brush her hair, you know, she could fall over. >> i had mentioned to my therapist that my balance is better on my saddle than anywhere else.saddle in and i got on the saddle and my balance was better there. >> reporter: four months after her accident, she was in the saddle, on her horse. when you first got back on the horse, is it what you
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horse was the hardest day of my life. >> reporter: why? >> because in that moment, i realized my whole life was different. >> reporter: later that year, amberley hit bottom. for eight months she didn't even want to see her horses, let alone ride them. >> stubborn. i was, like, no, not doing it, not doing it. >> reporter: you needed your own time. >> mm-hmm. >> reporter: at one point, amberley begged her mother to sell the horses. tina snyder refused. >> i said, amberley, your horses have been injured before, and you waited for them to heal. they're going to wait for you. >> reporter: the wait paid off. 18 months after her accident, amberley snyder returned to regular competition. >> the very first time we went out for a race, you want to win. the competitive nature is still there every single time i go in the arena. >> when she's on a horse, she's like everybody else. she gets to leave the wheelchair behind and the horse is her
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later, amberley snyder is firmly back in her saddle. >> i had outrun myself of what i have before my wreck. even though i'm strapped in and can't kick, i still can run with anyone out there. ♪ amberley's able to saddle her horse from her chair, using an old seat belt. >> we cut this out of a junk card car. >> reporter: and a series of straps and rubber bands to hold her steady and keep her legs in place. >> they go around my feet and my stirrups. >> reporter: her horses have also adjusted to this new normal. >> they learned to just completely ignore my legs. they don't even pay attention to them anymore. >> reporter: as positive as she is, amberley doesn't shy away from her daily struggle. >> i don't think i'm ever going to roll over when i get out of bed in the morning and go, man, i'm glad i'm getting into that chair. you just have to shift the way you look at
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i'm just giving myself a little more time in order to accomplish them. >> reporter: when you look at her today, what is first thought that comes to your mind when you look at your daughter? >> awe. and grateful she's here. >> to say amberley and her mother tina are incredible would be a gross understatement. she regained some feeling in her legs. you can real more about it at today.com. she said she's convinced it is from the riding. >> from the stimulation of it? >> she thinks it helped. she's a motivational speaker. but she's phenomenal. and caroline gottlieb, our producer, thank you, you found us an incredible story. >> we're back after this. at johnson's, the products in our bath time routine work together like a team. the washes with the shampoos, the shampoos with the lotions. a combination designed to help improve your baby's skin barrier
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we're back with new developments in a controversial case out of texas. >> dwayne brown was sentenced to death for a crime he insisted he didn't commit. he was freed last year after new evidence was uncovered in a retired detective's garage. i visited him recently and found someone surprisingly not bitter, but thankful. say the word freedom to a man who hasn't had it for more
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unexpected. >> freedom for me is being around things that i can actually get up and go do and i enjoy doing. it is a feeling that you can't explain. >> reporter: in 2003, dwayne brown was charged with murder in the shooting death of charles clark, a decorated police officer. the killing happened during a robbery at a check cashing store on the southeast side of houston. the store's clerk alfreda jones was also killed. >> never been any signs on this case that implicates him. never a shred of evidence, no dna, no gunshot residue. >> reporter: brown was convicted and sentenced to death. spending 23 hours a day in a cell like this, 12 years in prison. >> when you're on death row, did you think that the day would come when you would actually get out. >> when you're in that place, you don't -- at least i wasn't thinking that far ahead. i was trying to takee
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do today. and that's how i live my life every day. day by day. >> reporter: his saving grace, a single piece of paper, subpoenaed phone records that proved he was at his girlfriend's apartment during the crime, records that his appellant attorney said were never turned over to his court appointed attorney during his original trial. it would have confirmed his alibi. turns out they were discovered eight years later, in the garage of the investigating officer. he has since retired. last june, the district attorney dismissed his case, saying she did not have enough evidence to convict in a new trial and set him free. do you think you were set up? >> very much so. very much so. >> they were seeking a conviction at any cost. in a high profile case. and but for our work, they would have gotten away with it. >> reporter: nbc news reached out to
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e-mailed an audio recording of a june 2015 press conference where the police chief said the case was improperly investigated and would not comment on the evidence. the district attorney's office declined to comment. >> we shouldn't be in a justice system where it takes eight years of work from a number of lawyers, probably over a million dollars in probono fees and expenses and those types of things to exonerate one man. can't be what the system is all about. but that's what it took here. >> reporter: brown's daughter kiara was 2 years old when her father went away. what has it been like having dad back? >> it has been amazing. he's strict. but he's not strict. he's like a cool dad. >> reporter: what is he strict about? boys? one thing that strikes me about you, you're not angry. you smile. it is the
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how is that? how are you not mad at the world? >> i don't have a word for it, i don't have an answer for it, i'm just enjoying myself. i'm doing the things i like to do. >> and under texas law, people wrongly convicted, they're entitled to $80,000 a year. brown's legal team petitioned the state to approve roughly about $973,000. the state has until april 7th to respond. >> that's remarkable story. >> he's a remarkable guy. you would be surprised how happy he is about life. >> a great story. craig, thanks. up next, an amazing display in the skies over nebraska after this. earning unlimited cash back on purchases. that's a win. but imagine earning it twice. you can with the citi double cash® card. it lets you earn cash back twice. once when you buy and again as you pay. it's cash back then cash back again. and that's a cash back win-win. the citi double cash card. the only card that lets you earn cash back twice on every purchase
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harry, something to get you in the mood for spring. good morning, harry smith. >> good morning. feeling a tiny -- spring is a couple of weeks away, but i saw cr crocuses in central park and they reminded me of something we shot, we got to see a couple of years ago too, a great seasonal migration that happen right in the middle of the country. interstate 80. if you're on it, you race through places like carney, nebraska. but this time of year it is hard not to notice the birds here. yes, those are birds in the sky. thousands and thousands of snow geese migrating northward, slowing down for a rest. talk about a roadside attraction. 20 million or so birds would be offended to hear nebraska referred to as a flyover state. the birds and their ancestors have spent every spring here
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these are sand hill cranes, mike forsbe forsberg, a photographer, author and conservationist has been watching the cranes for more than 20 years. >> it would be like missing christmas. >> reporter: this is good. this is really good. revered since ancient times, mike says the graceful elegant birds dance sometimes because they're nervous, sometimes because they're in love. and sometimes because they just like to dance. but the best time to watch them is at first light, with the golden moon in the western sky, you can barely see the birds, and you sure can hear them. the cranes spend the night on the bank and the sandbars of the plat river and as day break comes, the birds get louder and
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crescendo, a wake-up call the likes of which you have never heard. crane lovers come from all over the country, and all over the world, to visit audubon's rose sanctuary. lynn hobsa can't wait to see the birds up close. you're all pumped up. >> i am. i can't help it. >> reporter: we used to say you know it's spring when the swallows return to capistrano. now, you know it's spring when the cranes return to carney. so mike forsberg, the photographer, he sent me this picture, which we'll put up on the screen, that was taken just last week. >> oh, my goodness. >> the migration has started already. so if you're in the middle of the country, get to the plat river and be awed. >> thank you, harry. >> thanks, harry. tune into "meet the press" this morning. chuck will have more on the super saturday results and he's speaking with mitt romney. >> don't forget to check out our facebook page. la
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>> for the special olympic right now it is all about the battle for delegates. decision 2016 brings key wins for candidates, more states head to the polls as hillary clinton and donald trump get further ahead. and going out on top. the new report that says peyton manning is set to announce his retirement. and metro general manager taking a hard look at safety and security. the top issues being addressed as a big change for riders goes into place today. good morning to you. i'm angie goff. are you ready to do it, to say good-bye to all the cold? me too. we are looking for the sun and warming coming our way. >> and i'm adam
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rain for the next few days and you have 70 degree temperatures to look forward to temperature lauryn ricketts is here to tell us about that. >> let's talk about those 70 degree temperatures. not today. todays will still be around the 50 degree hark. but each day we're itting a little bit better. today around 50 and we improve from there. a very quiet workweek. not a lot of hiccups this the "7-day forecast." we don't have any rain until the end of the workweek. even though it looks like it will rain outside this morning. but we will have decreasing clouds. a quiet weather week and we're still on track for 70s. right now we're at 40 degrees here in d.c. 39 in maenassas. so a cool and cloudy start. but also dry conditions. now, we are going to warm up as we've been saying, we'll let you know how warm and how far into the 70s we will get coming up on that seven day. story developing right now, d.c. police are

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