tv CBS Morning News CBS July 16, 2012 4:00am-4:30am EDT
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when did it end? when mitt romney gave up control of bain capital, the private equity firm he founded. civil war. it is official. the red cross says the bloodbath in syria has crossed an important threshold. and dodging disaster. a bus collides with a truck in southern russia and both vehicles just miss a man at a southern russia and both vehicles just miss a man at a gas station. captioning funded by cbs this is the "cbs morning news" for monday, july 16, 2012. good morning everybody. good to be with you. i'm terrell brown. the dust-up over just how long mitt romney was in charge of bain capital is heating up. meanwhile, president obama travels to cincinnati today to talk about the economy. mitt romney will be in mississippi and louisiana.
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tara mergener is in washington. boy, we covered the country, didn't we? tara, good morning to you. >> good morning to you, terrell. happy monday. yes, mitt romney now says president obama will do anything to get re-elected and that he's still owed an apology. the president says the attacks are justified. president barack obama is back on the campaign trail today to talk about jobs and the economy. a topic mitt romney consistently criticizes the president about. but on thursday, president obama told cbs sunday morning he doesn't mind the attacks. >> you don't hear me complaining about him making that argument. because if i was in his shoes, i'd be making the same argument. >> mitt romney says he gave up managing bain capital in 1999 in order to run the salt lake city olympics. but bain filed federal documents showing romney as the chairman, ceo and sole owner of the company until 2002. >> it is standard, though, to, while you're on leave to sign those documents for the s.e.c.
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he was still ceo and had shares. but he wasn't responsible for management and that's the bottom line. >> if you're telling the s.e.c. that you're in charge but you're telling the american people that you bear no responsibility, one of those things is not true. >> the battle over bain made it on to the airwaves. both campaigns have new ads focusing on the issue. >> for spacious skies -- >> the obama ad features mitt romney singing america the beautiful while showing headlines accusing romney of shipping jobs overseas. >> whatever happened to -- >> the romney campus countered with its own ad saying the president's attacks are misleading. >> this is not the candidate of hope and change. this is a candidate who is hoping to change the subject by attacking his opponent. >> president obama says he will not apologize for attacking romney's record at bain. and today there is no evidence romney had an active role in bain or directed any of its investments after february of 1999.
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terrell, haven't heard the last of this. >> tara mergener in washington. thank you so much. you can see more of charlie rose's interview with president and mrs. obama later on "cbs this morning.." overseas, the red cross formally declared the fighting in syria say civil war. today in moscow, u.n. special enjoy kofi annan discusses the crisis with the roush u. russian foreign minister. in damascus, reported near the syrian capital. u.n. observers visited a village where syrian troops killed dozens last week. the u.n. says they targeted activists and army detectors. the syrian government said it was not a massacre. hillary clinton is in israel after her first visit to egypt since that country's presidential elections. protesters threw shoes, water bottles and tomatoes at clinton's motorcade in alexandria last night. her car was not hit. earlier, she met with the head of egypt's military urging him
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to work with the newly elected islamic leaders. he said he won't allow fundamentalists to dominate the country. in this country, the government releases a report on the drought that's gripped half the country. more than 1,000 counties in 26 states across the u.s. have been declared disaster areas and more heat is on the way. much of the midwest and the plains will be in the upper 90s to start the week. high temperatures and strong winds are fueling a wildfire in northern california. the so-called routers fire is threatening homes northeast of sacramento. one home has already been destroyed. the fire started wednesday and has burned nearly four square miles. the cause of that fire is still under investigation. in southeast british klum i don't, the body of one of four people missing was recovered after a massive landslide last thursday. unbelievable to watch that. on friday, the smaller landslide was captured on videotape by a news crew covering the original
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rockslide. thursday's landslide crushed several homes as a wall of rocks, mud and trees slide down a mountainside. recovery operations are under way in southwest japan this morning after widespread flooding killed at least 27 people. thousands of homes were damaged, hundreds of roads wiped out. one man said it was raining so heavily, it was like a waterfall. more than a quarter million people evacuated have been able to return. take a look at this out of northern poland much that is a tornado. one of several reported in poland where twisters are beyond rare. winds were clocked at 125 miles per hour. one person was killed when his house collapsed. at least ten others injured. the twisters damaged dozens of homes and flattened thousands of trees. cbs "moneywatch" time on a monday. microsoft is ready to go at it alone in the news business and ford recalls a popular suv. ashley morrison in new york with more. good morning. >> good morning, terrell. the marriage of microsoft and nbc news is all but over. the software giant is pulling out of the venture that owned
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msnbc.com, microsoft is moving on by starting its own online news service. a quiet day for ashe shan stocks. the hang seng dropped a fraction and the nikkei was closed for a public holiday. stocks ended a six-day skid on friday. the dow made it into positive territory by adding 203 points. the nasdaq dand 42. the national association for business economics is out with a survey today that shows most economists are concerned with the european financial crisis and the impending fiscal cliff. the survey also found less evidence of hiring. the good news, a majority report employment rates are not falling. gas prices are starting to sink again according to aaa, the average price of a gallon of regular is $3.39. that's down about 13 cents from just a month ago. and a potential braking
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problem prompted ford to issue a recall. it affects 2013 escapes. they were built between march 8th and june 7 ft at the louisville plant. the carpet padding could sbeer fear with the escape's brakes. no accidents or injuries have been reported. that's good news. that could certainly be dangerous. >> absolutely. could be. ashley morrison in new york. thanks very much. when we come back, did the fda illegally crackdown on whistle blowers. the agency is caught spying on almost two dozen people including workers and congressional officials. first, a bus slams into a truck and then watch out, watch out. why they're calling this guy the luckiest man in russia.
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>> this is crazy. scary pick frurs southern russia. bus carrying people slams into a truck pulling across the road and both vehicles barely miss a man filling his tank at a gas station. amazingly, no one was hurt. he's probably looking for a restroom now. there was no fire. officials at the food and drug administration are defending a spy operation aimed at some of their own scientists. the targets were suspected of leaking confidential information to journalists and critics of the agency. but the surveillance campaign grew and eventually reached all the way to the white house. jan crawford reports. >> for years, fda scientists raised safety concerns about devices the agency had approved for routine breast cancer scans. after fda authorities dismissed their complaint, nine wrote a letter in early 2009 to president obama's transition team warning that fda managers failed to take appropriate actions. according to court papers, shortly after the scientists sent the letter, the fda
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commenced a covert and secret search operation capturing scientists' e-mails from private accounts on government-issued laptops. but according to the times, the spying effort quickly went beyond the scientists to ensnare a total of 21 fda employees, medical researchers, journalists, even congressional officials looking into whether the fda failed to woorn the public about risks from devices used to scan breast and colon cancer. the times discovered some 80,000 pages of documents the fda secretly monitored. confirmed by cbs news, they include a letter the scientists wrote to president obama saying they were afraid they could not act without fear of reprisal for their whistle blowing efforts. the fda has denied any wrongdoing, saying the monitoring was intended to determine whether confidential information was inappropriately released off government laptops
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from scientists it suspected of sharing information about the medical devices. but some say the agency's surveillance was illegal and the scientists have sued. >> they actually tried to go after these whistle blowers criminally. >> steven cone is a lawyer for the fda whistle blowers and executive director of the national whistle blower center. >> if you can target whistle blowers for this type of intrusive surveillance, no one will blow the whistle. it will create a chilling effect and a fear. >> now, in may the office of special counsel which investigates reports found that the sipe tiss were in fact warning of substantial and specific danger to public safety. that's what the office said. it's ordered an investigation into their allegations about the scans. jan crawford, cbs news, washington. we will take a quick break. up next, your monday morning weather and in sports, the sign says yankee stadium but give a certain sports fan and moviemaker a fan and it turns into a spike lee joint.
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florida, north carolina and west texas. brief downpours could produce flash flooding in parts of the desert southwest. near triple digit heat in the midwest and plains. in sports, the reds are on a roll. scott roland is one of the reasons why. cincinnati fans arrived looking for a sweep of the cardinals. in the eighth they got what they came for. the reds held on for a 4-2 win. a three-game sweep of st. louis. their sixth straight victory. first inning at yankee stadium. a bat went flying into the stands and lookie who comes up with it. spike lee. he pops up places, doesn't he? >> of course, he shows off his swing for the crowd. he got to keep that bat. before that, though, top of the first, angels slugger albert pujols hit a solo home run to put l.a. up by two. minutes later, alex rodriguez tying the score for the yankees with a two-run shot of his own.
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10-8. a-rod up to bat with the bases loaded. he popped up missing his chance to win the game and to top the great lou gehrig for most grand slams in major league history. in kansas city, white sox slugger adam dunn went deep for the third straight game hitting his league-leading 28th homer to win in the top of the first. chicago left-hander gave up one run over eight innings for his eighth straight victory. the white sox beat the royals 2-1. finally, we go to golf. a dramatic climax in illinois. on the second hole of a sudden death playoff, 2007 masters champion zach johnson hit a nearly 200 yard shot that rolled to within two feet of the pin. johnson sank the easy putt for the big victory. when we come back on a monday morning, another look at this morning's top stories and an olympic size snafu. an alarming security shortfall at the london olympics. just 11 days before the opening ceremonies.
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d.c., thunderstorms, 94. thunderstorms in atlanta as well, 93. partly sunny skies, 98 in st. louis. thunderstorms in denver, 91 degrees. same deal in seattle, 78. the search continues this morning in iowa for two girls who went missing on friday. cousins elizabeth collins, she's eight and lyric cook morrissey, she's ten. both went bike riding in east central iowa. their bikes were found near a local lake and police spent the weekend searching the water. hundreds of volunteers turned out to search fields and woodlands. less than two weeks before the 2012 olympics in london. the british government is scrambling to bolster security for the thousands of athletes and millions of visitors. elizabeth palmer explains why. >> the 2012 olympic games will
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be staged in dozens of venues across a vast area in and around london. and they'll need an equally vast security operation to keep them safe. key are 13,000 british soldiers and marines. the largest massive mobilization since world war ii. with fighter jets to enforce no fly zone for small planes and missiles set up on apartment buildings. there was supposed to be another army of more than 10,000 civilian security guards too supplied by a private contractor, g 4s. suddenly last week the company announced it could not deliver. ceo nick buckles. >> it's a very complex process to recruit and deliver that many people for quite a short period of time. >> the original contract was for 2,000 g 4s guards. then last december, after advice from u.s. law enforcement, that figure ballooned to more than
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13,000. and g 4s simply couldn't keep up. >> down to g 4s, we should have -- we're contracted to deliver stuff. we should have done that. >> it's a big blunder on a sensitive issue. >> this month, seven years ago, london won the 2012 games. and the very next day suicide bombers killed 52 people on a bus in the london subway. so g 4s's announce. put the government on the offensive. their plan b? more troops. that means another 3,500 soldiers. there is no specific terrorist threat against the olympics. in fact, organizers are concerned about something else. the weather. this has been the wettest summer in the uk since records began and the forecast? more of the same. elizabeth palmer, cbs news,
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london. however, the brits deal with the olympic problems, they know how to pull the plug on rock stars. paul mccartney and bruce springsteen were wrapping up a show but the show ran late facing strict noise regulations, they cut the juice to the band leaving sir paul and the boss to wave goodbye in silence. shut it down. ice age, continental drift, the fourth in the series and first in 3d pulled in $46 million this weekend. the amazing spider man dropped to number 2 earning $35 million. it's now made over $200 million domestically. in third, ted starring mark wahlberg and a foul mouthed teddy bear. coming up later, more of charlie rose's interview with the president and mrs. obama. i'm terrell brown. this is the "cbs morning news."
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in for howard. >> reporter: we are going to heat things up today. definitely felt the humidity. same deal for today. plenty of sunshine for the afternoon. by 9:00 we'll have partly cloudy conditions. temperatures in the 80s. noon already around 90. 77 in downtown, 73 in frederick. la plata, good morning to you, you are at 72 degrees. here's a look at the doppler 9000 hd. you can see some showers did go through yesterday and last night, some showers producing decent thunderstorms. but now things are much quieter around the beltway. those clouds should start to clear out by this morning. highs for your afternoon, 95 in downtown, fredericksburg 93, annapolis in the lower 90s. we have a slight chance for maybe an isolated thunderstorm
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this afternoon. mid 90s for today, tuesday upper 90s, wednesday upper nines, some places could get to 100 degrees by tomorrow. here's monika samtani with your traffic this morning. >> reporter: well it is monday but at least things are relatively calm outside. there had been construction on both routes of the beltway. route 198 in burtonsville, we'll take a live look at i-27 0, looking good at shady grove. an accident on the westbound side of i-70 after route 29, so be aware of that. but 270 looks great, as you can see. this time over to the west side. looking good on the dulles toll road, no problems through tyson's corner. i-95 nice and light up to springfield and 395-6789 coming up in my next report we'll go
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over to the east side of town at 4:39. back to you guys. what a busy weekend for metro transit. they were forced to shut down the entire system twice. all trains on all five lines had to be stopped, with passengers on board. >> a computer went dark. that is to blame for the problem. sue rae chin has more along with looking ahead. >> reporter: 106 miles of rail on five lines with 44 cars all came to a complete stop on dc's metro rail. the screens at the transit agency's control center went dark for roughly 40 minutes in both cases. >> it was a long ride, kind of terrible, i must say. >> reporter: randy duncan is hoping there is not a repeat of his ride sunday morning after he was stuck on a train.
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>> took me three hours to make it home. from 12:00 until about 3:00. >> reporter: he says the train operator did communicate to passengers there was a computer problem. >> when it did finally move once again, we had to get off the train, go to another stop and actually catch shuttle buses. >> reporter: for the second time this weekend the moving map that shows the location of each train malfunctioned. the first glitch on saturday afternoon forced the trains to stop and be directed to the nearest station. the second incident on sunday morning caused only a brief stall before the trains could operate at reduced speeds. >> reporter: technicians are watching to make sure another glitch doesn't happen again. in both cases they said the problem was solved by rebooting the system. >> you have to hope that everything is okay. >> reporter: some dc council members are putting some heat on the transit agency. >> it is disturbing and i don't re
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