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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 7, 2013 7:00am-9:00am EDT

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>> al libi taken into custody. >> they were forced to withdraw under fire. >> both operations signaling the landscape has change and our u.s. is willing put their boots on the ground go after these leaders. race car fans injured and witnessed race car driver hospitalized. >> everyone in the stands is like freaking out. it was just crazy. a big section of the country is recovering from a nasty storm system that included not only dangerous snow but destructive flooding and a dangerous tornado. democrats say hold a vote and find out. >> the president is risking default by not having a conversation. he know as what my phone number is. all he has to do is call. >> another suspect is behind bars after last week's
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motorcycle cage. >> there's speculation the wedding bells will ring for britain's most eligible batchelor. all that -- >> made the catch into the seats and held on. >> 51-48, broncos, in the fourth highest scoring game in the history of the nfl. >> and all that matters. >> vladimir putin has finally accepted the olympic flame in ryu thussi russia. >> the flame went out. >> he shouldn't worry about the flame. it's the track suit. >> guys, i don't think we should do that wrecking ball sketch. >> what? come on. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." good morning, norah. good to be back. >> good to have you back,
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charlie. a lot of news this morning. >> we begin with this. intelligence officials are interrogating an al qaeda leader this morning. after 15 years on the run americans captured the suspect. the operation, one of two raids carried out over the weekend in libya and somalia. >> libya is complained that u.s. forces kidnapped the al qaeda suspect but secretary of state john kerry said this morning the raid followed u.s. law. david martin is at the pentagon this morning. david, good morning. >> good morning. there are no reports of u.s. casualties in either of these operations, which is remarkable because they both were high risk, putting american boots on the ground in populated areas. early saturday morning in front of this house in the downtown area of libya's capitol tripoli, delta force commandos surrounded al libi's car, smashed his windows, and carried him away.
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traveling abroad, secretary of state john kerry defended the operation. >> the united states of america is going do everything in its power that's legal and appropriate in order to enforce the law and protect our security. >> a second raid along the coast of somalia was also under way early saturday morning. u.s. navy s.e.a.l.s stormed the shore trying to apprehend the leader of al shabaab. he's responsible for the recent attack on the shopping mall in nairobi. another named al cowas also. defense secretary chuck hagel said they thai will continue to maintain relentless pressure on
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terrorist groups that threatern our people or our interests. >> he's expected to be transferred to new york city where he'll stand trial for the bombings. >> thanks, david. john miller is with thus morning. john, good morning. >> good morning. >> how significant is the capture in libya? >> it's bag deal in two ways. he's a former al qaeda senior leader. he may have information on what's going on now and he may have intelligence on what's going on in al qaeda's affiliates in libya. why is that so important? foo you look at the extensions of al qaeda, they're the people behind the benghazi consulate attack that killed the u.s. ambassador, that's the potential place to mine. but the important part is push the intelligence aside. he's wanted for the murder of
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225 people murdered in the truck bombs of 1998 and that's something they've vowed to track down everyone involved with no matter where they are in the world. >> al libi has been on the fbi's most wanted list for two decades. >> they're going to be using the hague, which is the high-value interrogation group. they're going to be offshore on a ship and they're going to transfer him. this is a mixture of cia people, d.o.t. people and others who are trained but also in the arts of interrogation. >> and then there's somalia. >> and then there's somalia. >> so what happened? >> this is one of those operations -- now we're into in both of the cases covert actions. and that's where the intelligence military and special operations people get together. this is a classic navy s.e.a.l. operation.
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they're coming off the water onto the beach to hit this villa where this leader is, and the suggestion is either the intelligence was flawed meaning there are a lot more bad guys they ended up confronting than they expected or part of what we're hearing this morning is that they ran into somebody who spotted them early on. they had to shoot that person and that attracted attention before they expected to get attention. their thing is speed, surprise, violence of action. that's the mantra of the navy s.e.a.l.s and once you lose either or both of those first two things, you've damaged the third thing and that means to go to plan b or plan c. >> i'm fascinated by this. charlie and i were talking about this. this is the same group of navy s.e.a.l.s that killed osama bin laden. how is it they weren't able to capture or kill the group they wanted. >> it sounded like they were faced with an overwhelming
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force. at that point the idea was let's get in, get out and do this a different way. >> with no casualties, yeah. thank you. >> john miller, thank you. this morning we enter another morning of political gridlock. a far more serious fight looms over the debt limit on october 17th. the congress won't be able to pay the bills until congress acts. john boehner is doubling down on his position. nancy core diskocore is on capi >> he said republicans want a negotiation not only over the president's health care law but also over spending cuts and debt reducti reduction. those are conversations the two sides have been having in town for years without much success. the top republican in congress says he wants another round of negotiations before any vote to reopen the government. >> the american people expect in
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washington that when they have a crisis like this the leaders will sit down and have a conversation. >> but democrats who blame speaker boehner for a shutdown are steering him. >> let me issue a friendly challenge. put it on the floor monday or tuesday. >> boehner insists that's not the case, so the impasse continues with obama administration and democrats saying they won't negotiate. >> i don't think it's fair to say there's no reasonable on the democratic side. you know, what we've seen is demands. unless i get my way, you know, we'll bring these terrible consequences of shutdown or default. >> with 8,000 federal workers furlou furloughed. king argued his own party should not have used the shutdown to delay the strategy. >> it's sort of a nullification to say we're going to shut down the government if we don't defund a law we don't like.
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if we want to defund something, we should repeal it. >> it appears the health care law along with spending limits will be there. he won't hold a vote without those concessions. without a vote in the next ten days the u.s. treasury says it will run out of money to pay the nation's bills. >> the president, his refusal to talk, is results in a possible default on a debt. >> when is this going to end? >> if i knew, i'd tell you. >> the treasury department has warned the economic consequences of default could be catastrophic. one good piece of news for federal workers, charlie and norah, oefrp the weekend the house voted 407 to not to give them backpay when the government reopens. the senate plans to take up that bill as early as today. >> nancy cordes, thank you. cbs political director john dickerson is here. good morning. >> good morn, norah.
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speaker john boehner says he doesn't have the votes to put a clean bill before the government. is that true? >> he wants to use the vote as leverage to try to gend some spending concessions out of the white house. but that's different than what he said. hoe said it's a met a physical certainty that it's going to fail. news agencies have tallied of the republicans who say they'll continue it or raise the debt limit with no conditions attached. speaker boehner is not going do that. >> the new element is speaker boehner is talking about spending beyond defunding obama care. >> right. and this plit lick i makes sense because so far the original republican gambit was to call for the total lack of funding or remove all funding in obama care just to keep the government open for two months. that has been a political loser. what is better ground for them to fight on is the idea of tying some spending reductions to
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raising the debt limit. that poll is much more favorable for republicans. he's trying to move to that turf. of course, the white house says we're not going to deal with that at all. >> in terms of the spin of all this, is the fact that the president says i'm not going to negotiate until you pass a resolution and agree to raise the debt ceiling and then we can talk about it. who wins. >> right now the president is in better shape on that, particularly when it's on the question of spending. people don't like funding the government to defunding obama care but when you shift it to the question of should there be any spending reductions as a condition to raise the debt limit, the president is on a slightly weaker ground there. the question now is how do you find your way out of it. there's a little bit of a template in 2013. they had a kind of a little side agreement and that side agreement was the senate would vote on a budget. the senate hadn't done it in a while. so it was that side limit that allowed that to go forward.
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there was a chance you could see an agreement of that shape coming out at some point. >> do you think that side deal will ultimately be about the president giving grounds on entitlement? >> yes, except the president said he won't negotiate. of course, lit have to be a wink of a signed deal. a lot of boehner's conservatives won't gorego for it. so it's in crafting that side deal that in a way seems legitimate that will, you know, allow this kind of a compromise to come about, but that's still a lodge way out. >> and the bottom line -- if that means default, that's a very serious thing. extremely serious thing. five egypt chant shouldiers were shot and killed at a security checkpoint east of cairo and in a separate area there was an attack that killed two people. it came after ousted leaders
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fought with security forces. it left 53 dead and nearly 300 wounded. sunday marked the anniversary of egypt's 1973 war with israel. working from damascus, a u.n.-led team is working. on sunday the dismantled mixing equipment, warheads, and aerial bombs. the mission is to last until the middle of next year. experts think their stockpile of gas and nerve agents is among the largest in the world. a crash sent indycar driver franchitti flying through the air. it happened in hughes. more than a does a dozen fans w injured. >> it was the final lap of the grand prix of houston when dario franchitti's car went airborne,
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cartwheeling across a protective fence before bouncing back onto the track. >> oh, my goodness. that is a horrifying ride for dario franchitti. >> reporter: amateur video captured the moment of high-speed impact as large chunks of debris soared into the air and into the stands. >> we saw stuff flying everywhere. it was just crazy. >> oh [ bleep ]. >> reporter: a large portion was sent up into the crowd and injured spectators. two fans and franchitti were taken to the hospital while others were treated on the scene. >> you don't believe it's happening because it happened so quick and it's so scary. >> reporter: it hamid as franchitti tried to pass takuma sato. miraculously the 40-year-old was alert and awake. suffered a con kukz, fractured
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his spine and ankle but won't need surgery. she thanked twitter for their prars saying she was on her way. others weaved in and around the crash site to complete the course. >> we come here to race, put on great show. i don't want to see anybody get hurt, so fingers crossed everybody's doing all right. the race promoter and indycar race promother's days put out a statement saying fans and indycar safety are always a concern. the crash remains under investigation. for c"cbs this morning," manuel bojorquez. >> that is a thundering, thundering blow. an out-of-control monster truck killed eight people. it mowed over cars before plowing into people. 79 people were hurt, four critically. he appeared to hit his head as
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he drove over the cars. he had alcohol on his breath. officials aren't saying how much. he faces possible manslaughter charges. time to look at this morning's wed cyber. "wall street journal" says the site needs to fixes problems. demand caused the system to crash from many users. federal officials said yesterday more conservative pattern is needed. the "washington post" said they're going have scientific meeting of panels. it's for testing the safety of painkillers. e-mails show the drug company spent as much as $25,000 each to take part in the talks. u-t san diego says two
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californians share the 2013 nobel prize. some of the biggest youth sports organizations are teeming up to take concussions. the hartford current says newtown, connecticut, says that will accept $50 million for a new school. they could begin tearing down the school next marriage. they plan a school on the same site. a gunman killed 20 in december. "the new york times" has introduced a new $100 bill. they appear with three-dimensional strips that appear to move and a new holographic design. water is receding after heavy storms causeded widespread flooding. more than 6 inches of rain fell over the weekend. some neighborhoods turned into swimming pools.
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a twister with 170-mile-an-hour winds struck friday in nebraska. and there will be more digging out in the upper midwest. blizzard conditions in wyoming stranded tourists in yellowstone national park. more than 21 inches fell in rapid city leaving about 5,000 people without >> announcer: this national
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weather report sponsored by asthma.com. talk to your doctor. coping isn't kroeping. new questions about the police after bikers attack an suv driver in new york. >> nypd insider john miller is with us. >> norah and charlie, we know that at least three of the bikers were off-duty police officers, including one who works undercover. we'll look at why they didn't
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interve intervene. they looking to give pilots more rest but captain sully sullenberger tells us why it still leaves a hole in safety. and 59-year-old flies halfway across the country to las vegas without a ticket. how so many check points failed. the news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by usaa, serving the financial needs of current and former military members an their families. nistan in 2009. on the u.s.s. saratoga in 1982. [ male announcer ] once it's earned, usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve current and former military members and their families is without equal. begin your legacy. get an auto insurance quote.
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with a
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. a new study says women who stress with middle age are more likely to suffer from alzheimer's disease later in life. that story again. every woman in the world will get alzheimer's. >> that's so good. coming up this half hour, the faa is trying to keep pilots from falling asleep at the controls but the new rule comes with a major loophole. captain sul j sullenberger shows us how it can leave all of us at risk. >> and a airport security could also come under review after 59-year-old hopped a flight to las vegas with no tickets. that's right. we'll look at how the young adventurer was finally grounded. that's ahead. new arrests and outrage over the violent assault of an suv driver by a group of bikers in new york city. well, we now know at least three off-duty police officers say they were part of that motorcycle group last weekend. michelle miller is with us. good morning.
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>> good morning. well, police arrested two of the allege aid sail aunts over the weekend an more arrests could be on the way and we learned the morning that the suspect at the center of the case, reginald chance, already has 21 prior arrests on his record including robbery and drug charges. police say the person seen pulling the range rover's door open is this man, 35-year-old robert simms of brooklyn and they say the man who later slammed his helmet against the driver's side window is reginald chance, 37, also from brooklyn. chance's lawyers say his client overreacted and broke the window but denied taking part in the beating. >> if you look at the video you will see my client immediately after smashing the window returning to his bicycle and there are still photographers in the potion of the attorney. >> both have been charged with
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gang assault and other felonies. simms according to court documents stomped on the head and body of alexian lien. an unknown attacker tried to yank the wife and 2-year-old daughter out of the vehicle. >> i heard a lot of people screaming and telling the man, no, not at the woman, not the woman. this is a child. this is a child. >> sergio consuegra was late to church when he saw the men hitting the man with the helmet. >> you saw it. >> real hard. real hard. that's when i stepped in. i said, that's it. there was more coming. said that's it, guy. let it go. let it go. >> at least three off-duty new york police officers now admit to being in the motorcycle rally. one who admits he was working undercover saw the attack but
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fearful of revealing his identity did not the inner veen. >> were you surprised to hear there were police officers on the scene and did nothing? >> i'm shocked. it mademy angry, made me sad that -- you know, knowing that could be avoided. >> this morning police released pictures of two more persons of interest. they also continue to scour the video for clues about the other assail laments. as for the motorcyclist who took the video, kevin breslov, he is cooperating with police and is not considered a suspect. the undercover officer waited several days before coming forward and it's unclear if the others were witness. they'll be stripped of their guns and badge s pending
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investigation. >> john miller is with us. what do you know about this? you know the police inside and out. >> there's a few things going on here. first on wednesday of last week the understood cover detective said i was there, i saw the beating, i didn't want to break my cover. he's assigned to the intelligence division and under training they're not to admit. he would circulate v been in a lot less trouble if he came in the first day instead of four days later. now this is what's happening. they readering in the paper and learning that a police officer has come forward. two other police officers who were a also riding with the group that day. one of them was a sergeant. that's a supervisor and a detecti detective undercover in internal affairs.
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they're goimgs to be sat down and said where were you, what did you see, what did you do, what did you not do, why did you wait to come forward. >> i mean, john, what enthis story broke i asked you where were the cops and now we found out there were cops there who didn't stop this. why? >> well, i mean we know of one who was there at the initial beating, but these other officers, one of the ones that's come forward said after the guy got run over by the suv, i wasn't there for the rest of it. so we'll have to sort through their stories. but certainly they're going -- here's the problem they're going to face, which is whatever they did or didn't do that day is one issue but not coming forward right away could rise to official misconduct. that's a potential criminal charge. >> that's my exact question. >> that's the outer edge of it. they're going to be placed on modified assignments after their
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stories are weighed. they could be suspended. this could be grounds for dismissal, especially if the -- this is the d.a.'s call. if the district attorney says that rises to misconduct, everybody knew this going forward and they needed the information and these guys needed that. that could be a violation of law. >> one of the guys arrested, reginald chance has 21 prior arrests for charges from drugs to robbery to gun possession and yet he was out on the streets. >> so all but three of those 21 are sealed records in the system and most of those are a long string of narcotics arrests. so the idea that people who ride in motorcycle gangs or involved in criminal drugs is not strange. the idea they're riding with police officers is a bit of a head turner. >> is there likely to be -- >> you know, i think before -- that should happen and it
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shouldn't have to happen. i mean once they took that oath they should understand that already. thing what you're going to see is the police commissioner step forward and say we're going to change the rules about what groups you can be a part of and what groups you can be a part of because this with as really bad example. >> thank you. and captain sully sullenberger is out this morning with an opinion piece in t"the wall street journal". he writes about giving pilots longer rest shifts. it caps the amount of time pilots can fly over a 28-day period. but there was one big exception for the pilots of cargo planes. sully joins us from san francisco this morning. good morning. >> good morning, norah. hi, charlie. >> good morning. >> so good news for kmernl pcom pilots. but you say this exemption for cargo pilots is very dafrmgs. >> fatigue is fatigue whether
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you're carrying passengers or people. while it improves the safety for passenger flights but it does nothing for cargo flights. they're the most vulnerable to fa teak. you wouldn't have want your surgeon operating on your after only five hours of sleep or your passenger pilot flying after only five hours of sleep and you certainly wouldn't want a cargo pilot flying over your house in the middle of the night trying to find the airport. >> it seems so obvious. how was this made? >> they're trying to make economic arguments about an important safety issue and i think the faa in its calculation greatly underestimated the harm that could be done due to large crash. one recent example was the 1993 crash in amsterdam of a boeing
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737, killed people. >> we cover thad plaerngs ups plane that was trying to land in alabama. it ended up hitting a field and two pilots died. what if it crashed in a city? >> it could have been catastrophic. it's a tragedy that the two pilots died but it could have been much worse and while we don't know yet how much involvement fatigue played i'm sure investigators are looking at all the factors. this certainly affects it. >> i get the sense you're outraged by this and the safety considerations ought to be and you want dodd speak out. >> yes. the original title is one level of safety. it should be true no matter what we're talking about. fatigue is fatigue.
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>> captain sully sullenberger. good to see you. thanks so much for joining us. here's one sully probably never faced achlt child sneaking aboard a flight to las vegas. that's right. you'll see how his luck ran out next on "cbs this morning." and light 50, with just 50 calories,
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a follow-up this morning on 8-year-old nebraska boy jack, he's a cancer patient and football fan. earlier this year he lived out a dream of it. the video of the play game an internet sensation. well, now we've got to more good news for jack. last week his family hearned his brain cancer is in remission. the kimmo seems to have done its job, the tumor is stable and jack's father says hopefully the cancer has been knocked out for good. go, team jack.
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that's a great news. >> a lot of questions after a little boy snuck aboard a flight. he flew from minneapolis to las vegas. bill whitaker look at how the child outsmarted security and nearly everyone else. >> reporter: it all started here at the st. paul minneapolis airport. officials say the 9-year-old boy whose name has not been released took a flight to las vegas. >> in my wildest imagine i could not figure out how this young man was able to do this. >> reporter: here's what officials say happened. he apparently scouted the bag at the care sul and sat down in a restaurant. he told the waitress he had to use the restroom and he left. >> that's the amazing part about it. >> he somehow made it past airport security, possibly
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blending in with another family and got on a delta flight to los angeles. >> so it wasn't the fact he could have potentially had a weapon on him. he was screened. the real question is how do you get on board an airplane without the appropriate validate that you belong there. >> reporter: it wasn't till mid flight they noticed he was alone. delta release add statement saying we're investigating it. >> he's got a lot of explaining to do to the authorities, to delta air lines, and certainly to his mom and dad. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," bill whitaker, los angeles. i still don't understand how he did it. >> i know. it's an incredible story. he snuck past agents i guess. he's in a bit of trouble, i think, at home. >> he won't be
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this morning you'll meet the man who could be the next steve winn. he could become a los angeles casino boss. that's right. then he learns about his plan to shake up sin city. ahead on "cbs this morning." this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by levemir flexpen. ask your health care provider about the benefits of levemir flexpen today. tter.
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it is 8:00 a.m. welcome back to "cbs this morning." it is day seven of the partial government shutdown. house speaker john boehner says the standoff will not end unless president obama gives up something in negotiations. a disability insurance probe finds billion dollars of fraud and abuse and tom coburn tells us what his investigators found. and kenny rogers is here in studio 57. he's singeing again with dolly parton and entering the country music hall of fame. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. al libi is on a u.s. ship being interrogated. >> after 15 years on the run american forces captured the suspect in the bombings of two american embassies in africa. the operation is one of two over the weekend in libya and
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somalia. >> speaker boehner says he wants it also over spending cuts and debt reductions. >> that is a horrifying ride to dario franchitti. >> we come here to put on great show. we don't want anybody to get hurt. were you surprised there were police officers on the scene who did nothing? >> i'm shocked. >> that's one issue. but not coming forward right away could rise to official misconduct while the rule provides safety for passenger flights it does nothing for cargo flights and that's really ironic because cargo flights as you can imagine flying overnight are the most fatigued. >> they need to work on the demands. >> how could you not be ready? that's like 1-800-flowers getting caught off guard by
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valentine's day. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by benefiber. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. house speaker john boehner is not giving an inch to president obama and the democrats. >> boehner says the republicans won't stop until they get some concessions from the other side. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. good morning to you. >> good morning to all of you. and because this fight is blood broadening to not only include that but the debt ceiling as well, they say republicans started this fight and they need to fix it on their own. the top republican in congress says he wants another round of negotiations before any vote to reopen the government. >> the american people expect in washington when we have a crisis like this that the leaders will sit down and have a conversation. >> but democrats who blame
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speaker boehner for the shutdown are daring him to hold a vote on a no-victims-attached agreement. boehner insists that's not the case so the impasse continues with obama and democrats saying they won't negotiate. >> you know, what we've seen is demands. unless i get my way >> without a vote in the next tell days the u.s. treasury says it will run out of money to pay the nation's bills. over the weekend they voted unanimously to give them backpay. the democrats say all the more reason to reopen the government right away so the workers can get paid for what they do. john kerry says they followed orders.
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al libi was captured in libya yesterday. he was indicted 13 years ago for the attacks on ten ya and tanzania. heavy gunfire forced the americaned to pull back. it is unclear if the suspect survived that attack. a senate hearing this afternoon focuses on waste and abuse and federal disability insurance. last night's "60 minutes" reported on this. one told steve kroft many are going on disability when they cannot find a job. >> they're not going to die sile silently. they're going to look for another source of income. they'll file for disability benefits based upon that. for many of these people, the
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plant closed, there are no jobs in their communities. what are people supposed to do? >> tom coburn is also a doctor. 's been reviewing the insurance disability for the past two years. good morning, senator. >> good morning, charlie. >> good to see you. >> good to see you. >> can you tell what they found and what's most disturbing to you in. >> actually this is the second hearing. in the first one we found 25% of the cases that are adjudicated by the system are wrong, so that's one out of four. the second thing what we found was collusion and most likely fraud and extortion in this particular office as well as terrible management by social security itself in terms of its own rules and its oven guidelines. the other thing we found is that the people inside the social
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security office, not the judges but the people actually making determinations do a pretty good job but then it's totally ignored by the aojs and the trial board when, in fact, they try to go secure somebody with disability when, in fact, that ire not disabled. >> this fraud and collusion you talk about, what's the cost to taxpayers? >> well, i think just this one judge that we looked at assigned over $5 billion worth of claims just in the last four or five years, and we don't know which one of those might have been real. they just decided them on the record without hearing the testimony from either the attorney, the individual, or social security or reading actually the full file on the individual's claim. >> senator, last night on "60
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minutes" you said we have so many squally wags in the system that those who need help won't get it. what can we do to prevent this from happening? >> well, there's a couple of things. in 16 to 18 months they'll run out of money and that means people truly disabled are going to take a serious cut in the disability payments they receive today. i think that's one. they send you a post card and ask are you continuously disabled and of course anybody who's getting a good sized check is going to say yes rather than no, so there's no real organized effort to take them off disability once their injury has resolved. >> senator, i want to turn to
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the government shutdown. you have said you thought your fellow republicans would fold like hotcakes into the federal shut joup. today makes day search. what do you say to your fellow republicans? >> i didn't say that. i said they would fold like hotcakes. i didn't say seven. said the pressure will become so great the compromise will happen. >> where are we at now? >> we're not because nobody's talking. look. the debt ceiling and the c.r. are the same thing. there is no such thing as a debt creeling in this country because it's never been not increased and that's why we're $17 trillion in debt and i would dispel the rumor that's going around that you hear on every newscast that we'll default. we won't. we'll continue to pay our interest and continue to redeem bonds andish new bonds to
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replace those. so it's not entirely accurate. what we need to do is having a discussion. the social security/disability program, we need to fix it. nobody wants to fix it. we have a new plan come out otherwise known as obama care. we know it's going to get defrauded to the tune of billions and billions of dollar so why continue to do the same thing that put us in trouble to begin with. >> that is the question we continue to as
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the biggest nightclub owner in the west. how this big tycoon is making a big bet to change las vegas. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." thn this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by benefiber. benefiber. so easy with fiber that's taste-free, grit-free and dissolves completely. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber.
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how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed much is the official retirement age. ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ suddenly you're a mouth breather. a mouth breather! how do you sleep like that? you dry up, your cold feels even worse. well, put on a breathe right strip and shut your mouth. cold medicines open your nose over time,
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that's powerful. video of all the hot air balloons launched in albuquerque. 500 balloons took to the skies on sunday. just gorgeous. >> they are very pretty. i want to see them flying in the air. when meteor rights slammed into russia scientists didn't know until they looked at youtube. >> threatened with more asteroids ahead on "cbs this morning." sandwich comes with fs and your choice of soup or salad. it's just one of chili's delicious lunch break combos. more life happens here.
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how about a little viva las
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vegas to get you started. no city was hit harder by the recession than las vegas. now home prices are soaring and the tourists are back, but they're not spending money the way they used to. ben tracy introduces us to a man who says he know as what the new vegas needs. >> and so this right here, this will be the swimming pool. >> this is the money right here. >> reporter: sam nazarian is making what may seem like a risky bet. he's building the first new resort casino to open on the great strip since the great recession dealt this city a losing hand. >> reporter: you can see this right now. >> ef square inch. >> reporter: 38-year-old nazarian bought the famed sahara resort for $345 million. it was once of the play ground of johnny carson, elvis, and the
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rat pack. >> the only time beatles ever came to las vegas, they stayed in top left-hand corner, 2424. it's unbelievable. so the history is there. >> so instead of doing what everyone does with old vegas, nazarian is reusing the bones of the sahara to build something new. the $450 million sls las vegas is based on a radical idea in a town not known for being modest. you're doing most people don't try to do. you're trying to make vegas smaller, more personal? >> yes. smaller, more personal and the experience is more manicured. bigger isn't batter. you can have fun and not have to walk two miles to their room or be a number versus a person. i've been looking at this model for seven years now. >> unlike other moguls on this strip he'll own all restauranted
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and nightclubs under its roof. nothing is farmed out, meaning he keeps all the money. >> this is las vegas where nighttime is truly fun time. >> reporter: it's a business strategy reflecting how much business has changed. historically gambling was about 70% of the property's revenue. 30% for hotels, restaurants and amenities. today it's reversed. booze is as big as black jack and deejays in new mega clubs are the main part of the strip. the bellagio had $35 million last year. he's now the biggest night life operator west of the mississippi. >> what's the shelf life of a club. >> in the major cities the shelf
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life of a club has been 36 to 40 months because everybody wants to go to the next great place. you're also forced to manage a business that only works three or four night as week for three hours. >> so nazarian is rapidly expending his company. sbe short for sammy boy entertainment. they plan to have 30 nightclubs and 120 restaurants all over the world. he's building his sls hotels from miami to mumbai. he wants 20-something club kids to become his lifelong customers. >> as a customer, you can grow with us, come in at any level, and we have product that will be relevant to you and a product you can afford. >> reporter: his business is about constant reinvention. a lesson na varian learned at an early aim.
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his father lost his fortune but quickly remade it in california in a tiny company called call come. that made him a millionaire. even with all that money sam could not buy his way into clubs. >> because of my middle eastern background they wouldn't have let me in. it lit a fire in me that one day i'll be on the other side of that. i think only in america you can feel that evolution happen so fast. >> reporter: na varian now holds the velvet rope. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy. >> i think sammy boy entertainment is onto something. >> you know what's neat about
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"i'm terry mcauliffe, candidate for governor, and i sponsored this ad." these are birth control pills. more than half of american women use them at some point in their lives but ken cuccinelli sponsored a bill that could have made common forms of birth control illegal, including the pill. cuccinelli was one of only five senators to support this "potentially radical intrusion into domestic, family and individual decision-making"
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why is ken cuccinelli interfering in our private lives? he's focused on his own agenda. not us.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, remember that asteroid that exploded in russia last summer, we have more for you. michio kaku has another space rock causing trouble for us. and kenny rogers is here in the green room. he started his first band in high school. and he'll talk about his reunion with who else, dolly parton. that's ahead. >> right now it's time to show you this morning's headlines. a new term begins this morning for the high court. when asked about the legacy of his decisions, scalia said, quote, said i may be the justice sutherland who's regarded as,
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quote, he was on the losing side of everything, the old fogey, and i don't care. >> i like it. the "los angeles times" says that gravity soared to first place. the 3-d space drama took in more than $55 million. are we surprised? george clooney and sandra bullock where in that movie, thank you very much. "wall street journal" says general motors wants to sell more vehicles online. it wants to include its entire network of 43 dealers. that will give dealers exclusive rights to sell most cars. and gotham magazine lists 100 most eligible batchelors. they include bradley cooper, derek jeter and, drum roll please, our own charlie rose. the deb near southern genteel
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charm is rare. and charlie -- >> i swear to you did not know anything about this. >> i didn't either. >> i did read this last night. charlie is called the ultimate dinner companion. >> they can vouch for that. >> because they've never had dinner with miller. >> how many stop you on the street and say, hey, gayle, what's charlie rose really like? all ages, all sizes, all colors. >> the battle involves more. the 21st century is sponsoring a new form of financial warfare. mate be changing the behavior of countries like iran and north korea. cbs news analyst analyst juan zarate is one of the architects of that strategy. he's the author of the new book treasury war.
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joining us is fbi assistant director john miller. good morning. >> good morning, everybody. >> what's financial warfare. >> it's financial power that attacks. this became an integral part of how we did business. >> how dwrou it? >> you do it by enlisting the private sector. in a globalized system it's not about freeing assets or following the money but not giving them any accent. any group that wants breach, imagine the ability to g after the united states has to have access to money harkss to have global reach using the financial system. >> and money is very important. but this is the thing people should know about you, juan zarate. i have to say it's not a beach read. you were in the room after 9/11. you were in the room when all
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this planning started and you guys were told to do what? >> the treasury department was told to use all its power, influence, tools to go after al qaeda terrorist groups. disrupt, dismantle, disgroup so they can't attack again and also they can't attack in the future. >> that spawned a whole knew group of tools on how to go after them. it's now an integral part of how the national security and united states has thought about. >> having covered the white house you hear the administration talk about this speckly with iran, terrorist groups, north korea, et cetera. what about groups today, al shabaab. do they put money in banks? can we use this to thwart them? >> they actually use a lost
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money they attack, they have exporting charcoal, importing sugar. they raise millions of dollars? >> the interesting thing is, norah, even with inform nal groups or local groups, they have too access the financial group. you can use these techniques. with countries like iran, it's harder. the first thing rouhani wants is a litt from sanctions but first he wanted a plug back into the banking system. >> that's that 311 rule i was looking at. >> that's exactly right. >> if you look at what's going on, around the corner is a big giant skyscraper that sits on the most expensive real estate on the planet and this was owned and seized a few weeks ago by a held real government because
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they tran traced the money to iran. >> financial warfare, can they use it against us? ? >> they use it but in a different way. like china, instead of using the moral high ground and international community, they're doing the opposite. they're taking their cyber capabilities and stealing trade secrets to boost their own economy. >> they call it the biggest transfer. remember juan zarate is like kara karate. if you watched "06 minutes" last night, you saw it. and we doechb know what all these
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neil six months after the marathon bombing many are learning to use their legs again. it was led by the challenge athletes foundation. >> it was important for us to make sure that we try to offer some level of support beyond providing somebody with an artificial leg. certainly everybody, whether you're a runner or not, everybody wants to move and be tissue and that's what these clinics promote more
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what percentage of those asteroids? >> about one half of one percent. >> does it worry you that you only know of 1% that are big
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enough to destroy a city? >> most of those are really small and the odds are many would hit in a remote area or hit in a an ocean. that's why the larger ones are the ones we're peaing attention to first. the next size range, they can cause continent wide extinction or destruction. >> continent-wide destruction? >> we'll work down. >> but right now a comet that could wipe out an eastern seaboard or new york city could be a day away and there's a very good chance we wouldn't know about it. >> we're working to make sure we know about it. >> but right now we wouldn't know about it. >> it's possible. >> michio kaku is a physics professor in new york. good morning. >> good morning.
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>> i was thinking about you. it's scary, really scary we don't know. >> the dinosaurs did not have a space program and that's why they're not here today but we do have a space program but again we are sitting ducks with a piece of a rock the side of a telescope. that's a city buster. >> what do we have to do to be able to detect them? >> believe it or not amateurs do a good goode job of manning the skies. a hubble space telescope that is ziemed to look for small asteroids. it would cost churmp changrc ch >> if it's a no-brainer --
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that's crazy. >> that's right. if that thing had hit the war, it would have hit with hiroshima bonds but we have the giggle factor. every time you talk to a politician about asteroids they start to giggle. that's a problem that should be taken seriously by the community. >> is there something in the atmosphere that will cause it to blow up before it hits the ground? >> we don't know for sure. a lot of them are not constructed well. these gases will explode the object even before it hits the earth. that's what happened twice. it got hit twice with a city buster. it hit moscow.
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we can't have this luck forever. soon or or later it's inevitable that it could happen. >> the professor doesn't really give us an answer. >> should we all go out and get a helmet? >> an asummonmy course would but things in perspective. 6 one of these days it will hit the earth. >> we'll get kenny rogers to weigh in on that. . you, doctor. >> we'll be right back.
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february, 2013. a landmark transportation bill is up for consideration. even though it's backed by republican governor mcdonnell... ken cuccinelli joins tea party republicans to block the plan. but terry mcauliffe believes it's time to break through the gridlock in richmond. mcauliffe presses democrats to support the bill.
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and the bill passes. terry mcauliffe. putting virginia first. "i'm terry mcauliffe, candidate for governor, and i sponsored this ad." it's like you want to tellfind something the world.special. shout it from the rooftops. show it off. you just know when you find the real thing. and some designer deals are so sweet you just can't say no. see the real deal. check out all the designers maxxinistas are scoring. t.j.maxx.
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we could do it, kenny. ♪ we rely on each other, uh-huh ♪ ♪ >> the good news is -- >> i know, i know, i know. 30 years after their hit song -- the executive producer went, okay. i don't think he's enjoying the duet. kenny rogers and dolly parton are teaming up once again. ♪ we all know the show must go on but you can't make old friends ♪ >> their new number is called "you can't make old friends" from the album called "you can't make old friends."
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kenny rogers is about to be enlisted into the rock and roll hall of fame. let's talk about it 306789 years. >> i didn't know thereafter. somebody told me that at an interview that i was doing that it was the 30th anniversary on the day. >> but you said back then you connected musically and now as we fast forward 30 years you've connected personally. i'd like know how personal was it because you know we all want you to get together, so -- >> we're both married. so why would -- >> we should let that go. >> in all fairness dolly and i have been accused of having an affair for the last 30 year and we never did. what we've done is flirted with each other for 30 years. i do it in front of my wife because i know it's harmless. it gives us a great tension when we work together but she's one of those rare people that if she walked in the door and i had. seen her in five years it would be like we were together yesterday. >> you can see that always.
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so what number is this? album? >> 66. >> incredible. what did she say? >> it there's a really sweet story about that song. i was in california doing a thing called stagecoach and this kid walks backstage and said, kenny, i'm ryan kij, willie king of the commodores' son and i told him some of my favorite memories were when we went to your place in athens, georgia, when we would ride dirt bikes with your son chris and i told them you can't make old friends. next thing i was in new york with don who wrote "the gambler," and i told him about the story and he said can i have a shot. >> isn't "the gambler" the
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biggest thing? >> i think it's the most on everybody's mind but "islands in the stream" was voted best of all time. so i don't know which sold more or less. dwrou have a favorite kenny rogers song? >> i look at it always a weapon. >> i thought you were going to say children. as you sit here today with 9-year-old twins. norah has twins at her house too. i can't imagine what these like in your life. >> me either. someone told me that 6-year-old boys are like little criminals, so my whole goal was to get them safely into prisonern before i died. >> how are twins different? >> well, you know, it's funny because they're independent but they're so depep accident. i just dread this age going
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away. still right now when they walk the first day of school, they hold hands when they go in. they just count on each other so much. >> kenny rogers, thank you so much. great to have you here. congratulations on being admitted into the country hall of fame. >> not bad. >> "you can't make old friends" goes on sale tomorrow. up next your local news. we'll see you tomorrow morning. >> announcer: closed captions sponsored by citracal. and when you get up -- can i play?
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no! you don't even get football. [ male announcer ] when you've got 100% fiber optic fios, you get it. america's fastest, most reliable internet. it's the ultimate for downloading, streaming, and chatting. -- that guy all over the football field. thanks, joe. if the running backs don't start picking up the blitz, the quarterback is going to have a long night. is that your sister? look, are you trying to take my job? maybe. technology that lets you play with the big boys. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities that's powerful. at 800-974-6006 tty/v. technology that lets you play with the big boys. call the verizon center when ouwe got a subaru.s born,s it's where she said her first word. (little girl) no! saw her first day of school. (little girl) bye bye! made a best friend forever. the back seat of my subaru is where she grew up. what? (announcer) the two-thousand-fourteen subaru forester. (girl) what? (announcer) built to be there for your family.
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love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. .
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announcer: the following program contains mature subject
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matter. viewer discretion is advised. >> all new on the doctors. >> does your daughter know you're coming out with adult sex toys. >> i would hope not. >> trying to reconcile -- >> that's something i'm proud of. >> you're proud of the sex tape. announcer: then disturbing drug abuse, allegedly smoking crack. >> this is tough to watch. >> ya. she's got kids. >> plus back street boy nick and his advice for justin bieber. announcer: the cdc says we may face the worst measles out break in two decades. what went wrong with the vaccines. find out today.

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