tv CBS This Morning CBS August 29, 2014 7:00am-8:57am EDT
7:00 am
good morning. it's fr,iday august 29, 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." president obama admits we don't have a strategy yet to fight the terror group isis. a life-threatening health crisis for joan rivers. nancy o'dell is watching the legendary comic's condition. >> roger goodell said he didn't get it right. the new action to correct course. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye
7:01 am
opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> i don't want to put the cart before the horse. we don't have a strategy yet. >> the white house says no to immediate military action against isis in syria. >> isis militants claim to have carried out a mass execution of syrian soldiers. >> the president is taking heat from his critics whoay se h doesn't understand the isis threat. >> this is a pitiful foreign pocy and barney fife is in charge. >> it's a full-scale invasion with them fighting along another front in southern ukraine. to comedian joan rivers rushed a new york hospital when she was rushed in due to cardiac arrest after a throat procedure. >> her daughter says she is comfortably surroundedy b family. >> nfl commissioner roger goodell is admitting his two-game suspension of ray rice was too soft. >> it's not a league to back down from its decisions. for roger goodell to say that in
7:02 am
this case says quite a bit. >> the volcano is causing an eruption. a red alert issued for amenrica flights. >> american teen cici bellis is out of the u.s. open. >> it didn't turn out the way i wanted to, but -- >> rob ford is at it again. >> a womanel tls her sons she's pr. nant >>hat are you thinking. you're having a baby. you have two. >> that's why twitter went nuts yesterday. d>> i kon'tnow about a tie with that suit. >> i don't know if you're allowed to cast that stone with your glass house yellow tie. have a great morning. >> arby's. the roast beef people have a brand-new sandwich, the meat mountain. michelle obama said, oh, i give
7:03 am
up. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose and norah o'donnell are off but as we've been saying all week, all is well because anthony mason is here. >> hello again. >> hello again. didn't the week fly by? >> flew. >> i think so too. president obama is considering action against isis and syria but he says there will be no attacks right away. this morning republicans are accusing the president of having no plan to deal with the terror group. >> secretary of state john kerry will go to the middle east next week. his job is to begin a coalition. bill plante's at the white house where the president met last night with his top security aides. bill, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the expectation around here was building that the president was on the verge of order erring air
7:04 am
strikes against the islamic militants inside syria, so he made his unscheduled appearance thursday to declare that the time is not yet right to strike isis or as he calls it, isil. >> we don't have a strategy yet. >> reporter: after more than 100 air strikes aimed at stopping the isis charge in northern iraq, president obama stated that conceding militants there is not enough. >> the violence that's been taking place in syria has obviously given isil a safe haven there. >> before a two-hour meeting with national security staff to consider options in syria, the president told reporters that any u.s. response will require the use of force, but just as important, the support of both other nations in the middle east and congress. >> in order for us to degrade isil over the long term, we're going to have to build a regional strategy. now, we're not going to do that alone. there will be a military aspect to that and it's going to be important for congress to know what that is, in part because it
7:05 am
may cost some money. >> but he denied reports that any decision to carry the fight against isil into syria was imminent. >> the suggestion seems to have been that, you know, we're about to go full-scale on an elaborate strategy for defeating isil, and the suggestion, i guess, has been that we'll start moving forward imminently and somehow congress still out of town is going to be left in the dark. that's not what's going to happen. >> reporter: congressional republicans were quick to criticize the president's remarks. >> to have a press conference to say we don't have a strategy was really shocking given the severity of the threat. >> reporter: white house officials scrambled immediately after the president gave the white house news conference to explain what the president meant was not that he didn't have an overall strategy, only that he was waiting for the military to have a strategy for striking in
7:06 am
syria. anthony? >> bill plante at the white house. thanks, bill. at his news conference the president ruled out military action in ukraine saying it will not solve the crisis. nato says there are now at least 1,000 russian troops in eastern ukraine. this morning russians and russian-backed rebels control several cities. elizabeth palmer is monitoring the fighting from london. elizabeth, good morning. >> good morning. this morning already president vladimir putin has addressed a youth group at home in russia where he said the ukrainians and the russians are practically one people. well, whatever he said, proof is mounting that in a bold escalation, the russian military has sent both troops and heavy fighting equipment into ukraine. the goal seems to be to help pro-russian rebels who were losing ground to the ukrainian army. this, says the ukrainian government, is a russian tank,
7:07 am
caught on cell phone camera inside the ukrainian city. and from the air, nato satellites have been capturing even more evidence of russian military presence including field artillery, trucks, and troop carriers. earlier this week the youkrainis actually captured ten russian pair a troopers and paraded them before cameras but each that wasn't enough to force russia to come clean about their operation. this morning the minister called the evidence conjecture. not once, he said, have any facts been presented to us. the ukrainians who want the russians to get out of their country don't believe him, and neither did the western diplomats and politicians at an emergency meeting of the security council yesterday. samantha power is america's u.n. ambassador. >> every step russia has come before this council to say everything but the truth. it is manipulated, it has on
7:08 am
fuss skated, it has outright lied. >> meanwhile the fighting with moscow backing rebel groups against the ukrainian army is ferocious. so far, according to the united nations, more than 2,500 people have been killed in what appear taos be escalated. western analysts think the end game may be for russia to take a narrow strip off of ukraine to join up with crimea which it seized earlier this spring. >> thank you, elizabeth. joan rivers' family is asked you to keep her in your prayers. she was rushed to the hospital after her heart stopped in the doctor's office. her daughter, melissa, said her mother is resting comfortably. nancy o'dell is with us. it sounds like it's a good thing
7:09 am
she was with the doctor. >> definitely. melissa is with her mother now. she flew there yesterday after hearing the news. you know, joan rivers is known as a legend, a ground braker. now she's having to deal with this life-threatening health crisis. legendary comedian joan rivers is in a medically induced coma at a hospital this morning. the 81-year-old queen of comedy stopped breathing on thursday while having a throat procedure at a clinic on new york's upper east side. according to a dispatch call, rivers wentz into cardiac arrest. she's being treated at mount sinai hospital. >> this is not a comeback business. i see people try to come back. people move on. you must always stay current. >> reporter: rivers appeared wednesday night promoting her book and was booked for a friday night show in red brook, new jersey. it's now been postponed. >> she's a trailblazer. she'serring we want to bring to red bank and to our states. it's close to being sold out.
7:10 am
>> reporter: rivers broke the glass ceiling of late night. she got her start in 1966 as a guest on "the tonight show" and served as permanent guest host for years. johnny carson adored her. >> please, are we going go back to that? no man should ever put his happened up a woman's dress looking for a library card. >> reporter: she's reidentified herself through five decades of ups and downs. >> tell us what you finally picked to wear tonight. >> i just want to know what you have to say this year. i want to hear it now. lasteer you said i looked like a swashberuckl. >> her sharp tongue has kept many of their tongues, many finding themselves the target of her "e!" network show. through it all rivers has retained the ability to laugh at
7:11 am
herself. >> i have been pulled so tight i put earrings on my [ bleep ] now. >> we also heard they were going to bring her out of hermetically induced coma this weekend to assess any damage. that was before melissa arrived. they're consulting melissa on medical decisions made. of course, everyone in hollywood is rallying around joan. larry tweeted go get 'em, girl. that's how we all feel. she's resilient, active, not your typical 81-year-old. certainly all our thoughts and prayers are out to her. >> nancy, she is not your typical 81-year-old and we wish her the best. this morning the giant pacific waves in california are starting to calm down but lifeguards say there's still danger out there. one man nearly drowned thursday at l.a.'s venice beach. he was revived after his pulse stopped. teri okita is on newport beach
7:12 am
in southern california. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. 435,000 people have hit the beaches up and down the southern coast of california over the last three days and many have been unprepared for these strong waves. even though the waves are dying down, as you mentioned, lifeguards are still concerned and still bracing for more rescues over the long holiday weekend. it's been almost 20 years since southern californians have seen waves like these. the once-in-a-lifetime chance to ride these big waves can turn into a near death experience, even for the best swimmers. >> they're fighting rip currents instead of, you know, swimming sideways. there's a lifeguard going out. >> we were with lifeguard captain brian o'rourke. our cameras captured this rescue. >> you can see the rip current. it's that big foamy water. they're going to swim out of that, right there, the current, they'd just be fighting it.
7:13 am
>> reporter: a rescue boat raced to the scene as waves crashedover the lifeguard and the swimmer struggled. >> this is where it's dangerous. they have to hold on. >> reporter: after several minutes 23-year-old body surfer luke busey was brought safely to shore. >> i wasn't in the right spot. i got caught in the water. when it breaks like that, all the foam and the backwash and white caps keeps you under, holds you under. hard to swim up. couldn't breathe. >> couldn't breathe. >> we're all about prevention. >> we would rather prevent it. >> reporter: despite the danger there are no plans to close the beach. lifeguards patrolling the beach here say they've talked to more than 8,000 people warning them of the condition. >> this is what we have. red flag surf. if you don't have fins, we'd appreciate if you didn't go in the world. >> reporter: for surfers who can hold the swell, it's one wild ride. even though the waves are
7:14 am
stronger it's the strong riptides that are of most concern for the lifeguards out here. one lifeguard told me 90% of all rescues in newport are caused by people being pulled out of the rip current. anthony? >> thank you, teri. roger goodell unveiled a tough new domestic violence policy on thursday. >> the league faced a backlash for giving the baltimore rairns' running back a short suh suspension of only two games. he's accused of beating his fiancee, she's now his wife, at a casino in february. amy trask from nbc sports joins us. good morning. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> the commissioner says he didn't get it right. what are the changes. >> a first offense may result in a six-game suspension. a second offense may result in a lifetime ban, but in addition to
7:15 am
the disciplinary system articulated in the policy, it includes a very strong educational program and also a program of support and assistance for players and their families. >> amy, is goodell's about-face here a response to the public backlash, do you think? >> i've known roger, i've had the pleasure of working with roger, the commissioner, for over a quarter of a century, and i know him to be deeply concerned with the issue of domestic violence, so i don't believe that the response, the new policy articulated yesterday, was solely a response to the public outcry and the image issues that arose in the wake of the ray rice issue. certainly image is very, very important to the national football league. certainly the public outrage over the rice suspension had a part. look, the suspension was inappropriate, the commissioner has acknowledged that, but i
7:16 am
believe there's more to it than public relations and image. as i said, i've worked with the commissioner for over a quarter of a century and i know he cares deeply about issues like domestic violence. >> many say he should be applauded for saying, listen, i got it wrong, and i want to change it. >> absolutely. that's how business has improved. they look at what they've done poorly, they fix it, and they get better. >> all right, amy, thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me. nascar champ tony stewart is about to break his silence this morning. he'll return to racing this weekend for the first time since he struck and killed a fellow driver three weeks ago. vicente arenas is with us. >> reporter: tony stewart set to race again after sitting out the past three events following the death of kevin ward earlier this month in upstate new york. >> people are still waiting to hear from him. they're waiting to hear whether he saw kevin ward jr. on the
7:17 am
track. >> reporter: the two drivers had been fighting for position in a sprint car race when they collided and ward hit the wall. he got out of his car and appeared to be pointing at stewart. several drives passed, but when stewart came around, he struck ward, tossing him 50 feet. the 20-year-old was pronounced dead at the hospital. >> except for a statement that said he is very upset about what happened that night, we haven't heard anything from tony stewart. >> reporter: investigators have said there's no evidence of criminal intent but declined to share details which could still result in charges. earlier this month ward's father told the imperial standard there's no reason for the crash that killed his son. apparently tony stewart was the only one driving out there who didn't s him, he said. the one person who knows what happened that night is possibly facing ten years in prison. is he going to say what he done? >> this is still a very sensitive issue for the ward
7:18 am
family. i think there are a lot of people who are anxious to hear what he has to say when he comes back. a search for a missing pilot is over this morning. he died when his jet went down in virginia on wednesday. the pilot from massachusetts did not eject from the plane as many believe. the f-15 crashed in the mountains of virginia after the pilot reported an in-flight emergency. this morning another airport reports another unscheduled landing after passengers squabbled over a reclined seat. a woman put her seat back, the man behind her got upset. he started arguing a crew member and grabbed his arm. the flight diverted to boston where the male passenger was arrested. a similar incident happened sunday on a united airlines flight. >> nobody seems to win in that situation. the largest volcano's system erupted earlier after several
7:19 am
days of derground rumbling. the small explosion took place in a lava field. a red alert is posted this morning for planes flying near the volcano. no ash has been detected but airspace near this volcano is closed. up to 18,000 feet. meanwhile several flights had to be diverted around new guinea after a volcano erupted. residents said they heard loud explosions and half an inch of ash fell on surrounding areas. schools and businesses were closed in that region north of australia. residents were advised to stay indoors. >> you don't have to ask me twice. aisle stay inside. it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning," private jets, 1%, are grounded on a holiday weekend. oh, no. find out why even rich
7:20 am
7:21 am
the terror group isis is invading our social media. >> ahead, insurgents waging war and winning support using facebook and twitter. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. we'll be right back. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by macy's. [ mike ] i wanted to do some good for my guys.
7:22 am
so i'm trying hellmann's with olive oil. let's see what happens. that's not hellmann's on your sandwiches. it's hellmann's with olive oil. whaddaya want, a parade? [ laughter ] bring 'em over here. c'mon. . rich, dark chocolate covering soft centers. flavored with exotic fruit juices. it's chocolate and fruit flavors like you've never experienced before. discover brookside. are you about to spend that on paper towels? mom: well, i use bounty... kerri: ooo! use sparkle®... it's just right for cleaning up everyday little messes without cleaning out your piggy bank. sparkle®. the bright way to clean. hey, i heard you guys can help me with frog protection?
7:23 am
yeah, we help with fraud protection. we monitor every purchase every day and alert you if anything looks unusual. wow! you're really looking out for us. we are. and if there are unauthorized purchases on your discover card, you're never held responsible. just to be clear, you are saying "frog protection" right? yeah, fraud protection. frog protection. fraud protection. frog. fraud. fro-g. frau-d. i think we're on the same page. we're totally on the same page. at discover, we treat you like you'd treat you. fraud protection. get it at discover.com of your daily routine. so why treat your mouth any differently. brushing alone does less than half the job leaving behind millions of germs. complete the job with listerine®. kill up to 99 percent of germs. and prevent plaque, early gum disease and bad breath. complete the job with listerine®. power to your mouth™. also try listerine® floss. its advanced technology removes more plaque.
7:24 am
grilled chicken, pico, fresh greens, cilantro, avocado, tortilla strips, and a drizzle of margarita sauce, all served with a bowl of soup. chili's fresh mex bowls from our lunch combo menu startit ng a6 bucks. more life happens here. make sure the second hug the feels just as good.ou. huggies gentle absorb liner... draws more mess away than pampers swaddlers. i'll take care of you. i promise. padvil pm gives you the healingu at nsleep you need, it. helping you fall asleep and stay asleep so your body can heal as you rest. advil pm. for a healing night's sleep. ...of america's number-one puppy food brand... ...with dha and essential nutrients also found in mother's milk. purina puppy chow.
7:25 am
exactly the way you want it... until boom, it's bedtime! your mattress is a battleground of thwarted desire. enter the sleep number bed. right now, all beds are on sale. he's the softy. his sleep number setting is 35. you're the rock, at 60. and snoring? sleep number's even got an adjustment for that. you can only find sleep number at a sleep number store. right now save 50% on the labor day limited edition bed, plus 24-month special financing. hurry ends monday!
7:30 am
one roll. >> let's get together and feel all right. toronto mayor rob ford danced to reggae music in city council chambers just hours later. he admitted he embarrassed the council this term as he's done before. ford danced in the center of the council chamber and sang along with songs including "hallelujah" and "one love." ford hopes to win re-election in
7:31 am
november. >> we'll see what happens. he is a gift that keeps on giving. >> not at all. >> not at all. charlie rose and norah o'donnell are off. anthony mason is with us. >> even though it's not saturday. coming up, race for ride-sharing supremacy turning into a bittersweet fight. it's brutal. we'll show you the battle between uber and lyft. >> imagine the 1% sitting in traffic like the rest of us this weekend. find out what some wealthy jet-setters blame president obama for grounding their labor day flight. that's ahead. time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. the straits times of singapore says malaysian airlines will cut 6,000 jobs. they have desserted the airline after a pair of disasters this
7:32 am
year. in march malaysian flight 370 disappeared and later a flight was shut down. they want to make the company profitable by 2017. the "san jose mercury news" says apple confirms a big month next month. they say wh we could say more. it will happen september 9, 2014. they're supposed to unveil a new phone with a larger screen. >> a new watch maybe? >> something that will measure our bio stats. >> wherever it is it will be a long line. >> that's where charlie will be. the "los angeles times" talks of a new fracking study. a report contends it's a danger to the public health.
7:33 am
"the new york times" reports dozens of americans have joined the terror group to join isis. a new downline video group shows brutal attacks. they show militants marching captured soldiers through the syrian desert in their underwear. the soldiers are later seen dead. a this morning group says 150 were killed. >> that's very tough to look at. terror analysts say those fighters posed the greatest threat to the united states because of their ability to travel freely and blend in. many are recruited through a powerful online media campaign. juliana goldman is in washington with a look at the isis pr strategy. julia juliana, good morning to you. >> good morning. this is a new generation of very sophisticated jihadi propaganda that's only emerged in the last several months. isis is using is cash and militants to recruit and
7:34 am
radicalize. this is a western jihadist urging potential isis recruits to come join the fight in syria. >> your families who live here live just like it is back home. >> reporter: it's all part of a high-tech propaganda machine isis has developed to reach out to militants in europe, canada, and the united states. the terror group now has its own multilingual media arm which is behind the creation and distribution of glossy magazines and highly produced slick videos. isis even uses drones and gopros to appeal to the western eye. and this is a tweet, a short promotional video which shows a softer side of jihad. here a belgian hands out ice cream to excited syrian children. >> you can see messages of camaraderie. >> this is deputy director of media research institute which has been tracking isis on the web. >> the focus of these is very
7:35 am
much on, come and join us, it's and gore and suffering. it's come and join us, join me, and we'll fight the good fight together. >> reporter: a celebrity culture has even emerged around some of these isis fighters. like this french militant who goes by giton. >> the message is very much here we are at the beach, here we are eating pizza. the guys, it's pizza night. almost on the side it says death to jews. >> and a german rapper who goes by deso dog. >> they're serving terrorist material. >> reporter: rita is a co-founder of site, an intelligence group pushing social media networks to crack down on isis postings. >> these are very inspiring images, 57bds individuals, images that are followed, that are very much celebrities in the
7:36 am
west and now they're celebrities of the jihadists. they're all over twitter, incited for killingçñoczf oth >> twitter has no comments but it has shut down official isis accounts. still these tweets show how easy it is for jihadists to skirt the system and get their message out. >> reporter: could it really be that the isis is ahead of the united states of america on the p.r. front? >> no. at the end of the day, they don't need big numbers. they're trying to appeal to small numbers, which unfortunately in the terrorism business is all it takes. >> when it comes to policing these social media sites, sources say the social media sites are divided. isis posts also track the militants and their abilities. >> all right, julia na. thank you. may i see, i've about seen you on other cbs shows but this is the first time you've about been on "cbs this morning." welcome.
7:37 am
good to have you here. >> thank you. >> i know we'll see you again. google could be the next company to attempt to deliver by drone. the company is working on a fleet of drones to fly packages to their destinations. a recent test flight in australia delivered a first aid kit, candy bars and water to farmers. it could still, though, take years to get the service ready to go. the program challenges a similar one that competitor amazon is working on right now. the high-tech world is watching a new battle this morning. it's all about commuting, not computing. two ride share companies uber and lyft are taking aim at the traditional taxi industry. they're also using extreme tactics to win your business. nicholas thompson, the editor of new yorker.com covers the tech industry. good morning. >> good morning. >> the battle is getting intense. they're two san francisco company but they're spreading all over the country. >> all over the world. >> what are they trying to do first? >> they're trying to destroy first? >> they're trying to destroy each other, poach drivero
7:38 am
price tag alert! is this normal? well, progressive is a price tag free zone. we let you tell us what you want to pay, and we help you find options to fit your budget. where are they taking him? i don't know. this seems excessive! decontamination in progress. i don't want to tell you guys your job, but... policies without the price tags. now, that's progressive. we are the solis family. and this is our chex commercial. there's lots of choices. like chocolate, honey nut and cinnamon, with no artificial colors or flavors. and it's gluten free. chex. full of what you love. free of what you don't. osteo bi-flex® with joint shield™ nurtures and helps defend your joints° so you can keep doing what you love. what'd you guys do today? the usual! the usual! [ male announcer ] osteo bi-flex, ready for action.
7:39 am
you. >> what kind of baby. >> a 7-year-old boy with a big vocabulary. you have to love a boy who knows how to use exasperating correctly. he goes off on his mom when she announces a little brother or sister is on the way. he was very upset he would have to listen to another baby crying. his mother assured him he would never, ever, ever be replaced. he wanted to know what kind of baby is it because boys make more noise than girls. >> vocabulary and smart. >> i love that story. president obama flies to westchester county. it's upset some powerful new yorkers. how the president is clipping their wings. >> clipped them he did. >> good morning. >> good morning. when "air force one" arrives, the they'll put the skies over the city of new york on lockdown. corporate planes and private charters and their jet-setting passengers will be the hardest hit just in time for the start passengers will be the hardest hit just in time for the start of the labor
7:40 am
when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america. good morning, usher! hey! did you know bees communicate through dance? me too... we're practically twins! finally, the purple pill,hr the #1 prescribed acid blocking brand, comes without a prescription for frequent heartburn. get complete protection. nexium level protection™
7:42 am
that means the huge waves created in southern california are dying down but the damage is done. new pictures show what's left of an old lifeguard station in malibu that was swept into the ocean early thursday. despite the destruction, surfers took on the towering ways. that's our carter evans tearing it up with a gopro camera. >> go, carter. >> he's impressive. when president obama spoke with reporters thursday, he also made a fashion statement. he was wearing a tan suit, and the online reaction was fast and furious. believe it or not, it drew about 4,000 tweets in half an hour with comments like the audacity of taupe and yes, we can. michigan congressman john dingell posted a picture of himself saying i see no problem with the suit. >> i think the president wore it well. >> i do too. we're not used to seeing him in such a light suit. it is labor day. you can't wear light ♪
7:43 am
7:44 am
they're going to yale, they're going to harvard, they have jobs waiting for them. it's all set in stone. everybody else has to fight for it. >> pollster frank luntz has some really interesting talks about the fears of income inequality. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs "morning rounds" sponsored by bayer aspirin. take charge of your health. visit iamproheart.com. one. if you've had a heart attack be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen.
7:45 am
going to harvard, they have jobs waiting for them. it's all set in stone. everybody else has to fight for it, and the corporations aren't creating any jobs. >> i have a 27-year-old and i encouraged him after he graduated to leave this country to go find a job. >> so you would leave the country. >> i lived in australia for a year and i made minimum wage over there. it's about $20 an hour. why would i stay here for $7.50. >> i write you a check for $10 million and here's the catch. you cannot return back to america. you can take anyone with you, you can live in canada, mexico, wherever you want to live across the globe. a check for $10 million, but you cannot return. who would take the money, raise your hands? you see, that just blows me away. you would go and not come back. >> i would go for free right now. i feel like there's no future for me t ere, if you've been
7:46 am
listening, for quite some time. >> that's the whole point. i don't think people listen. i'm grateful to you all for putting that on the air and putting it on as well as you did because now the average american gets to hear this. the problem is i don't think they tell politicians this. they always tell them that they're great or they yell at them. they really never tell the truth. that's the truth. >> are politicians listening? >> i'm not convinced of it. i'm hoping we have a great debate season this fall where you get a chaance to hear the differences in a positive way, not just tearing them down. >> the cry has gotten a lot louder even though it's been around about the tax breaks and groups it. was really interesting. thank you for sharing. >> thank you. this morning "48 hours" looks as a mysterious death and a family's search for answers. >> i'm peter van zapt. coming up, a todd is shane's mo.
7:48 am
she's in studio 57. her new book is called "hard drive. "good morning to you. >> good morning. >> i remember seeing this on "48 hours." i remember crying in my home, i was so angry, so sad, so upset your lost your son this way. >> thank you. >> i have to say i'm very, very sorry. >> thank you very much. >> you were all convinced starting with the suicide note that there's no way he could have done this. what was in the suicide note that you know this wasn't him? >> from the first paragraph i red that was my first sense of joy from the time -- we found out my son had hung himself supposedly and i knew the first paragraph weren't his words. he was saying nice things about the company that he hated and was leaving and so i knew. >> he told you he was worried about the company. >> right. he was told he was asked to compromise u.s. security and he quit his job and he told us his life was being threatened. >> it also didn't appear to be written by an american. >> that's correct. written by an american. >> that's correct. we had that
7:49 am
oh, hi there bill. written by an american. >> that's correct. we had that hey! are you in town for another meeting? yup, i brought my a-team. make the most of the weekend before it's gone. this is my family. this is joe. hi joe! hi there! be a weekender and book your stay at hampton. feel the hamptonality. >> reporter: lauren plans to
7:50 am
start selling the athletic shirts this spring. he plans to see the technology soon woirch into his classic dress shirts and more. >> it will no longer be used for a sporting idea either. someone walking down the street might want to know how their heart is doing, breathing, someone in the boardroom may be very curious about their stress level around someone might want to monitor their child at home in a crib. today we're living in a culture where people are gathering information to live happier, healthier, and better life. >> no word yet on how much it will cost. >> did it feel like a normal shirt? >> it's a compression t-shirt. the ball boys say it feels like a second skin. it needs to be really tight because it measures every move. >> they're good looking. i was at store the other day. there was a long line. wanted to get the yellow tennis shoes. >> it helps if y
7:51 am
that does it for us. i'll speak for anthony. didn't we have a great time? >> we had a lovely week. i loved being here. >> and vinita the last two days, very nice. be sure to tune in to "cbs evening news with scott pelley" as we leave you with the week that was. have a great holiday weekend. earthquake in three seconds. >> the chimney collapsed on my head. >> an-inch of olive oil and balsamic vinegar. an american journalist was
168 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WUSA (CBS)Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=854709317)