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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  May 8, 2015 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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┌ good morning. it is friday may 8th 20156789 welcome to "cbs this morning." severe weather sparks an explosion, and more tornadoes in the southern plains. tom brady goes on the record about deflate gait sort of. drivers illegally text and drive. police say how hard it is to get them to stop. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> another active day. weand 're going to be looking at the same situation friday. >> three tornadoes over texas. >> millions in the paths of severe storms. >> a light new england strike
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set off a natural gas exioplosn. >> look at this refrigerator? the force of water tipped it over. >> some tropical storms. >>er sup bowl famer -- he make his first report. >> fbi warns that a thousand online terrorist groups may be living in the u.s. meanwhile the fbi may have warned police in texas about the prophet muhammad cartoon contest. a cabin filled with smoke. >> david cameron is preparing for another term as prime minister. >> i will make sure i do not let you down. thank you. a veryve bra girl fought off an attacker after he followed her home in san jose. >> the driver landed on the
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railroad tracks. >> everyone is expected to be oklahoma okay. >> alex rodriguez, 661. >>ly's going to be a lot of happy people. >> using the proceeds from the ct auion of my whole set, with ee >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> when you retire i'm never going to wear a fancy dress on a talk show again. i want to give you the dress. this is it. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs another good-bye for for tina fey.
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very comfortable in her body. >> i know. i love her. welcome. the hurricane season is nearly a month way but the year's first named storm is already developing. the system named ana will cree area a wet weekend for some areas in the east coast. an apparent lightning strike caused a gas explosion outside dallas. adriana diaz has more after the severe storms. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. residents are trying to clean up after a massive tornado and heavy rains ripped apart this garage, destroyed 1,500 homes, and killed one woman. yesterday the storms made their way across texas where a lightning strike is expected to be the cause of a massive fire. flames burned out of control. >> oh my god, a fire.
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>> reporter: -- and lit up the sky. >> this is an explosion and the gas well is burning behind these houses. >> after an apparent lightning strike hit a dallas area gas well thursday night. >> all right. this one means business. >> violent weather brought tornadoes and dangerous flooding to texas. pickups struggled alongside police cars to navigate the mess. here in nearby oklahoma people are cleaning up after wednesday's tornado. >> we lost everything. we've got nothing. >> this southern rv park. >> we had water about six inches running through this area. >> the chief of the fire department gave us a closer look. >> in addition to this area right here citywide we responded to about 150 water rescues. >> hundreds of homes were damaged in bridge creek.
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susan blet hhrow and her daughter tina say resilience is the oklahoma standard. >> you keep going, clean up and move on. >> reporter: mark gleeman agrees. he says stuff can be replaced. for him he said the flag is worth saving. >> people from all over the united states will pour in. we can count on it. i know. we've seen it over and over. >> reporter: the red cross and salvation army are handing out food and shelter, but just when residents need a break, they have to prepare for more extreme weather. >> that's the last thing people want to see or hear. thank you, addrihanna. >> meteorologist scott padgett of our dallas-ft. worth station is tracking the sky.
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good morning. >> good morning. it's almost adding inshut to injury. a moderate amount as the dry line is going to work its way in with supercell storms and damaged tornadoes and baseball sized hail with 16.5 million people at risk. ana, subtropical storm ana with winds sustained at 45 miles per hour possibly making its way onshore going late saturday into sunday. maybe 2 to 4 inches of rain and dangerous surf as we have this first tropical system of the season. charlie? >> thanks. new england patriotss quarterback tom brady says we have learned everything on the field. a report says brady probably knew that patriots employees deflate ed deflated footballs. elaine quijano is at university
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of massachusetts where brady spoke last night. elaine, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. salem is notorious for its colonial era witch trials but now this is deep in the heart of patriots country and the reception for tom brady last night was far from a witch hunt. tom brady was treated like a hero and the reigning mvp loved every minute of it. >> this is like a patriots pep rally. >> reporter: but even in this friendly arena -- >> i love you, tom brady. >> i love you too. >> . >> reporter: -- however he couldn't address those questions. >> however, there's an elephant in the room. >> where. >> give it a chance. >> reporter: amid accusations he was a cheater, brady has declined to react. >> it's only been 30 hours.
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i haven't had much time to digest it, but when i do i'll be sure to let you know how i feel about it. >> reporter: brady descended in a helicopter for thursday's speaking engage management at salem university as fans cheered from a distance. the development was sold out months in advance. a packed auditorium delayed the program by 40 minutes. >> when do you plan to address this publicly? >> hopefully -- >> reporter: his agent don yee flatly denied it and told cbs news s his climate had been set up. >> it could be more probable than not that they teemed up with the colts in a sting operation. >> reporter: they say the allegations have placed a shadow over the nfl. >> we want to get to the truth. i think right now as farr as tom is concerned, a lot of guys
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don't know the truth because there's been this doubt cast. >> reporter: brady told the audience he's still appreciative of family support, and fans. >> has this however, detracted from your joy of winning the super bowl? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: brady's agent don yee says a significant amount of brady's testimony is missing from the report. this morning we still don't know whether the nfl will punish brady and the two employees implicated in the investigation. norah? >> thank you. breaking news this morning from pakistan where a military hospital packed with foreign dignitaries crashed killing seven people. among the dead ambassadors from norway ss s norway and others including two
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wives. the head of the fbi is asking local police for help. the bureau alerted texas police about one of the gunmen who opened fire outside a draw muha muhammad contest. jeff pegues has more. good morning. >> good morning. the fbi says they sent a notice to the texas police three hours before the attack. it included a photo of elton simpson and said he may have interest. they acknowledge they didn't know they were on their way to texas. and on thursday garland police said it had no information at all that simpson and soofi were headed their way. simpson had apparently received guidance and inspiration online from an american jihadest. james comey said the terrorist group reaches out through social
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media sites like twitter, finds followers and sends them to sites that are difficult to track. director comey warned there may be thousands inside the u.s. consuming what he called online poison from isis and said, quote, i know there will are more elton simpsons out there. we have not found and cannot see. among the things that he will tell them is that the failed attack was not specifically directed will by isis and that was also information that was sent out in classified bulletin yesterday. norah? >> a dramatic assessment from the fbi chief about hundreds, maybe thousands across the country who are receiving recruitment overtures. very scary indeed. this morning the bulk collection of americans' phone records are deemed illegal. the federal court made that
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ruling yesterday. it was necessary to ensure national security. the agency can still collect data temporarily. the panel asked for clarification of what is appropriate. it's what one passenger called the scariest flight ever. a delta airlines plane had to land and make an emergency landing in south carolina. "60 minutes" producer katherine davis was on board and shot the video. >> reporter: the cabin was filling up with smoke very quickly. yeah it was a little nerve-racking. they told us to put our heads down in our laps because the air would be fresher. >> very forever racking when you don't know what's going on. delta put everyone on a different flight which landed
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safe and sound. the justice didn't could launch an investigation into the baltimore police department. it's expected the justice department may look into whether there has been a pattern or practice by the baltimore police department. the six police officers who arrested freddie gray are facing charges. a police officer in dover, delaware, is arrested. the suspect drops to his hands and knees. the officer's then seen kicking the man in the face. the suspect's hat flies off and he falls to the ground. they say the suspect was knocked unconscious and suffered a broken jaw. they say they will stop selling laminate materials from china but this morning they say it's safe.
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they had higher than the normal levels of formaldehyde. in response they gave thousands of test kits to customers. >> lumber liquidator says more than 46,000 kits have been given up and out of those tested some came back within health guidelines but some customers are saying they still are trying to figure out what to believe and how they nope if their home is safe. john and his wife installed flooring from lumber liquidators in their home inning lexington, kentucky, two years ago. >> how do you like it. >> oh we love it. >> reporter: after seeing the report, he ordered two kits. >> what are you hoping to find out? >> i'm hoping to find out that the formaldehyde in our house is
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below level. >> reporter: they found box after box of floorboards with labels indicating they met strict california standards. in tests later commissioned by "60 minutes" 30 of 31 boxes of the product bought in the u.s. admitted as much as 13 times the amount of formaldehyde by those standard but bob sullivan told anderson cooper the flooring is compliant. the customer now say 15/,000 got quality test kits and of 30%, 97% had formaldehyde higher than that allowed. but one called the tests given to his client false and deceptive. >> they've been tricked and deceived that their results are,
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quote/unquote, safe. >> reporter: tom neltner is with the national center for protective housing. said the problem is they're not. >> they should. be asked based on how the product is but how it looks. >> reporter: he says if the results come back too high -- >> i have family living here, an. >> louis freed will look at the sourcing and compliance practices but told them last week it faces an ongoing investigation by the department of justice. since january, lumber
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liquidators' stock. >> he won a surprise victory. it sets him up to lead the first majority conservative government. mark phillips is outside the houses of parliament in london. mark good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well the people have spoken and david camm rob has been re-elected. but this was in many ways a really nasty campaign but it works. david camm ron came back to number 10 downing street as the liter of let leader of the majority government. he turned it into the object of ridicule and he was helped by a cause. one of the rules of politics don't eat a bacon sandwich in
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front of the cameras. they jumped on it. he was not just a free base one. he didn't look like a prime minister. now he won't be. if political campaigns were were set to music -- it might have looked like this. britain's sky news channel might have hat a little fun but the results were no fun for the losers. nick clegg's were wiped out. they annihilated labor and what used to be its stronghold. and the other big losers the pollsters. they got it wrong. david cameron and his conservatives got it right.
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norah? >> yeah. everybody thought this race was going to be a closer than it was? >> the other was an independent one in scotland. >> do not eat a bakecon sandwich in public because you can't take it back. >> not that there's anything wrong with bacon. ahead, how he worked his way
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by deckover. behr's resurfacing product. visit behhr.com. we all know it's dangerous, but many drivers still refuse to put down their phones. >> do you think it's safe to be on your phone? you're looking at pictures on instagram? >> boy ahead, why police say
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it's getting much tougher to stop text behind the wheel. >> the news is back right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by ma zoe last. take care of those you love and cook deliciously. cholesterol blocking plant sterols than olive oil. and a recent study found that it can help lower cholesterol 2 times more. take care of those you love. mazola makes it better.
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in japan the zoo is apologizing for the name it gave to this newborn monkey. it was named charlotte. the zoo got a lot of complaints saying this was very disrespectful. they were trying to do a nice thing but people don't like it. charles is charlotte is a nice name. you say it's much ado about nothing? >> yes. >> what do you think, charlie? charlotte's oklahomaay? >> i do. >> i think this is all a bunch of monkey business. >> welcome back to "cbs this moring." steve kroft is with us this morning in studio 57.
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he a man comes clean. he tells us how he hid in plain sight. >> we're going to show you how stephen colbert is giving back to education in his home state. >> about $800,000. >> i know. it's nice. "usa today" says the senate approving add bipartisan bill to give koj a chance to review any nuclear deal with iran. the vote thursday was 98:1. it would give lawmakers an opportunity to reject it. the house is expected to vote next week. the "washington post" says they launch add plan to train fighters in syria. many are training at a foreign location. the program will train 5,400 syrians a year. they're trying to vet these fighters. they're having trouble finding
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them. blue bell had wisteria in one of its plants two years before the recall. in 2013 traces were found in blue bell's oklahoma plant but it continued to sell the ice cream made there. in hindsight, it was not the best decision. a man still had the virus ebola in his eye even after he was cured. he was treated at emory university hospital and released but his left eye was teaming with the ebola virus. his sight was limited but he was cleared after taking a test
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drug. he spent decades unnoticed in the united states. he graduated from beirut college. for the first time he opens up about his secrets heefrm's a preview of steve kroft's report. >> so who are you? >> who am i? that depends when the question is asked. right now. i'm jack bar ski, a united states citizen but that wulsn't always the case. >> how many identities do you have? >> i have two main identities a german one and an american name. >> what is your real name. >> jack bar ski. >> what name were you born with. >> say it three times fast. >> say it slowly. [ pronounces name ] .
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bar ski was a ware city a soviet spy who posed as an american and became immeshed in the american sew side. no one knew hi real story, not even his family. >> did you think you were going to get away with it? >> yes, otherwise i wouldn't have done it. >> what he did can be traced back to east germany, back in the dames when he was albert dietrich. a national scholar dietrich was on the fast track to becoming a chemistry professor, his dream job. >> it didn't work out that way because i was recruit bed the kgb to do something a little more adventurous. >> steve kroft is with us. >> the story is unbelievable. >> norah, gayle. nice to meet you. >> it's early for steve.
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>> i mean how -- this story's incredible. how did you find him? >> i can't really say that. i don't want to say that. >> yeah. but we found out -- we knew that -- we had some people in germany that told us about it. >> i like how you asked him, steve, to say his name slowly. when he said it the first time i thought it was interesting. were you surprised how he was able to fool people? >> he's a very smart guy. >> clearly. >> by the time they finished training him he spoke incredibly good english. not really. the thing that's really interesting about it is ghav him $6,000. >> he ended up with $6,000 and a birth certificate and that's it. no social security number that's it. they wanted him to infiltrate the security and get close to
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jimmy carter's national security adviser. >> why is he coming forward now? >> i think that he -- you know he's getting on in years. i think that he wants to sort of resolve -- he has a lot of issues to resolve. he had a family here in the states. he has family in germany. he wants to meet his maker in good conscience. he wants to maybe write a book. i think he's interested in doing that. >> so do we know what information he gave to the russians and if there was any damage done to u.s. national security? >> i don't think there was any damage done to national security. i think it was mostly commercial information. i think he gave them some valuable computer code the russians needed and i think that was it. the hard thing about doing espionage stories is they're impossible to fact-check. we talked to the fbi people and
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jack barski and the fbi people that finally detained him and caught him, but the details of the case you don't know really because they're all classified. it's all classified. >> what's going to happen to him? >> he's never going to spend day in jail. he was finally detained by the fbi after he stopped working for the russians and basically by that time the berlin wall had stalin. he was sort of trapped here. there was nobody on the other side that was going to bring him back or cared about him. and so they just made a deal with him. he was going to help them and tell them as much as he knew about the kgb and the contacts and who he dealt with and they let him go and he's still consulting with the bureau. >> he sure seems to want to talk. i can't wait to see it. >> any story about spies is good. thank you. you can watch the full report on sunday. learn how they tracked him down and he how befriended an fbi
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agent. that's sunday night at 7:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. central on cbs. floyd mayweather is taking shots at many pacquiao after winning last weekend. he calls packquiao a sore loser. he he sits down with him. >> what is your thought? >> he's embarrassing. he's a beat fighter. there's a difference between a great fighter and tb ee and i proved that i'm the best. excuses, excuses, excuses. i knew it was coming. i knew it. but i'm not going to buy into the bull [ bleep ]. i'm not going to buy into the bull [ bleep ]. i don't want the public to buy
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into the bull [ bleep ]. he lost. and i lost a lot of respect for him after all of this. you know you fight. if you lose it's okay. may weather was the better man. >> well jim grey's full interview with floyd mayweather airs tomorrow night. showtime is a division of cbs. >> it makes you three more times likely to get into a car crash. >> are you checking your e-mail? >> yeah, i was checking my e-mail. i have an assignment due in about 40 minutes. >> why not wait till you're stopping. >> wow. but many drivers are still risking their lives and yours to use their phones. and that's next. >> if you're heading off to take your kids to work or school, set your dvr. we'll be right back.
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oklahoma is the newest state to outlaw texting while driving. they join 14 other states and washington, d.c. they say 660,000 drivers use cell phones or erie electronic devices while behind the wheel. chris van cleaves has seen some of the risky driving. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we know people are going to work driving while texting. when you're driving and texting you take your eyes completely off the road and you can drive as far as the length of a football field. she may not want to talk about it but texting and driving is dangerous. they say it makes driver .65% more likely to crash. we watched car after carve after
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car with our camera with people holding, typing on or staring at their phone. >> ma'am, i'm from cbs and i know tisz you were on your phone. >> i'm at a stoplight. >> we saw you on it while you were driving up to the light. >> reporter: he's hard to miss holding his phone right in front of his face for quite a while. >> you had your phone held up to your face. >> he said he doesn'tdidn't get a ticket because he was using his gps. >> it's not illegal now. >> that's got to make it hard to try to enforce -- >> sure is. it's not the easiest charge.
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>> >> reporter: he patrols this area. since the state's current texting ban became law in 2013 county officers have written just 635 excitations. some researchers believe texting relate accidents are the leading cause of deaths for teen drivers. minnesota senator amy klobuchar is introducing a bill next week. >> when people started learning through their school through word of mouth how dangerous it was not to wear a seatbelt, they started to wear a seatbelt. the same can happen with textbooking and facebooking and distracted driving. >> we want to show you. this camera is the police coming up behind beside us. you see how close they have to
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get to see what i'm doing. that's why often only the most flagrant violators are getting caught. chris? >> this is such an important story because everyone thinks they can avoid. they say after an accident the last text is usually laugh out loud, i'm on my way. jericka duncan looks at test tube babes. >> he's a new baby born through in vitro fetter zaegs. coming up we'll have the story and the science only on "cbs
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in lincoln, nebraska flying drones show flooding. it shows flooding yoef filling baseball fields and streets. more than 6 inches fell during severe weather. >> take a look at this video. flooding causes a big train derailment derailment. we'll show you more in the southern plains. that's ahead on "cbs this mornin." ♪ to you, they're more than just a pet. so protect them... ...with k9 advantix® ii. it's broad-spectrum protection k ills fleas ticks and mosquitoes too.
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it's friday may 8, 2015. and mother's day is two days away. a baby born using a controversial method. but first at 8:00 your "eye opener" at 8:00. >> residents here in bridge creek, oklahoma, are trying to clean up aftaser msive tornado. >> more severe storms expected in southern area and the pl.ains >> we earned everything we achieved and got this year as a team. >> we still don't know when the nfll wil punish brady. >> director comey warned there ma be thousands inside consuming what he called online poison.
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>> the people havepo sken and david cameron has been re-elected, this time with an even stronger mand ate. >>s thi story's incredible. how did you find him? >> i can't really say that. >> if you're texting, you take your eyes completely off the road and in just a fewon secds you can travel the distance of a football field. >> you appear to be operating your phone behind the wheel. >> there apparently are incriminating texts and e-mails about what they call deflate gate. hillary announced she would be happy to delete them. >> announcer: this morning ice "eye opener" at 8:00 presents by walgreens. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. there ee no rest this morning for the southern plains and more severe weather threatens the region. powers tornadoes and drenching
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thunderstorms has pounded the area for the last few days. more is expected today and through the weekend. flooding caused a train derailment in texas overnight. four workers were hurt when the cars plunged into water. a fire destroyed a gas well after an apparent lightning strike. it happened outside dallas. several tornados have been recorded including this one captured on video. adriana diaz is in bridgeport oklahoma, after they attempted to clean up after potentially damaging weather. good morning. >> good morning. this scene is just a slice of what people here in bridge creek, oklahoma, are going through. this was a garage. the metal roofing that's been mangled and tangled, migged in with everything inside like this set of golf club probably one of the only salvageable things left. today they'll be expected to come back here go through things and try to prepare because they have more things coming expecting this weekend. norah? >> all right adriana.
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thank you. the new england patriot ss footballer. jik mcnalley told them to get off his property and refused to answer questions. meanwhile tom brady said he and his teammates earned everything but he waved off a report that said he probably knew team employees let the air out of game balls. >> it's only been 30 hours so i haven't had much time to digest it fully, but when i do i beal sure to let you know how i feel about it. >> are you that slow a reader? >> well, my athletic career has been better than my academic career. i'm used to reading xs and 0s. the investigation is longer. >> i am curious about how long he plans before he reads the report. >> and how much he has to say about it. >> and how he'll say it. this morning stephen colbert is using his comedy success to help out in the flashroom.
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>> we're going to flash fund all 1,000 projects. >> yes. >> the south carolina native says he will fund every existing grand request from the state's public school teachers on donorschoose.org. those requests total $800,000. we spoke with a teacher who has five projects that will be funded. >> what a great example of showing our students what they're capable of and what their potential is and how they can achieve anything that they set their mind to. >> the money will benefit students in hundreds of schools across south carolina. colbert takes over as host of the "late show" in late september. >> it goes to show you steve colbert is a really good guy. >> such a generous thing to do. >> good cause. >> we like steve colbert a lot. >> this morning, george clooney -- we like him too.
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how and why he fell in love. george is talking. nancy o'dell asked him about his wife amal a 37-year-old human rights leader. george clooney said he was drawn to her intellect and her character. >> she's an amazing human being and she's caring and she also happens to be one of the smartest people i've ever met. >> that will do it. but when o'dell asked about children george clooney said your time is up. guess that means he doesn't want to answer that question. >> yeah. some things are private. some thing can be private. all right, a baby boy makes medical history, but the treatment his mother got is causing controversy. ahead only on "cbs this morning," his parents give us their first tv interview.
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a family tragedy takes an ominous turn.
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>> reporter: i'm susan spencer of "48 hours." a prominent cancer researcher is found dead in the bathtub. her son makes sure the man he thinks is responsible stands on trial for murder. that man, his own father. ahead on "cbs this morning."
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because this is my last time wearing a fancy dress on a talk show and conforming to gender norms out of respect for you, my gift to you is i want to give you the dress. you can keep it. i don't know if you can help me with this. >> is this all right? >> this is it. >> last dress ever.
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>> well there you go. she looks fabulous. she says #lastdressever. where do you get that spanx that says bye dave. >> my good fremt says you've got to see tina fey. he's been having a great last couple of weeks. >> every night. >> every night. >> tina i would like the dress. >> in our morning rounds -- >> after i lose 20 pounds. in our "morning rounds" a struggle to get pregnant. it's the sub jelkt of a story in the latest issue of "time" magazine. the incredible controversial new way to make a baby only on "cbs this morning." i love when we can say that. jericka duncan introduce us to the first baby to be born using this new in vitro technique. good morning. >> good morning. they call him a miracle. they've been trying to have a
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child so they tried in vitro. now, traditional invee tro is between 30% to 40% effective but this new procedure is showing promising results. it helps produce a baby, the first of its kind. >> zain is incredible. >> it's something we never thought we could experience. >> they'd been trying to conceive for month after month. >> finding out we weren't pregnant i knew it wasn't the time for us to become pregnant and so i really stayed positive. >> for those cups particularly the women who have poor egg health or quality, there are no alternatives. >> reporter: marthajorie recommended traditional intree
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voe. it didn't work. then she suggested al an alternative treatment that entered the market in 2014 using the woman's own cells. >> we previously weren't able to grow precursor egg cells. i had the opportunity to offer her this potential for renews hope. >> remember calling omar on the phone saying we had won the lottery. >> does it feel like you won the lottery? >> i think the proof is in the pudding in that we ended up with zain. >> here's how it works. myitochondria are taken egg cells found within the lining of a woman's own ovaries. they're combined with the woman's mature eggs charging the existing batteries. >> it's one that should be taken with caution.
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>> alex kofman says the procedure isn't necessarily the fix for those struggling to conceive. >> the major reason that an embryo doesn't stick and become the healthy pregnancy is because it doesn't have the right amount of dna so even with all the energy in the world, you're not going to take an unnecessary embryo and return it with a healthy one. r they say it's needing gene therapy before it's deemed safe for patients. august it's also considered controversial. >> science sin involves science is involved but it's still within us. it's my body and natasha's body and our body parts and everything that's really making the baby. >> alex park is a medical reporter for "time" magazine.
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these are so new that some researchers are a little nervous. these babies like zain will obviously continue to be studied. >> reporter: they're not concerned and say zain is a healthy baby. >> any plans on having another child through the same process? >> definitely. we actually will i have two embryos that are frozen and hopefully little zain will have a sit ter or brother one day. >> they say the cost of ivs is double that of regular in vitro and could cost at least $20,000. it's still early to tell how successful this new procedure could be in the future and what effects if any it has on children down the road. >> but for older women, this could mean some real hope. >> it could be but one of the things the doctor said is they're looking at women who have poor egg health. >> okay. >> so we'll see what happens. but it's definitely a step in
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the right direction for people who are looking to have a child and can't. >> people are looking at it this morning and saying how do i do this. >> >> juryjericka, thank you so much. a son is determined to prove his father killed his mother. will a jury. you erie watching "cbs this morning.." >> announcer: cbs "morning rounds" sponsored by new flonase allergy relief. life. when we breathe in allergens our bodies react by over-producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance, flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. so roll down your windows, hug your pet dust off some memories, make new ones. new flonase. six is greather than one. this changes everything. ♪ to you, they're more than just a pet.
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tomorrow night on "48 hours" a son who thinks his mother was murdered. here's a preview of continue susan spencer's report. >> mr. janson are you ready to call your first witness? >> yes, your honor. >> my father being put on trial is the culmination of a lot of work. >> reporter: for three years he's fought for his own father to stand trial for his mother's murder and finally that moment has come. >> i'll be sitting across from him. i'm sure hi doesn't have warm feelings toward me. >> reporter: caught up in the raging custody fight between his parents. the pediatrician dr. johnny wall and his ex-wife, a prominent research scientists. the prosecution begs to differ. >> the evidence is overwhelming. it was the defendant, donny
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walsh that killed her. >> but the defense suggests this was suicide. >> look carefully at the injuries. it's reasonable she could have done that to herself. >> reporter: her boyfriend found her lifeless body drowned in her bathtub. >> i tapped on the door said hello, hello, opened the door and there she was under water. >> reporter: she had superficial knife wounds and a high level of the anti-an zit medication xanax in her system. deshid take it or did he force her to take it? >> it's clearly enough to make her drowsy maybe render her unconscious and if she's trying to get into a bathtub, it's not that hard to drown. >> reporter: dr. wall was questioned by police soon after she was found. >> you're accusing me of
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something really horrendous. >> it is horrendous. somebody died. >> yeah. and i can't grieve bought you're yelling at me. >> he trails by my three siblings and then he tells me my mother is dead and he was the suspect. >> reporter: his account of his time was sketchy. he had written a xanax injury that night and he blamed it on his dog. >> reporter: by april 2013 prosecutors had enough circumstantial evidence to arrest johnny wall and charge him with murder. >> my dad sate oota's dead and they think i did it. >> you were at the trial. >> indeed. and i have to say, this is one of the most compelling trials i've ever attended. the attorneys were good.
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the evidence is bizarre and intriguing and you really can read it as either murder or suicide and against it all is this backdrop of people, these two antagonists who seem to be circling against one another. >> a son testifying against the father over the death of his mother. what's his take? >> his side of the family is just devastated. think they think the son is misguided, likes the attention. the family thinks framed. >> does he seem authentic? ? i haven't gotten a chance to talk to him. his attorneys belief he's -- that this is a miscarriage. >> thank you so much. you can watch
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so i'm having birthday brunch with my family. when my husband hands me a present. a galaxy s6! so i call my mom. i have verizon! i don't. she couldn't really hear me. i tell her how much she means to me. but she thinks i said she was always mean to me. i could hear how happy she was. now she definitely loves my sister more. vo: mother's day is almost here. now get 200 dollars or more when you trade in your smartphone for a galaxy s6. but hurry, this offer ends may 10th. verizon. i'm brian vickers, nascar® driver. i'm kevin nealon comedian. and i'm arnold palmer,
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, before you go to any nail salon this morning you might want to find out what's been uncovered. she's in our toyota green room with a look at the disturbing secrets. >> most shared on the website. plus the mom who saw all four of her kids answer the call to duty. ahead, her surprise to other families. this morning, tight to show you some of this morning's headlines. a cellist brought beautiful music to a scene of a car bottoming. he held an improp ta'u concert. he received nearly 50,000 views. he said he wanted to reach out
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to residents who had experienced something grotesque. >> it's beautiful. "usa today" says a man accuseded of robbing a bank say he posted a video gram. he showed the teller placing money into a bash. police arrested him 20 minutes after hi arrest. he didn't think that he was doing anything wrong because he didn't threaten anybody and nobody was hurt. somebody should tell him that's not how it works. the "san francisco chronicle" shows us how a 13-year-old girl fought off an assault. home cameras show him forcing his way through the door. she fights him off and he runs away. he's still on the run. how scary is that. >> sam smith will have vocal cord surgery.
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>> he suffered a vocal cord near last month. he's cancel tour dates until july. other artists including adele and keith urban have had similar surgeries. the nail industry is on the rise topping $8.5 billion last year but an investigation by "the new york times" shows all that luxury is coming at quite a cost. it finds they're underpaid, face discrimination and serious health risks. part 1 is the most viewed and tweeted on facebook these days. first on "cbs this morning" this morning. new story. good morning. >> good morning. >> what made you think that this would be interesting to even look at nail salons? >> well it started as i was getting a pedicure on my birthday at a quirky 24-hour nail salon.
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i said to the woman doing my toes, who works the night shift. she said i do. i said but it's the day. she said i work. >> i said please explain. she said i work 24 hours a day. when they come in at night, they shake me awake. i sleep in the barracks above. i have the seventh day off. this woman is enslaved. >> i spoke to upwards of 200 manicurists who work in 900, 600 shops all tolled. >> and they have to pay to work at a salon. how is that? >> the starting salary is negative $200 because manicurists have to pay for their job and then they work for free for a period of weeks to months at which point they earn maybe $30 a day. >> how common and are their specific salons you're talking about? >> i believe the majority of the
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salons in the industry. interviewing all of them i found no good actors. >> are they individually owned or primarily owned by one person? >> they're individually owned and it's about 80% korean owned industry. actually what happened because of that is there's a race-based cash system within the salon. so you'll have women doing the same job in the salon getting paid different amounts of money with hispanic workers at the bottom found by chinese and beautiful koreans are considering the most desirable. >> do the owners find they're doing something wrong here? >> they find themselves heroic. >> how so. >> >> they don't have papers they don't speak a lot of english and they feel they're giving them a leg up. >> how is this legal? >> it's not legal. it's completely illegal. these people are being robbed or their wages and in nine months
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it took me months. when i finally got the database i found they rarely rarely gts nail salons. >> no investigations? >> hardly any legal actions and no. >> even if they're in the country illegally? >> even if illegal in the country they have a right to be paid properly but they're terrified. i had a woman tell me she does have papers but she hides them. that's the only way to get a job. >> i'm sitting there surprised. two broken nails. what can we do? >> i had a really hard time trying to answer this. as i said i didn't have a good answer for this. maybe a punch card. >> i have never seen a punch card in a salon.
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>> exactly. >> why do you think this has been pointed out? why do you think there's been such an interest in what you wrote? >> two reasons. we all want to be rihanna. we can't. but we want her nails. >> do we all want to be rihanna? >> i want to be rihanna. it's a totally accessful treat and everything done. same with the experience. you're holding hands with this woman, you're looking her in the eye and they don't see her. >> i think that's because people secretly feel like there's something going on and spl's >> i've been in these women's homes, 12 to one bedroom. it's terrifying experience. >> i didn't think it was that bad. i'm still trying to think what to do. >> thank you very much. on this special weekend we'll look at the parents who
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raise patriots. i'm serving on board american's flagship. and next on "cbs this morning," a story about my
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nearly 2.7 million americans have deployed since the 9/11 attacks. that means millions watch their children go into harm's way. one has been a voice. she now has a new book with a simple message "be safe love mom." wyatt andrews is in washington with what motivated her to write it. good morning. >> good morning. our servicemembers go overseas well prepared for combat but there's no training for the moms and dads sending off a child. meet a mom who wrote a guidebook after having raised four sons in the army nay i have air force, and marines. she never raised them but they all for. air force engineer katrina moon and marine corps eric bri.
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call it coincidence or fate but it looks like a recruitment folder for the pentagon. >> if you knew these kids there's no way you could tell them what to do. >> maybe not, but service runs in the family. . elaine and her husband courtney both served. both of elaine's parents were in the army and as the bride's children grew up on a farm home movies featured them in home movies dressed like fly flags and stars. it's one to raise them as a patriot. it's another to watch them morph into an officer to go to war. three of them have deployed and every time elaine says nothing prepare as mother to handal deployment farewell. >> when you know that they're going to a place where they could be harm and you don't know
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if they're coming back there is a fear in that and there is a loss in that that is indescribable. >> do you think it's thanhed on most people the moment that you just described for a parent so ee a child off like that? >> i don't i really think so. >> the sacrifice asked of american moms led elaine to write this book "be save, love mom." it's a booker comforting families but with a surprising edge. she boroughs the military phrase "embrace the suck." >> it means don't waste time complaining about it. do what has to be done. if it's hard too bad. just power through it. >> okay. it's hard, move on? >> it's okay to be uncomfortable, move on, but that's what we need to do to
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support our kids. >> it's not all about tough love. earlier she was known as a military mom networking machine. she helped to prepare the first e-mail list and she's on six facebooks and blogs. when we visited the farm two of the bri officers were there, both with a new appreciation for how families embrace war and how important it is the cause. >> my mom's more than a military nature. sometimes they need a pat on the back. >> that's what she does? >> yes, absolutely. >> it's her way to give back and to help people where there isn't a life line out there. >> we also got to watch the only kind of family meeting that's possible. on face time they call brendan
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whose army unit is training in the desert. her children may be warriors but their mom is still mom. >> land on your wheels. >> dirty side down. >> as for elaine's favorite photoit's not this one with all four together. it's this one taken seconds later when she was the target of a joke. >> this is what i miss. these teams. when everyone's together and they're a family. they're always going to try to be together and that's what we want right? >> for mother's day elaine wants a full family reunion but with two on training missions she's embracing the fact a phone call will be enough yet another snapshot of what military moms do. >> boy wyatt. thank you. didn't we love her, elaine bri. >> yes. happy mother's ees's day to you,
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elaine. we recognize the sacrifice of families too. >> thanks a again, wyatt. we'll look at the most unforgettable moments of the week. that's coming up next on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back.
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first things first, happy moe mother's day out there to all the mothers out there. be sure to tune in to the "cbs evening news with scott pelley." for news any time anywhere log on to cbsnews.com and watch cbsn. watch through our app or on cbsnews.com/live. let's take a look back. >> this is like a patriots pep
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rally. >> i think he should be suspended for at least a half a season. >> a massive tornado and storms rodestyed 1,500 homes and killed one woman. >> he got out of the car and immediately started shooting. >> an officer has been shot. two suspects have been shot. >> don't blame the police man who shot and killed him. he was just doing his job. >> the driver claim eed he locked them inside because they re we disbehaving. >> it's probably difficult to live up to anyox b ingmatch. >> it's anotherac bk eye for tsarnaev. >> mexican officials say david goldberg died in an apparent accident. >> by far the biggest loss since steve jobs. >> well royals don't just give their baby a name they give
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them lists of naples. >> you're part ofll a of us. for you to -- >> you've given up a great gift. ♪ >> could we run that part again? >> what are you wearing tonight? you look fabulous. >> versace. >> she was so gorgeous i couldn't keep my train of thought. >> slapped and then obviously what happened on sunday. >> when everyone first found about me cheerleading they're like -- my dad's fans were really critical. >> let them say what they want to believe but he's got to do -- >> her fragrance -- >> there's something about your child's fragrance. >> does it make a profit? >> right now we're investing in
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youtube. i think we're pretty early in the online market. >> i want to see your -- you want to leave them on your eye? >> a lot of people want to know if there'll ever be a reunion. >> i've go got to careful. if every wanted to do it for the right reasons. >> what would be the right reasons? >> it's hard. >> is it likely? >> never say never. >> all that -- >> and he confirms in the books, guys, that he did smoke marijuana at the white house. >> on the roof. >> i heard i did. >> and all that matters. >> how did you get up on the roof? >> i don't
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skippy!! yippee!! fun fun fun! shiny! you never listen! what? is someone talking? skippy!! yippee!! look a ride! (vo) made with the funnest peanuts ever! skippy. yippee!!
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>> all new on the doctors. >> #bad breath? abgum -- #gum disease. >> glorifying a killer friend for young women. >> oral cancer is horrific. >> she lost a whopping 500 pounds. now the 7 hour surgery results to remove the excess skin. >> maria, come on out . >> the most requested celebrity body parts. >> no one hears it more than a plastic surgeon. >> 3 perfect gifts to keep mom healthy. all new! ♪ ♪ [ applause ] ♪ ♪ >> welcome everyone to the show. i want her lips, his nose, and i want her butt. [ laughter ] >> we hear this all the

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