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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 5, 2016 7:00am-8:59am EDT

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good morning. it is tuesday, april 5th, 20156789 welcome to "cbs this morning." villanova stuns north carolina with a buzzer-beating win. donald trump calls on his wife to sway wisconsin voters before today's primary. bernie sanders banks on an upset. plus the remarkable story of a war hero, the bomb-sniffing dog who completed over 400 missions protecting thousands of lives. but we begin today's "eye opener," your world in 9 0 seconds. >> wdo
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they need trump so badly. >> the battle for wisconsin voters. >> for the last two weeks donald trump has gotten his rear end whipped over and over again. >> trump says he's taking my voters, cruze says he'sin takg my voters. yeah, they're right. i'm taking both of their voters. >> after a huge turnout. five are dead after a kropt crashed into the smoky mountains. >> not much left. >> for the championship. >> villanova, phenomenal! the national champions! how about those edges? >> tell me about that shot. e>> h made the perfect pass, and every time i did it, it was going up. the temperature grips more than a dozen states. >> winter is back. >> couldn't believe it. >> a puzzl
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when a flight attendant suddenly deployed a terminal slide on the >>termal. t allhat -- amazing video of a police officer pulling an unconscious man from a burning apartment. they take home a 3-2 win. wait a minute. >> -- and all that matters -- >> a huge document lead has exposed shady financial dealings involving famous people like vladimir putin and jackie chan. i don't know about you but i smell a movie. "putin, chan." >> i would be presidential. if i wouldn't, only 20% of you would be here. >> cartoon trump, good luck in wisconsin tomorrow. >> thanks. i've already won. >> we'll see. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go placet.
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captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with one of the greatest finishes in college basketball history. >> seconds at midcourt. gives it to jenkins for the championship. >> villanova's kris jenkins scored three points with one second left on the clock. villanova beat north carolina for the national championship. >> villanova fans in pennsylvania went wild over the school's first basketball title since 1985. police arrested at least four people for disorderly conduct. dana jacobson is here from cbs sports. good morning. la good morning.
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certainly go down as one of the top finishes in national college basketball. the best way to describe it, what else. madness. >> trying to go the length of the court with arcidiacono. three seconds to midcourt. gives it to jenkins for the championship. >> march madness went out with a ba bank. villanova jr. kris jenkins let the ball fly from the three-point line as the clock hit zero. >> how about that. >> and like that one of the most dramatic title games ever was in the record book. the call from the villanova student radio station says it all. >> two seconds to go. jenkins, three, right wing to win it. he made it. he made it. three at the buzzer. cats win it all. >> like hossa, he made the ec
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every time i one-two stepped, it was definitely going up. >> jay wright celebrated with a stone cold reaction. he said he was shocked at the outcome. >> we had a game-winning play and put it in arch's hands. he made the perfect pass and kris jenkins lives for that moment. >> the tlul of victory was too much for commentator charles barkley whose celebration dance was captured by cameras. >> barry opens the score from three. >> through it all, the competition never lost its stride. with eight lead changes in the first half alone, marcus page tied the game with seconds to spare. >> it's page off balance. puts it home. impossible. >> leaving enough time for one last play. >> at that point we believed we were going to win. we needed 4.7 seconds of defe
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williams was crushed. >> i'm so proud of my team. you have to congratulate villanova. they're worthy champions. i love my kids in that locker room. >> but for villanova fans, it was history. villanova senior ryan arcidiacono who passed the ball to jenkins was named the most outstanding player in the ncaa tournament. he said that final buzzer-beater was something every kid dreams about. >> you saw the emotion from roy williams. he has said this is his a first class. obviously you don't want to play special but they're so special on both sides. >> you don't even have to be a basketball fan to love it. >> the emotion. >> here we have a situation in which two brothers playing on opposite teams, the mother sitting there with unc and villanova. >> at the half, yeah. >> it's just extraordinary human
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>> and that was kris jenkins who made the shot and his brother nate britt -- obviously brothers, legal guardianship. i said what's the table going to be like. said i'm just going to put the ring on the table. >> he said he'll remind him of it for the rest of his life. >> and the passion from the announcers. thanks, dana. that was fun to watch. donald trump pulls a large lead over ted cruz in the overall delegate race but cruz leads the polls in wisconsin where 42 delegates will be handed out. >> trump needs every possible delegate to secure the nomination before the july convention. major garrett is at a polling place in milwaukee, a city where cruz has strong support. good morning. >> good morning. they're predicting a turnout of 40% worldwide. the
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for gop front-runner donald trump who brought in his wife to see if she could help him close the deal. >> as you may know by now, when bau attack him, he will punch c ti back ten times harder. >> he hinted at a wisconsin poll. he's describes there's more to it than speeches and handshakes. there's delegates and rules. >> somebody said there's a rule and another rule. i don't care about rules, folks. i go out, we campaign, we win. we win. we get the delegates, right? >> earlier in the day he signaled he's ready for the republican party to move the theposts. >> meeting with the republican national committee, right? right, right. arey
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fairly? i said i have no idea but i'll let you know in six months, but my eyes are wide open. >> visiting a cheese castle -- >> i love cheese. i've never had a bad cheese. >> wisconsin could be a turning point. >> if we have a win tomorrow that will be four states in a row where donald trump has gotten whipped. >> they've ignored. >> both of them have said i should get out of the race because i'm winning votes. nobody's going win this going in. there's going to be an open cop vengs. >> trump and cruz frustration with kasich's persistent campaign. >> get out. he's taking my votes. >> if you lose 49 states, you ain't going to be the republican nominee. >> a new poll
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trump's national lead slipping three percentage points in the last week to cruz's 45%. cruz trailed by 28 points with kasich at 18%. nor rark trump still holds sizeable leads in new york and pennsylvania. >> great reporting there. thank you so much. bernie sanders is trying to keep his momentum going. 86% of delegates are up for grabs in wisconsin. most of the voters are white with a high number of white people. that's good for sanders who has the narrow lead. hillary clinton's campaign manager is looking ahead saying in a memo that clinton's overall lead will be hard to beat. nancy cordes is here with a look at the race. good morning. >> good morning. wisconsin would be a big prize for sanders. his sixth win in two weeks and the open primary format allows for an independent vote. >> let u
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unhappy tomorrow. let us have a huge voter turnout. >> sanders capped his push with a rally. >> we have won six out of the last seven caucuses and primaries. >> clinton says they haven't given up on wisconsin but she left the state on saturday and has been in new york ever since. >> hillary clinton. >> reminding new yorkers who go to the polls in two weeks that they voted for heror senate twice. >> i adored being your senator. i loved representing new york. >> her campaign's new memo points out that clinton has won 58% of the popular vote thus far and that sanders
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win roughly 650% of the vote in new york and three other big states to catch up. but new fund-raising figures show they have not dissuaded sanders' voters. he raised $15 million more. it's emboldened sanders to take on clinton more directly. >> if we win, i don't want to get hillary clinton more nervous than she already is. she's already under a lot of pressure. >> after going ten rounds, clinton and sanders finally settled on a debate night here in new york next thursday. sanders agreed to reschedule a rally saying in one final dig he was doing it to impact high fund-raiser. >> he has a front row seat in th
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the program airs on showtime, a division of cbs. good morning. >> hi, guys. >> you're back from wisconsin, i assum -- you're back from milwaukee? >> on to wisconsin. >> it's a game-changer. >> they have a chance to lock up their respeck tifb nominations, both on track, not necessarily on track to lose but -- >> if they do? >> changes both races. one more than the other. i think on the republican side, if donald trump loses tonight and loses decisively, it becomes almost impossible to get the majority of the delegates before the convention. to ted cruz wins big, we're on track for a contested/brokered convention on the republican side. that's a big deal. >> is there a second story that i merges from the story line at
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win for paul ryan, the speaker who's from wisconsin, reince priebus? >> it's a win for certainly the republican establish mnlts in wisconsin. they're amazingly all huge national figures in a lot of wall. they all decided to get on board the never trump train and they put their muscle into that. also importantly something that has not happened to trump before, conservative talk radio in wisconsin all got together and joined the same cause. so you had an interesting combination of things plus a lot of suburban republican women who are really turned off by what trump has said in the course of the last week. those are the blue print with how trump may stumble here in wisconsin. worst week of the campaign for him by far. that's not just conventional wisdom. that's real. >> now we have both
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and hillary clinton? >> no, no, no. >> ted cruz? >> donald trump and ted cruz saying, listen, kasich, you need to get out. kasich is saying i don't need to go anywhere. is this a sipe he's hurting candidates and who is he hurting more? >> if you look down the road, new york, connecticut, rhode island, pennsylvania, those are all cases where john kasich could do relatively well and they are states where he could take away votes from donald trump. kasich hurts trump down the line. he hurts cruz further down the line. the only way he hurts him is a contested convention and cruz wants kasich out of the way so he can be the only alternative. >> gate great to see you. >> we didn't get to talk hillary clinton and ben carsrnie sander >> we did not. >> i'll have to come back. >> where are you
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and 9:00. the so-called panama papers contain allegations of money laundering and tax evasion. they have sparked investigations in several countries including the united states. the prime minister of iceland and the minister of ukraine. good morning. >> good morning. an anonymous insider passed off millions of documents. more than 140 politicians and officials eventually did business with a pan main miami law firm. now concerned citizens are demandingances from leaders who have been caught up in the scandal. demonstrators descended on the capital over the prime minister who was named in the investigations. he's one of a dozen current or former heads of state who allegedly stashed
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when journalists pressed the prime minister last year, he walked out of the interview. they also talk about another. they registered an offshore company on the same day scoreses of ukrainian officials were killed. the law firm at the center of the league mon sack phenomenon see ka specializes in offshore finances. they skpanled nearly four decades worth of files. the documents show while they were talking sanction, close associates of vladimir putin, they ran a ring. >> this will be lots and lots of questions about the source of the funds.
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surface of the beginning of the scandal. >> right now no americans have been named in the investigation, but the department of justice is reviewing the reports saying it takes very seriously all allegations of high level foreign corruption that might have a link to the united states or the u.s. financial system. former treasury officer chip ponzi. there will be opportunities to identify, to initiate, to facilitate investigations into various financial crime, whether money lawn during or crime. >> mossack fonseca responded on monday. they said our firm has never been accuse or charged in criminal wrongdoing. we are not involved in managing our clients' company. meantime the journalist network plans to post all t
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downline next month in a searchable database. >> thank you. a huge story. cold air is sweeping across parts of the east. low temperatures are forecast to horcher around the teens 20678s or 30s. new york and massachusetts shows springtime snow. people had to shovel out of a messy commute. extreme winds over the weekend brought down a tree on a busy new jersey road. the officer avoided getting hit, but a truck traveling in the other direction hit the tree head on. neither was hurt. >> a new
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sticker shock at the pharmacy. >> ahead whierks the price of some of the nation's top selling prescription drugs has more than
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doubled and how you can pay less. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. lderness. the scent of his jerky attracted a hungry wolfpack behind him. to survive, he had to remain fearless. he would hunt with them. and expand their territory. he'd form a bond with a wolf named accalia... ...become den mother and nurse their young. james left in search of his next adventure. how far will you take the all-new rav4 hybrid? toyota. let's go places.
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alaska air has announced it's purchasing virgin airlines for $2.6 million. yeah. the most money spent on a virgin since my parents bought me a car after my college graduation. thank you. >> thank you, conan. to the cost of top-selling primgs drugs, it's soaring. we'll look at the new investigation and the changes you may need to make before you go to the drugstore. plus the gun that looks like a smartphone. it could hit the market soon. there's a debate whether this deceptive weapon should be considered legal.
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as unanimous supreme court decision on a one person/one court issue. they say it may count all residents not just eligible voters. some still have a stake in the policy stakes. the knox ville news sentinel reports on a helicopter crash. all five died when it down yesterday. a fire after the crash destroy most of the chopper. the five victims have not yet been identified. the defl philadelphi"philad reports a communication problem may have caused the accident that killed two amtrak workers. fishlgs from essentially agencies say word about work on a crew may not have been shared during
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show national football games online. the deal gives twitter a key piece of content to track mainstream users and aurs them a place to react and discuss live events. cbs will broadcast five cbs football games next season. a power shift at disney. tom staggs unexpectly stepped down. he was to become ceo when robert retires in 2008. there's an unusual new fire arm. it could go on sale later this year. it looks like a smartphone but it's actually a .380 caliber handgun. it's drawing attention. josh elliott of our
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network cbsn is here with the digital controversy. welcome and good morning. >> gayle, good morning. we should emphasize the gun is still in development. it hasn't stopped senator schumer from calling an investigation and keeping it off the marked. >> reporter: he's ceo of ideals. he says his gun's design which allows it to unphoto from a smartphone shape to a fully functional weapon would allow a person to carry it more freely. >> there are some who would take issue in a workplace to see a gun on you. it gives you the opportunity to avoid that. >> it's clearly being marketed for nefarious purposes. >> on monday charles schumer called on the department of justice and the bureau of alcoho
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explosives to whether this would violate federal law. >> there are two federal lawses. a gun can't be disguised like a pen or something else. the other says that if a gun can't be detected as a gun as it goes through security like at an airport, both can be illegal. he responded to "cbs this morning" saying i encurable shierm's investigation that it will fall firmly in line with atf guidelines and is therefore legal. matthew horace is an fta investigator and says this could have disastrous consequences. >> if someone has this and mistakes a phone for a gun or a gun for a phone t result could be tragic. >> reporter: the begin could be available for purchase by the mid of this year for $395. >> the second amendment say
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the second amendment doesn't say you have the right to bear a gun that's disguised as an iphone. >> we asked shoer whether it was a way to give publicity. responded 4,000 people have applied for this gun and they want it as soon as it becomes available. >> i wonder what power schumer has to stop it. >> the legality of this is one thing in a vacuum. on the other thing t practicality, the common sense, it doesn't seem that accessorizing a handgun is a good idea at any time. >> yeah. we always say don't make toys that look like guns and here we va gun that looks like a phone. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." >> thank you, thank you. >> the table feels pretty bad. >> not bad. >> josh will continue to cover the story along with other major news of the day including the wisconsin primary. you can
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your app or kindle fire. several brand naim medications more than doubled in price. the reuters analysis of the ten most popular drugs found the increases added billions to the nation's health care spending for things like arthritis, asthma, and others. lisa, good morning. >> good morning. >> what types of drugs are we talking about and what is the increase? >> we're talking about pretty intess life-saving medication, drugs like rheumatoid arthritis, embr some went up 126%. >> how much is that
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>> if for consumers, it's hard to say. sometimes they feel some pocketbook pain but that pain is very real. when these prices go up, we can see consumers that don't fill prescriptions like they should, take them like they should or they'll do other things. don't buy groceries gorks out to dinner with their families. that are other things they cut out. >> drug companies can bachbly set whatever price they wasn't. that's one issue we've struggled with. in some cases the list that reuters pulled out shows that these medications, some of them. there are alternatives. crestor is a good example. it lowers cholesterol. there are really cheap drugs you can get at walmart and walgreens, kmart for others on the market. nexium, the purple pill --
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>> right. you can buy them over the corner. the others corner america. >> focusing solely on the list of the price of medicine is misleading because it ig no, sir discounts and rebates negotiated. >> big pharma hates when you focus on the whom whack price, which is where this analysis came from. the industry average is about 20% less that prees you're looking at, but the impact on consumers is real. it still translates go increased prairie price. programs like medicare, medicaid are government programmes. paying more money. it shows us how little we actually understand about drug price. it's a lot of back room deals and we can't see what's going on. >> good to see you.
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thousands of u.s. schools may have beenbility with materials that could cause cancer. and if youer're heading out the door, you can still watch it live right there on your digital divide. s lesley stahl is coming into the studio today to talk about the joy of being a grandma. we'll be right back. your insurance company won't replace the full value of your totaled new car. the guy says, "you picked the wrong insurance plan."
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♪ real, simple ingredients. unbelievable taste. oh it's real! enjoy i can't believe it's not butter! building materials used in california school are sparking a nationwide debate this morning about the safety of students. the dispute involves toxic chemicals known as pcbs. they were discovered in malibu classrooms about three years ago. school officials say they have a plan to deal with the problem. danielle nottingham shows us why many parents do not believe them. >> we know there are pcbs in there. the district tested. and the highest results in the enti n
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entire world, has been found in our schools. that's not safe >> jennifer withdrew her daughter from middle school because of pcbs, but her son enrolled in high school as a sophomore partly because he didn't want to leave. >> i'm worried about my child that's still in that environment every day. >> she's part of a group suing the santa monica malibu school district. she got support from people like cindy crawford who pulled her two children from high school. >> we agreed we would happily pay. >> reporter: they're carcinogenic. they can also cause problems with the reproductive and nfs systems. before they were banned in 1979 they were widely used to make
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caulk, sealants, and other materials. >> there could be as many as 25,000 schools that contain those materials. >> reporter: the problem with the school is when three teachers were diagnosed with three thigh thyroid cancer. they're going continuously clean and monitor affected areas. >> we followed what we believe is the science and we believe wha we've done is protective. >> why does it take years to replace these materials? >> it requires students being out of the classrooms because we're talking about basically changing out windows. >> since implementing its plan, the district has tested more than a thousand samples and detected no pcb levels
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remain critical. >> you have to remove the source, so the cleaning is really just treating the symptoms. >> she wanted them to do a test to determine all the sources of pcb examination. >> what we want is we hope to set a press department. all of those kids deserve a school free of toxin materials. >> it's really an interesting issue. >> and a bit scary. >> i was going to say very sc y scary. when they say, no, we tested it, it's fine, it's scary when you see people still getting cancer.
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spectacular time lapsed video shows the earth's horizon nearly 200 miles above the ground. the camera captures earth's glowing atmosphere along the curving edge of the planet. those bright flickering flashes show what lightning storms look like from space. the space station orbits the earth every 90 minlds. that means the crews see 16 sunrises and 16 sun sets every day. >> that's not a bad job. you get to see what lightning looks like from high above. >> you can see where communities and countries have a lot of electricity and those that don't. >> does it make you want to go up? >> i'd love to see it but it's a sad commentary too. a
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electrici electricity. >> that's true. the shot everybody's talking about. we're going to talk with kris jenkins about the buzzer-beater. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. annie's always trying to get me to try new things. we've both been on weight watchers... and now they've totally changed it up. i like that this new plan encourages me to eat healthier. i like that it lets me eat my favorite foods. smartpoints has really helped me. i'm now down 37 pounds. it's helped me too! i'm down 40 pounds. just sayin'. all new smartpoints. join for free by april 18th and get a free starter kit. working on my feet all day gave min my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain. find a machine at drscholls.com
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it is tuesday, april 5th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including fallout from the panama papers. what could happen to world leaders suspected of hiding money in foreign bank accounts? opt first here's today's "eye "ener at 8:00. >> 33 years since a buzzer beater has tapped the national pichamiponsh. the best way to describe it? madness. >> he's going liv the rest of his life as a folk hero in the final four. >> donald trump brought in his wife to see if she could help close the deal. >> if he walks away with no
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impossible for him to get to 1,237 for the majority. >> wisconsin, a big win for him. >> an anonymous insider passed off millions of internal documents which exposed a global network. now citizens are demanding answers from leaders. >> the gun in question is still in development. that hasn't stopped senator schumer from calling for an investigation and keeping the potential weapon off the market. >> a man was arrested for climbing over the white house fence. i just wanted to see the oval office, said jeb. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by nationwide. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. villanova fans are celebrating a thrilling win in the
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game. the school's first national championship since 1985 came from a shot in the final skoinds. this is one of the greatest moments in basketball history. >> three seconds at midcourt. gives it to jenkins for the championship. villanova, phenomenal. the national champions. >> villanova's kris jenkins as you saw let the ball fly. look at that shot, from beyond the three-point line as the clock hit zero. the winning shot capped one of the most dramatic title games ever. north carolina's market page tied it earlier. there was time for one last play and that was all villanova needed. in our next half hour, we're going to go inside that incredible shot with kris jenkins. >> i'm really look forward it to. >>
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>> >> hhow did you do it, buddy? >> the pass, the pass. look at this. people lining up. donald trump leads the delegate counts but still needs 500 more to win the nomination. after last week's damaging comments on women and abortion it could cost him. ted cruz said part of being pro-life is valuing the mother's life as well. he said if he wins tort. it will change the landscape of the race. >> hillary clinton and bernie sanders remain in a virtual tie where 86 delegates are at stake today. the two candidates have agreed finally to debasement he's not happy about it. his cam pape says, hope, we hope the debate will be worth the inconvenience for
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support irs. but will have to change our schedule to change humanitarian's high dollar coast to coast fund-raiser. >> the massive document leak contains allegations of money laundering and tax evasion. the paper names 140 politicians and public oi officialing. they allegedly did business with the pap ma based law firm mossack fonseca. we're joined at the table. good to see you once again. >> good morning. >> the scope of this is stunning. what is the possible fallout for the leaders around the country -- the world really.
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it's like an earthquake. we're seeing demonstrate in ireland. >> he's under pressure to resign right now. >> exactly. in china, they banned all measures because they're worrying 78d choob night putin. his circle on part-time are mepgded in the league and it's raised a lot of skpoirs on what's going on. $2 billion is the number being cited in terms of the amount of money flow. >> putin's own spokesman said putin is the target of these leaks. >> they say this is putin of soev ya. ev the reality is this is actually a global story.
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>> i was going the say quickly not only is it hiding of money but stealing from their own people. >> yes. what's fascinating is we live in a world of radical transparency. the idea that you can hide anything anywhere is rapidly evaporating. 11.5 million documents have been leaked. think about it. >> think about the boxes of paper you'd neechltd stick in one usb stick and it's gone. >> how long would it take them to go through all of it to discover who's implicated? >> here's the thing. in the old days, it would take years. now what they've created is like a wikipedia of these offshore documents. anybody can
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name of a politician, businessperson, address, american state and soo if anyone is instigated. >> who are these jurmts. >> they come from all over the world. many are involved. this shows you this is the era. >> anyone who says journalists these days are doing trivial celebrity things are dead wrong. >> what about u.s. politicians, u.s. businessmen or women. >> thus far there are not any americans named but people haven't gone into the website fully to look at all the details. and even enif our people, sit dens. there are those o who are actually on that website. >> all right.
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thank you. paid family leave is an issue heating up. ahead, geedy cater >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by nationwide.
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top honor this morning for a u.s. military dog who protected thousands of troops in a war zone. debora patta is in london. >> this is the dog being awarded a top medal for bravery in battle. that story coming up on "cbs this morning."
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but jamie raskin is the only democrat for congress who's authored landmark progressive laws -- marriage equality, equal pay for women, green maryland act, assault weapons ban, and more. raskin: i'm jamie raskin, and i approve this message.
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a new milestone this morning in the national debate over paid family leave. new york governor cuomo signed landmark legislation on monday. employers will have to provide 1 12 weeks of paid time off for new family members. jodi kanter has written te
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facing women in the workplace. good morning. >> good morning. >> this is being called revolutionary, ground braking. >> for the first time we can really see a system coming into play in america where there will be state mandated family leave coming from employers, especially for people who dmot work for google, who do not work for facebook, ghot work for a rich company that can provide a really generous leave policy. the way it works sit's employee funded. you put a tiny amount from your paycheck each week. >> what is tiny? >> a dollar a week, $1.50 a week for family funding. if your father is dying and you need to spend a few weeks. if you're a mother or family and you have pain that's where your paid leechb comes from. >> is it mandated for everyone? >> men and women, part-time employees are
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freelancers can opt in and small businesses are included in this. >> do you expect other states to follow through? >> possibly. this is on the table in a bunch of other cities and states. and the opposition is not that high. ice not coming out of tax and it's not coming directly from the employer. >> so the business council of new york is already speaking out against it saying the benefit replacement costs will prove to be a significant burden on most of the employers. >> this has been in place in california for years and we've not seen a huge backlash or outcry. if you're an employer and you have five employees and someone's aging parent gets sick and you have to spend a lot of money to hire a lot of replacements, that's where the money comes from. >> why
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need to pay that when insurance pays for that? >> that's disability, but a father is not going to have a disability from having a baby, at least we hope not. so much of the population is taking care of aging parents or if you have a child with disability. so pregnancy is only a very small part of family leave. not a very small part. >> i do think one of the important things to point out as par of the law is it doesn't start out until 2018 and then it ease faced in. so you only get a 50% cap. >> absolutely. a lot of mothers who work at fast food restaurants, their family leave is they would quit their job. they would have to or
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>> thank you. lesley stahl. her most important assignment did not happen on 60 minutes or ahead in the white house. look. she's just smiling thinking about it. ahead, revealing her personal story on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. risk of stroke due to afib,e r a type of irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. but i won't play anything less than my best. so if there's something better than warfarin, i'm going for it. eliquis. eliquis reduced the risk of stroke better than warfarin, plus it had significantly less major bleeding than warfarin... eliquis had both... that's what i wanted to hear. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily...
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that's the band of the cold stream arms. honoring a hero for her sacrifice on the battlefield. luca is a german shepherd that helps joerlds in war zones. she protected thousands of troops before a bomb ended her service. debora patta is in london with the prestigious new honor. good morning. >> good morning. we're here at the wellington barracks in london where a very brave three-legged dog is being honored as a war hero for savinging the lives of countless coalition troops in iraq and afghanistan. the highest medal of valor awarded for one incredibly heroic
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he ser she served with u.s. marines for six years. during her tour, not one soldier died. he said she was, well, just one of the boys. >> we treat these dogs like a fellow marine. and so it really is a team effort when you're out there because your life is in your dog's detection capability and you're there to maybe sure the dog is properly deployed and make sure the dog's not in harm's way unnecessarily. >> she served with her second commander. she lost her leg to a hidden bomb. she had already sniffed out 30 pounds of explosives and was looking for more when the second device detonated resulting in her severe injuries. corporal rodriguez said she had saved his life so many times before that it was now his
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to stand by luca and he did. he was there during the emergency surgery and slept by her side during her recovery at a u.s. base. that band damage bears the marine moat toe. semper fi, always loyal. luca is first dog to receive the medal. it's the highest military honor for valor in the uk. luca joins a proud history of 66 other recipient os testiof the prestigious medal. there's this one and j.i.oe j who saved allied forces from attack. since leaving active surface luca was adopted by gunnerman. and is now
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as one of the family. >> so you know what would be an average day for luca in her retirement? >> she enjoys going on family walks and loves getting in the water. other than that, just lie on the couch and relax and kind of enjoying her rye tiemt. >> gunnery sergeant willingham is deeply indebted to lieu kachlt he told us it is safe too her he made it safely back home to his family. norah? >> debora patta, what a wonderful story. >> we love that. >> pulling on the heart strings today. beautiful story. gorgeous too. >> gorgeous dog. talk about one shining moment. kris jenkins made the shot that won the ncaa championship. we'll hear from villanova's hero. that's next after your local news. i'm anne-marie green with a look beyond this morning's headlines.
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working for us pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, "60 minutes" correspondent lesley stahl is back in studio 57 with the joyous changes in her life after becoming a grand massachusetts. her new book with the different approaches of baby boomers, largest group in the nation. plus kris jenkins made the last-second three-pointer that won villanova the national title. that's ahead. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the hollywood reporter" wrecks
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act actor erik bauersfeld. admiral ackbar said that. he did the voice based on ackbar's unusual face. he died at age 93. "new york times" says rwanda will be the first. drones will drop medical supp supplies and blood to remote locations. a fleet of drones will officially make up to 150 deliveries a day. the silicon valley startup zip line will operate the drones. they will report on the postponement of a harry potter event because only 12 to 18-year-olds were invited. grown-ups wrote they were
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used. many said they were children when the harry potter books came out. the event was to get to know library staff but the unexpected enthusiasm of adults caused a change of plans for the adults is. a the independent of britain reports to end the nap gnome as the siesta. he wants the work day to match the rest of europe. that would shorten most shifts be i two hours. it zbap as a way to let farm workers avoid midday heat and as somebody who studied in spain, that would be a big change. >> not necessarily good. >> charlie is pros siesta. lesley stahl. she's investigated some of the biggest stories in america and around the world. here's a look at a fewth
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>> oh, walter, i'm just being told by a high lieutenant that the choice is bush. >> that's the most amazing piece news we've heard. >> the ball is now in the hands of the court. >> you seem to be saying president bush was willing to polarize the nation on a political game. >> immoral, corrupt, you say you're running a centimeter enterprise. you're one of the reasons we have to are e-stof restore it. >> it's haunting, a little chilly. in a place where so many innocent people lost their lives. >> sir, i know you're angry. >> translator: i'm not angry. i'm in a hurry. >> this is 3,850
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>> it's exactly original. >> guess what my favorite tv show is. >> i can't. >> duh. put "60 minutes" there. >> she's added grandmother to her list of achievements shchl e writes about her latest roll, becoming grandma. the joys and science of new grandparenting. you look at your work and your most important work is being welcome, local . >> you say lol doesn't stand for laughing out loud. it stands for little old lady. why do you do that? >> the truth is and i find this myself you don't become old when you're a grand parent. they don't make you older that. mang you younger. is it never too late to have the best day of your life like your heart was on a trampoline.
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>> what makes it so great? >> everything. there's not a downside. the first thing was just the emotion of holding that baby for the first time. it was so explosive and unexpectedly so and total body and i -- when someone suggested i write the book, the first thing i did was try to find out what that was. so there's a whole business on the biochemistry of it all. there's a reason we do that. i had an epiphany. we never hug when we're adults, we never hug, except in sex but that's different. air kiss, a man hug. but the center of us is never touched until we have these grandchildren and then we hold them. i guess if you're a mother, it's the same thing. but as a grandparent, you hold them and you hold on tight and it just -- you go into another planet, you know. you're off in space with that feeling all over you. >> you say you surprised even yourself.
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not just in that. i mean we as grandparents -- and this is universal -- we're so different than we are as mothers. you're both mothers. you're not a father. but you're both mothers. i mean you -- you just are trying to raise little wonderful citizens. >> you make a really interesting point you. say more than half of grand parents were member os testify baby boom generation. ho ryu baby boomers becoming different kinds of grand parents? >> a lot of us worked, so we just didn't have the time as i was just about to say. you're working and you're trying to raise good citizens and teach them manners. we as grandparents are just there to love them. >> it reminds me a little bit of men who tell me they have children later in life. it's very different than when they had children early in life. they appreciate them more. they're more department. all these things make the one
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different. >> and as a grandparent, as opposed to the older man who is a father, you really don't have that responsibility. so you can be there in time and devote yourself in a loving way. >> you know what i thought was interesting? your point about the other grandparents, that there can be competition between grandparents. i thought the most poignant thing is when you talk to the other grandparents in your daughter's life. i thought that was very touching. >> she was so beautifully candid. she is the mother of the father. and i said is it more difficult. long pause and she said it is. it's more difficult. >> you get to -- >> but not always true. believe me, not always true sfloo i was going to say, the ceo of pepsico says our biological clocks and our career clocks are in direct competition with one another and they were for you because your own
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you were covering the white house and you write very candidly about how many events of her life that you missed. >> well, you must have related to that. >> i did, i did. >> you must have related to that. yeah. and so as a grandmother, you're in a way trying to make up for it. you're getting a second chance. that's like men who weren't there when their babies d own children were growing up and then the grandchild comes and they say, i'm going to be in this person's life. but the most surprising thing and shocking was how many grand paints are not allowed to see their own grandchildren. >> that's terrible. >> the parents say, you know, i'm not going to subject my child to that woman or that man. >> friction within the families. >> but you also say it's chapter four in the evolution of a life. >> oh, it is definitely chapter
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longer and living so much longer healthily, it's kind of the big phase that's undefined. >> it's chapter four in your life vchl you slowed down at all? >> have you? >> hello. meet mr.iquette >> when you talk about the shocking thing, these grand parents will do anything to please their daughters and son-in-l son-in-law-. you say one woman said she would wear a hazmat suit if she could see her grandchild. >> it's funny. even if it's your own daughter, we're walking on eggshells. we want those children and we're being so careful not to antagonize them. just because they're holding a card. they have some power they didn't have before over us. >> i love that you -- i think it's the last cheap tur of the book. you issue a sort of
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to grand paints. what is that call? >> get more involved. even if you're more involved now, get more involved. our children are both working, mother and father, they're frazzled beyond belief. they're not making as much money as we did and they need us. they need us. and more importantly, those children need us. they need their grandparents. my call is to find a way. if you don't liv near them, find a way to be there and be more in valved. >> i read the book with such longing. i don't have grandchildren yet but it is my deepest desire i'll live long enough. i said to her kirby, can i be in the delivery room. we'll see. >> i wanted that and i wasn't -- >> you write about that. >> i understand. and i wanted a grandchild almost
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viscerally. i yearned for it the way a young woman yearn for a baby. >> now you're a lollie times two. >> it's breath taking. every part of it. i hope it for you and you become a surrogate because surrogate grandparents are also helping children. >> i have four godchildren. >> there you go. >> lesley, thank you so much. >> pleasure. >> congratulations on the book. it's terrific. "becoming grandma" goes on sale today. villanova kris jenkins, the series of events that helped him clinch
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three seconds at midcourt. gives it to jenkins for the championship. >> this is villanova's kris jenkins with the dramatic game-winning shot at the buzzer last night. kris joins us from houston. good morning and congratulations. >> good morning. >> let me start with this. it was a perfect pass for you, right? >> yeah. archie, he found me and i was able to one-two step right into that one. >> did you know it was going in when it left your hands? >> i think every
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it was no different. i was able to catch that one right in stride. >> your brother said, look, he knew it was going go in because that's like lay jeff shot for you. i'd like to know, kris, what was the moment for you when the ball was going in and what did you and your brother say to each other. >> the moment it stood out to me is when my teammates tackled me. you know, nate just told me how proud he was of me and how happy he was for me, you know, he did stress that he was upset that they lost but he was happy for me. >> both your adoomted mom and birth mom were sitting there watching you guys in this game. what was that like for them? >> it was something special for our family, you know, something that, you know, just shows the sacrifice and hard work, it was worth. >> it what has your mom taught you? >> my mom just taught me a lot about basketball and life. she knew it was a better situation for me shows how much
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cares about me and what i wanted to do with my life and chase my dreams. >> chris, has it sunk in for you this is a shot that will be remembered for as long ads you live and people will talk about it for as long as you live? >> new york it hasn't surge in yet probably because i'm sleep ychl i want to get some sleep. >> i know, kris. we saw you yawning and rubbing your eyes. what did you do last night. now they're calling you a folk hero, mr. man. what -- go ahead. >> i spent time with my family and i just stayed up and talked with my teammates and before i knew it, it was 7:00 in the morning. >> what did the coach say to you, kris? >> he just said, you know, how proud he was and happy for us for our program. >> was the shot planned? was that the way you were planning it after you came back from that tra men does last shot that tied the game for the tar heels? >> we work on ge
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like that in practice every single day. our coach makes sure we prepare. the plan was to give ryan the ball. i was just able to get in ryan's vip and he gave me the perfect pass. >> good for you. thank you so munks kris jenkins, from villanova. >> bravo. teen people rooting against you can't hate on you for what you did last night. there can be no hating on that game. >> thank you. up next tshlg high school student who's following a course of brilliance on her campus. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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all right. listen to this. amazing achievement by a long island new york student is giving her high school deja vu. augusta uwamanzu-nna has eight schools that have excepted her. >> to see they got in all eight of these amazing institutions is incredible. the fact that it happened two years in a row it speaks volumes to the elmont teachers, school, and students. >> she was born in the u.s. but her family is from nigeria. congratulations. augusta, she's a leader. and the staff. tou know what augusta can do
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bracket challenge. >> i wasn't following. >> because your teams got booted out early. >> way early. >> thank god they don't have video of me going what are you going for villanova for. >> you gave me crap on air in front of our viewers. >> remind everybody about that. that was my first bracket i filled out. i was like what am i going to do. i started looking at the rankings. the one team i picked kept going all the way. congrats to villanova wildcats. they are the national champions thanks to a buzzer beater by chris jenkins. north carolina fans, you were excited including michael jordan. they were ecstatic when they tied at 74 with under five secos
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chance and boy did they turn it into a shining moment. chris jenkins, also a gonzaga high school grad gave the wildcats the 77-74 win and claim the first national championship since 19850. >> congratulations, good for you. can i do my happy dance. >> whatever. >> we have a clip of a bracket expert telling me that i made a poor choice. take a look at this then the happy dance. >> my big sports fan. it was fun filling out my bracket. i was trying to kind of pick based on the predictions but, i mean, i guess it looks fine. i have villanova winning. what do you think about that. >> that makes me uncomfortable. >> my husband went to villanova but i don't have them going that far. >> who do you have winning? >> i have

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