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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 13, 2016 7:00am-8:59am EDT

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. good morning, it is wednesday, july 13, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump says he's ready to choose a vice presidential candidate. >> and a call for protest and the one thing he want you to know with
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at a nion grieves but those of us who love dallas and call it hom have had five deaths in the family. >> two presidents honor dallas. >> so much tnension between the police departments, we ask the police to do too much and we ask too little of ourselves. >> i have come here to make it as clear as possible why i am endorsing hillary clinton. >>'l youl be calling up mike pence. i don't know whether he's going to be your governor or your vice president, who the hell knows. >> attorney general loretta lynch deflected questions about the investigation into hillary clinton's use of ava prite e-mail server. >> as attorney general, it would be inappropriate for me to comment further. >> today the united kingdom gets a new prime minister. meanwhile, david cameron has packed his bags before visiting the q tueeno formally
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♪ all lives matter to the great ♪ >> flooding washed out sections of roads and bridges and caused powe routages. >> a case of road rage caught on tape in san diego as a driver threatens to run over a man. >> whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, sir! >> a curious bear locks himself inside a subrow aru in colorado. >> forced to leap to safety. >> and all of that matters. >> and bernie sanders this morning finally endorsed hillary clinton as the democratic nominee. >> and as promised, the clinton campaign released bernie sanders' wife. >> oh, so few remain but the bar is closing and america has to go home with someone so in your honor --
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[ laughter ] [ applause ] >> good night, good night sweet prince! welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump says he has just about made up his mind on a vice presidential nominee. trump tells the wall street journal he wants an attack dog on his running mate. he describes the person as a fighter skilled in hand-to-hand combat who can take on hillary clinton. >> trump is trying out some of his potential picks. former speaker of the house newt gingrich, chris christie and mike pence have all campaigned with him. major garrett was with him. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. at a rally nearby,
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gave a press conference. >> how a your governor doing? good? i think so. >> i mike pence has until friday to file for reelection. >> you'll be calling up mike pence. i don't know whether he's going to be your governor or your vice president. who the hell knows. >> reporter: pence is popular among tea party conservatives and has even deeper ties to evangelicals. as a former member of the house of republican leadership, pence has most of what he wants. including the ability to appease skeptical republicans. >> we will unite, we will stand together, we will not rest, we will not relent until this we make good man our next president. >> in a series
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ginsburg called him a faker, a political opportunist and said whatever comes into his head in a moment. trump responded saying justice ginsburg has embraced as all. house speaker paul ryan questioned her ability to be impartial. >> for somebody on the supreme court, that strikes me as inherently biased and out of realm. >> back to trump and pence, they spent a good deal of time together after the fund-raiser delaying the start of their rally for nearly an hour and then trump spent the night here in indianapolis before flying to california, gale. all this deepens the intrigue.
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donald trump is dwayning gaini swing states and clinton campaigns in illinois this morning after winning the endorsement of her main democratic challenger, bernie sanders. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. sanders delighted democratic leaders with his enthusiastic praise for clinton. he went further than even his campaign expected. but it was hard for some of his supporters to swallow, especially some of those drawn to politics because of him. >> i am endorsing hillary clinton. >> a roaring crowd in portsmouth couldn't completely drown out the sound of supporters. "sellout sanders" and "never
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hillary" began. >> i don't question her judgment. >> his new found admiration. >> i know her and you all know her as one of the most intelligent people we have ever met. >> sanders spent a long e-mail to supporters saying i know some of you will be businedisappointh my decision. >> our job is to see that platform implemented. >> clinton aides argued the hold outs are limited to a few. frederick lancaster has been volunteering for sanders since last summer, but added a clinton button to his ensemble yesterday. >> what do you say to those younger sands are supporters who are particulartipartar
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>> listen to that inspiration that brought them to politics. and that was bernie. and if they listen to the man who meant so much to them, they'll see the value in staying involved. >> one of the clearest signs that sanders is no longer a candidate, he released his secret service detail last night, which can be a tough adjustment for some politicians but probably not, charlie, for the junior senator from vermont who always preferred walking to a motorcade. >> thank you, nancy. >> mark liebovich is with us from washington. good morning. >> hi, charlie. >> how do you assess the tighten of of the race in the swing state and decline for numbers for hillary clinton. >> swing states tend to go back and forth maybe more than other states. this is a snapshot. all
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in particular does encapsulate the last ten days during which the fbi investigation was completed. it was a rough few days for hillary clinton. i think this reflects that. i think in the big picture, though, that the up shot of the fbi investigation is that this will not be a long-term problem. i think this could be something she recovers from but clearly the damage is done here. >> so bernie sanders finally makes the endorsement park so you're thinking what is the difference it's going to make. the talk, was it enthusiastic enough? >> i think it was enthusiastic enough. i think the big question is how sustained this will be, where in goes from here, what the tenor of his convention speech, i assume he'll give a speech in philadelphia is going to be and whether he can build on this. an endorsement like this is not flicking the switch. it's the beginning of a process, the beginning of a reconciliation. i think the next few weeks will be pivotal.
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>> mark, what are you hearing trump will pick as a vice presidential candidates. >> well, there are the big three. he's looking for an attack dog for christie over pence. >> he also said he's looking for someone he has chemistry with. >> that would probably argue for christie. they're also northeastern, you know, they know each other, they've known each other for many years, they're old friends. but i think chemistry is a pretty low bar when you're doing one of these searches. the question is do you like each other, will you grow together? >> mark, we still doesn't know much about the rnc convention starting on monday. does that say anything to you? >> it makes it interesting. what's really stunning to me right now, four, five days away from this is that no one knows what's g t
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stage, no one knows what's going to happen on the floor and no one knows what's going to happen on the streets. those are the three big wild cards which usually you have a pretty good sense of coming in. there could be floor demonstrations, no one knows who the running mate is going to be, if there's drama trying to oust trump. it interesting, reality tv, which is what drpt wants. >> we'll all be there with our own chemistry. >> with curiosity and enthusiasm. >> alert and available. >> that's who we are, alert and available. >> and coming up, we'll talk to bernie sanders about his campaign and endorsement of hillary clinton. >> law enforcement is making preparations for next week's conventions.
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jeff pegues has details. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. there will be a large, hefty presence in these barricades, across the street from the quicken loan arena. ne will be part of the infrastructure here for crowd control once the convention begins. >> we're not going to restrict anybody's constitutional rights. >> reporter: cleveland police chief calvin willians says his officers are prepared to deal with the possibility that many of the people on the street during the gop convention could be armed. >> people in this state have a right to open carry. there is a second amendment to the constitution, we stand that. our officers are prepared. they're used to seeing that in downtown cleveland for different events. >> the violence in dallas has
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concerns. >> it's increasingly challenging when people have ar-15s slung over and there's confusion in a crowd and they begin running. we don't know who the good guy is versus the bad guy if everybody starts shooting. >> trump's rally already have been the scene of violent clashes between supporters and opponents. a man was arrested in vegas after allegedly trying to grab gun and another man was arrested in dayton, ohio. >> we've been planning for close to a year but a plan is never finished. you have to constantly be ready to adapt, be flexible to whatever may occur. >> they are
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50,000 people to attend the convention. it is harder to put a number on how many people will be come hearing armed. closer to the quicken loans arena, there is a security zone where weapons are banned but anywhere else you can legally carry. gale? >> thank you very much, joe. funerals will take place today for three of the five police officers killed in that dallas ambush. president obama was joined on stage by former president george w. bush and vice president bide i don't know. michael smith, lawyer i don't know ahrens, patriceio zamarripa were called as heros. >> when the bullets
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flying, the men and women of the dallas police, they did not flinch and they did not react recklessly. >> president obama yeulogized te five fallen officers. the president urged americans not to lose hope in unity. >> it ha's hard not to think sometimes the center won't hold and that things will get worse. i understand how americans feels. but, dallas, i'm here to say we must reject such despair and i'm here to say we areot
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divided as people might think. >> people of different religions and nations joined in. >> today we grieve. >> former president george w. bush directly addressed the family members. >> we can pray in a god will comfort you in a hope deeper than sorrow and stronger than death. >> president obama met privately with the families of the fallen police officers after the service. in tragedy appears to be drawing those families closer. a photograph posted by a family friend shows sergeant michael smith's daughter giving a bracelet she made to the young daughter of officer zamarripa during a memorial. charlie? >> thank you so much. it is incredible how
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together. >> and that last picture of the girls bonding. >> britain is hour away from having its second prime minister in history. david cameron is addressing parliament right now as leader. his successor, teresa may will lead britain to the european union. good morning? >> reporter: good morning. this political theater here, at least this act of it and everybody knows how this show will end the main actor, david cameron, is leaving the stage and the building, a victim of his own hubris. but the show must go on. normally it's a chance to ask the head of government about policy, but david cameron is no longer making policy and won't be head of anything in a few hours. >> this will be the last es
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>> the house of common appearance has become a platform for prime minister farewells and like the others, david cameron tried to make the best of his. >> other than within meeting this morning with her majesty the queen, the diary of the rest of my day is remarkably light. >> the movers have been coming up and he'll be moved out by the rest of the day. the new prime minister will move in former cabinet prime minister teresa may who will be asked by the queen to take off. may won by default. the other contenders have either stabbed each other in the back or the front or fall i don't know -- fallen on their own swords. there's a lot of tal
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about the accomplishments of david cameron's six years in power. but he'll be remembered as the man who held the referendum that he didn't hold and everything he lost for the country who didn't vote for him. >> and a mother tells a son
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this national weather report sponsored by purina, your pet, our passion. >> his father's killing by police helped spark nationwide protests. >> i feel they're all racist, latino, mexican, white, black, it doesn't matter what the race, the skin tone, none of it. i feel all of them should come together as someone united family. >> ahead, only on "cbs this morning", the teen-age son of
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it's getting crazy. the game poke man go is going to dangerous areas. on the bright side, they finally got people to attend the rio olympics. >> it's going to be interesting to see what happens. never good when the police are holding signs that say "welcome pto hell." never a good sign. coming up, a bankruptcy lawyer describes the largest state-run student loan in the country as state sanctioned loan sharking. michelle miller talks with the head of an agency that reportedly sued a cancer patient that lost his job and couldn't pay his
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>> and the son of alton sterling, his message for protesters angry oaf hver his d. >> police arrested three suspects in connection with an alleged plot. one, a 13-year-old, was not identified. a fourth suspect is on the run. investigators say four burglars broke into a pawn shop and stole eight handguns. a suspected later admitted they wanted to target officers. the arrest comes just days after baton rouge police killed alton sterling. we saw his son break done last week during a news conference. david is in baton rouge, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. cameron sterling is 15 years old. while he is preparing to bury his father on friday, he's thinking about the
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that ambush on police in dallas, which in some part was motivated by what happened to his father, his father's death right here at this convenience store in baton rouge, louisiana. what we saw was a young man far beyond his years. >> i really want everyone to know nationwide, everyone in this world to know that alton sterling was a good man, no matter what anyone else has to say about him. truly in my heart i know he was a good dad. >> the individual involved in his murder took away a man with children. >> i'll never forget that image of you waling on the side of your mom. >> when i put my arm around her, it's like somebody else had touched me. like i had another hand laying on top of my hand and when i looked over, wasn't nobody else touching me. nobody else was touching me. and it was like at that moment, i knew
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her. he's standing here as a family together once again because when i just started crying, i know i can't physically have him back so i know i had to cry just to be like i want my daddy back. >> reporter: if you had an opportunity to say one thing to your dad, one last thing, what would it be? >> i love you so dearly. >> reporter: what is your opinion of police in general these days? >> police in general. all police aren't bad. they all aren't bad. there are some that are bad, but all aren't bad. how i feel, i feel all police shouldn't be punished for other polices' crimes. the police in dallas,
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nobody knew if they had kids to go home to. those kids need their parents. >> reporter: people around the which have been protesting because of what happened to your dad. what would you say to him? >> continue protesting but what i want, what i ask if you truly love my father, i truly just want everyone to protest the right way, protesting in peace, not in violence, not beating up police, not police beating up people. that makes no sense. that makes things worse. you have to make things better by making peace. >> today cameron sterling will get on a plane to washington. tomorrow he'll meet the president at a town hall and, charlie, on friday he'll bury his dad. >> david, thank you so much. >> he was so composed considering you know he was in so much pain and it makes it
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and he's saying to others, please, please, please, stop the violence. >> and not angry. asking for unity, asking for continuing protesting but do it in the right way. >> his anger would be understandable, which makes it even more powerful. >> it's amazing how people in so much pain can find their heart. >> i marvel at that, too, charlie. >> the wall street journal reports on record setting closes for two key stock indexes, the dow jones industrial average joined 120 points yesterday closing al 18,347. the s&p 500 gained nearly 15 points. it ended the day at 2,152. analysts say investors are shaking off worries about a potential recession and britain leaving the eu. >> loretta lynch refused to discuss details before the how
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clinton e-mail investigation, which ended with no charges. he defended her meeting with former bill clinton in phoenix last month saying they had a social conversation. >> "the washington post" says isis is preparing followers for the potential collapse of its caliphate. an isis operative tells the post that the organization has shifted some of its command structure and wealth to different countries isis is vowing to press ahead with its recent campaign of attacks. >> a seventh killing is being linked to a serial street shooter. detectives are connecting the suspect of a woman whose body was found in april. all the shootings were in or near phoenix. police helped a sketch leads to the capture of a killer. >> and she lost her son to murder. now a student loan program makes her feel victimized again. >> i just felt like they don't care. they just want the money. i feel like there'
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my son's life. it sad. it really sd. >> up next, the program's executive director stands by the decision to keep issuing bills. >> and if you're heading out the door, guess what, you can watch us live through the cbs all-access app right on your digital device. you won't want to miss how to tell if the food you're buying and eating is counterfeit. we'll explain and we'll be right back. to severe plaque psoria, isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla (apremilast). otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression.
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the woman in charge of new jersey's student loan agency is out of control. a look at the higher education assistance student authority. they likened it to state sanctioned loan sharking. michele miller spoke to a mother who was required to pay back her son's student loans a year after he was murdered.
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>> the authority, known as hesa, is the largest student loan run program in the country with with $1.9 billion portfolio. it's being accused of driving families into financial ruins when borrowers become sick, lose their jobs or even die. >> i know what a co-signing is. if it defaults, i'm responsible. i know that. you're not going to say to your kid you're not going to go to college because of a thousand dollars. >> reporter: marsha dedeoliveira longinetti said her son was a gifted athlete when he enrolled in the university of vermont in 2009. he had draereams of becoming a doctor. but in january 2015, she got a visit from police. >> i put my hands on my ears, i don't want to hear. i don't want to hear. >> reporter: kevin had been shot in the head in his burlington,
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>> everybody in vermont was so forgiving. the gas company was forgiven. marcia said the federal government wiped out his student loan debts but hesa, the source of nearly $19,000 in student loans did not. please accept our condolences on your loss. monthly statements will continue to be sent to you. >> reporter: when you get this bill in the mail, is it a reminder? >> yes, it's a reminder every month that he's dead and not going to graduate. >> reporter: dozens of borrowers were interviewed, including a cancer patient who lost his job and could not pay his loan.
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trying to help them but in the end, they all felt this state took advantage with them. >> the report was exceptionally one sided. >> hesa's executive director could not comment on specific cases because of privacy laws but she personally reviews every death and disability discharge application the agency receives. >> i would love to grant 100% of course but that's not feasible. >> reporter: of the 62 requests over the last four years, she says 47 were granted due to financial hardship, about $500,000 total. the agency also forgives loans if a student dies while enrolled in school. marcia's son, krevin, had taken time off. >> we have to keep this program sufficiently solvent. >> reporter: are you sayint
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insolvent to forgive those loans? >> i'm saying every year we have to look at loans on a case-by-case basis. >> reporter: why don't you have an automatic discharge policy in the event of death? >> we are a small state agency using public money and we need to be as judicious as possible so that we can help those who truly need it. >> reporter: although it a public agency, hesaa's loans are not financed by state money but through the sale of bonds to investors. >> my primary interest is providing students and families with the lowest cost options available and having a strong bond rating allows hesaa to offer very low interest rates. >> because if it was a house, i would have a house. if i was paying for that. but this is something that is useless. i'm paying for -- i'm throwing my money in somebody else's pocket. that's how i see it. >> reporter: marcia s
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principal on her son's loan but had hoped hesaa would at least forgive the interest which more than doubles the amount. of the 65,000 active borrowers, hesaa said there have only been about 40 complaints to the consumer protection bureau. so a small amount. >> that's a very tough story. >> it is a tough story. >> thank you very much, michele. >> scary moments over a florida beach. the extreme athlete
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>> a beach goer captured the end of a paraglider's wild and dangerous ride. damian le roy plunged nearly 150 feet because of possible mechanical problems. he was airlifted to the hospital reportedly with several broken bones. he's expected to make a full recovery. >> somebody's looking out for him. that's for sure. i wonder if he'll do that again. my guess would be yeah. >> not on my bucket list in. >> me neither. yours, charlie? >> no, no. i'm always interested in what >> bernie sanders endorsed hillary clinton. we'll ask him about that decision and the road ahead coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ well, it's all right now or wonder whether i should seek treatment.
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are we ready? >> do you know charlie's line where he goes "and all that." >> and all that matters. >> can i do all that? >> and all that matters. >> on cbs. >> on "cbs this
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>> how's that, charlie? >> it's as good as has been done.
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>> top of the morning to you. it's wednesday, july 13th, 016. there's more real news ahead including donald trump catching up to hillary clinton in key battle ground states. we'll talk about the next stage of the race with senator bernie sanders. but first here's t'soday "eye opener." >> a rousing introduction defending trump and criticizing clton. >>de sanrs delighted democrat being leaders with his praise for clinton. he went further than even her campaign expected. >> we don't know much about the rnc convention starting monday. >> right now four, five days away, no one knows what's going to happen on
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and no one knows what's going to happen on the streets. >> these barricadeils wl soon be part of the security infrastructure here once the convention begins. >> president obama landed here with a algo, to give hope to the entire nation while comforting a city trying to heal. >> people around the country have been protesting because of what happened tor youdad. >> i truly just want everyone to protest the right way, protesting in peace. >> the main toacr,id dav cameron, is leaving the stage and the building, a victim of his own hubris. >> later this year, apple is expected to create additions to its health app to make it easier to become an organ donor but the easiest way to become an organ donor is to play poke
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new york city. >> department leaves by five points in florida. clinton is six points behind in pennsylvania with the libertarian and green party candidates in the mix and trump leads a four-person race in ohio by one point. during polling the fbi announced clinton should not face charges over her private e-mail servers. >> bernie sanders endorsed hillary clinton yesterday. he said his favorite progressive issues will not have a future unless she beats donald trump. trump tweeted this: "bernie sanders endorsing crooked hillary clinton is like occupy wall street endorsing goldman sachs." senator sanders is with us from washington. good morning. you have made attacking wall street a pillar of your presidential campaign. are you capitulating some of your values by endorsing hillary clinton? >> no, i'm standing up for working families in the middle
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be a disaster for the future of this country. this campaign is about taking a hard look for candidates. we have worked with secretary clinton's campaign. she's talking about making public colleges and universities twice free for all countries under $125,000. she's talking about expanding health care while donald trump wants to throw 20 million people off of the health insurance they now have and cut medicaid. donald trump does not accept science, thinks that climate change is a hoax. hillary clinton wants to rebuild our sustainable energy system and move away from fossil fuels. the differences between the two candidates are very, very clear. clinton is by far the superior candidate for the middle class to my mind. >> well, it took you 35 days after she locked up the nomination. was this very difficult for to
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and was hillary clinton looking at you a like, thanks, bernie, took you long enough? what finally convinced you? >> well, what we have been doing during that period is making sure that the democratic platform becomes the most progressive platform in the history of the democratic party. and what we were able to do in that process is get the democrats on board to a $15 an hour minimum wage, rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure and creating millions of decent paying jobs, demanding that the wealthiest people in this country start paying their fair share of taxes and these are ideas more or less that secretary clinton has supported, the idea of electing a trump who wants o give hundreds of billions in tax breaks to the top 0.2% of americans is not what america wants. >> senator, may i break in? >> sure.
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to the left? >> i think when you win 22 states, when young people all over the country are demanding real change, secretary clinton and her team are smart enough to understand that they have got to go where the action is and move to where the people want to go and what the people in this country want is a standing up to the big money interests and so much political power today. >> if i'm a bernie sanders supporter, raised money for you, campaigned for you, i want to know what did you extract from hillary clinton? >> it's not a question of extracting. it's a question of working with the clinton campaign. >> what did she promise she would do that would get your endorsement? >> let me give you two examples. what she has recently proposed and it was a working between the campaigns, is to say anybody 55 of age or older can opt in to medicare. that's a big deal. that people all over this
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option in the health care exchange, which likely will be a lot less expensive than the private insurance options they now have. and a massive expansion of community health centers all over this country so that people can walk in the door and get the health care, the dental care, the low-cost prescription drug, the mental health counseling they need. >> if you did that and got her to come to those positions you feel so strongly about, what didn't you get? >> well, what we didn't get is me becoming president of the united states of america. >> that want going to happen in terms of after the delegate count took place. so you've been talking to her. what did you not get? >> well, look, there are issues like, in my view, the united states should join the rest of the industrial wor
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people as a right through a medicare for all, a single payor program. what i want -- and she is supportive of this. i would have liked to have seen it in the democratic platform. that did not happen. what i would like is to make sure that the transpacific partnership, which i believe is a continuation of disastrous trade agreements we've had for so many years, i want to see that absolutely not come up in the lame duck session. secretary clinton, by the way, is on record. she has just said that the other day. but we did not get that into the platform. >> would you like a position in the clinton administration if there is one? >> that's something we have not talked about at all. right now i am focusing on is to support progressive candidates all over this country at every level. >> we got that. are you having presidential running withdrawal already? >> i'm feeling fine. >> are you going to misshe
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>> that's an interesting question. yes and no. now i don't have to tell anybody when i'm going to the bathroom. that's the advantage. but those guys did a great job and i appreciate it. >> some things should be private. >> good luck with that. >> we appreciate you joining us today. we really do. turning to a very sad story today, there will be funerals for three of the five police officers killed last week in dallas. president obama attended a memorial yesterday with vice president joe biden and former president george w. bush. he said we can try to match their service and to sustain unity, we need to act on the truth that we know. >> when african-americans from all walks of life, from different communities across the country, voice a growing despair over what they perceive to be unequal treatment, when study after study shows that whites and people of color experience the criminal justice system difftl
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turn away and dismiss those in peaceful protest as troublemakers or paranoid. to have your experience deneed like th -- denied like that, dismissed by those in authorities, even by your co-workers and fellow church members again and again and again, it hurts. we also know what chief brown has said is true. that so much of the tensions between police departments and minority communities that they serve, is because we ask the police to do too much and we ask too little of ourselves. >>. [ applause ] . >> protesters, you know it. you know how dangerous some of the communities where these police officers serve are. and you pretend as if there's
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context? these things we know to be true. and if we cannot even talk about these things, if we cannot talk honestly and openly, not just in the comfort of our own circles but with those who look different than us or bring a different perspective, then we will never break this dangerous cycle. can we do this? can we find the character as americans to open our hearts to each other? i don't know. i confess that sometimes i, too, experience doubt i've been to too many of these things. i've seen too many families go ug
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the president said we must pray for open hearts so we can stand in each other's shoes. i thought that he was so poignant yesterday. he gave people on all sides of the issue something to think about. >> it was definitely coming from the heart there as soon as the mind. >> and that line, we ask too little of ourselves and we ask a lot of law enforcement. >> the only unsolved hijacking in american history my stump the fbi forever.
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>> he helped netflix consumers stay at home. ahead, how he could revival
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one of the most notorious
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unsolved crimes in american history will remain an history. the case is closed, a captivating story that may never have an injury. >> d.b. cooper parachuted from a jetliner with 200,000 in ransom money and was never seen again. did he get away with it? did he die trying? it's safe to say we'll probably never know. >> frank montoya jr. ended the 45-year hunt for the hijacker known as d.b. cooper. >> when it occurred in 1971, i was 8 years old. i remember watching walter cronkite. it brought back memories. >> when he got on the plane
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portland, oregon, he was just another passenger. >> the number stuck and soon he became of fbi mythology. he bought a $25 ticket and boarded this 727. he allegedly showed the flight attendant what he showed was a suitcase bomb and forced the plane to land in seattle. >> i gave the information to authority and we just don't want to discuss it any further. >> 36 passengers were freed when cooper's ransom demands were met, $200,000 in cash and four parachutes. the plane took off for mexico city with the rear stairwell left open. somewhere between seattle and reasoni reno, cooper jumped out of the plane. >> how did you surmise he was not on the plane in reno? >> well, a search was made of the plane
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landing. >> an exhaustive investigation began. a boy digging near the colombia river in washington found three bundles of weathered $20 bills but it only totalled $6,000. the case has inspired films, books and even a song by the birds called "bagful of money." >> ♪ be glad when it's over, happy to land and a bag full of money i've got in my hand ♪ >> the fbi says it has diverted resources to more pressing cases but now that's over. >> we would love to have solved this. it doesn't feel good to know this is the only unsolved sky jacking in american history. >> the case may be closed but the fbi said i w
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to take another look if it finds his parachute or if the money turns up but it highly unlikely. >> what do you think? >> i think it's a major feat to jump out of a jetliner. i think only navy seals have accomplished that kind of thing. i think it doubtful he survived. >> i think he pulled it off. >> gayle is hoping he's alive in his 80s somewhere. >> come to the table. can you see right where don is sitting. >> he's got a story to tell, doesn't he? >> yes, he does. >> sometimes it's okay to smile at someone's sad face. coming up next, the bride who had big fun when she had to go solo on her second honeymoon. we'll explain. it funny stuff. you're watching "cbs this morning." then i found aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. now i'm back. aleve pm for a better am.
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those vine-ripened tomatoes are going to feel super fresh. they just came from one of our many nearby farms. we're focusing on fresh so you don't have to guess. my giant. what's a honeymoon like white house why are husband? >> without your honey. >> i like husband or your significant other, your man. when her husband couldn't get a visa in time, it was supposed to be a second honeymoon. instead she turned it into a gag, she turned it in to social media, visiting all the things he cout
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and her in-laws took his place.
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>> a blue whale surfaced near a whale watching ship off the southern california coast. the 90-foot whale dwarfed the 72 foot long boat. the whales are the largest on earth. their tongues can weigh as much as an elephant. >> whoa. >> it's beautiful, though. >> its life span is about 90 years. >> i would love to see a blue whale in person. >> and guess what, norah, it's blue! >> which is one of my favorite colors. >> it matches your eyes. >> coming you in this half hour, dining on danger.
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larry olmstead is in our green room. also in studio 57, mitch lowe. pushing to make movies a hot ticket given. how movie pass wants to shake up the theater industry or the netflix generation. >> it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the "san francisco chronicle" reports on the emperor of japan considering retiring. he reportedly said he wants to step down in the next few years. he has been head of state for 27 years. it would be the first japanese state abdication for 20 years. >> emperor who? >> ahito. >> so if the pope can step down, so can he. sp "time" reports on malala
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kenyan refugee camp. more than 300,000 people live there. the nobel peace prize winner said she wants to make sure there are other places for the ref jugee girls to continue the education. >> and tesla has no plans to discontinue their auto pilot system. tesla chief elon musk said they'll better educate customers about how it works. >> the "new york post" quotes royal mcilroy in saying drug testing in golf is lax. he said he can probably get away of using human growth hormones. he said he thinks doping in golf is low but would welcome tougher testing. >> "the washington post" taking issue with the gaming app poke man go.
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playing the game is not appropriate at those places. digital creatures were also found at the 9/11 memorial in new york city which angered some visitors. >> and jupiter is ready for its close-up view. the shot was snapped from around 3 million miles away. juneau is now passing jupiter and is programmed to pass within 3,000 miles of its cloud. >> about 48 million americans suffer from food-related illnesses each year. "usa today".com's columnist new book is called "real food fake food" and reveals ways americans are tricked into buying and eating w
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foot. what is trick food? >> i like to talk about lobster. you go to maine, you go to the tank and it got the claws, it can't be anything else. but if you order lobster ravioli, and they did a story and lobster bisque contained no lobster. >> the first line of your book is "i love food." then you proceed to tell us that truffle oil is awful oil, kobe beef is not kobe beef, run away from the shrimp on the buffet. >> i flipped the title of the book because the real food is important. they knock off rolexes more often than
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out. real kobe beef, it's not what you're getting. i want people to enjoy these foods. they taste better and are better for you. >> you say it includes wines? >> it does. champagne would be the number one example. there's no food more associated with a geographical location. champagne labeled champagne is widely made in upstate new york and is typically a low standard and does not adhere to standards. >> and none of this is violating laws? >> some it have of it is. they cut honey with corn syrup, that is a violation of the law. a lot of it is labelling issues which are unregulated. like "natural" is an
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you can slap that on just about any product. >> you said walmart does a better job than the fda in protecting consumers. >> part of it is they have such clout with their buyers. if you sell to walmart and costco, you get a certification where the fda is asleep at the switch. >> you come down hard on fish. >> 91% of the seafood we eat is imported. the fda is mandated by law to inspect 2% of that and every year they come up woefully short. they're lucky if they inspect a quarter percent. it's a low bar and they can't cop close to making it. >> what proof do you have that it's fake? that the red snapper you say is fake in particularly sushi restaurants. >> for seafood the number one weapon has been dna
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done by a nonprofit environmental group, which is the leader in this, the times, the glo"boston globe" and other companies have done studies. and dna testing has been done and they can profit not red snapper. >> it seems like it an indictment of the food industry. >> larry goes, yup, that's what it is. >> i don't know if that's fair. a broad brush indictment of the food industry doesn't seem fair. if there's a specific bad actor, you should point out that bad actor. >> sure. and there's a lot of good producers that you do single out. when i say the food history, i say the way it's regulated and
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i saw the movie "the big short" and i see a lot of this is similar to that. >> but it not all bad news. you have advice on what we should do when we go to the store and how we should order. >> i give very specific buying tips, how to buy real extra virgin olive oil, how to buy seafood that is what it says it is. as people are more informed, they can eat healthier and eat better. >> larry, thank you. cbs news is celebrating 100 years of the national park service. we're bringing you a facebook live stream from arizona's hubbell trading post on the navajo nation. we're partners with national geo travel and department of the interior. see how the post still barters for crafts
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facebook.com/cbsthis morning. >> you'll want to go. mitch, raise your hand. there's a lot of people in there. mitch lowe is here. coming
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five years ago, on any given night, you know, almost 75,000 veterans experienced homelessness. we have reduced those numbers by almost half, but despite the great progress that we have achieved, there are still too many veterans who still need a place to live. this project is a comprehensive rehabilitation of the center's facility here in downtown boston to create permanent supportive housing, transitional housing and service spaces, a facility that really delivers on society's commitment to people who have served in the military. citi® was the natural partner because they were able to come with the resources, both the capital resources and also the human resources,
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we probably would not be in construction right now. the goal for us in this project is to be more effective in the services that we provide so that veterans who have committed to put their lives at risk to protect this country have a home in this country. prodders, shuckersers, and sniffers, [ inhales ] all giant produce is triple checked. farm, crate, and store. we're focusing on fresh... ...so you don't have to guess. my giant.
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>> it's a proton glove. just give it a punch. it's motion activated. >> awesome! oh! whoo-hoo! that is a deadly high five. >> that's a scene from the highly anticipated movie "gho "ghostbuster." it hits the theaters this friday. american theaters chains hopes movies like that will give attendance a bolt. and mitch lowe has joined a service aftoffering monthly
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tell us all how it works. i pay how much and get to see what? >> you pay $39.95. >> $40. >> $40. and you go to as many movies as you want in a month. it works all over the country, about 95% of the theaters and you use your iphone or android app to pick the movie, the time, the theater and then when you get to the theater, we activate a debit card which we send you that gives you the money to just walk up to the box office and pay for your ticket. >> does the $40 include free popcorn? >> no, but we're working on the concessions. >> all of us here have not seen a movie at a theater in a while. what's happening to movie attendance? >> and we want to go. we want to go. zit actually incorrect. the attendance 20 years ago was about 100 million tickets less there and it was last year.
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like it's declined is about 14%, 15% have moved over to 3d and imax. so they don't count those. but last year it was $1.3 billion tickets sold. 20 years ago it was 1.2. the height of the business was in '02, about 1.5 billion. >> did you and your team come out with movie pass because you want to get people in the theaters? you doesn't want us home watching movies, on the computers? what happened? >> people who like entertainment like entertainment in many places. moviemakers never made a film to watch on your small device. they wanted you to see it with the great sound and the picture and i think there's a little bit of reversal of this kind of solo watching. people are now starting to think i want to go out with my friends. in fact, three out of four
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i can go with my family and friends to experience -- you like to see other people laugh or cry in a film. it's not that great watching it by yourself. >> it's interesting because you started in netflix and you don't like people binge watching. >> i must admit i do binge watch all the time. >> but, mitch, you have a little bit of credibility since you're not promoting movies when before you were encouraging us to binge watch. >> i was. for 30 years i've been trying to get people to watch more movies at home. >> yes, right, right. >> but throughout that i realized the great place to watch a movie -- i don't care how good your home theater system is -- >> and they are much better. >> they are much better. but over the last five years movie theaters have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into improving the experience. a lot of people -- >> such as? >> well, reclining seats, better sound, better picture, and they're getting a lot better at making surer
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on their cell phones and talking and no sticky floors like there used to be. so the experience has gotten a lot better. >> how about movies? have they gotten a lot better? >> i'd say everybody has to decide that. i'd say they've stabilized. >> isn't this a business model of getting people on a prescription experience, just like your phone company or your gym, that means a steady stream of revenue for the movie industry. >> the beauty of that is with that steady stream and not having to keep acquiring customers, can you offer a lot of been nats ynefits you couldn. at netflix, you didn't have to worry about late fees or returning to your video store. with movie pass, we're able to give you invitations to private screenings and other benefits that connect you to hollywood. so we're trying to
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the movie-goes audience. that's where all the downstream revenues come from. >> and the big theater chains are in on this? >> in netflix's early days, no one believed we would be successful so we had to prove ourselves to the studios. we're in that statement position. the jury is out. they're looking to see do we drive more people? we did a study with amc and found a movie pass customer goes to the movies twice as often as they did before, movie pass. >> and who is your customer? >> that doesn't surprise me. you spend $40 a month -- >> you're going to get value out it have. >> who is your customer? >> the great news is the customer is millennials, 18 to 35 years old. that's the group that has started to not go to the movies as often and they're comfortable with subscription. they've gotten into this world where they don't want to make individual choices based on
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good or not. so a subscription allows them to see film and explore movies they might not otherwise. >> you and i are not millennials but everything seems to be geared to millennials. why is that? >> they just passed us with 75 million. >> a dog makes an unusual friend. the unlikely bond with a bird. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> that's so cute!
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sfx: turbines revving up, you hear that? and louder that's the sound of our summer sale firing up its engines
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a friendship between a dog and a baby bird is taking off. a 2-year-old boxer named rusty found the chick under a tree in southern england after it fell from its nest. rusty's owner brought the bird inside and the two are napping and playing together and becoming best friends.
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we'll
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bugged musician adam freeman on "great day washington." >> boot camp to keep your fitness going on your next trip. >> this is "great day washington." >> good morning, i'm chris leary. >> i'm markette sheppard. we are your hosts. i just learned the diffce
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adam freeman lemonade. >> there is a difference? >> are you being funny? >> we were talking about him. he is on tour with mike posner and he took video or somebody took video of those guys on the tour in an rv. it's really cool. he is a good guy. >> is that on twitter. >> i don't know where it is. youtube, i know that. >> apparently beyonce's album is lemonade. adam's song is lemonade. both are sweet. stay tuned for a performance. >> lemonade. >> all of our male guests are sailors. >> we will get in the kitchen with good stuff to eat and travel, exercise, big packed show. stay and watch the whole thing it will be good. >> absolutely. head's up if you live or commute
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a quite of movie -- bit of movie magic is underway. you may hear explosions. the prince george county fire department says a film crew is working near freeway airport and a fake plane crash is part of the production. that costs a big -- caused a big plume of black smoke on your screen. the production is ongoing for the remainder of the week between 10:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. in this area with so many government facilities and joint base andrews scare it's good to know what the heck is going on. i passed by that airport on my way to annapolis. >> don't make any calls. >> that would be the first thing, should i drive to it or away from it. >> they are not saying which movie. >> or a tv show. nonetheless, i don't know, for more important news, an update on pokemon go. folks have gone nuts over the

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