tv CBS This Morning CBS June 10, 2017 8:00am-9:57am EDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's june 10th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." ready to testify. president trump says former fbi director james comey lied and that he would be willing to say that under oath. plus turning the tables on a deadly shooting during a traffic stop. why the officer says he was scared to death. digging up a new story about mankind. details on the discovery, changing our understanding of human history. and two members of fleetwood mack go on the record. we talk to lindsey
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and christine mcvieban's dramas, plus they'll perform right here in studio 57. but we begin with this morning's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> let's get back to james comey's testimony. would you be willing to speak under oath? >> 100%. >> president trump fights back. >> i'm not going to say i want you to pledge allegiance. who would do that? >> this was an extraordinary news conference where in just a matter of moments the president accused his former fbi director as a liar. >> i'll have to come up with something. goat radio. >> hanging by a thread. >> may's facing calls to quit following the shocked election result and the loss of her coervative ma jourtd. >>
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>> the bus crashing onhe t front lawn. >> the invenltder of the hawaiian pizza is dead. he said he did it for fun. >> and hehr tows it down. >> cleveland is still alive and golden state's perfection comes to an end tot.nigh >> one game. it's going to be even tougher for game five but we look forward to the challenge. >> all that -- >> take a look at the grlt escape. little ollie found a plastic stool to help his baboty brher finn get out of his crib. >> now, that's thinking. >> big brother coming to the rescue. >> -- and all that matters -- >> oh, that was close. contact with peters up and over. >> look at thert deah and earth as they turn him right side over. >> wow. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> president trump has been dealing with the aftermath of the james comey
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he's a leaker. >> after everything, he's claiming it went great. he used like -- it would be like if the cavaliers went into the game tonight and went, we're winning, three games to none, and everyone is like, what? and welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner. mr. trump said he is willing to testify over the special counsel overseeing the russian investigations. >> that was the president's first comments since former fbi director james comey's explosive testimony before the intelligence committee on thursday. afterward president trump went to spend the weekend in bedminsterw
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errol barnett is traveling with the prest. morning. >> reporter: good morning. president trump is trying to spin the congressional testimony both ways. mr. trump implied he lied and he exonerated him as far as being the subject of an fbi investigation, and all of this is releasing calls for the release of any taped conversations between the two which may not even exist. >> no collusion, no obstruction. he's a leaker. >> reporter: on friday president trump said fired fbi director james comey's statements were a type of vindication. >> frankly, james comey confirmed a lot of what i said, and some of the things that he said just weren't true. >> reporter: mr. trump also denied he told comey to drop the fbi's investigation of former national security adviser michael flynn. >> i didn't say that. >> so he lied about that. >> well, i didn't say that. i meanly tell you i didn't say that. >> reporter: in his testimony watched by nearly 20
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people comey said repeatedly he. >> i mean it's the president of that i hope this, i took it as this is what he wants me to do. i didn't obey that but that's how i took it. >> reporter: comey was also disturbed by the nature of a private dinner with the president. he said that's why he took contemporaneous notes which were later leaked to the press after his dismissal. >> i was honestly concerned he would not describe our meetinging and that's why i documented it. >> i hardly know the man. i would not say pledge allegiance. who would do that? who would ask a man to pledge allegiance under oath? think of it. i hardly know the man. it doesn't make sense. >> reporter: the president also teased an announcement on taped conversations at the white house. >> you seem to be hinting about
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recordings. >> i'm not hinting over a fairly short period of time. >> when will you tell us? ? >> a fairly short period of time. >> are there tapes, sir? >> you ear going be disappointed, don't roir. >> he said he should hope no tapes exist. but comey does. >> lordy, i hope there are tapes. >> reporter: now to get to the bottom of all this, the house intelligence committee has sent a letter to the white house requesting any tapes or, quote, recordings of memoranda between the president and former fbi director. alex, a similar letter was sent to the former fbi director, james comey. >> errol barnett. thanks, errol. attorney general jeff sessions goes before the committee on tuesday and he'll be asked
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part he might have played in comey's firing. >> reporter: he said he didn't trust him. he said he felt uncomfortable that the president pressured him to stop the investigation of fired national security adviser michael flynn. >> our judgment as i recall was he was very close to and inevitably going to accuse himself for a variety of reasons. we also were aware of facts that i can't discuss in an open setting. >> reporter: those reasons are unclear, but sessions had failed to disclose at least two meetings with russian ambassador sergey kislyak. they were reported in early march and one day later sessions did recuse himself. >> never had meetings with russian operatives or russian intermediaries about the trump campaign. >> reporter: the justice department said sessions' decision was based on h
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and it was for that reason alone. >> when i decided to do it, i said to myself, you know, this russia thing with trump and russia is a made up story. >> reporter: sessions recommended firing comey last month and agreed in a memo with his deputy criticizing comey of the clinton e-mail investigation. but he said he got rid of the fbi director because of the russian probe. oregon senator john riden. >> how would you characterize his recusal in particular with your involvement of your firing? >> if he said i was fired because of the russian investigation, why was the attorney general involved in that? i don't know. >> he recommended he be fired for his effectiveness of his leadership, not the russian investigation. the attorney general is scheduled to testify on capitol
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saturday," jeff pegues, washington. for more on this, we're joined by ed o'keefe, editor in chief of the "washington post." good to see you. >> good to see you guys. >> he said he'd swear to that in testimony. are we headed for the president being deposed by special counsel? >> it's certainly possible and there are lawmakers in both parties who have acknowledged that could happen. you know, i think that's part of what was so intriguing about comey's testimony this week is he may have been laying out lines of questioning the president will have to eventually answer and answer to a special counsel under oath and, you know, that's part of a concern that the republicans have. if he keeps talking about this, is he setting himself up for legal trouble should he get asked these legal questions in an official way. >> ed, the tapes of the president alludes to but will not confirm the exice
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we will find out whether theyti. what's the strategy of dangling this out there? >> gosh, alex, i wish i knew. if anything, it leaves the intrigue there. the fact that they're asking for these taper later this month will give us a few more days of intrigue whether or not they exist. if they don't exist, so be it. if they do exist, boy, oh, boy. as the director said, lordy, it will be fun to listen to. >> do you hi think his testimony has essentially changed anybody's mind in washington? >> certainly now the president believes he's out from under the cloud of criminal wrongdoing but he's certainly not clear of any political wrongdoing. this is going to fester for quite some time, and it's going to might very difficult for him to really command the agenda and the attention of everyone in washington to get things done. things are still going on, b
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with so much attention probe continues to leak out. >> but, ed, the president has set up a dynamic saying, he said, he said, denying pledges that i didn't to it and if there did, there would be nothing wrong with it. when it comes with who to trust, where is washington at this point? >> well, because you ask it that way, i think many people point out that comey testified under oath. the president has not done that. and knowing that he understands the consequences of saying things under oath and standing by what he wrote and what he said, there may be a little more credibility right now at least. >> how surprising was it to hear comey acknowledge that he leaked this information in hopes that it would lead to the appointment of an official counsel? >> i'm glad
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out. there's nothingnherently illegal with leaking. there's nothing wrong with being a leaker unless it's classified information. obviously that's against the law. what he did, i think, was a big favor to all of the journalists. he explain to the public why it is officials feel compelled sometimes share information they believe needs to get out there for us to disseminate and report publicly. there was nothing illegal based on the analysis of legal experts with former government official sharing notes of a meeting with his boss that were not classified. >> we know his lawyer is going to be suing or putting forth a lawsuit with the justice department's inspector general. ed, it would be remiss of us not to mention it was infrastructure week. >> right. >> the legislative authority is in congress. >> no. that's another thing. the house this week essentially
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financial regulatory reforms that obama's administration put in place. the senate is struggling to come up with a plan to undo the affordable care act and they're still continuing. that work continues. everyone is paying attention to it. >> like you. >> yeah. if anything, comey may have for a few days diverted the attention away from the fact that the republicans are struggling to come up with a plan. >> ed o'keefe, always good to see you. thanks for your time. >> good to see you. tomorrow morning on "face the nation" john dickerson's guests will include lindsey graham, chuck schumer and james lankford who's a member of the intelligence committee. there are mixed messages coming from the white house about qatar, a key middle east partner the middle east. ties were cut in the persian gulf this week when they were
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on friday president trump pledged his support saming, quote, it was at a very high level but earlier in the day rex tillerson sought to ease the embargo. >> the block aide is also impairing u.s. and other activities in the region, it's created a hardship on the people of qatar and those whose livelihoods depend on commerce of qatar. it's blocking military actions in the region and the campaign against isis. >> about 10,000 u.s. forces are based in qatar. the pentagon said the embargo is only affecting long-term planning from operations from qatar. u.s. special forces are providing technical assistance but no boots on the ground for philippines trying to end a three-week ban. the islamics are held up in malawi in the philippines. up to 1,000
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trapped there, some being held as human shields. there are fears that isis is trying to establish a stronghold in the philippines. british police say the terror attack on the london bridge that left eight people dead and almost 50 people injured could have been much worse. one of the three men tried to rent a larger truck with the intent of killing more people but his payment was declined. the triftds were shot dead before they returned to their van packed with gasoline bombs. two more suspects were arrested overnight. this will be a weekend of retooling. after receiving the backing of president trump and other world leaders may is retooling and fighting for her political life after the stunning elections. >> reporter: good morning. the prime minister had hoped holding an early
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strengthen the uk. with no easy fix inside. prime minister theresa may and her conservative party were supposed to cruise to victory, but in the wake of failure last night she snuck out the back door of number 10. it was her far left opponent from the labor party, jeremy corbyn, who was supposed to be crushed, but his support was strong enough to steal the conservative party's majority status in parliament. >> i have just been to see her majesty, the keen. >> she bent to the palace to talk to the quadriplegic. it will make them complicated but necessary allies if may is to lead the uk through brexit negotiations. may called for this snap vote three years early hoping to increase her party's
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of the divorce union. >> strong and stable. >> strong and stable. >> strong and stable leadership. >> reporter: her campaign seemed anything but strong and stable. it's something the european union is closely monitoring if not already capitalizing on it. german chancellor angela merkel speaking from mexico. we will, of course, wait for the results of the british elections, she said, but the meetings with great brittain will start in the next few days. and with any divorce, the brexit essentially boils down to money. and with the parliament, negotiations are going to be tough. >> jonathan vigliotti in london. thanks, jonathan. closing arguments are set for monday in
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officer. the officer testifieddeath. here's barry on. >> reporter: among 26 witnesses to testify over five dares, the officer was the key witness at his trial about what happened in a manner of seconds. in july of last year giannis dioped castille for a broken taillight. he said he had a concealed weapon. giannis fired at him with five shots. castille's girlfriend and daughter were in the car. she livestreamed it on facebook after that. >> i told him not to reach for it. >> oh, my god. please don't tell me he's dead. >> reporter: on the stand, he
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was crisp until he remember thad ight. castille at all, he told the court. that was not my intent. then he stopped over tears. on monday there will be closing argument and then deliberation is will break. there are protests set if he walks free. for "cbs this morning: saturday" barry petersen, st. paul, minnesota. a big rig truck with a chase. the tractor trailer was reported stolen on friday. the driver sur rended but not before the big chase. six people were injured. don't write off the cavaliers just yet. lebron james and company came out shooting in game four. >> james puts the defense. swings.
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there's the the c smart-shooting warriors,. james score third degree 1 point and fheh his ninth triple-double if the finals, surpassing magic johnson. the cavs never trailed in the 137-116 win, but they still find themselves down three games to one, the same deficit they overcame in last year's finals that i mean i don't like it. it causes too much stress, man. i'm stressed out. keep doing this every year. but listen. at the end of the day, we've just got some resilient guys. >> lebron is stressed out. game five is on monday night in boston. oh, don't you know, anthony, i'm going to be watching that. never bet against lebron james. >> no. time to show you some of th m
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"the indianapolis star" reports 12 votofth to the presidential election last year. prosecutors say the group made up information about scores of voerts and registered at least one felon, a minor, a noncitizen, and at least one dead person. they say there's no evidence the ballots were cast in the died. she also side in mr. holland's opus and the mini series "lone? dove." no cause was given. glenn headley was 62 years old. "the new york times" says a crack in antarctica is rapidly advancing. it's eight miles away from recording one he
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there could be a dramatic turn in the bill cosby sexual assault trial. a spokesman says cosby may take the witness stand, which legal experts say could pose a big risk. ahead, an update on that trial. and later, did she text a teen to death? the latest on the case against a young woman accused of urging a fellow teen to take his own life. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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it's time we took notice. there is a raging battle between online booking sites and hotel chance, why they're fighting to be your first choice when reserving a room and how that might save you money. and ahead of tomorrow's tony awards, blue collar blues on the broadway stage. critics say a searing social drama of working-class despair couldn't be more timely. we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up, he fled sentencing in his sexual assault case 40 years ago. roman polanski may soon be free to return to the u.s. details on the surprising request from his victim. and battle of the bookings. online travel sites are in a battle. what you should know to get the best deal. plus a fossil find that rewrote history. how it's changed our understanding of the origin of man. but we begin this half hour
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with shifting strategies at the now that the prosecution has rested its case. the defense gets to tell its side of the story starting monday and after initially saying the comedian would not testify, the attorneys for bill cosby may be having second thoughts. here's jericka duncan. >> reporter: as bill cosby arrived in court, prosecutors for a second day used the 79-year-old's words. they cytoed a deposition bill cosby gave in 2005 and 2006. he was asked several times if he ever gave quaaludes, a hypnotic drug, to more than one woman. he answered yes. he got at least seven prescriptions for quaaludes in the '70s and he said at one time quaaludes was the drug young people used at parties. he wanted to have them just in case. he gave andrea constand a pill and a half of benadryl to help her relax
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what it was. fondled constand after she took the pills. she didn't tell him to stop. afterward he gave her three blue pills and within a half hour after taking them she said she had blurred vision, she went limp, and was unable to move. bill cosby said, i apologized twice because i'm thinking this is a dirty old man with a young girl. the prosecution rested its case. a spokesman for bill cosby says there's a possibility the comedian may testify after all. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jericka duncan, norristown, pennsylvania. a call to end fugitive roman polanski's sentencing -- she was abused by him when she was 13. she was in a los angeles courtroom friday. she asked the judge to
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the case against her attacker or to sentence him to time already served. she said she had for givenen planky years ago. the judge said he would consider her request request. a teenager took his life, but his girlfriend is charged in connection with his death. ahead, the troubling case of texting and up next, medical news in our morning rounds. doctors jon lapook and nera narula, discomfort found by your diet. a new survey finds just how big of
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time now for "morning rounds." our look at medical news of the week. first up, the worry? rise in liver cancer. it's been increasing since the mid-1970s, and a new report by the american cancer society, liver cancer death rates are rising faster than any other form of the disease, with the death rate doubling since the 1980s. the american cancer society claims there will be close to 20,000 deaths. >> here to talk about it is cbs medical correspondent dr. jon lapook and cbs contributor dr. tara na rule la. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> did they say what causes it? >> some of those risk factors have been increasing over the past two decades like type 2 diabetes and obese
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in addition alcohol plays a lewe kw there's 10% increase in the risk per day and smoking which we think of as being associated with lung cancer increases liver cancer by 50%. then you have to think about hepatitis b and c. in this country, really only the cause of less than 5% of liver cancers, but hepatitis c, very prevalent high numbers in the baby boomer population, those born between 1945 and 1965 actually account for 85% of cases for hepatitis c. >> dr. lapook, there were significant disparities. what can you tell us about this? >> as i'm listening to you, i want to point out, we're talking about cancer that starts in the liver, not cancer that starts somewhere else and spread supers to the liver. yes, there are a lot of racial disparities and ethnic disparities and the lowest death rate is with whites, blacks,
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the greatest was native american. they feel it's largely due to differences i the risk factors that tara was talking about and to some extent, access to care. >> tara, is there any way to reverse these trends? >> we know survival is not great. after diagnosis, about one in five. better diagnosis of diabetes, weight control, alcohol, smoking. then you want to make sure people are vaccinated for hepatitis b which became part of childhood vaccinations in 1982 and for hepc, we need to do a better job of surveillance and screening. everyone born in the baby boom generation should get treated at least once and since 2014 we have new oral drugs that can treat hepatitis c. new rates. then lki
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are at highse needle sharing, trying to avoid those as well. >> good words of wisdom. our next topic, what all of us suffer from, stomach problems. they look at how americans deal with digestive discomfort. at least a quarter of the people experience digestive discomfort once a week or more and only 16% who suffer digestive discomfort visit a doctor. it sort of doesn't surprise me and does surprise me. dr. lapook, what are the other findings? >> it's not surprising. 40% try to treat it with over-the-counter medicine, 20% change their diet. 22% sought some alternative medicine. >> tara, what strategies have they
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the ot were contributing. about 47% decreased their exposure to thinks they thought they might be intolerant to. 32% conducted their own research and 13% to 14% tried talking to friends and family or taking their own medication, lots of times seeing a doctor, getting testing and gopher it what the triggers might be would be more beneficial than people suffering and trying to diagnose things themselves, running to the bathroom, embarrassed, dashing to the bathroom, overstretched pants. >> it's something so many people are steering with, doc. and it's your field of expertise. what's surprising to you in all of this? >> yeah. what stood out is how many people have gastrointestinal problems and how few people seek the help of a doctor. they say a doctor in the survey or other clinician. i'm a
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one of the reasons you need go to a clinician is there are so many things that can cause gastrointestinal problems. it could be stress, diet, bowel disease, ciliac disease or diet. the way to resolve this is go to someone, have them slowly carefully go through your diet. i take people through their day. what do you have fur breakfast, what do you have for lunch, and very often something will come out. somebody will come to me after 20 years and it's something simple. you have lactose intolerance. it's one of the reasons why i love being a g.i. is you can really help people. if they don't come to you, it's tough to help them. which which is why i love "morning rounds" because we can come to them squloo lastly, they're part of family. can having a dogro
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health? a new study looked at thempact of owning a dog for people 65 and oiler in the uk. it led to an average of 22 additional walking time and they had significantly less time than when they were sitting. >> what about cat owners? >> does it count if my wife walks the dog? >>'ll give you credit. >> no. osmosis. go get a dog. doctors jon lapook and tara narula. always guede the see you. coming up. it's a chilling case where text messages are the primary evidence. a teen is on trial in massachusetts for urging her boyfriend to take his own life all through a series of texts. the latest on what could be a groundbreaking prosecution. you're watching "cbs this olay regenerist... known by beauty editors who know best. cosmopolitan best daily treatment... regenerist spf 30. marie claire, 10 best editor-approved night creams...
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what's the story behind green mountain coffee and fair trade? let's take a flight to colombia. this is boris calvo. boris grows mind-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee. when a young man was found dead of suicide in a massachusetts parking lot three years ago, his cell
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a disturbing. the girlfriend suggested he take his life but pressured him to follow through in a series of text messages. >> the young woman, michelle carter, is charged with involuntary manslaughter. her trial resumes monday. good morning. in this case, 20-year-old michelle carter has been charged with involuntary manslaughter in the death of conrad roy. what can you tell us about the case thus far? >> if we look at the facts, it's a question of do the facts equal the law. what happened is you have a 17-year-old girl involved with an 18-year-old boy over a two-year period they exchange thousands of text messages. as it gets closer and closer to the time of this young man's death, she encourages him, cajoles him, taunts him, mocks him into committing suicide. this is a boy who was
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who was suicidal. she gives him sites to look at, ideas about suicide. and the worst part of it from the prosecution point of view is that when she has talked him into doing this by carbon monoxide poisoning in a car, he is on the phone with her and goes on for a period of time where he gets out of the car, because he's too scared, and she talks him to get back into the car to finish the job, stays on the phone with him, doesn't call anyone, hears him cry out until his death. >> how unusual is it for someone to be charged with manslaughter when not actually physically present at the time of death? >> very, very unusual. almost unheard of. this is a case of great importance in the commonwealth of massachusetts. but it will also be of great importance throughout the country. because what you have here is someone who is considered virtually present.
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and that's in the same way of her being miles and miles away, but through her pushing him, through these texts, through her malicious intent, that what she has basically done is next to him virtually and put the gun in his hand. they decided in massachusetts to charge her with involuntary manslaughter. >> so tell us how that factors into the fact that she's not being charged with assisted suicide but involuntary manslaughter. >> in massachusetts what you have is one of 11 states that does not have a law that makes it a crime do assisted suicide. so the only thing left for the prosecutor if they wanted to charge we are with anything was this choice of involuntary manslaughter. it's also the reason that they have gone forward in this case from the defense and decided to go forward with a bench trial, not a jury trial. because a jury would look at this case the way i sound and the way you look, which is this is just terrible, this is o
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heard of, b dispassionate enough to say, what is the law, how do i follow the law. >> prosecutors have played videos of conrad roy expressing home in some cases, disparaging himself in others. what are they trying to do with these videos? >> the videos were very important to the prosecution for two reasons. number one is, he is not a nameless, faceless person. he comes alive on the vitd deo. number two is he has hope in the videos. he is a kid who is definitely depressed, has problems. but you can see the hopeful side of him. he got a job. he got into school. that he wants to live. he's a life worth saving. >> michelle carter's lawyers were hoping for an acquittal friday. they did not get one. >> it's in the defense case now. the defense is going to try to say this is a young man who would have committed suicide anyway. >> thanks for being with us this morning.
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before you and your rheumatologist move to another treatment, ask if xeljanz is right for you. xeljanz is a small pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can reduce joint pain and swelling in as little as two weeks, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz can reduce the symptoms of ra, even without methotrexate, and is also available in a once-daily pill. ask about xeljanz xr.
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the origins of man have always been a mystery, but this week we uncovered major clue that makes us change the way we think about our early ancestors. archaeologists announced they had unearthed homo sapiens they had never discovered. fossils date back to 350,000 years, making them more than 100,000 years oiler than those previously thought to be the oldest. the history-altering fossils were found on a hillside in the moroccan desert. researchers discovered skull fragments, teeth, and other bones from five individuals along with stone tools and evidence of fire usage. the discovery reveals that the bone structures of these early human faces are not much different than ours. >> to me what
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is the reason we connect these people to heire would recognize like us if we would cross them in the streets. >> reporter: the fossils also make us change the way we think about where they were discovered. thaw were discovered on the western average of the african continent sew-called cranial area. challenging another fundamental idea, that our species evolved in just one location. >> you know, it's so fascinating how much we don't know about ourselves, right? >> yes. very exciting all of this. >> imagine stumbling on all that. >> i'm struck by their dental work. >> amazing teeth. it's a high-stakes battle for your next hotel booking. ahead, why major hotel chains are fighting travel websites hoping to win back the right to
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♪ welcome to "cbs this morning" saturday. i'm anthony mason with alex wagner. coming up this hour, bill maher returns to his hbo show "real time" after using a racial slur on last week's show. uestsis guests don't let him off easy. we'll take you on stage at studio 54, for a look at "sweat" the tony-nominated show, that is showing the plight of the american worker. they for part of one of rock 'n' roll's latest bands. fleetwood mac has come together once
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to their new collaboration right here in so with our top >> story this half hour. president trump charges that ousted fbi director james comey president trress. the president said friday, he would testify before the special counsel investigating the alleged meddling in the 2016 election. >> that follows combny's explosive testimony on thursday. withporter: good morning. president trump has put himself nn collect conflict with james comey. in a press conference at the white house on friday, the president denied he asked comey for his loyalty and said he goer asked him to let go of his investigation into the former national security adviser, ichael flynn. usion, nllusion. no obstruction. he's a leaker. but we want to get back to
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them to disappear fast. > reporter: the most wasificant development from the press conference, though, estify tt trump, seeming to say he would 100% testify the same statements under oath. hatcial prosecutor robert mueller would be interested in that testimony. but no formal request has been muel made. aeller has hired a top criminal law expert to aid in the nt estigation in michael l eeben. filedent trump's personal complaey plans to file a complaint to the justice department over comey's cong ile the ional testimony. commwhile, the house intelligence chit committee has a letter to the white house, asking it turn over recordings ny conversations between the resident and james comey, with comey asked to turn over notes for the same conversations. >> thanks,
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policy. he is expected to roll back prosecu president obama's decision to open communication with cuba. the president could justify the changes on human rights grounds. hisay claim the policy is a fulfillment of his campaign promise. montana's congressman-elect is expected in court on monday to plead guilty to body-slamming demeporter. cking as to plead guilty to misdemeanor assault, after he is event.d of attacking a reporter. the senator was asked a question about health care. carries atana law, a misdemeanor of assault carries a maximum rentence of six months in jail. kirsten gillibrand news profanities to express her frustration with president trump trump and her
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she was speaking when she used the "f" word, not once, but twice. >> what about president trump? has he kept any of these promises? no. [ bleep ] no. undamentally, if we are not helping people, we should go the is upp ] home. >> gillibrand is up for re-election next year. acialill not be a kocandidate f president in 2020. m> a week after using a racial slur on his show, bill maher was use on the air sunday night. he was confronted by michael eric dyson, simoymone sanders a hinker, ice cube. >> what made you think that it was cool to say that? on. youknow, i just explained. >> that's the question. >> there was no thought putnt io it. >> it's a word that has been used against us. fe's like a knife, man. sen i hear my homeys say it, it don't feel like
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it, i stabbing me, even if they don't even if >> reporter: maher used the slur during an interview with ben sass last week. he later apologized and hbo removed the comment from subsequent airings. the tampa bay rays celebrated pride night and paid tribute to the victims of the deadly nightclub shooting in orlando. throwing out the first pitch was a tampa native, and survivor of the pulse nightclub shooting. this was the one-year anniversary of the attack that left 49 people dead. strong winds and low humidity are expected to worsen wildfire conditions across the southwest. some 5,700 acres have burned in southwestern utah. summer-like temperatures are expected for two-thirds of the country. let's get more from mornorologist ed curran. ed, good morning. >> dangerous f
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ut here. together wind watch. this continues until sunday night. the southwest is under a fire rning,r warning. levels iave relative humidity wills in this area that will go toeath 10% relative humidity to 20%.e 20%. dangerous conditions there. look at the temperature. 102 degrees for phoenix. 95 for albuquerque. in minneapolis. and the heat is moving to the east east. we'll see the temperatures on as warm side rise into tomorrow. as far as thunderstorms, here's he way that looks around the wauntry. od as far as any of these being severe, these two areas, up here in south dakota, and also in wisconsin, part of minnesota, a marginal chance for severe storms. here,y the threat here, damaging hai and large hail. alex? urranteorologist ed curran of our chicago station, wbbmtv. thanks,
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s a batis a battle for your next youl booking. major hotel chains have serious reservations about the money bookinge to online booking sites. they'reow they're trying to win back your business and how you oun benefit. you are watching "cbs this morning saturday." i try hard to get a great shape. this i can do, easily. benefiber® healthy shape is a clear, taste-free, 100% natural daily fiber... that's clinically proven to help me feel fuller longer. benefiber® healthy shape. this i can do! are you one sneeze away from being voted out of the carpool?
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>> hotel chains have been long s such as expedia and hotel.comet now they're fighting to win back your business. our travel editor peter greenberg is here to tell us all about it. good morning. >> good morning. >> hotel chains and travel websites used to play nice. how did they get here? >> they used to play nice because they had to. all the online sites like expedia, priceline, travel asti, went to the hotel chains said, look, you're not going to fill up the rooms. let us sell your inventory. that was a good idea. they said, great. before they knew it, they were selling a lot of their in venntry, so much so that with their markups and commissions that between 15% and 25% of the revenue was going to the otas. so they got very angry. at
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kissed, made up, and allowed them back in. we're talking about serious money here. >> hilton is fighting back with an ad campaign called "stop clicking around" which is its largest markets cam pape in u.s. history? >> it is. they've appealed everyone to go back to the hotel site, claiming if you go back to the site, you'll get a better rate and free wi-fi. >> is it true? you get the better rate? >> everything is relative. you get the better rate official lu by you get points that you otherwise wouldn't get. since they've done that. hilton has added 9 million members to their program. the bottom line there is the rate, as you asked, is relative. >> are the hotel chains winning this battle? >>
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it's not about but consumers winning. when hotels tell you you would never get a lower rate than going the hotel website, i disagree with that. it's called make a phone call, have a conversation. each hotel knows their inventory. think of this. only about 52% of all available inventory, whether it's a hotel, airline or cruise line is online. you're disenfranchising yourself of the 48% you don't know about. >> i was surprised that expedia has orbitz and travelocity under their umbrella. >> they're the big bird. priceline is number two. they've got expedia, orbitz, travelocity, trivago, all under the
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i'm saying do your research. then what people always forget to do. make the phone call. call the hotel directly and ask them, can my kids stay free, can they eat free? will you get rid of the dreaded resort free. >> free wi-fi, free parking? those are questions you can't sk online. it's not just about the rate. it's about the value. >> you have to change consumer behavioral pattern. they sort of have the leg up on technology and that's how the kids are doing it these days. >> all the kids are doing it and they're still doing it even though the hilton and marriott campaigns are doing it. they've made inroads. persistent consumer habits remain and people are still going online. i'm waving the flag saying at least make a phone call. >> is there a way essentially to play the online travel sites against the hotel chains in terms of bargaining for a better deal? >> i do it all the time. they don'te
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hotel directly and say i'll split the difference with you. . >> every time. >> play them off each other. get in the middle of the battlefield. >> every once in a while you can get a lower fare, you really can, from the website. you have to be a comparison shopper. >> peter greenberg with the insight. great to see you. >> you've got it. it's called a perfectly working play. ahead, wheel look at a pulitzer prize-winning drama up for even more awards on tomorrow night's tonys. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ wow. good to know we have that on our prius!
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broadway. musicals g musicals usually get most of the attention. there's one that is up for three awards. jamie wax has the story. good morning, jamie. >> reporter: good morning, alex. some predicted some of most important and deviivisive issuef our time such as race, class, and immigration. research, humanity and tremendous talent combine on stage for powerful take of the american working class. >> hell, no. she's the designated driver. >> reporter: "sweat" takes place mostly inside a bar. it's the union of a reading, pennsylvania, factory. >> how important is the setting being the bar? >> it's a place where people relax and unwind but liquor has this incredible power to get
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>> reporter: she's the director of "sweat" directed by kay woe win ski. >> i really felt like i was holding a hammer in my hand just because i was so angry about the fact that there was this huge swath of america that has not been seen. >> president trump has been called the comeback kid. >> reporter: it came after the north american free trade agreement became law. >> when you wake up tomorrow, all your jobs are in mexico. >> reporter: and the aftermath of the world financial crisis. >> it's been a volatile time for our financial crisis. >> reporter: that was the time of bailout. >> this is a lot more than about detroit. it's about saving the u.s. economy from catastrophic collapse. >> reporter: and big banks. in 2011 the only pie wall street movement jrue thousands of angry
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americans. >> and iengh. i femt like i needed to understand what was happening to our country. >> reporter: an article in "the new york times" led her 150 miles away to redding. >> basically it said reading was the poor city of its size. >> what did you find when you arooived? >> when i began interviewing people, said how would you describe your city, they would say, reading was. they always spoke of their town in past tense. that sort of saddened and shocked me. you have this generation that was so aspirational and achieved for so long that suddenly finds that they can't pass that same bounty onto their children. >> reporter: they joked each other a year later. together they visits locals like mikeista vern. eventually a narrative of characters began to
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cynthia and tracy, best factory tony nominees. >> do you see your own life experiences in this play? >> oh, for sure. i'm frt detroit and i was saying that detroiters were canaries in the coal mine ages ago. i remember the gas crisis and i remember them sendling counselors into the schools because the children were depressed because their parents were out of work. so i know intimately what it's like to come from a company town, a one-industry town. >> reporter: when cynthia receive as promotion, relationships begin to fray. >> it sucks. and i bet you they wanted a minority. i'm not prejudiced but that's how things are going these days. i've about got eyes. they get tax breaks or something. >> when she says -- >> t-- they're going to ask everyone to take a pay cut. 60%.
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>> not hard to get upset about your d pension and, you know. this is the majority of the world, with this play, these people in this play. >> three generalities of almighty to the same company, but this is america, right? "sweat" was originally commissioned by the shakespeare play world. a political landscape began to shift and intersect with the script. >> america has lost 70,000 factories. hard to believe. did you have any sense to believe that those issues might be boiling over to the point that they are now? >> certainly when we sat down and began speaking with people in reading, we felt their anger and their frustration, we felt a sense of alienation. we felt all the things that we're reading about today. and the question we often get asked, cow could weer
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thad the country would turn what we could predict is this kind of frustration would take some form of revolution. >> in some ways it was absoluely shocking and in another way we had access to the motor for five years. i mean for five years we were hearing the same stories and the same kind of anger and engine and not realizing exactly whether that energy would go. >> since march the production has been at new york's famed studio 54 theater, but before they made the move to broadway -- >> we've been having the same conversation for 20 years. >> -- the cast put on a special performance for people in reading. the reaction was startling, like one story told to joanna. >> she was in tears because she said we're not just the block on the monopoly board or the brunt of everyone's jokes. we're a play now. >> she said thanks. she said
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>> why do you think they've been ignored for so long? >> there seems to be a resentment. there's something about the working class, the dignity of getting up and taking care of your family. we have a disconnection, right? like the easier your money comes, the more worthy you must be and you're not a sucker, and these people are not suckers. they're hard workers doing everything they're supposed to do to achieve the american dream. >> yeah. >> and even though "sweat" won her her second pulitzer prize, believe it or not, it's her debut, and i'll be looking for her tomorrow night. >> it's an interesting play. we talk about it in the context of policy and politics but rarely in the context of human. >> when you sit and watch someone uninterrupted
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this morning on "the dish" chef thomas boe mer, his family moved to north carolina when he was 5 years old. it was a change of venue that changed his life. from fried chicken to barbecued pork he fell hard for southern cooking and later made it the focus of his career. >> he took over the award-winning corner table and opened the revival of his beloved recipes of his youth now with a second location in nearby st. paul. chef boe mer, welcome to "the dish." >> thank you. >> i can barely see over the >>le of burgers.
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biscuits and sweet potato doughnuts. >> minnesota barbecue, those words don't go together very often. you came late to barbecue. it was something you discovered. it wasn't something your parents cooked for you. >> absolutely. we came from lexington, which is this barbecue pillar of that style of food, and for me being introduced to that as a young kid and vm another kid offer me barbecue, i said, what's that. barbecue. >> you were also, i read, into woodworking and designing instruments. how did that skill translate into the kitchen? >> woodworking, you're working with this organic
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you're working with your hands. lot of care. it's all about process. each thing leads into another. it allowed me to take food to the next level and dedicate myself to the process to see it three, whether it's a month-long process of fermentation or 24-hour smoke. all these things, you know, really helped build that for me. >> one of the chefs you trained with, tell us about that and how influential was he in your career? >> this is a chef i had looked up to since the very beginning of my career. you know, his food, you know, visually just being aware of it and the philosophy behind it just spoke to me. this flawless technique. you know, he's such an incredible figure, getting to work with him. it really gave me a base of, you know, dedicating to that technique. >> you worked with him in las vegas, but you went back to
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minneapolis. >> yes. >> ultimately taking oveyourse >> it's in beautiful southwest minneapolis. what we fell in love with, my business partner, nick, was the community. when we came to this restaurant, it wasn't about, look what i can do, i can cook these wonderful things. it was really about servicing this incredible community. >> chef, you have a new product. >> yes. >> tell us about that as i tell you do sign this dish. >> absolutely. it's a very exciting projectle it's a keg and case project. we're revitalizing st. paul. it's a beautiful huge food hall style market. it's going to combine our community and farmers and producers along with these restaurant euros in place. we want to build something for the community. >> the whole experience. >> absolutely. >> good for you. if you could share this delicious southern feast with any figure past or
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would it be, steph? >> i have to say jock pa pell. but it was my first professional cookbook. it was a very early version of his cookbook which i wish i still had. again, i love technique. i love process. and that book kind of started that. i think that was the very beginning. >> that's so cool. >> to be able to -- this is where it led me. >> he's been on our show, but that's the first show. >> congratulations for trail blazing on many fronts. chef thomas boe mer, great to see
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coming up, lindsey buckingham and christine mcvie were part of one of the biggest bands in rock history. now the fleetwood mac bandmates are teaming up together on a new album. we'll hear from them and their new album straight ahead on "saturday sessions" here on "cbs this morning: saturday." ...this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain... ...and protect my joints from further damage. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira works by targeting and helping to... ...block a specific source... ...of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain and... ...stop further joint damage in many adults. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions,
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for many music lovers their favorite band was fleetwood mac. >> now guitarist lindsey buckingham and singer christine mcvie have come up with brand-new album. we'll have a chance to hear them perform in a few minutes. i had a chance to speak with them in los angeles ♪ sometimes i wonder do you ever think of me ♪ >> reporter: lindsey buckingham and christine mcvie came together through flood wood mac but their packets couldn't have been any different. christine mcvie came from a family in england. >> discovered a book a
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started going. ♪ >> reporter: she studied sculpture at birmingham before moving to london to look for work. >> you can't really go out and get a job as a sculpturist, can you? i ended up window dressing. somebody walked by a window dressing dummy and it was a friend of mine. she said, do you want to join a band. i thought anything beats this. >> reporter: the band was chicken shack with christine mcvie singing lead. they had a song that hit the charts. there weren't a lot of female blues singers in the 1960s. >> we were living in a man's world for sure, but i just loved it. i loved the blues and that's
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thing at on. fleetwood mac was my >>eporter: after naehring the bassist job mcvie, she joined the band in 1970. lindsey buckingham wouldn't join the band until five years later. was it hard coaxing you into the band? >> the way we were asked in or the way i was asked in was so random. >> bucking hamg who grew up in snans had his own band with his then girlfriend stevie nicks. one day walking into the studio he said he saw the producer of his album playing the record for a tall skinny man. >> i see this guy like grooving away to the guitar solo and i thought, what is going on here, and the song finished and he says, lindsey,
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call from mac. >> i get a call asked if i wanted to join. >> reporter: buckingham had one condition. >> if you want me, you'll have to take my girlfriend. >> reporter: the classic lineup of fleetwood mack was born. >> do you remember the first time? >> stevie and -- >> rehearsal. >> i was singing "say you love me" and you and steve i have chirped in with background vocals. i sat there with goosebumps. i couldn't believe it. ♪ >> reporter: lindsey buckingham gave up his own band, he says, to join something bigger. e mean just the series of circumstances. >> it's unbelievable. >> you think about how tenuous all that is. >> and we're still here.
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nobody wishes for words they couldn't say ♪ ♪ bless my soul let the night unfurl ♪ ♪ dancin' spinnin' dreamin' singing in my world ♪ ♪ fare farewell liberty ♪ ♪ maybe we're lost without the cost of who we used to be ♪ ♪ in my world everybody stays nobody wishes for words they couldn't say ♪ ♪ bless my soul let the night unfurl ♪ ♪ dancin' spinnin' dreamin' singing in my world ♪ ♪ in my world northb
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♪ in my world everybody stays nobody wishes for words they couldn't say ♪ ♪ lbless my soul let the night unfurl ♪ ♪ dancin' spinnin' dreamin' singing in my world ♪ ♪ in my world everybody stays nobody wishes for words they couldn't say ♪ ♪ bless my soul let the night unfurl ♪ ♪ dancin' spinnin' dreamin' singing in my world ♪ ♪ in my world everybody stays nobody wishes for words they couldn't say ♪ ♪ bless my soul let the night unfurl ♪ ♪ dancin' spinnin' dreamin' singing in my world ♪ ♪
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what's thet ready, go! hi, juice universe? one large rutabaga, with eggplant... done! that's not fair. glad i had a v8. the original way to fuel your day. i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. buried just under the surface, the answer to it all. ♪ we want to need each other. ♪
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day on "lucky dog," an australian cattle dog mix could be a match for a family with its heart set on a heeler. pete: they're active dogs. we're both active. brandon: yeah, she's a jumper. when a dog is this out of control on the leash, you always run the risk of doing some damage. narrator: if she can't be trained to go at their speed, she might outrun her own best chance for a happy future. brandon: yeah, you're still a jumper. hold on. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope.
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