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christoph christopher's mom won't stop until there's one in every school in the state. >> it's not a matter of if a tornado is going to come to oklahoma again, it's a matter of when it's going to happen. >> reporter: preparing for the future with painful lessons learned the past year. residential storm shelters permits have increased dramatically, 8600 issued in the last year compared to just a couple hundred, betty, the year before. >> that's understandable. sarah, thank you. >>> it was certainly a college graduation with a back story. in her first public appearance since her dismissal from "new york times," jill abramson addressed over a thousand new wake forest graduates monday and said she was kind of like a new grad herself. >> you know the stick of losing or not getting something you badly want. when that happens, show what you are made of. sure, losing a job you love hurts, but the work i revered, journalism that holds powerful institutions and people accountable, is what makes our democracy so resilient. what's next for me? i don't know. so i'm in exactly the same boat as man
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christopher legg and six other students were killed there. like 50% of oklahoma schools, plaza towers did not have a tornado shelter. the new building will, but christoph christopher'stop, she says, until there is one in every school in the state. >> it is a matter of when it is going to happen. >> reporter: preparing for the future with painful lessons learned the past year. storm shelter permits have increased dramatically. 8600 issued in the last year compared to just a couple hundred the year before. frances, back to you. >> from moore, oklahoma. >>> time to get down to business with sima modi. sima, good morning. >> credit suisse pled guilty to helping wealthy americans to avoid paying taxes. they will pay $2.6 billion to the u.s. government and regulators, the largest penalty the u.s. justice department has imposed in any criminal tax case. >>> in other news, chipotle is asking customers not bring firearms into the restaurants. this after it says gun rights advocates brought military style assault rifles in one of the restaurants this weekend. chipotle says it has complied with local laws regarding open and concealed firearms. >>> can you guess most popular fr
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christoph christopher-martinez's father, the grief, the anger, his voice. he slammed politicians, slammed the nra. he said, their rights, their rights, what about christopher'sve and we believe given that he was the one who had gone out to simply get something to eat he was the victim killed at this deli, correct? >> that is correct. you see it. i saw it and that's part of the reason why the owner of the surveillance video didn't want to release it because he heard the father. he knows what the father is going through and he doesn't want to add to the pain. so that is certainly something that people are thinking about, the young man who lost his life and everyone who was in that store was traumatized. you mention thad young woman. that young woman pulled out her cell phone to call 911. a lot of people in the store started running to the back exit. she stayed there. you can see her lift her arm to try to reach out to ask christopher how he's doing, is he okay. and she's -- there's no audio. we can't hear what she's saying, but she's very visibly trying to help him and on the video where you see him bleeding, everyone there is trying to help him as well. so it
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if you want to laugh, laugh with christopher hitchens -- christopher buckley but dedicated to our friend christopherchens. i cannot even pronounce the title. why am i doing this? >> give it a rest. go home. [laughter] >> it 7:00, for god's sake. christopher buckley, "but enough about you." thanks for joining us. see you next time. ♪ >> live from pier 3 in san francisco, welcome to the late edition of "bloomberg west," where we cover the global technology and media companies that are reshaping our world. i'm cory johnson. uber is headed toward evaluation of $10 billion. big question -- is it worth it? critic's on both the left and right are already pouncing on what internet fast lanes could
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[laughter] >> if you want to laugh, laugh with christopher hitchens -- christopher buckley but dedicated to our friend christopheritchens. i cannot even pronounce the title. why am i doing this? >> give it a rest. go home. [laughter] >> it 7:00, for god's sake. christopher buckley, "but enough about you." thanks for joining us. see you next time. ♪ . ♪ >> this is "taking stock" for thursday, may 15, 2014. i'm pimm fox. today's theme is trail blazer. tough mutter and mudderella are blazing a trail when it comes to adventurous fitness. we find out how getting down in the mud is creating a business boom. plus, michael sam, a trailblazer in football. i will speak with the agent for the first openly gay player drafted by an nfl team. and solar roadways -- it is trying to change the energy market.
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>> great to be here. >> rose: if you want to laugh, live at christopher buckley but dedicated to our friend christopher hitchens. christopher buckley, but not, i can't even pronounce the title, what am i doing. >> it's caught you. give it a round. go home. >> rose: it's 7:00, for god's sake. christopher buckley but enough about you. thank you for joining us. see you next time. captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org clo . >>> this is "nightly business report" with tyler mathisen and susie gharib. brought to you in part by. >> thestreet.com, featuring herb greenberg who reminds investors that risk is real, with herb greenberg's reality check in terms of stocks and risks. you can learn more at thestreet.com/reality check. >>> the magic of macy's disappeared just a bit in the first quarter, sales were soft but management is optimistic. is the ceo right or is the consumer pulling back? >>> cisco kid, the stock initially takes off, could this dow component be setting the tone for tomorrow? >>> taking a toll, president obama
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>> great to be here. >> rose: if you want to laugh, live at christopher buckley but dedicated to our friend christopher hitchens. christopher buckley, but not, i can't even pronounce the title, what am i doing. >> it's caught you. give it a round. go home. >> rose: it's 7:00, for god's sake. christopher buckley but enough about you. thank you for joining us. see you next time. captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >>> the following kqed production was produced in high definition. ♪ ♪ ♪ >>> every single bite needed to be great. >> twinkies in there. >> wow! >> it's like a great, big hug in the whole city. >> that food is about all i can handle. my parents put chili powder in my baby food. >> french fries everywhere, all over the table and just a lot of chili.
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christopher evans hubbart -- to muffle the scenes, christopher evans hubbart terrorized women in the bay area and in southern california and that is where he has been ordered to move when he is revealed. when and how was the subject of a court hearing in san jose. ktvu's noelle walker is live outside the courthouse where the judge will decide his fate. >> reporter: today the neighbors told the judge they don't just want a change of address, they think he should never be freed. >> reporter: the man with the jacket over his head is the pillow case rapist. for decades christopher evans hubbart terrorized women from the bay area tosouthern california put -- to southern california, muffling their screams as he raped them. he raped 38 women but authority the number could top 100. he is the man no one wants for a neighbor. that is why a group of women fron los angeles county drove 7 hours to testify in san jose where a judge is deciding when and how christopher evans hubbart should be reloosed. >> she -- released -- >> he is a repeated rapist, serial rapist. >> reporter: he spent more time in jail and mental hospitals than out. each time they said he wasn't a danger to society and released he raped again. that is why this week he filed papers requesting an audit of doctors at state hospitals. >> reporter: are you saying they are releasing predator whose are still dangerous? >> yes, in my opinion. i think they are too dangerous for the rest of us. some people never learn. >> reporter: he calls christopher evans hubbart the worst of the wur. some of -- worst. some o
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christoph john, arriving in his high school. christoph's mom, diane. >> every child going to that school, they have a photo i.d. in the morning, when you enter the school, you have to scan the i.d. >> according to christophity dean and teacher stefan hudson asks him to step to the side when his i.d. doesn't work. christoph says when he tries to go through security again, the dean becomes enraged believing he is acting disrespectfully. >> immediately i could see it was in violation of the rules of the department of education and probably it looked like something that was illegal, possibly criminal to me. we went to diane john's house to show her the video of her son involved in this altercation with the dean. >> when i first saw the video, i got nervous. like my belly start hurting. i feel my stomach left where it was and went somewhere else. i see the dean grab on to him and throw him down. picks him up, throw him into a table violently. picks him up again and throw him to the ground. >> at 5'5," 120 pounds, the 15-year-old boy is no match for the dean, who is more than twice his size. >> they throw him around like a rag doll. so he was trying to get up. but he couldn't. the man had him in a lockdown the
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christopher michael martinez. his father, richard, talked with christopher 45 minutes before he died. >> you don't think it will happen to your child until it does. chris died because of craven, irresponsible politicians and the nra. they talk about gun rights. what about chris' right to live? when will this insanity stop? >> six victims are still hospitalized tonight two are in serious condition. one of those injured in the santa barbara rampage is a 19-year-old university of pacific student who lives in danville. we spoke to his family tonight and she joins us live with more on their ordeal. >> reporter: that's right, nick pasichuke was done for the school year and drove down to uc santa barbara to visit his best friend from high school for the weekend and was in the wrong place at the wrong time. the 19-year-old water polo star was happy to be hanging out with friends in isla vista for the start of summer vacation. his dad says they went out to celebrate and get something to eat. nick pasichuke says he shot at us. the police said i flew 50 feet into a busy intersection. his dad got the dreaded phone call late frida
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christopher ross martinez, he was 20 years old and he died last night. i've written out a statement that was prepared by the family. our son christopher six others are dead. our family -- our family has a message for every parent out there. you don't think it'll happen to your child until it does. chris was a really great kid. ask anyone who knew him. his death has left our family lost and broken. why did chris die? chris died because of craven irresponsible politicians and the nra. they talk about gun rights, what about chris's right to live? when will this insanity stop? when will enough people say stop this madness, we don't have to live like this! too many have died! we should say to ourselves, not one more! thank you. that's it. >> now, when he walked off, he literally broke down in tears. he could not stop himself. and you hear there it's going to bring that debate back up about gun rights here in america. but we also talked to someone who was a witness, someone who went to the scene and saw three girls who were lying on the grass outside of a sorority and described to us what he saw. his name is kyle sullivan, 19 years old, a f
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christopher dickey, whose column we just mentioned. christopher, i want to go ahead and start with you on the points that you made in that column, and i'm going to read you a quote of what you wrote. you says said, "there's really only one answer. deeply unsatisfactory and grossry unsavory as that might be, negotiation with boko haram and almost certainly the payment of a significant ransom." do you really think that's the only way out of this? >> if the objective is to free as many girls as possible, yes, i think that probably is the only way out of it. if we talk about using military force, those girls are scattered. we saw 100 girls maybe. maybe they were the school girls in that video. it was only about half the number that were taken. what happens to the other hundred if you try to rescue half of them? the options of the use of force are very limited, so tend of the day if the objective is to free the girls, you've got to negotiate, and if you negotiate, this guy is going to want money. he is not going to just want the release of prisoners. i think it's going to be a long and difficult process, and, you know, we can only hope that the result at the end of the day is that most or all of these girls are liberated at the end of it. >> and let me just go to you on that same question. you have -- you know, to christopher's point, they showed 100 or so girls. dwoent know that these are the girls. we don't really know the circumstances behind how that video was made. you know, even family members, fathers of some of the girls had gone into the forests of there in northeast nigeria to work around and were pushed back by the fact that there were militants throughout the forest. it's very dangerous. is it safe to try to rescue the girls, or to christopher dickey's point, do the nigerians need to find someone to negotiate with and pay up? >> okay. you don't want to negotiate with terrorists. the day you negotiate with terrorists, game over. you just gave the green light to every terrorist across the globe to say go ahead and do what you are going to do. we're going to negotiate with you. now you are going to see more copycats, more actions. what you want to do is not an overt mission where you are taking military force and pushing through. a covert mission. you gather intelligence. you get informants, people
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the best we can determine, christopher gonzalez is the person who wrote the note. >> christopher gonzalezg trial on attempted murder to which he has pled not guilty has been david goodell's cell mate for the past year. he was assigned to be a sort of companion and confidant following goodell's suicide attempt. officer burke recently dismissed gonzalez from a volunteer position that allowed him extra time out of his cell. >> he was one of the unofficial food servers. i would go in at 7:00 a.m., do my head count and he would be in his cell and he would have a blanket up, so i couldn't see him to take count. and so i wouldn't let gonzalez out to serve because if he doesn't want to be seen, maybe he shouldn't serve chow today. >> though the jail won't press criminal charges for the threat, they have placed gonzalez on restriction and moved him to another housing unit. but gonzalez says he had nothing to do with the threat. >> [ bleep ]. my handwriting is totally different than that. i don't write like that. so i looked at it like, i'm not going to argue with it. that's the evidence they got.
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christopher buckley, but also the late joseph heller, the late christopher hitchens and martin amos. one can only imagine what those lunches were like. so, ladies and gentlemen, it's my pleasure to introduce the author of "but enough about you," a storyteller, a cultural critic and, if i may say, irreverent historian, mr. christopher buckley. let's welcome him. [applause] >> hello. would you please turn your cell phones back on? [laughter] what an honor to be introduced by dr. pastides. i've had the pleasure for some years now of getting to know him and his delightful and very beautiful wife, patricia, your first lady, who is a connecticut girl i point out with no small pride being a connecticut yankee myself. and she is also an author as, and you will be hearing from her at, later on at this festival. i, having identified myself as a connecticut yankee, i hasten to point out that i have -- can you hear me in the cheap seats back there? how much did you pay for those? [laughter] i hasten to point out that i have south carolina connections. my grandparents moved to camden in 1938, so i spent a lot of time growing up there. growing up is, in my case, an ongoing process. [laughter] my uncle reid lived in camden. he passed away just a month ago. and i miss him greatly. he ran the public -- the buckley school of public
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christopher martinez. this is the memorial to christopher martinez, he was killed here at the ivy deli mart, with one girl, at least one person trying to save him, and throughout the evening, there have been more candles and more flowers brought to this particular site. also at the site where the girls were walking by the sorority, where two girls died, one of the girls ended up surviving. there is a growing memorial there. you can hear from the voices of students that they are extremely disturbed by what happened here, but also fearful. they said when they were walking down the street, right after this happened and subsequently throughout the day, they would be nervous, jumpy, as cars drove by, after witnessing such horror here in isla vista. >> you can imagine. you know, sara, i want to ask you quickly about the girls in the sorority house. when you hear he pounded on door for two minutes and nobody answered i'm wondering if there's counseling made available to them because they are thinking my gosh, had we opened that door, who knows what he would have done and that's got to be sobering to them. >> reporter: yes, we know there was a sign on the door saying "we're not commenting on what's happening, please respect our privacy." we are hearing they are being given some kind of counseling assistance. all the students here so shaken by this, so concerned, and also many of them going online, trying to understand the person behind this, the suspect, elliot rodger, watching those videos he posted online. there are several but the most disturbing one is the one where he describes and details what it is he is going to do. he tried to carry that out. wasn't able to get inside the sorority but starting his shooting spree and ramming people with his car outside. it went on for about ten minutes. had gun battles with sheriff's deputies as well and in the end, it appeared he shot and killed himself. this has just been a terrible time for students. there was also a vigil last night where hundreds of students showed up, some in tears, holding candles, trying to remember the victims. >> we'll have more from the students understandably very difficult time for isla vista. sara sidner live for us this morning, thank you. >> as she mentioned we are hearing and learning new details about theer er iterrifying mom when rodger opened fire. >> listen to this witness. >> i was inside my apartment. i heard some what sounded like gunshots in the distance, but we couldn't tell because it was faint, it was in the distance and about a minute later, the scene showed up to the place right in front of my apartment, and we heard a loud crash and about close to 30 rounds of gunfire, and i looked outside and i saw the bmw had crashed into the parked cars on the street and made its way up to the sidewalk and you know, the car has a huge hole in the windshield, with a huge dent on the roof as well. there was a, but cycle in the street, there was a bicyclist involved that may have been hit. and then when i looked outside, i saw one cop rush to the car and the policeman cleared out the car, and then very soon after, more squad cars showed up, policemen showed up with their rifles, they cleared the scene. i saw the driver get pulled out. i think there may have been another person in the car, i'm not sure, or maybe that other person was a bicyclist, but they were kind of in the same area, and the ambulances showed up, policemen were telling us to stay inside because there were weapons involved, maybe not all the weapons were recovered at that point, and just a very chaotic, shocking scene. it's really a shock, because this is such a beautiful place, and we're here to go to college in uc santa barbara, it's a beautiful campus and here we are living on the beach, we're supposed to be enjoying a certain type of lifestyle, where everyone's like you know, not completely care-free but that's kind of like the lifestyle that we have, and we're supposed to feel safe and be able to go out and do our own thing. and i never thought that i would witness gun violence, and i would never imagine it would be here out of all places so it's a huge shock. it's very sad. and i never expected anything like this to are take place. >> you know, another jolting fact here, police say three handguns and more than 400 rounds of unused ammunition were recovered from rodger's vehicle. >> there's more video that we want to you see, surveillance video, and it catches the moment that elliot rodger started shooting inside the deli. you'll see more of this. you'll see the stunning bravery that happened inside this deli. new car! hey! [squeals] ♪ [ewh!] [baby crying] the great thing about a subaru is you don't have to put up with that new car smell for long. the versatile, 2015 subaru forester. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, and 9 grams of protein. [ bottle ] ensure®. nutrition in charge™. [ bottle ] ensure®. i couldn't lay down it was a i couldn't sit up because it burned so much. as first lady of our church we have meetings. we have activities. and i couldn't do any of that. any time anything brushed up against this rash it would seem like it would set it on fire again. it was the worst pain i ever had. woman: what do you mean, homeowners insurance doesn't cover floods? [ heart rate increases ] man: a few inches of water caused all this? [ heart rate increases ] woman #2: but i don't even live near the water. what you don't know about flood insurance may shock you -- including the fact that a preferred risk policy starts as low as $129 a year. for an agent, call the number that appears on your screen. >>> okay, we need a second ambulance nor another gunshot wounded, ivy deli mart, code three. >> another xgunshot to the ches. >> those were the calls after a 22-year-old man shot a man outside a tellie. >> the moment bullets came flying into that deli, our kyung lah has the story. >> reporter: a normal friday night at the ivy mart when suddenly -- >> i was like holy -- oh, my god. >> reporter: mike hassan's surveillance cameras capturing the moment at his store. customers ducking, a glass door shattering, while people run, one come tries to reach out to a victim, and calls 911 as bullets fly overhead. the gunman is just outside, mere feet away, intent on killing. >> there's two bullets came in through the counter, the counter down here. you can see through. >> reporter: holes puncture the wall, riddle the glass. chunks of counter missing. that's a bullet fragment. >> yes. >> reporter: where did it come from? >> in the back. >> reporter: the worst is too gruesome to show. christophermartinez was headed to the deli to get something to eat. surveillance show him running inside, bullets hit him twice. the ucs student bleeds to death on the floor as his friends try to keep him alive using cpr. >> it was very horrible, it was very, very, like i saw some of it and i couldn't finish, like you can't imagine the horrible. >> reporter: from the deli the gunman drove to this apartment complex where ellen cotton recorded the barrage of bullets on her iphone. >> can't find the words, horrible, sad, i'm still like in shock that like this happened here, and it was just so random. >> reporter: in the angle that we can't show you, you see the victim's friends trying to comfort him, trying to resuscitate him. there's the woman who dials 911 who refuses to leave even as bullets are flying over her head. this deli, a microcosm of bravery and humanity, even in the face of such horror. victor, christi? >> kyung lah in isla vista for us thank you. >>> switching gears because there is ot
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christopher martinez was 20 years old. in a moment we'll talk to christopher's dad. despite enduring the worst loss a parent could have, he speaks out because he says he cannot bear to lose one chance to tell the world about his son and prevent the next person from having this happen. joining me right now is kyung lah. kyung? >> reporter: it is very important to note, anderson, that this entire rampage, when the bullets began to fly, it was only ten minutes. and that is what is stunning. that so much devastation to take place in that short of time. the killer winding his way up and down very busy streets, 9:30 on a friday evening, unloading his weapon, reloading, and then taking aim at people he simply did not know. he went to a sorority, a deli, outside a 7-eleven. he tried to hit as many people as possible and so many people, anderson, have been affected. you see the stadium behind me. there is a vigil happening right now. it is packed with people who are trying to remember the good in people, trying to remember the victims, and looking forward to trying to pick up the pieces as a community. anderson? >> yeah, kyung, the memorial that is happening now, i mean, we've seen literally thousands of people attending this. any idea of the total number and i know that christopher'sather spoke at the memorial just a short time ago. >> reporter: he did speak at the memorial and a lot of people came here to see him. and when we look at the faces of the people who came into the stadium, it's like the entire town came here. many of them young. because we're talking about young victims, a community of students. two schools affected. a city college and the university of california, santa barbara. and there are mainly students, but there are also all sorts of ages because this is a college town filled with professors, students, residents. they are here. this entire place is packed. the police here are telling us there are 20,000 people who have filled this stadium. the capacity is technically 17,000. people are filling the entire area and around this stadium, anderson. >> kyung lah, appreciate the update. as she mentioned, richard martinez, who is speaking tonight, has been facing cameras almost nonstop. he has been telling his story and taking politicians to staff for
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christopher michael martinez, katie cooper weeks away from graduating, vernonica white. it has been christopher'srief and anger. >> he is our only child. he died friday. i am 61 years old now. i will never have another child. he is gone. the reason i am doing this right now is to try to see if we can do anything to make my son's death mean something. >> he talked to his son 45 minutes before he was shot and killed. richard martinez blaming the nra saying they have learned nothing. >> reporter: elliot had been planning this rampage for a year. his twisted world manifesto, he wrote about a friend who was an object of extreme hatred. the quiet loner down the street. >> i was shocked. i literally didn't believe it was coming from. when i heard everything. i am still shocked. i couldn't believe it. i still can't believe it. >> reporter: we know elliot's family was concerned about his instability from an early age. one neighbor said he saw therapist when he was 8. he was treated by 2 of them. >>> tens of thousands of people honoring the men and women serving in the armed services. a large memorial cele
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christopher michael martinez, a second-year student at santa barbara. the other three names have not been released pending notification of next of kin. >>> christopher martinez's father blasted politicians and gun rights advocates for his son's murder. >> when will enough people say, stop this madness? we don't have to live like this. too many have died. we should say to ourselves, not one more. >>> the moments after the shooting were chaotic as first responders tried to help people search for the gunman. listen to the frantic dispatch calls between officers last night. >>> here's what we know about the gunman, eliot rodger, 22-year-old student at santa barbara city college. his father is a commercial director who worked as an assistant director on "the hung are games" movie. the family says he has diagnosed with aspergers syndrome. about a year and a half ago rodger fell from a balcony at a party. the attorney believes he may have been thrown as he was a victim of bullying for his entire life. rodger also posted a manifesto in which he says i realized long ago there's no way i could possibly rise to such a level of power in my lifetime. if you give me somethi
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christopher michael martinez, a second-year student at santa barbara. the other three names have not been released pending notification of next of kin. >>> christopher martinez's father blasted politicians and gun rights advocates for his son's murder. >> when will enough people say, stop this madness? we don't have to live like this. too many have died. we should say to ourselves, not one more. >>> the moments after the shooting were chaotic as first responders tried to help people search for the gunman. listen to the frantic dispatch calls between officers last night. >>> here's what we know about the gunman, eliot rodger, 22-year-old student at santa barbara city college. his father is a commercial director who worked as an assistant director on "the hung are games" movie. the family says he has diagnosed with aspergers syndrome. about a year and a half ago rodger fell from a balcony at a party. the attorney believes he may have been thrown as he was a victim of bullying for his entire life. rodger also posted a manifesto in which he says i realized long ago there's no way i could possibly rise to such a level of power in my lifetime. if you give me somethi
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christopher hubbart" be let out of a state mental hospital. he'll be living in palmdale... and have >>> a rapist is going to be released in california. christopher hubbart will be led out in the state's mental hospital. he will be living in california and have a monitor on him. hubbart is responsible for 40 rapes but may have committed many mother. >>> we are learning two united airlines jets came in seconds hitting each other in houston that happened earlier this month. cbs reporter jeff, takes us to it. >> it happens around may 9th, united flight 601 was on runway 9 taking off and another united plane just departed on runway 15 left. the controller instructed the pilot 601 to make a right turn and puting plane on a collision course before realizing his mistakes. >> stop your plane, 601. >> basically, went directly over each other. that's what it looked like from my perspective. i have no idea what was going on. >> the incident is the third near midair collision in recent weeks. on april 24, at new york international airport, two planes had a collision of even closer. within seconds of a disaster, emergency warnings kicked in and one plane desc
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break. ,,,,,,,,,,,, christopher columbus set sao discov the santa maria sa >> well, some explorers are pushing for the speedy excavation of what they believe is the remains of christopher columbus' santa maria. >> barry clifford says his family found the ship near haiti. he used a diary written by columbus to find the iconic vessel. >> the reason this has not been found is people were looking in the wrong place. but with the new location, we extrapolated the distance. found what we were looking for. >> the remains were found in just 10 feet of water. the haitian government will have to approve any excavation plans. >>> and tony and stephanie have a cauliflower recipe worth trying. >> we are going to do a great dish with cauliflower. >> and salami. >> you asked me if i was crazy, but it is really good. heat up the cauliflower, then throw in the salami. it produces a nice flavor overall. >> and saute with a little bit of olive oil and chicken stock. roasted garlic. i'm adding pine nuts. >> a little bit of parsley. >> there we go. >> a little bit more parsley. >> let it cook together for just a little bit. >> turn the heat up a little bit. i'm adding some green olives. le
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and 20-year-old christopher michael martinez, a second-year student the santa barbara. his father, richard, talked with christopher just about 45 minutes before he died. >> you don't think it will happen to your child until it does. chris died because of craven, irresponsible politicians and -- they talk about gun rights. what about chris' right to live? when will this insanity stop? >> six victims are still hospitalized." two remain in serious condition. one of those injured in the santa barbara rampage is a 19-year-old university of pacific student who lives in danville. abc7 news reporter leslie brinkley spoke to his family. >> the 19-year-old water polo star was happy to be hanging out with friends for the start of customer vacation. his dad said they web out to celebrate and get something to eat friday evening. nick told cnn there was a guy driving a bmw. i was on a long board and he aimed his car at our group of friends and gunned us into it. i have two broken legs and need surgery. police said i flew roughly 50 feet into a busy intersection. this is all so crazy. his dad got the dreaded phone call saturday
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and 20-year-old christopher michael martinez, a second-year student the santa barbara. his father, richard, talked with christopher just about 45 minutes before he died. >> you don't think it will happen to your child until it does. chris died because of craven, irresponsible politicians and -- they talk about gun rights. what about chris' right to live? when will this insanity stop? >> six victims are still hospitalized. two remain in serious condition. one of those injured in the santa barbara rampage is a 19-year-old university of pacific student who lives in danville. abc7 news reporter leslie brinkley spoke to his family. >> the 19-year-old water polo star was happy to be hanging out with friends for the start of customer vacation. his dad said they went out to celebrate and get something to eat friday evening. nick told cnn there was a guy driving a bmw. i was on a long board and he aimed his car at our group of friends and gunned it into it. i have two broken legs and need surgery. police said i flew roughly 50 feet into a busy intersection. this is all so crazy. his dad got the dreaded phone call saturday
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christopher leg and six uother students were killed there. like 6 o% of oklahoma schools, did not have a tornado shelter. the new building will, but christopher's mom won't stop until there is one in every school in the state. >> it's not a matter if a tornido will come to oklahoma again, it's a matter of when. >> reporter: painful lessons learned the past year. >> you know they're going to return, as she said. across oklahoma, 1,100 schools do not have tornado shelters leaving half a million students and teachers potentially at risk, but the state says retrofitting every school would cost nearly $1 billion. oklahoma's governor said voters and local school districts should decide whether to build shelters and raise property taxes to help them rebuild. >>> here in california it's not a matter of if, but when we're hit by a major earthquake. the bay area may be in for more than the big one. after years of digging into faults, scientists have managed to look back 400 years and identify a pattern. they say between 1690 and 1776, many large quakes shook the region and relieved stress that had been built up in the fault lines. now scientists think th
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christopher hubbard into los angeles county. we took every legal action at our disposal to try to stop his return to our community. >> reporter: after his release, christopher hubbard will be watched round the clock for the first month in this home in unincorporated palmdale. then police will monitor his every move via gps. but his new neighbors and rape victims from other cases fought a losing battle to keep hubbard and other violent sexual predators like him locked up indefinitely. >> prison and institutions do not rehabilitate criminals, they make them better criminals. >> reporter: hubbard has been convicted of nearly 40 rapes. the chief in the l.a. county sheriff's office says hubbard has admitted to more than 100 rapes across the state and the deputy d.a. doubts rapistipists hubbard can change their ways. >> hubbard may well not be a reformed criminal and does pose risk. >> reporter: he was known as the pillow case rapist because he used a pill hoe to silence victims' screams during attacks. in isn't the first time he's served time and been released and every time, he raped again. san jose has somewhat of a history with these violent sexual predators.
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christopher hubbart raped at least 40 women in >>> new at 6:00, fears over the pillowcase rapist. christopher hubbard raped at least 40 women in san francisco and los angeles in the 1970s and '80s. as kristine lazar reports, he could be released from jail and soon. >> i have to stand my ground put my foot down, you know, voice my opinion. >> reporter: a mother of four daughters and a rape survivor herself, misty leaves for san jose tonight to plead with a judge to block the release of christopher hubbard serial rapist in her neighborhood. he lives five minutes away from the house that the landlord agreed to rent to him in los angeles outside palmdale. >> he has to come by my house to go in town and get medicine, groceries, anything. and he is going to see my kids playing outside. he is not going to stop. >> reporter: dubbed the pillowcase rapist he admitted to sexually assaulting 40 women's in the '70s and '80s. he has been locked up since 1996. >> he needs to stay where he's at, locked up. >> reporter: sheryl holbrook was raped at 14. >> it brings back a lot of flashbacks when i was raped at 14 years old by knifepoint by two men. >> reporter: she and a dozen women formed a group of ladies of lake los angeles upon hearing the release. they staged a protest today and will leave for tomorrow's public hearing. so far they have sent 11,000 letters in protest to the santa clara county superior court judge supervising hubbard. >> don't make us have to sleep with our guns. don't make
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christopher martinez bleeding on the floor and tried in vein to help -- vain to help. >> first two shots hit christopher martinez in the chest. i took my shirt off and applied it to his chest. >> was he alive when you got to him? >> we were doing what we could. that's why it kind of shook us all up. he wasn't shooting at a target. just happened to be him. >> dylan didn't know the victims or the shooter but says the look on his face is something he'll never forget. >> he was almost smiling like he was happy about what was going on. it was very chilling. i'll remember that face for a long time. people don't just do that. people don't just plot that out. people don't just write 10e 141- page manifestos for a year. you can't blame the cops for not knowing. the kid was a manipulator. >> dylan didn't know he had to get back to pleasanton to see family and friends, a place to find peace and time to count his blessings. >> i feel like it hasn't fully set in yet, how big of a situation it is, but i'm just happy to be alive right now. >> reporter: dylan tells me he plans to go backston to collect his belongings. despite what he has been through, he says he plans to go back to city college next semester. >> chilling. brian webb in pleasanton. >>> kpix 5's len ramirez on the students who did not survive friday's rampage. len. >> reporter: liz, because of the memorial day holiday, there are very few kids on campus. a couple of them did come by to share memories of the victims. >> two friends from the class of 2012 came back to campus today. they were angry that the life of their buddy who they last saw on graduation day was cut so short and sew violently. >> horrible to think about someone who did that to a game who did nothing wrong. sickening, to honest. >> like chen, 20-year-old wang was the first victims, stabbed multiple times in the apartment they shared. chang and chen were both graduates. a family spokesperson said the distraught parents left for santa barbara this morning to bring his body back to san jose. a long time neighbor says the tragedy is hard to believe. >> weird that i just saw him the other day. now, it's just like he is just gone, you know. just like weird to see somebody you see own a regular basis and then just something like that happens and you're like wow. >> chen graduated from leland two years ago, so there are still students who do near who knew him. for enforcement that reason, grief counselors will be made available starting tomorrow. in san jose, len ramirez kpix 5. >> kpix 5's ryan takeo was in fremont where were another one of the victims grew up -- where another one of the victims grew up. ryan. >> reporter: david wang graduated in 2012. he moved in just down the street. when he was in high school, neighbors never gnaw the story would hit so close to home. >> last night i came. i came to know him. >> his friend found out about david wang's death like most of us, from the news stories. he lived next door where the 20- year-old lived. >> kneeing it is one of our neighbor -- knowing it is our neighbor just hurts more. >> the hurt has extended to david's high school, fremont christian. the school wrote david had learn rare character and was loved by -- exemplary character and was loved by all. >> he was such a good kid. he loved to play basketball. >> a family friend tells us david's parents are devastated. >> i talked to his mom. it's just so hard for her. she really want the school to know that she definitely doesn't want this kind of thing to happen again. >> the sophomore engineering student was quiet, but neighbors noticed his character. >> very kind and generous. he came out to play with my kids. >> the semester was almost over. neighbors said david normally came back home during summer and winter breaks. inositide, his parents are heading to santa barbara to deal with what happened. in fremont, ryan takeo kpix 5. >> another guy from alamo is in the hospital tonight after beings caught in the gunman's rampage. he was run over by rodger's car. >> basically just had gotten food and was boarding down the street while my friend in front of me was on his bike. needless to say, he and i were just talking and out of no where get sweep ised up by -- swooped up by a car and thrown about 50 yards. it is all a real blur. next thing i know, i'm on the ground. can't move my legs. yeah. >> nick is recovering tonight. heehaws two broken legs. he had to have surge -- he has two broken legs. he had to have surgery. >>> a bullet nearly grazed this girl. sierra sayest rodger opened fire on her. she says he was about 10 feet from her car when he looked directly at her and shot at her. >> i feel like it is an absolute miracle he didn't shoot me. he knows there was no anneals around. it was a friday night. there was no one else around. i was the only one. me looked directly at me. he talked to me and he just shot at me multiple times. somehow, even though i hadn't even ran yet, he didn't hit me. >> schwartz plans to head home to san diego so she can try to cope in the aftermath of the rampage. we will have much more in live report coming up tonight at 6:30. >>>ed to, a day to have remembrance all across the bay area to pay respects to fallen soldiers. in san francisco, hundreds took part in one of the largest memorial day observances in the country. it included a reef laying at a military aircraft fly-over. that ceremony is now in pits 146th year. >>> the names of some service members who died in war were read at cypress lawn memorial service. this was the 18th annual memorial day service there. patriotic songs also filled the air. >>> a retired lawsuit commandery counted his experiences during world war ii in front of a packed crowd in marin today. he not only risked his life in a dare rescue mission, he tells our john ramos he saved a young skipper who would go on to make history. >> united states marine corps. >> people who came to marin county's memorial day ceremony wanted to give thanks to those who serve in the military. but what they got in return was extraordinary. >> commander robinson, united states navy. >> ted robinson is 95 years old now. but in world war ii he got word that a navy torpedo boat had been sunk and its crew set adrift. that boat was the pt-1096789 its skipper was a young lieutenant named john f. kennedy. >> he had a lot of guts. what he did to try to save his man after his boat was ran from a japanese destroyer is unbelievable. >> kennedy dove into a burning sea to pull his men back in the wreckage and then swam for two miles with an injured sailor despite his own serious injuries. he finally got word of their survival back to bit. robinson said he was asked if he wanted to attempt a rescue. >> if the commanding officer in the united states navy asked you to do something, it has to be the greatest idea in the whole freaking world. >> we were going in against japanese destroyers with little wooden boats. >> againsted toes, robinson sailed his own pt boat in 30 miles of enemy-controlled water. later, they shared a hospital room. even then, rick remembers kennedy being concerned about the living conditions of the island natives. >> did you know he was head for big things? >> yes, i did. he was talking about some day we ought to help people like. this that was the start of the peace corps when he and i were just chatting about that. >> speak for nearly an hour in what was half history lesson, half comedy routine, this remarblable 95-year-old man told the story of his friend, the president who died much too young. for this audience, he made memorial day something to remember. in san rafael, john ramos, kpix 5. >> amazing man. robinson now lives in the sacramento area and has written a book about his experiences. >>> teachers saying the children were throwing up while they were taking agness exam. >>> some people are calling it child abecause of the why some students are getting so sick. >>> plus, he has his eyes on a world series trophy, but tonight, why hunter pence is on a quest for justice. >>> looking out over san francisco. there was not one cloud in the entirety of this six-hour time lapse. any clouds, any fog returning to the city? what about the temperature? i will update you in about six minute us. >>> we check in on the 280 closure, ask if repairs will be done in time for tomorrow's commute. tonight. not only did the giants lose against the cubs this afternoon. but his beloved scooter's been stol. as allen mar >>> hunter pence is bombed out tonight. not only did the san francisco giants lose to the cubs this afternoon, but his beloved scooter has been stolen. as allen martin tells us, it was his transportation. >> this is the reward. a an autographed bobble head. pence is taking this very personally. maybe not all that seriously, but personally. >> the scooter got some love from crowd reporter amy gutierrez this afternoon. >> sad news to report from hunter pence who tweeted last night that his beloved scooter was stolen at a restaurant that he was eating last night in san francisco. >> the scooter is so much a part of pence's persona, the giants include it in his bobble head. so it was no surprise he tweeted about it. >> he is putting out a reward. he will give out a signed scooter hunter pence bobble head to whoever returns it. he said he is not mad. he just wants his scooter back. he said it is one of his favorite things. >> really, it is so not a joke that the restaurant where pence says the scooter was stolen sunday night is also offering a reward. dish for two and no questions asked. >> i didn't it was going to -- dinner for two with no questions asked. >> i didn't know it was going to become a big deal. a lot of love from the city. pretty cool. >> reporter: union square's restaurant leslie o'odoule's also hopped on the bandwagon. >> a guy i feel sorry for, that bike is stripped. the wheels will gone. the seat, the handlebars. it was double locked. hunter pence didn't even lock up his scooter. but let's be hear, he makes $85,000 a game he can certainly afford to buy another scooter. in fact, that's how he got to today's game. he owns another scooter. >> he has a scooter factory. >> he is kind of a trendsetter, right? with the giants. >> yeah. some of the other guys have it, too. >> giants weren't crazy about him riding to and from the embarcadero. >> yeah. injuries. >> a lot of close calls. >> lock it up. >> let's hope he gets it back. >> thanks. >>> this spring, schools across the bay area are wrapping up the preliminary round of core testing testing. ann notarangelo with the debite school testing. >> studentings are trying to figure -- students are trying to figure out how to survive with these tests. >> you liked it? >> when was the last time you said you like testing? >> a while ago. >> she's talking about the common core math test. it is these eighth graders last day of testing and they survived. >> we're using technology all the time. it makes us think way more. >> common core advocates say the new standards teach children to be critical thinkers and to get away from just memorizing facts. common core is new to california, but the curriculum has been implemented in other states for the last few years. so there is a lot of information out there. now there is a ground swell of opposition. >> parents on the east coast are reacting. it will happen here, too. >> liz is a high school teacher in marin county. because she fears retribution for talking negatively about common core, she has asked we not identify her schools. he has harsh words for the federal standards adopt by more than 40 states. >> teachers saying the children were throwing up while they were taking an exam. >> some call it child abuse. with educators in other states claiming children miss recess to study for the test. homework that's confusing, even for the parents and exasperating tests. they say teachers are fired for not meeting testing goals. >> it's pretty much the same as taking a new drug and putting it on the market without testing it. we just would never do that. >> common core has been dubbed obamacare for education. even supporters can see it is not perfect. >> it seems in some states florida, new york, has had messy roll out. >> absolutely. i think that is a very fair statement, a messy rollout. >> teachers and students couldn't get away fast enough from the previous star testing which leave some common core fans asking. >> you can object to bun thing, but what's the alternative? i really think if they understand it, it's going to be we're headed in the right direction. >> but who will pay the price for this joy mean to at what cost. in walnut creek, ann notarangelo, kpix 5. >> coming up tomorrow at 6:00, we will go inside one school on test day to see what the students and teachers really have to say about this revolution in education. >>> kids have the day off from school today if they are not already graduated from the university. beautiful day to have a day off. >> a pool day away from the water. you have to get in the hot tub close to san francisco. one of those days with that big temperature spread close to 90 inland. barely at the 60s for the coast. peek outside, great shot of san francisco which only topped out in the mid to upper 60s today. inland, white-spread 90s. brentwood 93. pittsburgh, 90. mill valley, 89. campbell, your high 87. now, to the cooler spots. current temperatures, san mateo 69. 68 at the oakland coliseum. half moon bay right now only 56 degrees. for the whole month of may we have no rain for san jose. a couple drips in the rain bucket for santa rosa and san francisco. vain not in the forecast. it is automatic about the temperature change, but we will stay dry for a while. mainly sunny weather today with temperatures in the 90s inland. tomorrow, that ridge gets muscled out to the state of texas. kind of looks like it's in the same spot, but it is not. been pushed off to the south and east. the ocean temperature sitting at about 51.4 degrees. that will be cold air rushing in. temperatures tomorrow will be about 10 degrees cooler. then, the ridge moves back. that limits the on shore flow and temperatures climb back up. there are tiny little changes around here. but our weather is so sensitive that that increased on shore flow tomorrow knocks us down consider establishment fremont only 71 tomorrow. concord 79. 80 in napa. san francisco, 65 for your high tomorrow. still sunny. gist not as warm. warm you have on wednesday and thursday. not only are we cooler next weekend, we will also be cloudier. partly sunny skies at best. mid 60s near the bay. mid 70s inland. everyday is looking nice. >> right. >> you have to pick your day. warmer weather in the middle of the week. >> thank you, paul. >>> will a stretch of 280 reopen in time for tomorrow's commute. >> she wants to be okay so no one else will worry about her, especially her parents. >>> why this bay area is having such a hard time finding a life- saving donor. ,,,,,,,,,,,, if i eat this super creamy and delicious tillamook marionberry pie ice cream right now i'll explode into creamy happiness. wha? oh. tillamook ice cream, tastes better because it's made better. wrapping up. 's mike sugerman >>> we're in the home stretch. a massive construction project on part of 280 is about 12 hours away from wrapping up. kpix 5's mike sugerman spoke to spokes who said the shut town has been one giant headache. mike. >> reporter: well, actually that is good. it is a giant headache because of the giants. this is one of the signs i think finally people have caught on. one of four southbound ramps to 280. i will tell you what, turn around. there is no traffic. that's good because that wasn't the case for a lot of the weekend. >> it was a beautiful day for a ball game. >> yay. >> but just wait until you had to go home. >> oh, it was horrible. it was super backed up. >> marissa came to the game yesterday from stockton. just getting out of the parking lot took almost as long as a trip home. >> it was almost an hour just to get out of the park alone. >> out of the parking lot? >> yes. >> here is the reason why. highway280 southbound, the smart way to get out of the park for savvy fans has been shut down all weekend to fortify it against earthquakes. >> what we've done is replace the hinges. the hinges on this freeway were about 50 years old. been here since they built. obviously, during that time, the seismic standards changed. >> they picked a three-day holiday weekend to do the work because they figured fewer people would be using the road. we wondered why do the work when 40,000 giants fans would be packing the park which is right at tend of the roadway. >> we reached out to the giants and they reached out to their fans. it has been very noticeable. the traffic for the friday and saturday night game was fairly normal. >> it is ridiculous. >> marissa would tell you different. >> kind of backs everybody up and delays them. >> cal tran has been known over estimate the time the job has been tone so they can open the freeway early, they are heroes. probably not going to happen this time. >> we anticipate opening on time which will be tomorrow morning at 5:00. >> see that crack in the structure over there northbound, they're going to fix that, too, over the july fourth weekend. the giants are houston of town. >> reporter: they do expect these signs will come down tomorrow in time for the commute at 5:00 a.m. in san francisco, mike sugerman kpix 5. >> the plan to tear down that section of the freeway altogether could be in the works, but that project is still at least a couple years away. >>> coming up in our next half hour, more on the killing spree in santa barbara. tonight, we will hear from a childhood friend of the gunman. >> it doesn't hit you until it is so close to home. >>> why this bay area girl faces an uphill battle in the fight for her life. ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,, ,,,, now at 6:30: stories of terror, from a bay area survivor, of the killing spree in santa barbara. >> actually came over my head breaking the glass as i am sliding under it. >>> now at 6:30, stories of terror from a bay area survivor of the killing spree in santa barbara. begat shebaz has the very latest. >> reporter: this is one of two makeshift memorials that have been created outside of campus. but while friends and family members continue to mourn their loved ones, authorities say they are still trying to find out everything they can about the man responsible for this community's pain and loss. >> authorities are looking over items taken from the homes of elliot rodger's parents trying to piece together why the 22- year-old student went on a deadly killing spree. >> they will be annihilate 0. >> rodgers posted a series of disturbing youtube videos days before the attack. his parent -- police visited him a few days before the attack and did not make an arrest. >> he was able to give a very convincing story. >> he told several people about his manifesto, detailing his reasons for revenge. he wrote, if only one pretty girl had shown some form of attraction to me, the day of retribution would never 457. authorities say rodgers stabbed to death his two roommates and a third student. he then shot and killed two women outside a sorority house and student at a deli mart. >> still very emotional. >> sophomore jesse white was just a block away when rodger began firing. >> he felt so alone. it is so strange because it is such a welcoming place. there are so many nice people here. he gist struck innocent people. could have been anyone of us. that's what's scary the most. >> she says the community will get through this tragedy together. >> reporter: the university is scheduled to hold that memorial tomorrow at 4:00 p.m., liz. >> yeah, begat, i can see some mourners there behind you. uc santa barbara community clearly still in shock. >> reporter: yeah, they certainly are. while classes aren't going to be held, the school is still asking professors and counselors to be there for the students. we have also seen people with signs asking news and media crews to leave this town, allowing people and students time to grieve. there are also those on the other side who are already voicing frustration at the amount of reporters who are already beginning to leave this town. they fear the story might have come and gone. they want the names of those victims out there and remembered. liz. >> begat, thank you. >>> tonight, we're learning more about the gunman. cbs reporter randy page spoke with one of his childhood friends. >> i like flipped out. i went crazy. >> lucky is describing the moment he saw this video. he immediately realized the mass murder in isla vista was his childhood friend. >> speechless. >> he says he got an even great shock when he saw his name in the 137-page manifesto elliot rodger wrote about his tortured life. speaking of a group of kids his stepmother wanted him to be friends with, rodger wrote one of them was a black boy named lucky. he was fourth grader. he would later go to the same middle school with me where he would become an object of my extreme hatred and jealousy. looking back, i can't believe i actually played with him in his father's neighborhood. rodger wrote later he immediately became popular with the pretty girls of his game i hated him for it. >> i mean, i didn't even know i was popular with the girls. i was just friendly to everybody. >> he described the elliot rodger he knew as the part loner who never looked him in the eye and had very little to say. >> he would have, you know, one word answers. i never really heard him speak. >> coming up later this evening here at westlake high school, a candle light vigil will be held as friends of the victims as well as friends of the gunman try to understand why this happened. in westlake, randy page kpix 5. >> the father of the shooting victim christopher martinez is lashing out at politicians in washington, d.c. and at congress. in particular. he says mass shootings are too common and gun control legislation needs to become a priority. >> this has happened, i really look -- releasees looking back that there's been a total failure here of leadership in this country on this issue. >> he says it is another opportunity for congress to do more about getting gun out of the hands of the mentally ill. >>> president obama paid tribute to fallen soldiers. mr. obama made mention of the va scandal and said more needs to be done to insure vets get the care and benefits they have earned. >>> three powerful words changed one bay area man's life forever. you have cancer. our kate cogeron reports on how he has turned his diagnosis into a movement to help others. >> two years ago ryan was looking for a new apartment and a new job. he was on a date when he got the call he never expect 0. >> you might collapse any day now. you need to check in right away
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christopher. please join me in thanking her. i also want to thank dr. christopher because we are here because of the w. k. kellogg foundation support. we thank you for that generous support for many years encouraging the work that we do. we are very grateful for the intellectual framework as well as our resources to do this important work. we will hear from our two panelists. we will start with roger clay. >> thank you very much for that introduction. thanks to the joint center for inviting me. and thanks to sheryll cashin for writing this boat. i am going to say positive and negative things about the book, but one thing that i want to be upfront about is that this is a great book. you know, a few weeks ago attorney general holder praised justice sotomayor for courageous to cents. whatever you think of the dissent, it was not courageous. does not take gets for a liberal to defend racial preferences. the state gets for a liberal to say that racial preferences are maybe no longer a good idea. and so i tip my hat to you. i know it is not an easy conclusion to come to
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christopher ross martinez. he was 20 years old. he died last night. i've written out a statement that was prepared by the family. our son christophermartinez and six others are dead. our family has a message for every parent out there. you don't think it will happen to your child until it does. chris was a really great kid. ask anyone who knew him. his death has left our family lost and broken. why did chris die? chris died because a craven, irresponsible politicians and the nra. they talk about gun rights. what about krchris's right to live? when will this insanity stop? when will enough people say, stop this madness? we don't have to live like this! too many have died! we should say to ourselves, not one more! thank you. that's it. that's it. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go! alright, fellas. alright, russ. back to work! reckless seeding... ...failure to disa
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christopher leg and six other students were killed there. like 60% of oklahoma schools, profit towedid not have a torna shelter. christopher's mom won't stop until there is one in every school in the state. >> it's not a matter of if another tornado is coming to oklahoma, again. it's a matter of when. >> reporter: painful lessons learned the past year. permits for residential storm shelters have dramatically increased. 8,600 since the tornado compared to just a few hundred the year before. scott and laura, back to you. >> sarah, i know they have been implementing tougher building codes after this disaster. how is that going, how is the progress on that? >> the city council voted a couple weeks ago to vote in these stricter building codes. they now require all homes to be built to withstand winds of 135 miles per hour. that is the equivalent of an ef-3 tornado. obviously, it would not have helped if you were in the direct path of the tornado last year, but what officials are hoping is that it saved some homes and future tornadoes that are on the edges of that tornado. not getting hit by the direct force, but by those side win
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christopher hitchens. ladies and gentlemen it is my pleasure to introduce the author of that enough about you the cultural critic and if i may say irreverent historian, mr. christopher buckley. [applause] >> would you please turn your cell phones back on? what an honor to be introduced. it was a connecticut girl that i point out. you will be hearing from her later on. having identified myself as a connecticut yankee i hasten to point out the -- can you hear me in the cheap seats by the way? i hasten to point out that i have south carolina connections. i spent a lot of time growing up there and in the long going process. he passed away just a month ago, and i miss him greatly. he ran the school of public speaking. and lastly and certainly most importantly though i had the very good sense to marry a south carolina girl that is sitting by the exit. let's not go there. katie went to medical school while here in columbia and her grandfather was a very distinguished south carolinians whose name was eliot spring and he was from poo portability ande was a classmate of the aforementioned at the yankee institution of the allegedly higher education and when the great war broke
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christopher martinez. he was shot dead at a deli. he was reportedly preparing for a year of studying abroad in london. the father of christopher martinez showed his anger and agony to the nation, blaming not just the man who killed his son but those who represent the rights of gun owners. let's bring in our own kyung lah who is live in isla vista, california. what did the father tell you? >> reporter: he said that this sort of pain is unimaginable. this was his only child who he lost. and he says he is filled with rage. he says he wants to talk to the press. as many reporters as possible because washington is refusing to talk, refusing to listen. and this father says it is congress' inaction that has led to all of this. >> where the hell is the leadership? where the hell are these people that we elect to congress and spend so much money on? these people are getting rich sitting in congress. and what do they do? they don't take care of our kids. my kid died because nobody responded to what occurred at sandy hook. those parents lost little kids. it's bad enough that i lost my 20-year-old but i had 20 years with my son. >> reporter: and this father also adds today who is talking about the parents of sandy hook. those sandy hook victims. he says today you can simply replace the town sandy hook with isla vista and tomorrow it will be a new town and this will keep going on until he believes there will be a conversation about mental health and the proliferation of guns. jake? >> kyung lah, thank you so much. >>> coming up, how much blame for this tragedy lies with washington? next, i'll speak with a congressman who will respond to the distraught father about why more has not been done. >>> plus, the defense secretary and how his own brother saved his life after he was shot on the battlefield. how much protein does your dog food have? 18 percent? 20? purina one true instinct has 30. active dogs crave nutrient-dense food. so we made purina one true instinct. learn more at purinaone.com ♪ (train horn) vo: wherever our trains go, the economy comes to life. norfolk southern. one line, infinite possibilities. ... many okinawans stay so ractive as they age... (elder man speaks in japanese) (elder man then laughs) (elder woman speaks in japanese) but okinawans know one reason... elder couple laughs) ...they eat well to be well... ...okinawa life has isoflavone, a key ingredient to the... ... okinawa diet. a secret of ... ( elder couple laugh) ... vitality from people ... ... who really know how to live. (female scientists yells) hey! (elder couple laugh) okinawa life! cozy or cool? or "woof"? everything exactly the way you want is...until boom, its bedtime. your mattress it's a battleground of thwarted desire. enter the sleep number bed, designed to let couples sleep together in individualized comfort. he's the softy: his sleep number setting is 35. you're the rock at 60. and snoring? sleep number's even got an adjustment for that. you can only find sleep number at a sleep number store. hurry in for memorial day weekend savings. all beds are on sale, starting at just $649.99. know better sleep with sleep number. > >>> welcome back to "the lead." i'm jake tapper. the signs were there, and now a grieving father of a victim is demanding that washington do something. >> have we learned nothing? these things are going to continue until somebody does something. so where the hell is the leadership? >> it is a painful plea to hear from the father of 20-year-old christopherichael martinez, one of the people senselessly killed by a sick young man. so what kind of leadership can washington offer to stop the mass murders like this one? joining me is a congressman who is trying to push through a bill that would talk about mental illness in america. what is your reaction to that grieving parent? he wants to know why mentally disturbed people are still able to get guns. why? why are they? >> well, it comes down to this point when we did our year-long investigation. one of the mothers that i met whose child was killed at sandy hook, she said when we're talking about guns, it's too late. and what we found was pretty awful in terms of the handling of mental illness. families are shut out from treatment, we found there's a critical bed shortage and treatment options, not enough beds and providers. we found that it's difficult to get effective treatment. it's difficult. we need police to be treating these things and we found that a lot of federal resources are not
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christopher dobbs from the mary rose trust, a marine archaeologist and also an expert on ancient ship wrecks. thanks for being with us, christopher. what do you think, could this be it? >> it's very exciting. this was obviously a really, really important ship for the whole of western civilization. but the key thing, is it actually the right ship? many people thought they've found this ship before. it's very difficult. not to be cynical, because if it really is that ship it's extremely exciting. >> how do you begin to verify whether or not it's that ship? >> a number of things. firstly see ing ifit ll lly seet size, date, cargo and the right ball ballast. it's probably the best candidate we've ever had for this ship. that doesn't necessarily mean that that's it. >> we're just looking at pictures now of divers looking at what we hope, i guess, is the santa maria. it's so difficult, surely, to tell, christopheroking at. >> yes, it is. one of the problems is this ran aground in fairy shallow water. unlike the mary rose that was in deeper water, in silt. it survived very well. because it was in shallow water it would have been buffeted by storms. if they have found that ship it's got to be excavated to the highest standards if it is excavated. it's up to the haitian government to decide how best to proceed with any work on a site like this. >> mentioning the government of haiti, truly exciting news for them. i mean, this is a country that's just had desperate times recently. and what a find this would be for the people of haiti. >> it is. it's very exciting. but, to me, it's really important that this sort of discovery, this sort of ship, this sort of heritage, this sort of treasure, except there won't be much treasure onboard, it really belongs to everybody. you know, the whole world. particularly the haitians. there has been a tendency over the years for some of the smaller, newer government
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christopher bailey is doing. stay with us on "countdown." 6:56 a.m. in london. ♪ >> first credit suisse, now the np. -- bnp. reporty's first earnings on the christopher bailey, the luxury labels latest numbers are breaking now. germany's central bank sends a warning. the bank sees risks. alcatel lucent looking for tel aviv for its latest research center. >> israel because it is the innovation country and we are the innovative company. it makes a lot of sense. >> welcome to "countdown" everybody. it has just gone 7:00 in london. a number of companies in london today. burberry, the first numbers coming through. this is under the leadership of christophere first time. .e are getting those numbers caroline hyde is here with us to take us through the details. >> beat across the board, sales up 17%. half it is up eight percent -- profit is up eight percent. this is for their last fiscal year. overall, it is looking like a .retty stellar for burberry this is the biggest luxury brand in the u.k., record sales and profits. christopher bailey remains creative director as well. seen isare going to be the focus on beauty. they will be energized by the opportunities ahead from unlocking japan and they will be ending -- to accelerate beauty to deliver distinctive experiences. this has been interesting tactic. unlike will jacob anna, armani and gabana, they're going to do it themselves. they aim to grow sales 25% for beauty this year. the top 10 beauty brands and they have gotten to grow fivefold. via amazon,ng this via alibaba. >> if you cannot beat them, join them approach. dominatehey will do is that space and lure in the younger generations. ,
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. >> christopher buckley, look at the best jacket photo ever in history. christophertner that we really are going to have to focus on energy and all those oil company execs from bp and exxonmobil are going to have to quit going to russia for a while, because i think it's going to be a tough showdown. >> thomas? >> the creator and writer of "veep," he actually wrote that whole white house correspondents dinner spoof with julia louis-dreyfus and joe biden. got a tip on that, but he's a great guy. he's really got his finger on the pulse of d.c. and he's british. >> and he's british! >> who'd have thunk. >> from a crumbling empire. >> crumbles. >> hey, if it's way too early, mark halperin, what time is it? >> it is "morning joe." right now stay tuned for mr. charles todd. >> i love charles, he's in charge. >>> gone to carolina in my mind. vulnerable democrat kay hagan could find out today who's her midterm matchup. will the gop establishment prevail or will a last-minute house call force a senate primary runoff? >>> plus, m
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christopher michaels martinez. he was 20 years old. he was a sophomore english major who dreamed of going to law school and following in his parents' footsteps. >> our son christopher martinez and six others are dead. chris was a really great kid. ask anyone who knew him. his death has left our family lost and broken. why did chris die? chris died because of craven irresponsible politicians and the nra. they talk about gun rights. what about chris' right to live? when will this insanity stop? when will enough people say, stop this madness, we don't have to live like this! too many have died. we should say to ourselves, not one more! >> not one more. richard martinez's plea after his son christopher and five college aged students were killed during a shooting rampage in the town of isla vista, california friday. joining me now tonight is richard martinez. first of all, richard, i want to say of course, i am story for the loss of your son, our thoughts and prayers are with you here, we appreciate you spending a little time with us during a difficult period tonight. >> thank you, ari. >> why don't we start, if you would, tell us, about christopher. i see you have his picture there. i know you are going through a grieving process and you have also talked about activism. but first what would you look to -- you like us to know about your son? >> well, this picture was taken when he was in high school. and chris was an incredible kid. and i was -- surprised -- i don't know if you know anything about the memorial that just took place here. i understood it was primarily for the students here, and i was very surprised at how many of my friends and how many, well, they were chris' friends,
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christopher jackson is with the international federation of red cross and red crescent societies. they have a team there on the ground now. he joins us by phone from kabul. christopher, thanks for your time. this took place in a very remote region of afghanistan. what's the latest information you have on the death toll and status of any rescues? >> reporter: good afternoon. well, as far as we can tell, the death toll is essentially an estimate. it's estimated on the fact that 300 houses were buried under these two landslides. and if you calculate that there's seven people per household, it brings you to that number which you just mentioned. of course, this can't be confirmed until the missing people are, shall we say, sort out and calculated. i think the death toll so far is about 300, in other words, 300 people to have died. but clearly, we have to expect this number to increase. this is an area where there's about 7,000 families, which brings us to about -- let me see, if there's 7,000 -- hang on, sorry, 1,000 families live in this area, so it's about 7,000 people altogether. >> you're there helping in this effort. just describe to us the conditions. is more rain expected? could there be more landslides? >> yes, this is the season for the rains, it is a season for the floods, especially in this northern area. the afghan red crescent, who we support, does reposition a lot of aid assistance, and we have been obviously busy in other areas of the north in supporting operations which have affected. i have to emphasize, this happens every year, so they're all prepared for it. it just happens in this remote area of the northeast. these landslides have had a devastating effect on the population of ta couple of vill. elsewhere, we have a usual death rate of 100 people or so. more importantly is to remember the living, who we have to assist in the end, and lots of people have been displaced. in this same area where we have these floods, we have such a large number of people displaced. but overall, in the floods of this year, some 67,000 people have been affected, all of which will need our support in the near future. >> absolutely. and even more tragic that, you know, neighbors from a nearby village ran over to help those affected by the first landslide when the second landslide hit. we've been speaking there with christopher jackson with the international federation of red cross and red crescent societies. thank you very much for your time, and certainly, good luck in your efforts there. the weather, as we just discussed, is not cooperating with the aid effort. let's bring in meteorologist samantha mohr now. she has the forecast for the region. sam? >> yeah, as mr. jackson was just saying, errol, it is the rainy season, and just this past week, we had five different systems bring in accumulating rain here, and it really tallied up. where you see the green and the bright blue colors, these are the radar estimates showing that we had some 100 to 150 millimeters of rain during the past seven days. and here was the timing on all of that, as the atmosphere moistened up and we saw a convective system move in on monday during the middle of the day, then another one on tuesday, and then didn't see much of a break, because on wednesday, another system moved on in. and then thursday's system moved through rather qu
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christopher porter- bailey is one of three people facing sentencing in this attack. at 6:00, we'll have emily's reaction to the sentence the judge handed down and her message to christopher porter- bailey. reporting live in san francisco, david stevenson, ktvu channel 2news. >>> the manhunt is over. a former calfire battalion chief who has been on the run for more than two weeks has now been arrested for the stabbing death of his girlfriend. orrville mo fleming is accused of killing his 26-year-old girlfriend in sacramento earlier this month. the sacramento county sheriffs detectives arrested him near where his pickup truck was abandoned in elk grove. we are working to get more information on how authorities discovered him. we'll have an update for you, coming up at 5:30. >>> all lanes are clear tonight after a mess on interstate 880 in oakland this afternoon. news chopper 2 was over the crash on northbound 880 near the broadway off ramp, involving a big rig and three other vehicles. officers tell us one of those vehicles was stolen. traffic was also backed up on the southbound lanes of 880, near fifth street. that's where a truck spilled a load of slabs onto the freeway
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christopher martinez says. you know richard martinez was the father and christopher was a son and and. it seems to me like this was this was what was needed in america that that was what. you know after newtown we had the thoughtful parents we had the thoughtful president we had a respectable debate in congress and we're talking about killing people with guns and insane rates. that no other country on earth is experiencing and all because the lobby organization for the for the arms for a readily wealthy arms industry is shoving this stuff down our throats and my you think i'm on to something i think you know how you feel it's like the majority of americans feel how something as simple as a background check for example could make it out of the u.s. senate is an outrage and i think mr martinez were fed up and once it personally affected him like so many of us eighty six of us on a daily basis were killed by gunfire and now we just had one father you know hit that perfect chord that perfect note that really shook people and will hopefully really shake people here in congress to ultimately
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christopher stevens and the three other americans who perished with him. but for the republicans again and again today to get out there and make this stuff up is really sacrilegious to the memory of christopher stevens. >> with all due respect, that's just a load of crap. >> a load of crap? >> we're not making anything up.. >> yes, you are! >> no, we're not. we're looking at the same stuff you're looking at. it may be a matter of interpretation or opinion, but the white house in handling this thing from the very beginning has botched it. and this memo, this particular paragraph that he started the segment off with, we've got to put this story, this is just about the video, and susan, just make sure you tell everybody that we're not failing on our policy, that we're doing this the right way, or it could be as nice and easy packaged at david put it. >> there's no doubt, gentlemen, that the white house has botched this up. why didn't they put out this memo with all the earlier stuff they put out? why do they let a rolling disclosure occur? which is what i said for years in politics. the one way to lose your credibility is have information leak out point and point. this was a foia thing, but it
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christopher and six other students were killed there. it did not have a tornado shelter. the new building will, but christopher's mom won't stop, she says until there's one in every school in the state. >> it's not a matter of if a tornado's going to come to oklahoma again, it's a matter of when it's going to happen. >> preparing for the future with painful lessons learned the past year. residential storm shelter permits increased dramatically. 8600 i should since the tornado compared to just a few hundred the year before. back to you. >> those images are incredible, but is the city taking step to say deal with this kind of disaster just in case it happens again? >> they are, del. in fact, just a few weeks ago, the city council passed stricter building codes, homes now required to be build to withstand 135-mile per hour winds, about the equivalent of an ef3 tornado. previously, they were only required to withstand winds of 90 miles per hour. >> sarah, thank you very much. interesting that that school is almost already been rebuilt. >> it looks a lot more solid now. a severe storm was caught on tape near the nebr
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christopher columbus sailed the ocean blue. the man who found the wreckage described it as the mount everest of shipwrecks. okay. he knows a lot about christopher columbus. how sure is he that this really is this ship? >> he's pretty darn sure. there's a lot of evidence out there, and i should say, should note we're doing this under the watchful gaze of mr. columbus himself here in columbus circle in new york. he's pretty sure. there's the physical evidence they found under the water. the rocks you're looking at right now are actually what he believes is the ballast pile from the ship. there is -- the diary of columbus himself. here he is talking about some of the evidence that he has. >> we're looking under 20 feet of clear water for a big pile of stones, that's about 40 feet long and 20 feet wide. which would be the fingerprint of the santa maria. >> so those stones are the ballast weight for that ship. and he believes that the size of it, the weight of it is about right for the santa maria, fairly small ship for even its day. but the big eureka moment for him is when they found a cannon basically, something called a long bar, a cannon with both ends open. he believes that indicates that this is most likely the santa maria. now they have to go in and prove it. he thinks it could take at best six months, probably longer to work out all of the details to get in there and actually be looking at the lombard right now, to see if they can find any trinkets, neg that they think columbus may have been taking back to spain when he was getting ready to leave the world for the first time. amazing story. >> miguel marquez, thank you very much. >>> coming up here, a man shoots and kills a police officer who responded to a domestic dispute. the shooter dies, not by police gunfire, but in this massive explosion. the house fire. we'll tell you how the whole thing went down. the day we rescued riley was a truly amazing day. he was a matted mess in a small cage. so that was our first task, was getting him to wellness. without angie's list, i don't know if we could have found all the services we needed for our riley. from contractors and doctors to dog sitters and landscapers, you can find it all on angie's list. we found riley at the shelter, and found everything he needed at angie's list. join today at angieslist.com for $175 dollars a month? so our business can be on at&t's network yup. all five of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line anytime for 15 bucks a month. low dues... great terms... let's close. new at&t mobile share value plans. our best value plans ever for business. how did i know? well, i didn't really. see, i figured low testosterone would decrease my sex drive... but when i started losing energy and became moody... that's when i had an honest conversation with my doctor. we discussed all the symptoms... then he gave me some blood tests. showed it was low t. that's it. it was a number -- not just me. 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[ male announcer ] in a clinical study, over 80% of treated men had their t levels restored to normal. talk to your doctor about all your symptoms. get the blood tests. change your number. turn it up. androgel 1.62%. >>> welcome back. you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. donald sterling's cluesive interview with anderson cooper has sparked all kinds of outrage and utter display, not for just an awkward apology for making racist statements about african-americans, but because he attacked beloved l.a. man, magic johnson, again. you heard the comments moments ago. in response, magic's long-time agent and friend said this to the "l.a. times." johnson is the exact opposite of the way sterling portrayed him on "anderson cooper 360." i've known ervin since 1979, and his whole mission in life has been to create business opportunities in urban america and to be charitable. rosen is the executive vp of the los angeles dodgers. let's talk about this with my friend in the studio. >> nice to be in atlanta with you. >> so you were in l.a. for nine years. you know magic. you've known magic for a few years. >> yes. >> you've watched all this unfold. you've been talking to your friends back home. >> i've been a hearing a lot from the folks from los angeles. it was interesting to watch it through the eyes of myself, of somebody who lived in los angeles for nearly a decade, covered that city extensively in the news. covered things that magic was involved in. and was in the communities that he was directly affecting. i've heard from people -- donald sterling was completely off-base. they're shocked, and just the fact that he got it plain wrong about magic. look at the things he has done. >> not just a little bit wrong. >> not just a little bit wrong. aside from the racial comments, but the attacks on magic. there are two separate things that are completely combined. look at his foundation. you know, we could even pull up some information that we have here. look, back in '91 is when he started the foundation, working with hiv awareness, and campaigning to get more people tested. he cites the fact that his own coming out prompted a lot of people to get out and get tested. it was the same year that he announced he was hiv positive. awareness testing. mobile clinics going into the community. still doing that. one of the challenge that many people expected him to fail before our eyes, he has thrived. he looks so healthy. and he is concerned because he looks so healthy, other people would think that they would do just as well with hiv. and he says that it's something that proves there's still more work to be done with hiv and aids awareness. >> he lived in l.a. you went to magic 24. >> right, in south l.a. scholarships. this is a thing that made a lot of people really upset, is that the fact that donald sterling made the claims that magic has done nothing for people of color. if you go into south los angeles, and you look around, the infrastructure that is there in terms of some of the businesses, that previously wouldn't go into los angeles, are there. the starbucks. he's since divested of them. the 24-hour fitness. this is where i worked out in the san gabriel valley. burger king, the movie theaters, one in harlem and one in los angeles. he put these businesses in south l.a., proving to these companies, you can do business in these communities and they will be supported. that influence is still found there. there's a chili's in englewood. >> quickly, so l.a., either lakers, clippers. >> well, see, my better half is a lakers fan. and i'm a clipper fan. and this is the thing. the clippers are always seen as sort of the jv team to their staples center, you know, roommates. for a long time, sterling was never seen as somebody that was taking the team seriously. you know, they never thought of him as a serious owner. but the fans are devout and devoted to the team, through thick and thin. and with cp 3 and blake griffin coming in, it's more exciting down there, if you're a clipper fan. this is not what they need, this is not what the fans need, and certainly not what the nba needs. >> i wanted to hear how you perceived it. >> people in los angeles, saying in the "l.a. times," this is not -- this is not l.a. >> thank you. >>> coming up here, reminder, magic johnson speaking exclusively to cnn, definitely tune in tonight. this is happening. we're actually sitting down shortly this afternoon. magic with anderson. he will be speaking. we'll hear this whole interview tonight, "ac 360," 8:00 p.m. only on cnn. >>> coming up, stunning video, this house explosion, happened to be caught live as the news helicopter was hovering over this home in new hampshire. it's unreal to watch. it happened minutes after an officer went inside, was shot and killed. that explosion shook that entire neighborhood. the officer responding, was there for a domestic dispute reportedly between a father and his son. neighbors were just stunned by what happened. >> you could see our house, saw the explosion go up. stuff blow over to our house. >> not only did we hear it, we saw it simultaneously. very frightening. >> it is believed that the gunman died in the fire, or the explosion afterwards. state and federal authorities are investigating that. >>> just ahead, legendary deejay vanishes. frantically searching for him. the fear now, that his wife has smuggled him out of the country. yep, smuggled him. more on that bizarre story. >>> we're talking beyonce's family drama and what actually it takes to break a story like this, coming up. sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering so, i'm walking down the street, sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering just you know walking, sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering and i found myself in the middle of this parade honoring america's troops. which is actually quite fitting because geico has been serving the military for over 75 years. aawh no, look, i know this is about the troops and not about me. right, but i don't look like that. who can i write a letter to about this? geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. improving everything from booking to baggage claim. we're raising the bar on flying and tomorrow we'll raise it yet again. without standard leather. you are feeling exhilarated with front-wheel drive. you are feeling powerful with a 4-cylinder engine. [ male announcer ] open your eyes... to the 6-cylinder, 8-speed lexus gs. with more standard horsepower than any of its german competitors. this is a wake-up call. ♪ >>> a couple crazy in love. on top of the world. ♪ but now, the intensely private jay-z and beyonce find themselves in an apparent family feud, that it now has its own hash tag on twitter. #with jay-z. this video, watch it with me, to the curiosity here, the woman on the right throwing the punches, according to tmz, the younger sister of beyonce, and the man in the white tux jacket according to tmz jay-z. beyonce's husband since 2008. but even gets kicked. never hits. never strikes back. the woman beside him on the left, see, right there next to jay-z, she never interconvenience. tmz said that is beyonce. the tabloid website also reports at one point the apparent bodyguard stopped the elevator on the 12th floor as this whole scene played out. the ugly episode reportedly happened during one of the most glamorous nights for the a-list. the hotel is investigating the apparent security breach with, quote, the utmost urgency. the couple and salange knowles are declining to comment. beyonce and jay-z were all smiles here. joining me to chat about it, brian seltzer and john. you're in the grocery store and you see the celebrity magazines, and you think, celebrities are just like us, they shop, get coffee. they also have family drama, right? >> that's right, brooke. this is really humanizing this couple. i call them the prime ministers of privacy. they don't share a lot about their life unless they're putting it in their music. sa lange likes to buck the system. she's like the latoya jackson of the family, if you will. it's a com bustible situation. she's mad. now you see how she acts when she's mad. >> what i really noticed, to follow up on that, when you see beyonce, in this elevator, she doesn't flinch, which makes me wonder that this has happened before. >> either she's accustomed to her sister flying off the handle, or she thought, this dress i have on costs so much money, girl, you're not going to make me have to pay for this. >> could be. brian, listen, when it comes to tmz, this sparks an interesting conversation in our morning meeting. it got us thinking, they have broken multiple major stories. you have the story we're all talking about, the sterling audio. michael jackson's death. can you braexplain to our viewe how much they pay? >> i wish i knew how much they pay. i think there are a wide variety of circumstances, no two stories are alike. in some cases they're not paying for the material. in other cases they probably are paying for the material. they might not be paying the person directly involved, they might be paying a third party. they have lots of different sources in hollywood. it all comes back to relationships. the same kind of relationship that it takes to get magic johnson, as anderson cooper has tonight, the same kind of relationship it took for edward snowden to share his top-secret nsa files. tmz has those relationships in hollywood. >> i need to pull away because we have to go to the white house as the president himself is about to bestow quite the honor, the u.s. medal of honor on a former u.s. army sergeant. let's listen. >> renew -- our de voice to our country. the men who fought that day. those who now rest in eternal peace. increase our faith, oh god, that we may live lives worthy of honor, that we recognize today. we pray all this in your holy name, amen. >> amen. >> good afternoon, everybody. please be seated. welcome to the white house. it has been said that true courage is a perfect sensibility of the measure of danger. more than 12 years with our nation at war, the men and women of our armed forces have known the measure of danger that comes with military service. but year after year, tour after tour, they have displayed a selfless willingness to incur it. by stepping forward, by volunteering, by serving and sacrificing greatly to keep us all safe. today our troops are coming home. by the end of this year, our war in afghanistan will be over. and we'll welcome home this generation, the 9/11 generation, that has proven itself to be one of america's greatest. and today we pay tribute to a soldier who embodies the courage of his generation. the young man who was a freshman in high school when the twin towers fell. and who just five years later became an elite paratrooper with the legendary 173rd airborne. today we present our nation's highest military decoration, the medal p honor, to sergeant kyle j. white. kyle is the second sky soldier to be recognized with the medal of honor for service above and beyond the call of duty in afghanistan. today he joins staff sergeant salvatore junta, and members of the medal of honor society, some of whom are with us here today. we have a lot of vips here. i'd like to acknowledge the most important, kyle's parents, cheryl and curt, and kyle's girlfriend helen. i am told that back home, in bonnie lake, washington, when kyle wanted to enlist, at first he had set his sights on the marines. but his dad, kurt, is a veteran of the army special forces. so i'm told there was a difference of opinion. and i suspect a good family discussion. as commander in chief, i cannot take sides in this debate. bottom line is, kyle joined the army. and in doing so, he carried on his family's proud tradition of service, which found its expression on a november day over six years ago. across afghanistan, base commanders were glued to the radios, listening as american forces fought back an ambush in the rugged mountains. one battalion commander remembered that all of afghanistan was listening as a soldier on the ground described what was happening. they knew him by his call sign, charlie 16 romeo. we know it was kyle, who was only 20 years old, and 21 months into his military service. earlier that afternoon, kyle and the 13 members of his team, along with a squad of afghan soldiers, left an afghan village after meeting with elders. the americans made their way back up a steep hill, single file along a narrow path, and cliff rising to their right, and the slope of rocky shale dropping on their left. they knew not to stop, that they had to keep moving. they were headed into an area known as ambush alley. and that's when a single shot rang out. then another. and then an entire canyon erupted with bullets coming from what seemed like every direction. it was as if kyle said the whole valley lit up. the platoon returned fire. kyle quickly emptied a full magazine, but as he went to load a second, an enemy grenade exploded and knocked him unconscious. he came to with his face pressed against a rock. as he moved to get up, enemy rounds hit, just inches from his head, sending shrapnel and rock shards across his face. most of the unit had been forced to slide down the cliff to the valley below, but kyle saw a teammate, specialist mccain schilling, trying to treat his own shattered arm. later came to be called the smallest tree on earth. i'm sure that's how it felt. kyle sprinted through enemy fire and began applying a tourniquet. gunfire shredded that tree. kyle saw another man down, marine sergeant phillip box, in the open, 30 feet behind them. too injured to reach cover. kyle remembers thinking it's just a matter of time before i'm dead. if that's going to happen, i might as well help someone while i can. with bullets impacting all around him, kyle ran to box and began to pull the injured marine to cover. worried he would expose box to more gunfire, kyle retreated. enemy rounds followed him. he ran out again pulling box a little farther. once more he retreated to distract the enemy fire. once more he went out. over and over thinking to himself, i'm not going to make it. kyle could feel the pressure of the rounds going by him. miraculously, they never hit him, not once. one of the teammates said it was as if kyle was moving faster than a speeding bullet. finally kyle succeeded in pulling his comrade to cover. tragically, there on that cliff, sergeant box succumbed to his wounds. with his final moments, this american marine certainly found solace in kyle white, the american soldier who to the very end was there by his side. now, that other injured soldier was still out there. he had sustained another injury, this time to his knee. kyle ran out once more to cane's side. kyle ripped off his own belt for a tourniquet and soon got his hands on a working radio. the voice of charlie 16 romeo came into base. crouching behind that lone tree, kyle began calling in air strikes to take out enemy positions. kyle stayed with specialist schilling as night fell. he was too badly injured to move. kyle was starting to feel the fog on his own concussion set in. but he knew that he was cane's best chance to get out alive, so kyle took charge and ordered the afghan soldiers to form a security perimeter. he called in a medevac and made sure cane and the other injured were safely on board. and only then did kyle allow himself to be lifted out. as the health pulled away, kyle looked out the window, watching the darkness as they pulled away from that single tree on the cliff. when you're deployed, he later said, those people become your family. what you really care about is, i want to get this guy to the left and to the right home. this family was tested that day. not a single one of them escaped without injury. and six brave americans gave their lives, their last full measure of devotion. and we remember them today, sergeant phillip a. box, captain matthew c. ferrera, specialist joseph m. moncore, sergeant jeffrey s. mersman, corporal lester g. rokay, and kyle's best friend corporal shawn j.a. longsmith. some of their families are here today. i've asked them to please stand so we can recognize their extraordinary sacrifice. [ applause ] >> the legacy of these fallen heroes endurs, and the strength of their unit. 14 men, forever brothers in arms. we're proud to welcome those who fought so valiantly that day. specialist cane schilling, the soldier that kyle saved, and members of the second battalion, chosen company of the 173rd airborne brigade, would you please stand. [ applause ] >> we honor kyle white for his extraordinary actions on that november day, but his journey from that day to this speaks to the story of his generation. kyle completed the rest of a 15-month deployment in afghanistan. he came back home and trained other young paratroopers as they prepared to deploy. when he completed his service, kyle decided to pursue a different dream, and with the help of the post-9/11 gi bill, he went to college and graduated, and today works for a bank in charlotte, north carolina. when kyle walks into the office every day people see a man in a suit headed to work. that's how it should be, a proud veteran walking into his community, contributing his talents and skills to the progress of our nation. kyle will tell you that the transition to civilian life, in dealing with the post-traumatic stress hasn't always been easy. more than six years later, yhe can still hear the images of that battle. he wakes up thinking about his battle buddies. if you look closely at that man in the suit on his way to work, you'll notice the piece of war under his shirt sleeve, the bracelet with the names of his six fallen comrades who will always be with him. their sacrifice motivates me, he says, to be the best i can be. everything i do in my life is done to make them proud. kyle, members of chosen company, you did your duty. and now it's time for america to do ours. after more than a decade of war, to welcome you home with the support and the benefits and opportunities that you've earned. you make us proud. and you make -- you motivate all of us to be the best we can be, as americans, as a nation to uphold our sacred obligations to your generation, and all who have faced that measure of danger, and the willingness to incur it. may god bless you, and may your courage inspire and sustain us always. and may god continue to bless the united states of america. with that, i'd like to have the citation read. >> the president of the united states of america authorized by act of congress march 3, 1863, has awarded in the name of congress the medal of honor to specialist kyle j. white, united states army. specialist kyle j. white distinguished himself by acts of gallantry at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty, while serving as a radio telephone operator with company c, second battalion airborne, 503rd infantry regiment, 173rd airborne brigade during combat operations against an armed enemy in afghanistan on november 9, 2007. on that day, specialist white and his comrades were returning to an outpost from ashurah with the village elders, as the soldiers traversed a narrow path surrounded by mountainous rocky terrain they were ambushed by enemy forces from elevated positions. pinned against a steep mountain face, specialist white and his fellow soldiers were completely exposed to enemy fire. specialist white returned fire and was briefly knocked unconscious when a rocket propelled grenade impacted near him. when he regained consciousness, another round impacted near him, embedding small pieces of sh rab nell in his face. shaking off his wounds, specialist white noticed one of his comrades lying wounded nearby. without hesitation, specialist white exposed himself to enemy fire in order to reach the soldier and provide medical aid. after applying a tourniquet, specialist white moved to an injured marine providing aid and comfort until the marine succumbed to his wounds. specialist white then returned to the soldier and discovered that he had been wounded again. applying his own belt as an additional kurn ket, specialist white was able to stem the flow of blood and save the soldier's life. noticing that his and the other soldiers' radios were inoperative, specialist white exposed himself to enemy fire yet again in order to secure a radio from a deceased comrade. he then provided information and updates to friendly forces, allowing precision air strikes to stifle the enemy's attack and ultimately permitting medical evacuation aircraft to rescue him, his fellow soldiers, marines, and afghan army soldiers. specialist kyle j. white, extraordinary heroism, and selflessness, above and beyond the call of duty, are in keeping with the highest tradition of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, company c, second battalion airborne, 503rd infantry regiment, 173rd airborne brigade in the united states army. [ applause ] >> let us pray. to god's gracious mercy and protect us, we commit ourselves, inspired by the actions of sergeant kyle white, strengthened by divine province, that we go our way in peace. be of good courage, we hold fast to that which is good, and enter no evil, no one evil for evil, rather there to be strengthened in the fainthearted and support the weak, we help the wounded and honor all persons. the blessing of god be with us today we pray in his holy name, amen. >> amen. >> that concludes the ceremony. but not the celebration. i hear the food here is pretty good. and the drinks are free. who gave a big shout on that? i heard somebody. but i hope all of you enjoy the hospitality of the white house. i hope we all remember once again those who have fallen. we are grateful to the families who are here. and to kyle, and all who serve in america's armed forces, we want you to know that we will always be grateful for your extraordinary service to our country. thank you very much, everybody. have a great afternoon. [ applause ] >> so as the celebration and the eating commences there at the white house, jake tapper, let me bring you in. you talked to a lot of u.s. troops. i think listening to the president, this is now the seventh recipient of the u.s. medal of honor. what jumped out at me, what the president said, this image of this hero, yet here he is, with the gi bill, post-9/11, goes to college, he's now working at a bank in charlotte. throws on a suit each and every day. just to think that people see him in a suit and have no idea what he did in november of 2007. >> it is remarkable. and this is the tenth medal of honor given to somebody for actions in afghanistan. some of those medals, of course, were given posthumously. of these ten, nine of them have gone to soldiers operating in just two provinces in eastern afghanistan, kunar province and nearstan province, where some of the heaviest fighting has been. if it weren't for the quick actions of sergeant white, then what would have happened would have been that the 14 troops and marines attacked that day, ambushed that day, by locals in ku nar province, the death toll would have been much higher than six. possibly including wiping out the entire platoon. it's a very tough part of the war. it's a very tough part of the world. and of course, we see the actions -- we see the emotions these guys feel, where they're focusing almost entirely on the guys who didn't make it back. >> yeah. just reading the stars and stripes article, sergeant white was asked about the excitement of this day and this honor. of course, it's outweighed by the cost of losing friends and colleagues. keeping that in mind, as the celebration at the white house begins. jake tapper, thank you very much. >> thank you, brooke. >>> now this. >>> this is cnn breaking news. >>> as we continue on, we begin with more breaking news. i'm brooke baldwin. thank you for being with me. first, out of baltimore, maryland, someone has crashed a truck into a tv station. we know that evacuations are under way. we know reportedly this individual in his landscaping vehicle, reportedly still inside this tv station, getting reports from the news director and from the executive producer at wmar tv there, all of their people, all of their colleagues are evacuated, are accounted for. so no injuries, at least reportedly at this point. but according to some of those employees, and you see the s.w.a.t. members and authorities walking in, trying to figure out what is going on, according to these reports this individual, after he smashed through the front of the station, he was yelling things like, i am god. we're working on that story. also trying to stay in touch with the employees to figure out what is going on and why. so stay with me on that one. >>> also breaking right now, a ground stop, still under way for chicago's two big airports, because of an incident involving smoke. rene marsh, let me go to you in washington, d.c. what do we know at this point? >> we can tell you we've been watching the cancellations and delays, brooke. an hour ago, when we spoke, we see the number of cancellation and delays just increase. right now, close to 500 cancellations and delays for flights departing chicago o'hare, as well as arrivals as well, too. we're seeing those numbers continue to climb as this ground stop is still in place. here's what we know. we know an faa air traffic control center that handles intermediate air traffic, essentially there was smoke in that building. we don't know what caused the smoke. but we know everyone had to be evacuated. once that happened, they had to transfer the duties to a different air traffic control tower to take over the duties there. while that transfer was happening, they've put in place this ground stop. flights lined up on the tarmac there and not going anywhere. we're still trying to get some information on when this ground stop will be lifted, and what caused that smoke in air traffic control. but until then, if you're going in or out of chicago, it's a nightmare situation for you at this point, brooke. >> patience. thank you. >> we'll do. >>> now to alec baldwin. he is such a talented actor, but he also can't seem to stay out of trouble. today he was arrested in new york city after biking the wrong way down fifth avenue, and then on top of that, he got a ticket for disorderly conduct. poppy harlow is working this for us today. poppy, what happened? >> he was biking against traffic. you can't do that here on the street in new york city on 16th street and fifth avenue lower manhattan. pulled over by the cops. they took him into custody. they handcuffed him. apparently he didn't have i.d. on him so they took him in. he got two summons, one for riding his bike in the wrong direction, and also one for disorderly conduct. the nypd is telling us in part that alec baldwin got belligerent, arguing with police, using profanity. also, a law enforcement source telling us here at cnn that alec baldwin was sort of yelling at some of the officers saying, quote, give me the summons already. and then at the desk agent, at the precinct, who are these officers that they don't know who i am. alec baldwin's camp is saying he is back home with his family. he's obviously been released. he's going to have to appear in court on july 24th for this one. >> and as we know, he has done in the past, he hopped twon to twitter. and what did he say? >> within a matter of minutes, three tweets. let's go through them one by one. the first one, talking about the officer that arrested him. officer ma reno arrested me and handcuffed me for going the wrong way on fifth avenue. just a few minutes later, he tweets, meanwhile, photographers outside my home, once again terrified my daughter and nearly hit her with a camera. the police did nothing. then the third and final tweet so far, we haven't seen a tweet in about two hours, he said new york city is mismanaged carnival of stupidity that is desperate for revenue and anxious to criminalize behavior once thought benign. brooke, it's interesting this is coming now, he took to twitter with these three sort of rapid-fire tweets. but this comes from a man who had this big essay in "new york magazine" in february saying i'm done with public life. forget it. i want to show you an excerpt from that long essay that he told to "new york magazine," because it talked to new york specifically. he wrote, quote, i probably have to move out of new york. i just can't live in new york anymore. i want my newest child to have as normal and decent a life i can provide. new york doesn't seem the place for that anymore. he also said in the magazine, i don't want to be mr. show business anymore. he's had numerous run-ins with paparazzi. also, he was accused of shouting an anti-gay slur at a photographer, according to tmz. we all remember that. he later apologized. after that, his show on msnbc was canceled. they called it a mutual parting of ways. but this, the latest from alec baldwin. we'll see if we get more from his camp. but right now we have these tweets and we know he's back with his family. >> poppy harlow, thank you very much. >>> coming up next, let's talk about that donald sterling exclusive sit-down, that interview with anderson cooper. it began with an apology, a mea culpa, which is what we probably expected. but then the clippers owner discussed everything, from plantation owners, to african-american philanthropy. and that included a direct attack on magic johnson. coming up next, we'll tell you what magic johnson is saying now, and how people in los angeles are responding. ♪ [ girl ] my mom, she makes underwater fans that are powered by the moon. ♪ she can print amazing things, right from her computer. [ whirring ] [ train whistle blows ] she makes trains that are friends with trees. ♪ my mom works at ge. ♪ my mom works at ge. honestly, the off-season isn't i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go! alright, fellas. alright, russ. back to work! >>> welcome back. i'm brooke baldwin. donald sterl was supposed to be apologizing to nba fans and those offended by his racist rant. so he sat down and talked exclusively to anderson cooper. but the interview, very quickly, took a turn and when sterling started in on nba hall of famer magic johnson for the second time, you just have to hear this. we'll play parts of the rant. sterling suggested johnson was trying to steal the clippers from him. here he was. >> why did you say don't say anything? >> he just said, wait, be patient, i'll help you. we'll work it out. >> why do you think he said that? >> i think he wanted me to do nothing so he could buy the team. he thought maybe the whole thing would be resolved in two weeks. what has he done? can you tell me? big magic johnson. what has he done? >> he's a business person. >> he's got aids. did he do any business? i'd like -- did he help anybody in south l.a.? >> he has hiv, he doesn't have full-bone aids. >> he goes to every city and has sex with every girl. and then he has aids. is that somebody we want to respect and tell our kids about? i think he should be ashamed of himself. i think he should go in the background. what does he do for the black people? he doesn't do anything. you call up and say, well, you know -- >> he's opened a lot of businesses in inner city neighborhoods. >> the jewish people have a company, and it's for people who want to borrow money and no interest. they want to give him a fishing pole. we want to help people. if they don't have any money, we'll loan it to you. you don't have interest, one day you'll pay us back. i'm just telling you, he does nothing. it's all talk. >> are you saying african-americans don't contribute to african-american communities as much as jewish people do? >> there's no african-american -- never mind. i'm sorry. you know, i -- they all want to play golf with me. everybody wants to be with me. >> the second round of attacks on magic johnson has sparked all kinds of outrage, and calls for sterling's ouster. we are talking to sam mitchell here in the studio with me. a hot minute here, sir. nice to see you. let's go straight to los angeles to stephanie elam, who is there. when we hear sterling say that magic johnson has done mog for the city of los angeles, just on shear facts alone, that is wrong with a capital w. >> oh, the numbers never lie, brooke. that's the thing, you can go and see what's documented by what he's done. he's helped to revitalize this city, and parts of the city that did not have that. despite he played with the lakers and was a bigger than life star for the team, as an afterthought, he won a gold medal in the olympics. he's also brought businesses to places people did not expect it. like starbucks, for example, a great example. there are starbucks in south l.a. that no one thought they could put businesses. he showed them, there's money to be made here. same with movie theaters. same with gyms. that sort of business. he made money off of this, but also showing that there is a way to integrate these two issues. you take a look at what he's done with his foundation. the magic johnson foundation. he's been giving out many scholarships, helping people with aids and hiv. he's well documented in doing this. it's not secret. you can find this stuff out. but the fact that he continues to attack him -- you know, that second recording that we heard was also donald sterling, this would make the third time in three different times that we've heard from donald sterling where he's bringing up magic johnson. so he clearly has an issue with him. >> personal, professional, all of the above, we don't know. we're not inside donald sterling's head. stephanie, thank you. former player, former coach, good to see you, sir. >> nice to be here, brooke. >> we're talking commercial break when you were walking out about how, listen, you watched the interview. you watched donald sterling's facial expressions, the words. and whether you think -- some people say it was authentic at first, the mea culpa, but then what was your impression? >> well, at first you like the apology, you like the people he apologized to, the people he offended, the owners, the league, the players, the fans, the sponsors. but at a certain point you need to stop. and just let that be. when he started to explain himself, it just kind of -- then when you start bringing in magic johnson, who is idolized by not just current players, but former players, and all of the things he's done on and off the court. >> we're not donald sterling, but what do you think it is? is it because the lakers -- i know it's a lakers-clippers town. magic johnson led the lakers to so many championships. maybe a jealousy thing. might it be something more? maybe magic would throw his hat in the ring to buy the team? >> it could be jealousy about how much the city of l.a. and the country has for magic johnson. when you look at magic's life, we've all been through things, but you look at the things he's overcome and the man he is today. donald sterling is looking at him saying, why can't people give me the same pass. in his mind. i think he thinks that. but he doesn't realize, your apology has to be sincere. it takes time to prove that you have changed. i think if donald sterling would have just stopped with the apology, and apologized to the people he needed to, and then started living his life that way -- >> he might have been okay. >> exactly. but i think when you start dragging other people in, take accountability for what you've done. it's not about anybody else but you. >> let me ask you about this, though. on the magic note, sterling claims that magic told him to keep quiet. to quote him, magic told him, i'll help you. we'll work it out. what do you think that means? >> coming from donald sterling, who knows. if that's even the case. if magic even had that conversation. he's just all over the place. and i think that's the thing, we're seeing someone -- i'm starting to feel sorry for him, quite frankly. >> are you really? >> well, he just doesn't get it. my mom said she feels sorry for him. they don't get it. because the world is changing. if you're not going to change with it, if you're going to keep those ideas, you're going to feel that way. then the world will pass you by. not only the nba community came out against it, the world so to speak, say there's no place for that. there are people out there with that type of thought process. what it's going to do is, they need to stay on the ground with those thoughts. they don't need to verbalize them. people don't have the patience for it. >> the other variable is the estranged wife shelly sterling. i see you smiling. let me ask you this. she talked to nbc news. i want you to listen, because she's basically claiming, she said i'm fighting for my chunk, my share of the clippers. and she basically slams the league for being sexist. roll it. >> are you saying the nba's being sexist by trying to push you out? >> i really think so. would an owner's wife say the same thing, and would the owner be asked to leave the nba? or would they just say, well, she's only the wife. >> okay. when you are a player, and you are collecting a check, and the owners are the ones handing out the checks, do you think a player really cares if an owner or a partial owner is a male or woman in the league? >> no. the gender of the owner doesn't matter at all. the players coast care less. >> there are no female owners, right? >> no, there's not. let's say looking ahead to october, this whole thing is still locked up in some sort of legal fight, which it very well could be, and you have technically donald sterling as the owner, do you think it would -- as a former coach, thinking about doc rivers, do you think it would show more of a message not just to l.a., but the nation to stay put in l.a. and keep coaching the clippers, or should he leave in protest? >> wow, that's a tough one. that's personal, that's between doc -- i can only tell you what i would probably do. and everyone has their different opinion. i understand that it's hurtful when you work for someone that expresses those types of views. then you have to try to look at the bigger picture and understand what you love and what you've worked for all your life. and the league is doing -- >> hang on, and finish your thought, what would you do? >> me personally, i would not let anybody take away my dream. especially now. it's different. the league stepped in and trying to handle this situation. there's going to be some type of resolution. regardless of what that is, i'm confident that the league is going to do the best to its ability and do the right thing. that being said, once the league does what they have to do, if i'm in that position, then i will probably stay put. because again, i'm not going to let you win. if you feel that way. >> i'm not going to let you win. sam mitchell, thank you, sir. >> thanks for having me. >>> and now, nba commissioner adam silver actually rushed out this statement reading in part, while magic johnson doesn't need me to, i feel compelled on behalf of the nba family to apologize to him that he continues to be dragged into the situation and degraded by such a personal attack. the board of governors is continuing with the process to remove mr. sterling as expeditiously as possible. how is magic johnson himself responding to these comments? anderson cooper interviews him tonight, "ac 360," 8:00 eastern, definitely tune in and watch for that reaction. mr. magic johnson himself. >>> a voice actor vanishes. casey kasem's family, fearing that his wife smuggled him out of the country. we'll talk live with someone who is friends with casey kasem. knows the family drama all too well. that's next. stay with me. [ female announcer ] working together means working efficiently. and a lennox home comfort system may just be the perfect example. its air conditioner works together with the furnace, and that works together with the air purifier, and that works with you by saving you up to half off your heating and cooling bill. call now to get up to 1,700 dollars back or special financing on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 13th. plus download our free lennox mobile app with an energy-savings calculator. ♪ if your current system is 10 years or older, start planning now and take advantage of special financing. so call now to get up to 1,700 dollars back or special financing on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 13th. and download our free lennox mobile app. ♪ lennox. innovation never felt so good. >>> welcome back. i'm brooke baldwin. bottom of the hour. for generations, the smooth of silk voice of casey kasem told us what songs top the charts. >> thank you, and hello again, everybody. welcome to america's top ten. let's turn right to the action on the billboard pop singles chart and count down the ten most popular songs in the land this week. >> but now, dischord among his family members has reached a new level. his grown children cannot find their own father. and fear he has been yanked out of the country, while a court has ordered that authorities look for the 82-year-old radio legend. the judge also ruled that kasem's daughter carrie became his legal caretaker. she and her siblings have complained his new wife has kept all family members from seeing casey. he was first misdiagnosed with parkinson's. >> we had an incredible relationship with my father. we don't ask for money, we're all successful. why she's doing this is beyond me. >> joining me now, law professor, avery friedman, you go back with casey kasem three decades. >> that's right. >> avery, it's wonderful to have you on. i hate the circumstances here. you talked to casey, what, just a number of months ago? how did he seem? >> a little bit longer than that. you could tell that casey kasem is suffering right now. and because of this condition, the children know that they may not have that much longer, brooke. so what they wanted to do is just see their dad. well, the wife has said no. and so the legal issue interestingly enough, i'm not here to do legal analysis, is spousal rights versus children's rights. the wife has whisked him out of the country, whether or not that's true we don't know. what a court did yesterday is grant temporary conservatorship to one of casey's daughters, carrie. now they have access to the medical exam. when the judge asked the wife's lawyer, where is casey kasem? he said, i have no idea. so the judge -- we now are actually involved in a manhunt to find the legend of american radio, casey kasem, to find out where he is, and how he is. >> a manhunt for casey kasem. i never would have thought those words would come out of my mouth. let me tell our viewers at cnn, cnn has tried to reach casey. court documents show jean feels the kids' protests have shattered their lives and disgraced their father and vilified their stepmother. have you met this woman? have you met jean avery? he used to be an actress and people knew her from "cheers"? >> yeah, she was on "cheers" and in "ghostbusters." when one of casey's daughters was getting married, and casey was walking down the aisle, she said, casey, i wasn't invited. that gives you an idea, a mistake on my part. it gives you an idea of how dispersed this family is. and how troubled the situation is. and this has been the most recent of an ongoing battle. so they're going to find casey, and we're going to get him care, and hopefully the children will have access to their dad. >> once they find him, you know, maybe we can have you back on. and you can have the legal hat on and see how it plays out in the court system. thank you so much. >>> and tonight, 9:00 eastern, cnn's bill weir sits down with casey kasem's children as this manhunt for him intensifies. >>> keeping a close look on the baltimore area, as this man, with his landscaping truck, apparently smashed straight into the tv affiliate in the city. and is reportedly still in there. as all these newsroom employees got out of there. they're aok. this news briefing is about to begin. stay with me. cnn's there, live on the ground. in pursuit of all things awesome, amazing, and that's epic, bro, we've forgotten just how good good is. good is setting a personal best before going for a world record. good is swinging to get on base before swinging for a home run. 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[is engineered for comfort.hing that goes into a lennox system like parts that create your perfect temperature and humidity or the parts that purify the air. together these parts can cut your heating and cooling bills in half. which is quite comforting. and here's the best part... call now to get up to 1,700 dollars back or special financing on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 13th. plus download our free lennox mobile app with an energy-savings calculator. if your current system is 10 years or older, start planning now. and take advantage of special financing. so call now to get up to 1,700 dollars back or special financing on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 13th. and download our free lennox mobile app. lennox. innovation never felt so good. >>> this is cnn breaking news. >>> let's pick up on the breaking news out of the baltimore area, where someone, just a couple ours ago, crashed a truck, rammed it right into a tv station, wnar, evacuations have been under way. according to the tv station officials, executives, they say everyone is accounted for. but a news conference is about to be under way, because toure, as i bring you in, you're standing outside the news station, this individual is still holed up in the station, correct? >> reporter: yeah, you're correct, brooke. this is an extremely tense situation happening right now. i'll give you a sense of what's going on. they've got the crime scene tape up. they have the whole roadway blocked off. look above the wnar tv sign here, you'll see literally armed police inside the bushes there, standing by, ready for what could come next. let me sort of back up a little bit and tell you what's happened here earlier today. it was just before noon, when employees here at the station say a man came to the front doors and started rattling the front doors, was angry, yelling. they didn't let him in. that's when apparently, according to the people who worked here, he decided to get into a landscaping truck and drive that truck through the front doors into the lobby. and then according to employees as well, went up to the second floor, and that's where it's possible he is right now. but brooke, very serious situation happening here right now. and as you can tell from the pictures behind me, authorities are treating it as such. >> torii, we'll stay in close contact with you. we're waiting for the news conference to begin. the executive producer talked to wolf blitzer an hour or two ago, he said apparently as this man was slamming his truck into the tv station, was claiming that he was god. that's what we know, according to the folks who work at the tv station. incredibly frightening. torii, we'll come back to you as soon as we see the officials step behind that podium. this is just an amazing moment to watch a medal of honor individual receive such an honor at the white house, as we did just a little while ago with sergeant kyle white. he just spoke outside the white house. take a listen. >> good afternoon. on the surface, this is a piece of blue fabric and carved metal. at its core, it is a symbol of the nation, a nation forged in war. of men and women who heroically give their all for the nation and for each other. at its core, it is a symbol of the soldiers departing for distant lands. a responsibility that locks us all in bonds of brotherhood. the medal of honor is said to be the nation's highest award for valor by one individual. for me, it is much more. it is representation of the responsibility we accept as warriors and members of a team. it is a testament to the trust we have in each other, and our leaders. because of these reasons, the medal cannot be an individual award. battles are not won by men. if that were true, the taliban would have won on that trail in afghanistan because they had every tactical advantage, including the numbers. battles are won by spirit. and spirit is present in the relationships built from the trust and sacrifice we share with one another, in times of hardship, and by that definition cannot be possessed by one person. without the team, there could be no medal of honor. that is why i wear this medal for my team. i also wear a piece of metal around my wrist. it was given to me by another survivor of the 9 november ambush. he wears an identical one. this is maybe even more precious than the medal, the symbol just placed around my neck. on it are the names of my six fallen brothers. they are my heroes. though i am still uncomfortable with hearing my name and the word hero in the same sentence, i am now ready for the challenge of wearing this blue piece of fabric and carved medal, with the same re verence of this bracelet. i vow to live up to the responsibility of doing so. thank you all for allowing me to share this day with you. god bless you, the united states army, and god bless america. >> sergeant kyle white, thank you, we salute you and all members of the u.s. forces. let me just add one more thing that the president brought up when he was bestowing quite the honor on this young man. he said, after 9/11, he chose to leave the army, went to college, and we saw him in his uniform, with all his medals. but he now works at a bank in charlotte, just wearing a suit each and every day. just to imagine working with this man, thank you. >>> coming up next, men with homemade weapons on night patrols all in an attempt to keep their families safe. >> the men here have come together, each bringing what they could, machetes, homemade bows and arrows, trying, hoping, that they will be able to protect their families. >> cnn's correspondent traveled to one of the most dangerous places in all the world. this is the same area in nigeria, more than 200 school girls were abducted. more on what she found, and more on what the nigerian is willing to do to get the girls back. hey. i'm ted and this is rudy. say "hi" rudy. 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[ female announcer ] the sun powers life. ♪ and now it powers our latest innovation. ♪ introducing the world's only solar-powered home energy system, which can cut your heating and cooling bills in half. call now to get up to 1,700 dollars back or special financing on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 13th. plus download our free lennox mobile app with an energy-savings calculator. if your current system is 10 years or older, start planning now and take advantage of special financing. so call now to get up to 1,700 dollars back or special financing on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 13th. and download our free lennox mobile app. lennox. innovation never felt so good. >>> new revelations here about the latest chilling terror video, the one that shows about 100 girls wearing hijabs, reciting the carran. 54 girls here, you've season this video by now. they've been identified by name. according to the governor of nigeria's borno state, they're all part of the school in chibak. the u.s. is sending manned military planes over the area. even with the world here really honed in on nigeria, families continue to live the frightening grip of the terrorists. cnn's nim reports from one of the most dangerous places in nigeria, and all the world. >> reporter: the fear returns. bringing back memories of when nearly 300 girls were abducted here. it's at night that people say they feel most vulnerable, most abandoned by the outside world, which is why they started going on nightly patrols like this, ever since that horrifying night of april 14th. the men here have come together, each bringing what they could, machetes, homemade bows and arrows, trying, hoping they will be able to protect their families. >> the sound of gunshot, explosions everywhere. >> reporter: daniel and his family witnessed the terror firsthand. >> we have to run into the bushes for oir lives. so it was horrifying. fear is everywhere. >> reporter: day break does bring respite. but there's a reminder of the shear scale of the devastation. nearly a month since the night when boko haram stormed this town. nearly 200 of the girls are still missing. tired of waiting for help to arrive, fear is making way here to resilience. >> joining me live from abuja, nigeria. we have seen your incredibly compelling interviews with the mothers of the missing daughters. i have to ask you, i understand just to get to this village, it took you some four days. it should have just taken hours. can you just tell me about your harrowing journey to tell the stories? >> reporter: well, as you said, it took us an awful long time. a lot of that was on roads that were very, very exposed. and the closer you got to chibok, when we finally turned off the main road, two hours before chibok, there were reinforcements where you would imagine there would be some kind of support there, there was nothing, brooke. there was no phone that worked. it was just open savannah. there was a real sense of -- perhaps a small sense, i should say, of what it's like for the people living at the center of this tragedy every single day. you don't know where the danger is coming from. the road we were traveling on just the day before, policemen had gotten into a fire fight with the boko haram. so this threat for the village, for the community out there, while trying to deal with coming to the terms of the theft of their daughters, that threat is ever present here, brooke. >> the theft. that is the absolute appropriate word. my heart-felt thanks to you and the crew for risking what you have to tell those stories. thank you. live in abuja, nigeria, for us. >>> coming up next, karl rove makes an absolutely outrageous comment about hillary clinton's health. so shocking, that even the man known for his biting remarks is now backtracking. is this a sign of what's in store for a possible clinton presidential run? stay with me. ♪ [ dog barks ] ♪ [ male announcer ] imagine the cars we drive... being able to see so clearly... to respond so intelligently and so quickly, they can help protect us from a world of unseen danger. it's the stuff of science fiction... minus the fiction. and it is mercedes-benz... today. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers life with crohn's disease ois a daily game of "what if's". what if my abdominal pain and cramps end our night before it even starts? what if i eat the wrong thing? what if? what if i suddenly have to go? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk to your doctor and visit crohnsandcolitisadvocates.com to connect with a patient advocate from abbvie for one-to-one support and education. >> test tofl. >> >>> karl rove is apparently taking a page from the political operatives play book. this is a page that when the going gets rough, suggest your opponent is crazy. karl rove says, like it or not, her health will be an issue. he's saying in the new york post that clinton's brain is damaged. "the post" says rove mentioned several times at a conference that clinton suffered a blood clot in 2012 and then wore glasses made for people with brain trauma. now, rove is saying "the post" got it wrong, at least sort of wrong. >> no, no, no. wait a minute. i didn't say she had brain damage. she had a serious health episode and my point was that from the 7th of december in 2012 through the 7th of january of 2013, she underwent -- first she had apparently a serious virus. they announced that on the 15th of december that she had some period in the past a week fallen. they didn't say where. they didn't say when. she was recovering at home. on the 30th of december she goes in and it turns out she had a blood clot. they won't say where. my point is, hillary wants to run for president and she would not be human if this didn't enter in as a consideration. and my other point is, this will be an issue in the 2016 race whether she likes it or not. >> jake tapper, he's up next with "the lead." they say that karl rove is guilty of a flagrant foul. >> i don't know if it's a foul. we see it time and time again, a political operative looking to inject something into the bloodstream of the political media world says something seemingly outrageous. the condemnations come but he does interject this, introduce this subject. we saw it in the 2008 election a number of times. i remember a lot of operatives for hillary clinton doing this about obama, about his drug use when he was a child, a teenager. he's going to be asked about this. i'm not saying that i support it but he's going to be asked about it and then there also was a time when some operatives for then senator obama started using interesting language about senator john mccain that seemed to be suggesting that his age would be an issue. they kept talking about his losing his bearings or being confused. >> does it work, more or less? >> it can work. there's a risk because when you do that, you risk repercussions against yourself and the person you're advocating for. we're having this conversation right now and, for that reason, to a degree, karl rove succeeded. absolutely. >> jake tapper, we'll be watching you in a couple of minutes on "the lead." thank you, sir. and we'll be right back. get together for over 70 lunch combinations starting at $6.99. all part of olive garden's entirely new pronto lunch menu. choose from handmade sandwiches and flatbreads. paired with unlimited soup or salad. 70 lunch combinations starting at $6.99. at olive garden. what if it were more than something to share? what if a photo could build that shelf you've always wanted? or fix a leaky faucet? or even give you your saturday back? the new snapfix app revolutionizes local service. just snap a photo and angie's list coordinates a top-rated provider to do the work on your schedule. the app makes it easy. the power of angie's list makes it work. download snapfix for free. you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. [ man ] i'd be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pie maker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person were you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love? ♪ >>> before i let you go, you remember the story of christopher the ocean blue? well, this underwater explorer says he has found the last one just off the coast of haiti. clifford described the santa maria as, quote, the mt. everest of ship wrecks. how about this, divers just took photographs that it is the flagship itself. you can read more about that at cnn.com. thank you so much for being with me. i'll be back here at the same place, the same time tomorrow. i'm brooke baldwin. "the lead" with jake tapper starts right now. >>> and now this warning from the government, i'm jake tapper and this is "the lead." the national lead, it kills 30% of the people infected and now it is here on u.s. soil with two confirmed cases. fresh fears today that middle east respiratory syndrome or mers is spreading. >>> karl rove is the boogie man under the bed catching a lot of heat for something he may or may not have said about hillary clinton's president. she wants to be president, will she have to withstand more attacks like this? >>> and the buried lead. as fir
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christopher buckley's book is the first collection of essays since 1997. "but enough about you" is about history, human observations, travels, and politics. it's published by simon & schuster, a division of cbs. christopher buckley, good to see you. "but enough about you." >> i love that title. >> why that title? >> why that title? well, you're laughing. >> it's great. it's awesome. >> it was the title of a columbia that i wrote for a magazine that i edited at forbes, and it was -- i'm plagiarizing from myself. >> it's sort of akin to that idea of "but enough about me, what do you think about me." >> exactly. >> you seem to walk around in life, chris, just sort of picking out everyday things, rejection letters, who travels with an entourage. >> i have a great history of rejection letters. >> you had a humbling moment when you went to a book signing for yourself. only four people showed up. >> well, and -- >> that was hilarious. >> let me tell you who those four were. it was my first book tour. it was a prestigious book story in berkeley, california. i arrived at 8:00 at night and there was absolute no one. there were 50 empty chairs and the manager, she was very sweet. she sort of -- she said things like, well, you know, the traffic's terrible at 8:00 at night in berkeley. >> then she got employees. >> then she said could you excuse me for a moment and she disappeared, and a few minutes later there were four people, all of them hispanic, sitting in chairs spread out like this. and the dear thing. she'd gone into the stock room and said, quick, quick. >> but one of them ended up buying the book. >> one of them -- the subterfuge, one of them went to the cash register, which i'm sure -- i hope she was reading it. >> it didn't stop you from writing books. >> no, no, because i thought if i keep at it, one day i'll be asked on charlie rose's tv show, and i was 30 years ago on your first show. it was "cbs all night." >> yes. "night watch." >> in the prime time of 2:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m. >> i've gone from 2:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m. >> i said to the publicist, 2:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m.? she said, you'd be surprised how many are watching. security guards. >> college students. >> nurses. >> inmates. >> inmates. >> tell me, you know, you've written political satire, you write funny things. what sit that you define yourself as other than a writer? >> a hack writer, someone with a mortgage. an entertain er. i aspired to that. i think that's a good enough description of what i try to do. >> but i mean is it a learned thing for you or do you think you were simply born with a sense of humor? >> born with a gift of laughter and the sense that the world was mad. i don't know. wi us no good at anything else, really. it was a sad act of desperation. >> of all of your dad's qualities, which one would you most like to inherit? >> i'd love to inherit all of his qualities. gosh, it's a long list. his unconditional love, i think, would be -- if i had to choose one. >> the book is dedicated to chris hitchness who you described as one of the great friends and venisovenison. >> it means. christophernce had a lunch at cafe milano which is the rick's cafe of -- >> -- d.c., yeah. >> the lunch would have been at chef jeff's but i don't think they remained open long enough. >> they would have kicked you out. >> we sat down at 1:00 and left at 11:30 at night. he never ran out of things to talk about. finally at about 9:00 at night i think it was, he said, do you suppose we should order some more food? so i went home to be -- to lie on my bed for three weeks with a morphine drip and ice packs, and he probably went back and wrote a biography. i miss him very much. >> i do too. nothing became him as the way he handled his upcoming death. >> he wrote an extraordinary book which i wrote about in "the new york times" in this attractively packaged and very reasonably priced review of his very touching last book called "mortality," which is a record of his 18-month struggle with esophageal cancer. >> knowing your wife katherine is with you. >> katy. >> katy. i love how you -- >> i love the nam
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christopher hubbard should live. again, they feel that the judge -- they are gonna tell the judge that the community isn't equipped to deal with monitoring a convicted serial rapist even if he is considered rehabilitated. christopher hubbard was convicted of raping 23 women in california in the '70s and served time. he moved to the bay area in the early 'le os and -- '80s and raped 15 more women here. he was sentenced to prison for 16 years and after that moved to a state mental hospital. a judge in santa clara county ordered his release in the area of palmdale. people there are upset about it. they say the community doesn't have the law enforcement resources to monitor hubbard. now, joining me now is cheryl holbrook. you are from the antelope valley. you traveled 350 miles just to be here and talk to this judge. talk to me about what you plan on telling him. >> we plan on telling him that christopher hubbard needs to stay in lockup. he committed his last crimes here in santa clara county. we are not a dumping ground. that's exactly what they are trying to do. we're not gonna stop this fight. we are gonna continue all the way to sacramento if we have to. he's not welcome in our valley, our community or anywhere else because he's a repeated sex rapist, seerlial rapist -- serial rapist. he will offend again. the location where he's going to is in the middle of the desert of nowhere. no street lights, no sheriff patrols. he can have free game to attack any woman he wants. >> reporter: thank you so much for speaking with us this morning. now, we do know that there are four members of the los angeles county district attorney's office that will be hand delivering all sorts of letters and postcards and comments that have been made to them about more than 4,000 letters and e- mails have been sent to the district attorney's office there in los angeles. they will be delivered to the judge to
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