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a queen as everybody knows. i'm being asked to do this and kick off the jubilee tour was an honor. first as we do every morning, a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. anger boils over in afghanistan following the civilian massacre. >> policemen have gunfire in the village where some of the 16 afghans were killed. >> as new details emerge about the accused american shooter. >> staff sergeant who was diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury after a vehicle rollover accident in 2010. >> the suspect's family has been moved on to his home base for their protection. >> people in mississippi and alabama want to elect a conservative nominee. >> his record doesn't suggest he has the physical chops that i have. >> republicans dut it out as voters head to the polls. >> i believe this race is the most important in our lifetime and i will not leave the field. >> how can i resist a georgia peach like newt gingrich? he's a southerner born and raised except where he was born and raised. >> pictures from atlanta hartsfield airport. that's a delta plane. if you think it looks like it's on an angle, it is. >> former editor of the news of the world rebecca brooks are among six people arrested in connection with the inquiry into phone hacking of news international. >> four louisiana parishes are under a state of emergency because of flash flooding. >> the closer we got the higher the water was. >> everybody wants to sit back and talk about royalty. does it live up to the fairy teal? >> not at all. >> all that. >> a sea lion pup is getting much needed tlc. >> all that matters. >> a top of the line baby bassinet but i had it customized for snooki. watch this. it's a tanning bed. >> on "cbs this morning." >> sometimes it's nice to get recognition from the opposite sex that you've still got it a little bit. >> i wouldn't know what you're little bit. >> i wouldn't know what you're talking about. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." u.s. officials expected outrage after the killing of 16 civilians by american soldier in afghanistan and they are seeing it this morning. >> so are afghan government officials who were attacked this morning at the scene of that massacre. there are other protests as well. mandy clark is in kabul, the capital of afghanistan this morning. mandy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. dozens of people in kandahar held a vigil in memory of the shooting victims. around 1,000 students gathered to voice their anger over the killings. >> reporter: burning an ephigy of president obama. the protesters in the eastern city of jalalabad demanded the soldier responsible for killing 16 civilians face a public trial in afghanistan. we don't want a strategic partnership with foreign troops, the student said. the protesters also called for american troops to leave afghanistan now describing them as tyrants and dictators. it's the first significant protest in reaction to the shooting attack. the taliban has issued another threat to u.s. forces. in a statement the insurgent group said the islamic emirate once again warns the animals that the mujahadeen will avenge them. >> reporter: today militants ambushed an afghan delegation that was visiting the scene of the attack. gunfire came from two different directions killing an afghan soldier and wounding two others. >> mandy, thank you very much. pentagon officials are busy investigating the suspect and expressing grief for sunday's deadly rampage. >> national security correspondent david martin is at the pentagon. david, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the army has not yet brought charges against the sergeant who it still refuses to identify, but late monday defense secretary leon panetta said prosecutors could seek the death penalty. >> reporter: on a trip to asia and the middle east panetta seemed resigned to the fact that as long as u.s. troops are in afghanistan, bad things are bound to happen. >> war is hell. these kinds of events and incidents are going to take place. they've taken place in any war. they're terrible events, and this is not the first of those events and it probably won't be the last. >> reporter: the motive for the shootings is still unknown. investigators will pour over the personal documents and writings of the 38-year-old sergeant searching for evidence of his state of mind. did he set out to kill when he left the base? >> written letters, e-mails. all of his accounts, i'm sure all of that has been seized and searched. facebook pages often are the source of information about what people are thinking. >> reporter: there are eye witnesses who claim they saw him drag young boys by the hair and shoot them in the mouth. some of the victims were as young as two. attorney neil puckett who specializes in military cases thinks investigators should be able to match any spent shells recovered at the scene with the sergeant's weapon. >> assuming that bullets are recovered and the rifle that the individual is alleged to have used are available, i would think that that would be a very simple task for them. >> reporter: four years ago the sergeant passed a battery of psychological tests in order to qualify as a sniper. then in 2010 he was evaluated for mild traumatic brain injury after rolling his vehicle in iraq, but he was judged fit to return to duty. he was stationed at joint base lewis mcchord in washington state but had served three tours in iraq and was on his first deployment to afghanistan assigned to a special operations unit training villagers in southern afghanistan how to fend for themselves. >> reporter: the sergeant is married with two children, and for their own safety his family has been moved out of their home and on to joint base lewis mcchord. >> david, thank you very much. with us now retired general michael hayden. general, welcome. >> good morning. >> the administration said it has no viable alternative but to continue the course it is on and to begin assembling the end game. >> right. >> do you agree with that? >> i do. i recall a fishing trip i was on with my grandfather many years ago. he warned me, never make big decisions when you're tired, when you're angry, or when you're sad. and i think all three of those things apply right now. so i think we need to let this settle, stick with the strategy, and choose our options carefully as we go forward. >> this has been a ten-year war. are the afghans up to taking on the burden if the united states continues the withdrawal it's on, especially when you look at what seems to be a resurgence in the taliban? >> that's the $64 question. and the pivot point on which our strategy will succeed or fail. i think one very important thing, charlie, that we've got to keep in mind is that as we do this handoff, our afghan allies can not perceive that we are leaving them behind. we've done that once before. we've left them to their own devices. that can't happen. there has to be continuity in the american presence, in the american interests, and frankly american energy in supporting afghanistan over the long term. >> the president did bring that up in an interview yesterday. he said we can't move out too quickly because then we don't want to have to go back. >> right. >> is that something that you could see happening in the future especially based on how things are right now in afghanistan? >> i hope not. frankly, i think the current trajectory is too quickly. it is not consistent with the military advice that the president has been receiving from his commanders. we've deployed fewer forces in the surge. we are pulling the surge forces out earlier than we had anticipated. now there's some talk of moving that 2014 handoff date back towards 2013. all of that sends the signals to the afghans that we're leaving and undercuts the confidence that they're going to need in our long-term presence there. >> let me understand. that general allen, the commander in afghanistan, does not agree with the timetable that the president has put in motion? >> no. what i will say is in open congressional testimony when commanders were asked the numbers and the pace of withdrawal the surge forces were consistent with the recommendations that had been made, they said, no, that that was not one of the options that they had put forward and that was in open congressional testimony. >> are you talking about -- who are the people? >> i believe it was the sentcom commander. we put the surge forces in there. it takes a while to get the brigades there. they were there for one full fighting season. they're leaving before the end of the second fighting season. they are moving -- let me be very harsh here. they are being pulled back based upon the north american timetable, not a south asian timetable. >> when you look at pakistan, can we ever do anything in afghanistan unless we get some kind of understanding from the pakistans about the border and about their own support? >> that's going to test the fundamentals of counterinsurgency doctrine. can you actually win a war in one country while the enemy maintains a safe haven in another country? >> as the former head of cia, what do you say? >> three things have to happen. one of those was end the safe haven. the second was to increase afghan government capacity. and the third at the time was to push down the drug trade with poisoning everything. >> most of those have not been met. >> that's correct. that's right. >> therefore, why should we be in afghanistan? >> well, we should be in afghanistan for our own self-interests. we were attacked by afghanistan. if we leave that yar it turns into chaos. it becomes another ungoverned area, an ungoverned area among which the al qaeda feels very comfortable. >> but you see no possibility under the present circumstances for the mission to succeed. >> i didn't say that. >> what you said about pack disstand, what you said about the drug pack, the power of the government in afghanistan to do what it needs to do. >> charlie, i would think that anyone who knows how to point to afghanistan on a map knows that this is going to be a long project, that it was going to take a very long period of time. keep in mind, we are trying to negotiate a presence there in the strategic framework agreement post 2014. >> thank you, general. good to see you. turning now to atlanta where a delta airlines jet rolled off the runway this morning. luckily no one was injured. mechanics were testing the 737s engines when the brakes on that plane failed. there were no passengers on bored. the jet did sustain significant damage. it is another primary day in the republican presidential race. mississippi and alabama vote today 230followed by a late nig caucus in hawaii. they show the raisin credibly close. jan crawford is in birmingham, alaba alabama. >> reporter: good morning. a week ago people were saying rick santorum was going to win this state, win mississippi just like he won tennessee, now gingrich has made it a fight. it is so close that when you talk to senior republicans, people who follow politics a long time in this state, they say they have no idea who's going to win. it could be santorum, it could be gingrich, it even could be mitt romney. >> this is the heart of america. >> reporter: he was down but he wouldn't get out. now gingrich is back and sounding confident. >> we have momentum but we haven't won. we have to go out and finish the sale. >> reporter: gingrich's game is santorum's pain causing the former pennsylvania senator votes. monday santorum suggested gingrich was on a fool's errand that would result in romney's victory. >> whether he pulls it out or not, where does he go from here? you go next to illinois and he's sitting at 10% in the state of illinois. we're at 31 and romney's at 34 or something like that. >> reporter: with nearly half the states having already voted, santorum said gingrich needed to face the fact that he can't win. >> other than the state of georgia he hasn't finished above third in two months. he's running three states really. this is the fourth state he's tried to compete at because he hasn't been able to compete anywhere else because he can't. >> reporter: gingrich who is appealing to southern voters by stressing his southern ties says he's the only candidate who can beat president obama. >> we stayed in the race for two reasons. i do not believe the other two candidates can beat obama and i believe this race is the most important in our lifetime and i will not leave the field. >> reporter: with his two main rivalries shrugging it out, romney seems to have a clear path forward yet he's still making unforced errors that show he's out of touch. >> the owner of the my a.m. any dolphins and new york jets, both owners are friends of mine. >> reporter: romney has left the south. 's campaigning in missouri. he and ron paul both skipped a republican presidential forum that was held in birmingham last night. that left the stage to santorum and gingrich. they both had their supporters in the crowd. that crowd, like the voters in this state, was very evenly divided. >> jan, thank you. the latest cbs news "new york times" polls show president obama's rating is at an all time low down nine points from last month. the president talked about the issue of rising gas prices yesterday. >> understandably people are frustrated when gas prices are going up. i think the american people understand that, you know, we don't have a silver bullet when it comes to gas prices. there's no silver bullet here. >> chief washington correspondent and host of "face the nation" bob schieffer is with us. >> president has a point, doesn't he? there's little he can do necessarily to in the short term affect gas prices and gas prices hurts his political chances. >> reporter: well, that's right on all counts, charlie. you know, but the problem is, and in this cbs news poll that just came out, people think there are things he can do about it. the fact of the matter is, the reason gas prices are so high is because you have, you know, the turmoil that's going on in the middle east, you have oil speculators, and you have china which continues to buy more and more oil. and those are the things that are really keeping gas prices up. but people go to the -- go to that gas pump and they look at that gauge. i went myself the other day, charlie, and bought my first $75 tank of gas. and i wasn't buying premium gas. you know, it stunned me so much i went home and told my wife and i said, do you know how much i just paid for a tank of gas? >> what kind of car are you driving? >> reporter: there are a lot of folks around here that -- i mean, i'm getting along fine. i'm not, know, right now, but $75 for a tank of gas? it stares you in the face and it really makes you mad. >> many americans need their car to drive to work so, therefore, it hurts them a very deep way. >> reporter: yeah. >> mine was 60 bucks the other day. very upsetting. it seems as though republicans have really been able to make this quite a campaign issue. we know newt gingrich has been out there saying, look, i'm going to get gas down to the $2.50 mark. president obama or the white house coming out and hammering on that point. are they getting nervous about where this narrative is going in the country? >> reporter: well, i think they ought to. i mean, because it has upset people. people are really frustrated. think about this. in going back to this poll, when you see that the president's approval rating is down to 41%, it was at 50%, and then you look over at the republican race that's going on and our poll shows that half the republican voters still say it's too early to decide who they're going to vote for, what occurs to me, erica, is what if we had an election and nobody won? i mean, people are frustrated with both sides. they don't see anybody riding to the rescue yet. republicans are split over who they want. and you continue to have this frustration on the other side with the white house because even though the economy is looking better, even though the market is up, even though unemployment is coming down, going to that pump and looking at that $75 tank of gas, people are really nervous and they're really frustrated now. >> bob, thank you so much. it is time now to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the wall street journal" reports that faulty water wells may be the reason why some drinking water is contaminated in colorado and pennsylvania during natural gas drilling. environmentalists had blamed fracking, a drilling technique using high pressure water and sand. the texas law requiring voters to show a photo i.d. is headed to a federal court in washington. the houston chronicle reports the justice department rejected the law saying it could discriminate against minority voters. in northern ireland they say nike is stirring up controversy with its new black and tan sneakers. they're being released just before st. patrick's day. nike says they've named -- they're named after the popular drink that attacked irish citizens in the 1920s. new york's coney island board walk is getting a makeover. the city approved plans yesterday to rebuild the board walk using concrete and plastic lumber. residents say the project will turn their beloved board walk into a sidewalks. spring may not officially begin until next week but it is unusually warm in much of the country. you're looking at washington, d.c., where the expected high today, 78 degrees. >> love that. >> not too far below that for us here in new york city. hope,, >> announcer: this niona this national weather report sponsored by the u.s. postal service. this morning we have more of our rare interview with prince harry. he told seth doan when he gets back from celebrating the queen's jubilee, he's lied to take her out on the town. >> does the queen go out on the town? >> i don't know sn . >> you'll hear more of harry's work, afghanistan, and whether being a prince is all it's cracked up to be. the fed raft government says no to helping a community ravaged by tornados. you'll have more of that growing controversy. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by campbell's microwaveable soups. it's amazing what soup can do. campbell's microwavable soups. in three minutes -- the deliciousness that brings a smile to any monday. campbell's -- it's amazing what soup can do. helping strengthen our bones. caltrate delivers 1200 milligrams of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d plus minerals. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. with less chronic osteoarthritis pain. imagine living your life with less chronic low back pain. imagine you, with less pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one non-narcotic pill a day, every day, can help reduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaids, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. ask your doctor about cymbalta. imagine you with less pain. cymbalta can help. go to cymbalta.com to learn about a free trial offer. i get the power of claritin-d. sinus pressure? nothing works stronger or faster than claritin-d. get non-drowsy claritin-d at the pharmacy counter. live claritin clear. but my nose is still runny. 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[ engine revving ] the all-new 2013 lexus gs. there's no going back. a shot there of new haven, connecticut, or as we say where i grew up 20 mibltss to the east, the haven. we run it all together. that's a look at connecticut. >> and the home of oakland investigators are good morning. it's 7:26 here in the bay area. let's get a look at some of the headlines here. oakland investigators looking into what caused a carport fire and apartment complex on adams street. you are hear the windows of the cars breaking during the fire. the fire burned several cars, damaged at least two apartments. a plea deal means no trial for san francisco sheriff mirkarimi. he will be sentenced to probation and community service next week. mirkarimi pleaded guilty to one count of false imprisonment on a plea deal yesterday. and stanford women's basketball team takes another run at an ncaa championship. stanford is one of the four number one seeds in the women's tournament. they will play in virginia on saturday. the cal women are also in the tournament as a number 8 seed. they also play saturday in indiana. traffic and weather, weather and it is wet outside all week long, coming up right after this. ,,,,,,,, good morning. well, it is a wet commute just about everywhere you go. here's a live look at the golden gate bridge. you can see cars making some splashes. so far though, no big problems right now through marin. we are having issues through concord. westbound 4 right there by solano way, there is an accident there blocking one lane and it is pretty backed up across that stretch. all right. that's traffic. for your forecast, here's lawrence. >> very wet around the bay area. some gusty winds, some of the gusts over 40 miles per hour. doppler radar showing you the rainfall right now. the heaviest amounts showing up in the north bay. this is going to be a slow- moving cold front that will bring rain across the bay area for today. heaviest rainfall continuing as much as 3" in the wettest spots. ,, ,,,,,, fortunately romney had a chance to use a slightly more recent song reference at a rally last friday with randy owen of the country group alabama. i'd love to hear "sweet home alabama." ♪ sweet home alabama where the skies are so blue ♪ ♪ that song is lynyrd skynyrd everything he learned about the south he learned from a jeff fox worthy routine ♪ it is called prince harry's coming of age tour. it ended over the weekend in brazil where the prince sat down with seth doan to talk about the trip and his charitable work among other things. it's an interview you'll see only on "cbs this morning" and seth is back with us. >> finally back. >> we're glad to have you back. >> the prince told us his trip seem like a blur and traveling for much of it we could certainly see why. he was ushered not someone searching to fulfill the role, but obviously finding someone willing to take it on. but it has been slightly strange, this trip especially. the fact that i would be representing my grandmother and, you know, people go crazy for david beckham, fine, i can understand that, this is the hype, but the warmth of reception was beyond anything i've ever, ever expect. >> reporter: in the common wealth nations of the belize, bahamas and jamaica, the prince brought a message of goodwill and the queen, the ceremonial head of state. >> her majesty has asked me to extend her great wishes to you all and sorry she can't be here, but you're stuck with me, but don't worry, because every little thing will be all right. >> reporter: let me ask you about your grandmother. you spoke glowingly of your grandmother. do you have private ways planned that you will honor her as well for the 60th jubilee? >> i don't personally. i've been away. when i get back, i'm sure ideas will be flowing. hopefully we'll have a dinner and do something, take her out on the town, do something, i don't know. >> does the queen go out on the town. >> i don't know. but no, it's -- she's a fantastic woman, not only as a grandmother but queen as everybody knows, and me being asked to do these and kick off the jubilee tour was an honor, and i never expected the reception action, as i said, that we've been given in all these countries. despite the fact that she's only visited some of these countries two or three times, the impact that she has on they commonwealth countries from so far away is quite astonishing. it checks me up a bit, to me, she's just granny, but to all these countries, she's the queen, this great thing that they respect and love. it's been an emotional tour, but grateful. >> reporter: throughout his journey, the cameras remained focused on the prince. as they did at this children's hospital in jamaica. we watched and wondered if it's difficult to connect with these kids, while flashing lights follow every move. >> believe me, i spent so much time with the cameras and kids there, i unfortunately am a little observant, but when the cameras leave is when i get to enjoy the kids. >> reporter: is it tough with the cameras around? >> yeah, it's always tough, but lots of people can probably block them out, but i can't. probably because of my military training, i know what's around me, i know who is where and i recognize the faces. >> reporter: the military training was on tour, as he piloted a helicopter and took aim at this firing range. the prince sent 77 days on the front lines in afghanistan in 2007 to 2008 until his position was disclosed by media, making him too much of a target to stay. >> reporter: you want you want to go back to afghanistan. you clearly do not have. why would you go back? do you think it's important for the afghan people? the british people? the queen. >> if it was a pain for anyone for me to do, which i appreciate it probably is, but at the end of the day, i've done my training, it's cost of army money to train me, and if they didn't think they could get me out there again, they wouldn't have put me through this training, simple as that. >> well done, first of all, it was like listening in, eaves drove in on a conversation rather than an interview. clearly there was a connection there. he talked about the military, what it means to him, wanting to go back to afghanistan, said before the most recent thing, but it is what all soldiers seemed to love. it is their friends and their comrades in battle. >> that's one of the things i think went coming out through our time. he loves those moments where he can be a kid. he says he's a kid at heart. he loves when he's just a tall white guy you can climb on. i believe the same way with the military unit. he's out there fighting, just as the other guys, doing what he was told to do. i think those are the moments where he really, really connects. >> he even said in his recent training that he actually did very well in it. >> now a certified apache pilot. >> so not just sort of rubber stamping him through on things. he and his brother seem to put the time in there to be an active member of the military. >> absolutely. one thing worth noting, our interview was better the news had broke of this terrible incident in afghanistan over the weekend. >> what comes out of this is he does have some special quality, the it thing, the capacity to understand who he is at the same time to communicate with the people that he meets on his journey. >> absolutely. i think if you did what you were supposed to do, what you were told to do by all the people around you, you would be a very stiff person. the stakes are so high. that spotlight in the camera is so bright. he continues to find ways to step outside maybe that role. these cunning are fun places to be. relaxed, easygoing, and you have to be too or they'll think you're a fraud. >> we're looking forward to more of the interview. >> there's a lot more. >> you'll be intoic with us with more of that rare interview when you'll hair prince harry talked about his charity work and the example set business his mother, princess diana. that's tomorrow. there's outrage in southeastern illinois where deadly tornadoes destroyed many homes. no national disaster relief is coming to the area. we'll show you why. you've watching "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ ♪ grande caramel macchiato. iced grande caramel macchiato. make that iced. actually, hot, please. 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'tis tasty. the mayor of san francisco s pondering options, now thats sheriff has pleaded guilty a misdemeanor charge of false imprisonment. ross mirkarimi made a surprise pa deal yesterday... with >> the major of san francisco is weighing options of sheriff mirkarimi making a plead deal. the major says the options in the future could include suspended the sheriff. a ceremony at san jose city hall make it official yesterday. the bpa is getting a grant to build a bart extension. the bulk of the money for the project, more than a billion collars is coming from santa clara taxes. an update on your traffic and wet, windy wait sore coming up after -- weather is coming up after this. ,,,,,, good morning, well it's a very slow ride on highway 4. extra slow all the way out to concord. we have an accident westbound highway 4 at solano way and that's backing things up. a car actually went down the embankment. at the bay bridge, there's high winds advisories in effect. 40 minutes from the bridge to the maze so it's wet and windy. that's traffic. here's lawrence with weather. >> all right, weather around the bay area today as we start out the significant storm system today. the rain continuing over san francisco. the heaviest rainfall showing up in the north bay. more rain on the way. ,,,,,,,, hello, los angeles. wake up. it's 8:00. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm gayle king. >> and i'm charlie rose with erica hill. the american soldier who allegedly killed 16 afghan civilians served three tours of duty in iraq before serving in afghanistan. >> some say u.s. troops are being stretched too thin and it's having an effect. ben tracy is in a soldier who's worried that men and women are being stretched to their breaking points. >> it will get better and easier, but you won't ever forget faces and things that you saw. it just becomes part of you. >> reporter: this specialist should be in afghanistan fighting alongside the very soldier suspected of killing 16 civilians. >> he's in the same brigade i'm in, in a unit i've done work with. very well summomeone i could ha crossed paths with and done training with. >> reporter: he spent nearly two tours in iraq where he saw one of his best friends die right in front of him. like hundreds of others at joint base lewis-mcchord he was diagnosed with chronic post-traumatic stress disorder i e-mail having nightmares, flashbacks, i'm feeling completely on edge. >> reporter: and the news about how the base is responding to the soldier's issues has been dismal. last month the head of the base medical center was placed on leave for reversing the diagnosis of soldiers who were told they had ptsd, allegedly to save the military money. jared was one of them, but his diagnosis has been reinstate and he's about to be discharged, yet he worries about his fellow soldiers who have endured more than a decade of employment. 30 thousand have been be employed and 30,000 have served multiple tours. >> is two tours too much? is five tours too much? who's to say. there needs to be a better system in place. >> reporter: he's particularly upset about this. in just the past two years, 26 soldiers at lewis-mcchord have committed suicide. >> some of that should never have happened, and the only being in a battle zone is where he now feels the most normal. >> very interesting, ben. thank you very much. senior correspondent john miller is with us. he was part of the counterterrorism efforts with the fbi and cia. what are the threats here? >> there are two. what will the threat be in afghanistan, but the second threat is what is the threat on u.s. soil. yesterday at the fbi in their ops 3 intelligence center, a lot of conference calls going on saying what do we do, who do we warn, do we come out with a homeland security bonus saying extra vigilance, increased security at military installations here on u.s. soil, especially recruiting stations which are widely accessible and open to the public. and they're still trying to figure out how to set the right tone on that and assess what the threat is. >> i was wondering, are there any specific, i was thinking civilian target we should be worried about, thearities, the subways, the malls? >> any of that is always possible and trying to engage what's the most likely target can be difficult. obviously the military target is the obvious one here. what we've seen in the past is kind of interesting. i asked a key intelligence analyst about this yesterday. what she said was we haven't seen when there was an incident like this an immediate reaction here. what we have seen, for instance, when there were the cartoons in the danish newspaper, it was a complex plot. it was more than two years later. it hatched out of chicago. taking over the newspaper in denmark, holding hostages, beheading people on television. it took a long time to put together. the reaction is not always immediate. >> tom, thank you. the girlfriend of a mob boss is changing her tune and some of the victims not happy about it. >> national correspondent jim axelrod is here with more on the story. good morning to you. >> good morning. the headlines here, after pleading not guilty last summer, she wants to plead. the key is she'll not have to testify against her long-time boyfriend whitey bulger. >> some of the alleged victims who met with federal prosecutor on monday are angry. >> she's pretty much, if you ask me, like everybody else, got a sweetheart deal. >> they were told she will plead guilty to three charges to. while each carries a maximum of five years in prison, she could get as little as 32 months total. >> she helped keep that guy on the run. we could have had questions and answers 16 years ago. >> last summer they were arrested at this apartment in santa monica, california, where they had been living under false'dtys for more than a decade. law enforcement officers raided the home. >> over $800,000 in cash, more than 30 firearms to include pit tolls, rifles, and shotguns, several types of nieves and several pieces of false identification. >> reporter: bulger, the head of the notorious winter hill gang in boston was wanted for 19 murders allegedly committed in the late 1970s and '80s. he fled boston in 1984 after a corrupt fbi agent told him he was about to be in dieted. in a signed statement she admitted to having a close relationship with him, helping obtain false social security if you're a loyal customer at one bank and you think you're going to get some special perks, oh, not so fast, my friend. we'll show you five things that the banks do not want you to know. and a crime wave is cleaning out stores across the country. i wonder what that could be. that's a big old clue right on the screen. that's a long story short. you're watching "cbs this morning." losing weight clicked for me when i lost weight in all the right places. you know what i mean! [ laughs ] when i tried to lose weight other ways, i felt hungry all the time. on weight watchers online, i eat all day long. i loved grabbing those activity points and throwing them into my tracker. and then it adds it up for you at the end of the week so that you can earn more points for food. i never thought that way before. i lost 38 pounds with weight watchers online. i really did it. [ laughs ] [ female announcer ] hurry, join now for free. offer ends march 24th. weight watchers online. finally, losing weight clicks. [ female announcer ] with depression, simple pleasures can simply hurt. the sadness, anxiety, the loss of interest. the aches and pains and fatigue. depression hurts. cymbalta can help with many symptoms of depression. tell your doctor right away if your depression worsens, you have unusual changes in behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. simple pleasures shouldn't hurt. talk to your doctor about cymbalta. depression hurts. cymbalta can help. and i know we're still early in 2012, but this could turn out to be the sports highlight of the year. snoof well handling the dog, well handsing the dog. sometimes that works. sometimes it doesn't. if you don't get behind, you can lose control. oh, no. oh, no. >> i said sit. it's something we all do. when you've got to gorks you've got go. i prefer a bathroom with a door, don't you. >> then again, dogs don't seem to mind. as we looked around the web this morning we found a few reasons to make a long story short today. the "new york post" reports a series of guests with clean getaways. thieves are stealing tide. police say tide is going for currency, 5 to $10 a bottle, half the price it goes for in stores. chad ochocinco promised to pick up the tab at a top restaurant in harlem and check out the response at sylvias. after he tweeted the first 200 people by 7:00 would eat for free. there you go. everybody taking him up on that tweet. according to discovery.com art experts may have stumbled on a long lost work by leonardo devin i hade v devin chi. they found traces of paint that he used in the mona lisa. now they thing another masterpiece might be buried behind the wall. "the daily beast" says politics is now making the internet very unfriendly. according to a new poll, many have unfriend order defriended or blocked someone whose politics they disagree with. can't we just have a discussion anymore? >> we can, we can. the south by southwest music festival in austin, texas, some homeless people are being used as wi-fi carriers. they call it a charitable experiment but critics call it exploitive and inhumane. that's the long and short of it. >> this was on the cover of the "new york post" this morning. it does seem -- >> it bothers me because i know they're getting paid, and that's a good thing, but there's something very degrading and demeaning about it. >> it feels exploitive. >> not nice. >> i agree. it's not nice. >> so we don't approve. >> we do not approve. >> let's tell somebody. you shop around tr for the best places to spend your money. what about a best place to keep your cash? rebecca jarvis is here to key us in on a bank and to clue us in on five things the banks doan want you to know. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by discover card. it pays to switch. it pays to discover. brain freeze cake donettes rolling hot dogs bag of ice anti-freeze wash and dry diesel self-serve fix a flat jumper cables 5% cashback right now, get 5% cashback at gas stations. it pays to discover. helping strengthen our bones. caltrate delivers 1200 milligrams of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d plus minerals. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. so do you think your financial institution tells you everything you need to know? don't bank on it. ba da-da bam. >> rebecca jarvis is here to tell you five things your bank doesn't want you to know. first thing, bigger is not necessarily better. >> what i mean is sometimes the big commercial banks seem more convenient. there's an atm on every corner, a location everywhere you go. you end up paying for it. the bigger banks charge more. credit union, you can bank online and get a little more service. you're paying a lot less. >> you're disappointing me, mrs. hanson. she's a newlywed. when i first moved in my neighborhood, i walked around and saw chase everywhere so i went with chase. >> you didn't necessarily make the wrong decision going with chase. the reality is they make more money on the fees than anything else. anywhere between $4 and $20 is what you're going to pay on average. wells fargo is going to charge in six new states a $7 charge on checking accounts. they do add up. $38 billion is what they added up to. so the fees are something to watch out for. >> that's number two. >> watch the fineprint. >> are they negotiable, the fees? >> these are a nice thing. they're not going to necessarily be forthcoming with this. but if you're charged a fee and you don't want to be charge, go back to them. they have an unwritten policy if you're a good customer, they'll take that fee off of your bill because they want to keep you. >> we have three things. number four, you say, despite being a loyal customer it may not always get you the best deal. >> right. and this is the thing people should know. whenever you're looking for a new loan, credit card, any new form of banking that you'd like do. shop around. and the place to shop is bankrate.com. >> and you said just because you signed up with a bank and got rewards, they offered knicks tickets and i said no and then they said too late they're gone. i didn't see a catch in offering tickets to the knicks game. >> it's have interesting. a lot of people don't recognize the rewards programs are taxable. so if you receive a big reward, in excess of 60$600, you could taxed on that. in many cases the bank will take care of the taxation for that. they're going to going you the tax forms aet the next time. i don't know what knicks tickets go for these days. >> i don't think they were $600. >> if they're below, you're okay. if they're above, even if it's not a dollar amount or a point balance that equates to a dollar amount you could be charged. >> if there's any monetary value. >> in excess of $600. >> could we have a rule? please don't give me a gift that requires that i have to pay taxes. >> there's a lot of gifts that require to people pay taxes but i understand. and the banks, they don't necessarily have to -- in all of these cases it's within the bank's rights legally to not talk about these things. so once again the onus is on us as the consumer to do our due diligence. >> you have to read the fineprint and ask for help. >> call rebecca jarvis. it is finally time for the hunger games. excited fans camping out to see the stars of hollywood's next blockbuster. we're not going to make you sleep on the street though. we'll take you to the premiere along with our good friend kevin frazier of the,,,,,,,,,,,,,, state investigators are blag p-g-and-e for poor record- keeping on its natural gas pipelines. the p-u time for news headlines. state investigators are blasting them for poor recordkeeping on the natural gas pup pipelines. the records are disorganized, hard to access. they're looking into whether they violated state law and contributed to the deadly rupture in september of 2010. that he announced another $70 million for the city. it's a settlement for pain and suffering caused withty pipeline disaster that killed 8 people and leveled the neighborhood there. it's separate for what they already pledged to rebuild the neighborhood. >> and there is another burial site with remains of murder victims inside. he sent another letter to our sister station in sacramento. there's at least one person buried in an orchard belonging to a fellow killer. >> it's traffic and wet out there. weather coming upright after this ,,,,,,,,,, good morning. as the rain comes down our accident count is going up. it was pretty backed up for a minute there on northbound 101. there was an accident approaching the north tow we are. looks like it may have just been cleared because from our camera speeds have improved. again there may still be an accident northbound 101 right there by the north tower. southbound 101 looks okay. they've had a multivehicle accident, in fact, crash there. it is backed up well into the bay bridge toll plaza. and then check out this back up, northbound 880, there's a stall and that is not helping matters heading towards downtown oakland. >> plenty of rain outside. it will be spreading southward throughout the day today. more rain drops continuing into san francisco. doppler showing you that huge batch of moisture just now moving in. we're expecting heavy rainfall. showers now just to get in parts of south san jose. more on the way throughout the day ♪ [ male announcer ] for our families... our neighbors... and our communities... america's beverage companies have created a wide range of new choices. developing smaller portion sizes and more low- & no-calorie beverages... adding clear calorie labels so you know exactly what you're choosing... and in schools, replacing full-calorie soft drinks with lower-calorie options. with more choices and fewer calories, america's beverage companies are delivering. under one roof. my wife saw me taking the little nest egg that we had and putting everything on the line to see if we could make it as entrepreneurs. i was a retailer, but there was so much i didn't know about financing that bank of america has helped me understand, and without them, i don't know that we would have been as successful as we have been. our plan for the future is to grow across the country, and bank of america is going to be there with us every step of the way. that really is duran duran. "hungry like a wolf." welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's a reason we played that shong. "hunger games" is a new best searl and it's coming to the theater. >> last night the stars came out for the premiere. kevin frazier, co-host of the "insider" takes a look at the movie for us and at the fans. >> reporter: outside the l.a. live complex in downtown los angeles, hundreds of hungry fans gathered for a glimpse of what's about to become hollywood's hottest cast. but to score a spot alongside the red carpet in monday's much anticipated hunger games career, you had to camp out for days. >> i might cry. i really might cry. i'm really excited. >> reporter: based on a trilogy of books that sold more than 16 million copies, hungry games shows. children are chosen by a lottery to face off until death. >> it appeals to men as well as women and a lot of mirrors with a heroine doan have that. >> reporter: according to projections "hunger games" will earn $75 million on its own. that doesn't include hundreds of millions of dollars in merchandise sales including t-shirts, wallets, even a pillow case. while it's uncertain if the hunger games trilogy can max the box office clout of o'box series like "twilight" and ""harry potter," they're hungry for a hit. >> it also helps movie theaters, helps popcorn sales. so the whole center is rooting for this. >> reporter: unlike "twilight," the "hunger games" will have to succeed without the vampires and like "harry potter," the real story have to to come from a good story well told. kevin frazier, the "insider," los angeles. >> in the "hunger games," kids fight for they're lives and a few years ago, they almost died. >> it's the focus of a new book, "american icon." the author is bryce huffman. good morning. >> good morning. >> it's an interesting story because allan malawi was not a car guy. he came from outside. but more importantly ford motor company said there's a big crisis and we're going make a big loan. >> when the banking industry wasn't a dirty word and they pushed bill ford, his own adviser adviser pushed him to borrow the biggest amount in history before the credit markets slammed shut in 2006. >> i was very fascinated by alan malawi after read your book. that's neat, that's cool, absolutely. >> absolutely. >> how would you describe his management style? >> you know, it's really a unique style. he's very much a coach, not a dictator or a king. he really was about building a team at ford and showing the talent that was already at the company, that they could compete with the best in the world and win. so he was really about bringing people together. taking ideas that they already had, and showing how they could implement them. they had the most caustic company in the world and they had to overcome that. >> i couldn't tell in the book but i wonder if he felt great pressure. they told him you're the guy that's going to turn ford around. he came from boeing. i didn't get the sense he felt pressure. >> if he did, he didn't show it. at first he turned it down. >> exactly. >> he accepted and then he turned it down. it was a gamble. even though his name wasn't a household word, he knew that everyone in the business industry knew him as the guy who saved boeing. >> they made this big borrowing before, and today, how does ford motor company, general motors, and chrysler look after the bailout? >> well, you know, i think ford is still in the strongest decision of detroit's big three because it didn't take a bailout. that generate add huge amount of good will with the american consumer. they like the fact that they saved themselves. i think all three are on the rebound, but i think ford is in the strongest position. i thenk it's not only because they didn't take the loan but they really cut back. they stopped watering the plants in the building in order to not take a government loan. >> but then they ended up with products that they made. are they internationally competitive today? >> i think they are. if you look at ford's products, they rank right up there with the best of the japanese. >> but yet, you know, when you look at ford, they're clearly not resting on their laurels. you say they're looking for other things to do? >> that's the key. so many times in the past, ford has had many near-death experiences before. they'd come out of them but forgot the lessons that they learned. this time they're trying to institutionalize these changes so they can continue to improve. it's like taking a page it of toyota's playbook, continuous improvement that they got rid of the landrover. >>. millimeter. >> why is it unique and different from the manufacturers. this is really the company that put the world on wheelsnd and one of the things he brought to the company was a return of hendry ford's position. before we saved ourselves, we needed to find out who we are. he found that by looking at a 1920s ad he took out. they had a banner headline, opening the highways to all mankind. he said we have to find ways to do that. >> it's an interesting book. >> special shout-out to bill ford who realized this is not for me. let's bring somebody in. most people can't admit i can't do something, present company excluded. congratulations. >> thank you. >> thank you. we loved emily blunt in "the devil wears prada." her new movie's about fishing and she had a whale,,,,,,,,,,,,, there are fish out of water tales and then there's salmon fishing in the yemen, which brings it to a whole other level. >> in the new film emily blunt works for a man who fishes. she calls co-star ian mcgregor to try to help make it happen. >> what are you doing? >> no. this is something i invented. >> is it. what's it called? >> this one is called the chatwood beauty. >> that's very nice. >> did i mention the star of the movie is emily blunt? the title of the meesh is called "salmon fishing in the yemen." >> gayle loves the title. >> i don't know what else we should call it. you know, i think they thought about other generic titles like swimming upstream. the film is so surprising and it's about yems, ma'a fishing i. >> swimming upstream. >> it would have cheap fooid it. >> we won't given it away. when you got the script and saw the title, did you like it right away? >> i was confused. i thought i misheard my agent. he said it's wonderful and really special and i think you'll like it. >> i read it and it was quite an easy yes for me after the first 30 pages. it was incredibly fresh writing. i read scripts where i feel like the derivative of other movies and you're reading the same movie over and over again and this one kind of crept away from the crowd of these generic scripts. >> and you get to work with ian mcgregor who we adore. >> who i love that and is now my friend. >> he was here last week. he was talking about you. what would you say about him? >> he's really silly and goofy. >> i would not have thought that about him. >> funny. like really funny and warm and one of the most generous actors you can work with. there's a lot of actors who do the work here and they're close-up and he's about the scene and spontaneous. he's lovely. i want to do it again actually. >> did you know him ahead of time? >> no. i met him on a plane -- or not met him. i was with my husband and he was with his wife and we were both going to sundance. it was about two years before we met. >> they think all you guys know each other. it's so funny. that's him and he's going, that's her. so you were there with your husband. >> i'm a big, big fan of the office. did you two meet at work? >> no, no, no. we met at a restaurant. >> by chance? >> by chance. >> explain. >> i can't -- i never tell this story, it's so precious to me. i almost feel like if i sum it up in a sound bite i trivialize it. >> i first became smitten with you, emily blunt, in "the devil wears prada." that was such a delicious role to play. >> it really was. >> she was so nasty. >> vial, and imperious. the lines were so funny. they get quoted to me every day. >> who will come up to you -- >> my stomach flew away from my goal weight. when i'm hungry i want to keep my cheese. i keep swiveling. every day i'll get a quote from, which i love. >> this is what i read. you were a stutterer when you were younger and i'm thinking it didn't seem natural for somebody to say i want to be an actress. >> what happened? >> funny enough i had a lovely teacher, mr. mickael, who i do credit for getting over it. he said, i'd like you to be in the class play. i said i kchlt well not even that. he said i've heard you messing around with your friends. you never stauter when you're doing someone elise voice. why don't you do with somebody else's accent. i came home crying. she was thrilled. i think that was the easing. it's actually genetic. it's a gene i have. i'll always be one if i'm tired or on the phone. >> see mr. mickael saw something in you that you didn't see in yourself. >> yes. >> are you one of these people when the move comes out do you get nervous or do you do a movie and release it? >> it's funny. i've doing it a while. i've learned it's helnot healtho worry too much. >> we highly recommend it. >> "fisalmon fishing in the ye " millimeter sts is coming out. >> fans say it's the best you can get, we'll tell you all about it. next.,,,,,,,, getting ready to plant? chances are your soil is like this: compacted, drained of nutrients. it'll hold your plants... but it'll also hold 'em back. the solution: miracle-gro garden soil. the perfect mix of rich, organic ingredients, and miracle-gro plant food. just mix it in. and turn bad soil into great soil. helps plants grow twice as big. instead of holding 'em back, they'll leap ahead. miracle-gro garden soil. start right. finish big. finest cheese in america, where do you go? do you think vermont or wisconsin. >> how about heading a little south. mark strassmann found some goat cheese in the lone star state. >> reporter: the sun is setting in but ann joneses is there to meet her goats. the goat mixing begins at 6:00 a.m. if you want to create world-class goat cheese, get ready to work like a dog. >> physically hard work. trimming hay, trimming feet. you can have a headache, but you have to go dow and milk the goats. >> reporter: she's a licensed veterinarian who suspect 12 years healing animals before hurting them. in 2006 she bought her first farm and 2,000 goats. >> reporter: how long do you work in here? >> all day. she was winning competitions over noted dairies from vermont to california. confession. goat cheese has never been my thing, until i tasted her gupta. one of seven different cheeses she makes. of course, i'm no different. but chef john beknell is an expert. it's one of only 23 restaurants in the world to earn the highest food score and he ranks her goat cheese as high. >> i want not just a subtle hint of it. i want to know i'm getting some. the first thing i tried from her blew me away, the texture, creekiness. i knew that's what i wanted. >> he believes part of what makes her cheese so special is the way she treats her goats. >> they know their name when you call them. >> reporter: there are some pretty weird names on this farm and she knows them all. amelia air hard, ba da bing, michelle obama, jackie onassis and oh prarks talk show host "o." it's pretty quirky. >> which is the prettiest goal? >> zena princess warrior. >> she has more than 50 goats at la dae da and feels maternal to them all. >> absolutely. i was there when they took their first breath. >> reporter: she means that literally. on the day we visited two kids were born. >> you have a soft spot for them, all of them. >> absolutely. you're going to make me cry. >> reporter: why. >> the soft spot? because they are what you see. there's no games. there's no pretension. they're just who they are. they're just very honest and i think that's one of the things why i always feltal connection. >> reporter: a special connection. it's one that ann jones hopes you'll taste in every bite of her cheese. for "cbs this morning," mark strassmann. >> i love that story. i love ann. >> she took something special to do. >> a special hug to ann jones. just the fact that she names her goats she gets high opponents for me. you can only imagine who my favorite goat was. >> zena princess warrior. >> that one too. i love what mark strassmann said, goat cheese is not for me but i tasted hers. charlie, would you please take us there? >> okay. >> have you been there? >> no. but i lived there. with that i say we get out of here and get on the plane. up next your local news. we'll see you tomorrow right here on,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, a carport caught fire this morning in oakland. a neighr good morning. it's 8:55. get you caught up with headlines on this tuesday. a neighbor who woke up smelled the smoke and took this video with his cell phone, an area holding three cars. you can hear the windows cracking in them. that carport destroyed all three of those cars on adam's street. it started about 4:00 a.m. it was under control by 5:20. >> the san francisco sheriff made a plea bargain. he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor of false imprisonment. he agreed to three year's probation and one year of counseling. he has to take part in parenting classes and pay a fine and do community service as well. >> new criticism for shotty recordkeeping on it's natural gas pipelines. investigators say the records are disorganized and hard to access. they are looking into whether they violate state and federal laws and whether they contributed to the deadly rupture back in 2010. how about your forecast? it's wet and it's going to keep oncoming, huh? >> yeah, it's going to get going. heavier rainfall throughout the day today. we have already seen pretty good rain in some part of the bay area already. cloudy skies. the heaviest amounts of rainfall in the north bay and also up into the santa cruz mountains. highs today only expected into the 50s and the 60s. we'll see strong gusts to the system as well. some of them up to 60 miles per hour. expect heavy rainfall overnight into tomorrow. showers continuing on thursday and friday, more rain over the weekend. all right we'll check out your time saver traffic coming up next ,,,,,,,,,,,, >> good morning. we'll take you right outside. check out this back up in the northbound lanes. it is really slow all the way out toward the downtown and oakland exits. we have a lot of slow traffic, several wind advisories in effect. there's one on the bay bridge, most of your east, west bridges. ,,,,,,

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