going to pay for that. so, that does happen. srk right. they let grow through with something they think is suspicious. you show the receipt. show the receipt and id, verify it and walk home. usually, you are approached and ma am, may i see your receipt. you are not told how can you afford this, what are you doing here? after it came forward, we put it ton front page. the next morning, i was contacted by caleb phillip s mother. a hard working woman, works for the city. she said her daughter had the same exact experience. we went, it was a month before trayon s. kayla s was february 28. a young, nursing student, single mom, went to buy a bag she wanted. she had a job. she got a tax refund in february. she went with a bank of america card. it was a new account.
morning. we re starting our morning with something very, very healthy with their specialty, french fries the french fries smothered in cheese curd and gravy dressing. senator rand paul has joined us in the breakfast table. he s going to talk to us about the new polls, where his dad is in the polls and plan to chase delegates in florida. plus, we ll talk to john rats ratsenburger. cliff claven from cheers, he has an idea about bringing americans to work and manufacturing. talk about that. new details this morning emerging in the search of a missing tadler in maine. allah reynolds vanish ied last month. her grandmother claims family members at the home that flight had nothing to do with ayl a s disappearance but tells cnn
reporter: marcel rivera had to drop his health insurance about seven years ago. at $500 a month, he says it got too expensive when he had other bills to pay. what sort of choices would you have to make if you had health insurance? what would you be giving up? my daughter, kayla s, tuition. in college. reporter: you couldn t pay your daughter s tuition if you paid for your health care? i could not. it s either one or the other. reporter: rivera is one of an estimated 80,000 people living uninsured in new orleans. he s among the working uninsured, stuck making too much money to qualify for government assistance, but not enough to afford health insurance. but while the health care debate rages in washington, rivera and others like him are finding another option. down here on canal street, there s a clinic that s quietly giving these uninsured workers something they haven t seen in years, affordable health care. it s upstairs, this way. reporter: it s a short climb