Transcripts For WUSA CBS This Morning 20151204 : comparemela

Transcripts For WUSA CBS This Morning 20151204



massacre. >> it was unspeakable. the carnage that we were seeing and the furor panic on the face of those virgin islands that were still in need. >> i can't get my head around the fact that a 27-year-old mother is firing off as many roundsik le she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense, to be honest with you. >> i am convinced that was a terrorist attack. >> the san bernardino shooting and terrorism is dominating the talk on the presidential aicampgn trail. >> it's becoming clearer that we are dealing with an act of terrorism. ne senate republicans rejected unw g control legislation, including the ability to bar suspected terrorists from buying guns. >> defense secretary ash carter ordered all combat jobs be opened to women. >> they will be able to serve as army rangers and green berets and everything else that was previously open only to men. scott weiland, best known as the frontman for the band stone temple pilots was found dead on his bus. >> a flight was delayed after they were removing luggage that caught fire. >> who is going to play in the super bowl 50 halftime show? >> it's coldplay. >> it will be wonderful. >> rodgers, does he have a agvintmee mont in him? >> it is caught! a touchdown! a game ender for the packers. >> and all that matters. >> a national christmas tree shining bright. th president remembers the victims of the shooting in san bernardino. >> their loss is our loss too. we are all one american family. >> on "cbs this morning." i feel bad for barack obama. he has been begging for gun control for six years, and the only major change in the gun debate since he has got into office has been to his tas. -- face. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome back to "cbs this morning." new evidence is leading investigators to suspect the san bernardino shooters may have been terrorists. the married couple killed 14 people wednesday and wounded many more. we are seeing the faces of their victims and hearing from their grieving families. one police officer calls the carnage at a holiday party unspeakable. >> police say syed rizwan farook and his wife tashfeen malik carried out the attacks. they are looking into malik radicalized her husband. >> oh, my gosh! >> this cell phone video captured the violent gun battle with police that killed the couple. carter evans is in san bernardin with the new evidence the authorities have. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. law enforcement still won't speculate on why the couple opened fire, but they have not ruled out terrorism. and cbs news has learned that syed rizwan farook had been in communication with people with suspected ties to terrorism here in the u.s. he had also been communicating online with suspected extremists overseas. investigators continue their search for clues thursday near the bullet-ridden suv where syed rizwan farook and tashfeen malik were killed. for the first time the authorities showed the weapons they used in the brutal attack. >> as i said from day one with the evidence will lead us to the facts. >> reporter: police confirm there were 75 to 80 people in the conference room where farook started shooting employees. he shot first at department managers before spraying the room with as many as 75 rifle rounds. >> so many lives lost over nothing. >> reporter: lieutenant mike madden was one of the first officers on the scene. >> it was unspeakable the carnage that we were seeing. that was evident in the moans we were hearing in the room. >> reporter: the fresh spray of gun powder led authorities to believe the shooters were still at large. >> we went further into the building and that was a difficult choice to have to make as well, passing people we knew were injured and in needing of assistance but our goal had to be at that time locating the shooters. >> reporter: but the shooters were already gone. they left behind this bomb rigged to a remote control toy car that acted as a wireless trigger. it did not explode. >> it just seems so senseless that here people with going into their holiday festivities and now we are dealing with that. >> reporter: farook and malik were killed in a shoot-out with police about four hours later. newly released information shows the ver osity of that battle. the couple fired 76 roupeds at police and 23 police officers returned 383 rounds. on thursday, an fbi evidence response team combed through the home where the couple lived. inside they found more than 4,500 bullets and 12 pipe bombs and enough material and tools to build several more. chief, do you believe they were planning another attack? >> we don't know. clearly, they were equipped and they could of continued to do another attack. we intercepted them before that happened. >> reporter: now the fbi has flown in a special team from washington to study the crime scene and we understand that agents have already sent some evidence back to d.c. for analysis. they are also going to be taking a look at the couple's electronic devices to try and get a better understanding of what could make them commit such a heinous crime. >> thank you, carter. that is the question everyone is asking today. thanks a lot. thousands gathered in san bernardino last night at a candlelight and prayer vigil to honor the victims. relatives and friends are sharing stories to tell us about their loved ones. john blackstone has been speaking with the victims' families and he is outside loma linda medical center where some survivors are recovering. john, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the youngest of the victims was 26. t oldest was 60. we know most of them worked for the county of san bernardino and some worked so closely together, they called themselves family. family and friends of the 14 men and women killed in wednesday's shooting are honoring their loved ones by offering a glimpse into who they were and how they lived their lives. 37-year-old michael wetzel was a father of six. in a statement pted to a fund-raising website his wife renee said i didn't know a better person. without him, this family will never be the same. >> he was so kind to everybody so he was very chivalry. >> reporter: jennifer says her husband nicholas was devoted to his messianicjewish faith. >> they were a tight night group that worked together and some of them that passed away were very good friends. >> reporter: 27-year-old yvette velasco. >> they were a close family and tight-knit. >> reporter: according to iran-born bennetttibet-baddal they fled to america to escape islamic extremism. >> she came here to have a better life and everything else. >> reporter: on facebook one of sierra clayborn's photos is covered in blue, white and red. a tribute to the victims of last month's paris massacre. a message beneath the photo reads, even as you can, your picture is out of love for victims elsewhere. >> he had this grand that made it look like i was up to something. >> reporter: the los angeles reports that daniel kaufman worked at a coffee shop. >> when things were starting to get to you, daniel would show up and it was like -- >> he would pull some stunt and make you laugh. ♪ >> reporter: in addition to the 14 people who died, nearly two dozen were injured. one of the survivors 22-year-old jennifer stephens was shot in the side and lisa stephens is her mother. >> she keeps calling me and i said i have to take this call. mommy, i've been shot. >> reporter: to get a call and your daughter saying she had been shot. >> it was terrible and upsetting and you hear the casualties. >> reporter: other relatives of the injured say they are lucky. >> unfortunately, the other 14 families don't have the story to share and it really breaks our heart that this is happening to all of us. >> reporter: of course, some of the injured are luckier than others. at least three have now been released from area hospitals. but here at the loma linda university medical center, at least two remain in critical condition. norah? >> john, thank you so much. officials tell cbs news this morning that a woman named tashfeen malik attended pharmacy school in paecket and the home country of farook's wife. authorities are going through evidence at the couple's nearby home in redlands. david begnaud spoke with farook's sister farook's family appeared here in the apartment behind me with the couple's 6-month-old baby girl and the closest we have been able to get. for the first time we were able to ask immediate family is there anything they knew that would have indicated how violent this man would be? >> i can never imagine my brother or my sister-in-law doing something like this, especially because they were happily married and had a beautiful 6-month-old daughter. it's mind boggling why they could do something like this. >> reporter: the couple say they share the heartache felt by their community and this country. they can't believe someone so close to them could do something so horrific. >> people can't fathom how a mother and father drop their 6-month-old baby girl off and then commit mass murderer. >> we can't either. >> reporter: does it make you angry? >> of course. >> of course. very upset and angry how they can leave a 6-month-old daughter. >> and he put us in this predicament. >> reporter: farook started searching for a wife they say using an online dating website and he met tashfeen malik and they game engaged in 2013 after he traveled to saudi arabia during the annual pilgrimage known as the hajj. he returned to u.s. to bring malik to the u.s. she passed a counterterrosm screening as part of the vetting process and told cbs news she was not on a terror watch list. this man was shocked when he learned the man accused of gunning down more than a dozen people turned out to be the coworker he sat just feet from for five years. he says farook was different after he returned from saudi arabia. do you believe that he was radicalized? >> yes, by the wife. i think he married a terrorist. >> reporter: he married a terrorist? >> yes. >> reporter: a law enforcement source tells cbs news bombs found in the couple's home are near carbon copies of explosives shown in an issue of al qaeda online magazine "inspire" which printed instructions on how to make a bomb in the kitchen of your mom. what is the one thing you want to say on behalf of your family? >> we can't imagine the loss that everybody has gone through, all of the people that were injured or, you know, hurt badly, our thoughts and prayers are going out to them. >> reporter: she revealed to us during that interview the couple's 6-month-old baby girl who they left behind was actually taken into state custody on the night of the shooting. sarah says she and her husband now plan to adopt that baby girl. charlie? >> thanks, david. a new quinnipiac poll shows most americans believe home-grown jihadist are the greatest terror threat to the united states. the poll compared them to radicalized foreign visitors and terrorists hiding among syrian refuges. michael morale is a former cia deputy director. what questions should we be asking at this moment? >> i think the most urgent question were they working with anybody else? are there any other coconspirators out there? an awful lot of weapons for just two people. that is the most important questions for the fbi to run down now. the other questions what did he do in saudi arabia, who did he meet with? more importantly, what did he do in pakistan and did he get training to do something like this. what motivated them to do this particular event rather than something else. >> what else might they be plannng to do? >> exactly. >> what is your expertise tell us what happened here? they did the shooting at the center and went home and yesterday police found quite an arsenal at their place. >> i'm speculating right now. my expertise tells me that they were radicalized, they were radicalized by either isis or al qaeda, not necessarily just isis. they were planning something big or a series of events. they may not have been planning this particular event, right? that they may have gone to this party, got angry, decided to do this event based on that anger, rather than based on a series of plots that they were actually planning. >> what do you think happens next in terms of tracking down, as we have reported, that he was in contact with a person we believe has ties to terrorism ? >> i want to know what those conversations were, what was actually being said, who that person was. i also want to know the same thing about his reported communications with people overseas. >> and if we have this person that has suspected ties to terrorism under surveillance, why didn't our intelligence or law enforcement know about mr. farook and his wife and what they were doing? >> there is a lot of people, there's a lot of americans who are communicating with isis, reading isis propaganda, even communicating with them on facebook and twitter. too many people for the fbi to survey and follow up on. a lot of americans out there -- >> how many are we talking about? >> thousands. >> in 50 states we have open investigations into isis sympathizers. >> why is there a reluctance to call this terrorism? what do we need to know to call it officially terrorism? >> as odd as it sounds they were terrorists but this event was not terrorism. what it depends on is what was their motivation for doing this? right? was the motivation to do this to be part of al qaeda and isis and sympathize with them, or was this because you were mad at your coworkers? >> you would think if that was the issue, they would have just killed one or two rather than as many as they could. >> they shot their managers first. >> right. >> michael morrell, thank you very much. >> you're welcome. congress is rejecting a new gun control push in the wake of the shootings. they failed to pass a series of measures including more background checks. republicans say they are focusing on fixing the mental health system and renewing the terror fight. >> the san bernardino suspects were holding an arsenal in a state with some of the america's toughest gun laws. the husband and wife team carried two assault rifles and two semiautomatic handguns during the rampage. but in their home, investigators found a dozen pipe bombs and more th 4,500 bullets. jeff pegues has more in washington. >> reporter: good morning. the two shooters were armed to the teeth. officials want to know how the weapons were purchased and paid for. syed farook was a county employee earning about $70,000 a year. an expert told cbs news the cache would have cost between 10,000 and 15,000. police say syed farook and his wife tashfeen malik fired 65 to 75 rifle rounds inside the inland million regional center on wednesday and then fired 76 more rounds at officers during their life ending shoot-out. >> they had over 1,400, 22 3 caliber rounds and nine millimeter rounds on their person as well. >> reporter: at their home, 2,000 9 millimeter handgun rounds and more. this is a former l.a. prosecutor. >> when there is guns on the street and when with there is ammo and large magazine clips, this is bound to happen. >> reporter: are according to the atf the handguns were legally obtained and purchased by farook and they confirm the ar-15 guns in the shooting were bought legally and illegally modified to make them more powerful. california gun act ban those style rifles. a law banned magazines and clips which can hold ten or more but they are readily available online and in other states. chris cox from the national rifle association noted in today an opinion piece that california gun laws didn't stop the attack. quote, the fact remains that california has already adopted president obama's gun control wish list. according to investigators, a lot of the ammunition the shooters used was strong enough to pierce the bullet-proof vest worn by police. >> that's scary. jeff, thank you so much. we have much more to come from san bernardino in our next half. farook's sister talks about what if she could have stopped the bloodshed. that is ahead here on "cbs this morning." many rock music fans are shocked this morning by the sudden death of singer scott weiland. he was just 48 years old. ♪ ♪ when i feel times are gold ♪ he had other hits for the stone temple pilots starting in the 1990s. the band sold more than 13 million albums in the u.s. weiland won two grammys including one with the velvet revolver the group he led after the stone temple pilots broke up. he reportedly died on a tour bus last night in minnesota. the cause is not determined but he had battled drug and addiction for many years. ahead, "60 minutes" investigates the use the president answers skeptics who disagree that climate change poses the greatest threat to the future. donald trump who is the front-runner says you have one of the dumbest mistakes i've heard in politics. >> hear how the president responds to norah coming up. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by jcpenney. where giving begins. moderate to severe crohn's disease is tough, but i've managed. except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing. and when i finally told my doctor, he said humira is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain 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"the washington post" reports on a historic decision to open all jobs in combat units to women. for the first time, females will be eligible to join all infantry universities and special operations. the jobs will open beginning next year. defense secretary ash carter says there will be no exception. "usa today" says the army has grounded all aircraft in active duty units across the country between now and monday, after three helicopter crashes in ten days killed eight people. between now and monday, army leaders will review the flight mission, the briefing process, aircraft coordination training, unit preaccident plans, and maintains training responsibilities. "the post and courier" says they want one to repent for voting against the confederate flag. on the back it says may you take this joyous time to ask forgiveness of all of your sins such as betrayal. cbs chicago shows a video seems to show a toddler smoking marijuana. the media was alerted. police are investigating because the video apparently shows the little joint putting a joint in his mouth and he takes a few puffs while adults off camera encourage him to do so. we have unique insight about one of the san bernardino shooters and comes from his sister. the police searched the home of syed farook and his wife on thursday in redlands, california. the two had apparently been planning something for a long time. they had a giant stockpile of ammunition and homemade bombs. david begnaud in redlands shows us how the gunman's family is responding and coping. david, good morning. >> reporter: charlie, good morning. we are speaking to the sister and i have to tell you she says she is numb and, quite frankly, at a loss for words. for the first time since the shooting on "cbs this morning," the sister representing the immediate family is talking. it is their first interview ever since police told them their brother committed mass murder. >> i want to say i'm sorry, deeply saddened, and, i mean, it's a sad day for all of us. >> reporter: saira khan insists she has most idea what motivated her brother and his wife to go on a shoot rampage. she and her husband farhand are left to wonder could they have stopped it? >> i asked sk myself if i had called him that morning and asked how he was doing and what he was up to. if i had any inclination, could i have stopped it? >> reporter: they had thousands of rounds of ammunition in their garage. >> even i was surprised that somebody can go and buy that much weapons. >> reporter: he didn't talk a lot? >> no. he was always shy and quiet. >> reporter: did you like his life? >> yes. she was also shy and quiet and kept to herself. >> reporter: saira says she hasn't had the time to process what is going on. >> we are also mourning the loss of someone we knew or thought we knew. so we would really want, like, everybody to give us, you know, some time to mourn or, you know, get some time, i guess. just like everybody else out there that need time to mourn. >> reporter: far han, said he felt an obligation to address the people on the night of the shooting. >> i wanted to go there and talk to the victims. people were hurt. i felt responsible. tell us to the people. >> reporter: do you think your brother deserves to be forgiven? >> that's a hard question. i don't even know if i will forgive him. just because of what he did. >> reporter: farhan, could you forgive your brother-in-law? >> not right now. what he did do to his own family, to his daughter, to other families, to the people there, no, i won't forgive him. >> reporter: we spoke with the two attorneys who are representing the shooters' family. they told us yesterday they met with the fbi and based on questions from the fbi being asked of the family, the attorneys believe federal investigators are pursuing a theory that this very well could have been a terrorist attack. norah? >> david, thank you. again, scary that no one even their closest family members could not know they were building this arsenal at home. >> looking at interview you can't help but feel for the couple. david announced they are going to adopt the little girl. >> what seems to me nobody could see the radicalication. >> many questions here. >> indeed. president obama faces criticism from his opponents this morning for suggesting the world's greatest threat is not terrorism, but climate change. we asked him to explain his comments during wednesday's one-on-one interview at the white house. it is his first interview since returning from the paris climate talks. >> reporter: you did say in the state of the union that no challenge poses a greater threat to future generations than climate change. do you mean it's a greater threat than terrorism? >> what i mean by that is that we're going to get isil. they will be defeated. there will be ongoing efforts to disrupt the world order from terrorists, from rogue states from, you know, cyber steakatta. there is always bad people out there trying to do bad things and we have to be vigilant in going after them. but if you see the oceans rise by five, six, seven feet, if you see major shifts in weather patterns so that what had been previously bread baskets to the world, suddenly, can no longer grow food, then you're seeing the kind of crisis that we can't deal with through the deployment of the marines, we can't deal with it through money at it. what we know is that as human beings are placed under strain, then bad things happen, and, you know, if you look at world history, whenever people are desperate, when people start lacking food, when people are not able to make a living or take care of their families, that's when ideologies arise that are dangerous. >> reporter: donald trump who is the front-runner on the republican side, said your remarks are one of the dumbest statements i've ever heard in politics. >> well, you know? mr. trump should run back a tape and listen to some of the stuff he's said. but look. here is what we know. 99.5% of scientists in the world say this is a really urgent problem. the only people who are still disputing it are either some republicans in congress or folks on the campaign trail. >> you know, this is part of the debate, because the president has a view there, along with 190 world leaders. the republican party is debating a different view and i think it's going to continue to play itself out in this campaign. >> yeah. >> i thought it was an interesting analogy he made, because so many people don't believe this is a crisis and all of the experts say it is. >> our polling suggests, however, though, that almost two-thirds do believe that climate change deserves action. okay on. more of our conversation in the next hour. we will talk about his fight to make a deal with the world to limit global warming. that story is ahead. no training and suddenly no backup from police. how a young woman's fear after a drug bust led to a deadly choice. we will preview sunday's "60 minutes" report. if you're heading ought door we understand it's friday! we only ask that you set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time feel like it. certainly you won't want to his homeland star mandy patinkin who is coming to studio 57 today. one touch, and unlike life, no mess. your favorites. your way. keurig hot. and let roomba jufrom irobot®an help with your everyday messes. roomba navigates your entire home cleaning up pet hair and debris for up to 2 hours. which means your floors are always clean. you and roomba from irobot® better together™. the uncertainties i don't wantof hep c.with or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni, there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems, or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi. side effects may include tiredness and headache. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. iand quit a lot,t but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology, helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. in a wand conventions,tates could there be another way? ♪ ♪ la vie est belle. ♪ la vie est belle, the eau de parfum, lancôme. now, at the friends and family event, get your lancôme gift. only at macy's. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night,blind. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. ♪ sunday on "60 minutes," lesley stahl investigates the death of a 23-year-old woman and how police unknowingly set her up to be killed. in this preview she looks at the battle to shed light on some of the reality of some undercover drug stings. >> reporter: lance block is an attorney in tallahassee, florida. >> these kids are being recruited to do the most dangerous type of police work. they are going undercover with no background, training, or experience. they haven't been to the police academy. >> reporter: so they are basically doing the same work as a trained undercover cop? >> absolutely. >> reporter: lock says he was unaware police were using young people as confidential informants until he was hired seven years ago by the family of rachel hoffman, a recent college graduate who was caught with a large stash of marijuana and a few valium and ecstasy pills and her second marijuana arrest. >> she was caught by the tallahassee police department and told if she didn't become a confidential informant she was looking at four years in prison. >> reporter: she signed up and a few weeks later, was sent out to make her first undercover drug buy. it was to be one of the biggest in tallahassee's recent history, 1,500 ecstasy pills, an ounce and a half of cocaine, and a gun. had she ever dealt in any of those things? >> no. >> reporter: a gun? had she ever fired a gun? >> no. rachel was a pothead and rachel sold marijuana to her friends out of her home, but rachel wasn't dealing in ecstasy or cocaine, much less, of course, not weapons. >> reporter: rachel drove her car alone to meet the dealers in this park with 13,000 dollars cash from the police and a wire in her purse. she was to be monitored by some 20 officers. but then the dealers changed the location of the deal so rachel drove away from the police staging area and that is when things went terribly wrong. >> the drug dealers have her out on this road, one drug dealer gets into the car with her. >> reporter: and the 20 cops who were nearby? >> they lost her. >> hoffman is 5'7", 135 pounds. she was seen sunday night near forest meadows park. >> reporter: she shot her seven times when they found the wire in her purse and dumped the body in a ditch 50 miles away. >> watch "60 minutes" on sunday to find out what law enforcement say about using young confidential informants sunday on cbs. ahead, republican presidential hopeful marco rubio is here with his thoughts on announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nationwide. hi, i'd like to make a dep-- ♪ scanner: rescan item. rescan, rescan. rescan item. vo: it happens so often you almost get used to it. phone voice: main menu representative. representative. representative. vo: which is why being put first... relax, we got this. vo: ...takes some getting used to. join the nation. ♪ nnwatioiside on your side representative. working on my feet all day gave min my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain. find a machine at drscholls.com it takesi'm on the move.. to all day long...ss. and sometimes, i just don't eat the way i should. so i drink boost to get the nutrition that i'm missing. boost complete nutritional drink has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. all with a great taste. i don't plan on slowing down any time soon. stay strong. stay active with boost. now try new boost® compact and 100 calories. iand i'm jerry bell the third. i'm like a big bear and he's my little cub. this little guy is non-stop. he's always hanging out with his friends. you've got to be prepared to sit at the edge of your seat and be ready to get up. there's no "deep couch sitting." definitely not good for my back. this is the part i really don't like right here. 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>> rodgers in trouble. >> it's going to get there. >> he turned 32 yesterday. does he have a vintage moment in him? in the end zone, it is caught for the win! >> doesn't that make you happy? >> unbelievable! >> doesn't that make you happy? even if you're a detroit lions fan, it's just the sheer athleticism. >> hail mary by quarterback aaron rodgers gave green bay a come-from-behind win on "thursday night football." the packers trailed detroit 20-0 in the third quarter! green bay ended up winning 27-23. rodgers said it was the most amazing game of his life. >> you have to roll back again and say did that just happen? yes, it did. >> i know. >> one of the greats moments. >> great moment. >> why people love football right there. >> yeah. >> the packers victory wasn't the only surprise last night. the nfl announced that coldplay, there they are. they will headline super bowl 50 halftime show. they hinte the super bowl performance could be joined on stage by past performers. maybe beyonce is the big surprise. you can see the super bowl february 7th on cbs. >> is marco rubio poised to make a run at donald trump is in the florida senator is right here in studio 57. good morning, senator! we will ask him about his plan for stopping home-grown terror. that is ahead on "cbs this morning." and i'm still struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may too. know your options. once-daily toujeo® is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus®. it releases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours. toujeo® also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. toujeo® is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. don't use toujeo® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you're allergic to insulin. allergic reaction may occur and may be life threatening. don't reuse needles or share insulin pens, even if the needle has been changed. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which can be serious and life threatening. it may cause shaking, sweating, fast heartbeat, and blurred vision. check your blood sugar levels daily while using toujeo®. injection site reactions may occur. don't change your dose or type of insulin without talking to your doctor. tell your doctor if you take other medicines and about all your medical conditions. insulins, including toujeo®, in combination with tzds (thiazolidinediones) may cause serious side effects like heart failure that can lead to death, even if you've never had heart failure before. don't dilute or mix toujeo® with other insulins or solutions as it may not work as intended and you may lose blood sugar control, which could be serious. ask your doctor about toujeo®. came out today thousands of people to run the race for retirement. so we asked them... are you completely prepared for retirement? 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are there any other coconspirators out there? the two shooters were armed to the teeth. officials want to know how the weapons were purchased and paid for. >> the youngest of the victims was 26. the oldest was 60. some worked so closely together, they called themselves family. >> it is their first interview ever since police told them their brother committed mass murder. >> i want to say i'm sorry, deeply saddened, and, i mean, it's a sad day for all of us. >> you did say in the state of the union that no challenge poses a greater threat to future generations than clim chanate c. do you mean it's a greater threat than terrorism? >> what i mean by that is we are going to get isil. they will be defeated. >> several gathered in san bernardino last night at a candlelight and prayer vigil to honor the victims. >> this is my city. what affects one part of the city, affects us all. and we need, at this time, to come together. i'm chilarlie rose with gay king and norah o'donnell. authorities are trying to understand why 14 people were murdered in san bernardino, california. the evidence is pointing them more towards terrorism. thousands attended a vigil last night to honor the shooting victims. all 14 people killed have been identified. they range in age from 26 to 60. families are sharing stories of how they lived their lives. >> authorities will not speculate on the motivate of syed rizwan farook and his wife tashfeen malik. cell phone video captured the police shooting where the couple died. >> oh, my gosh. >> reporter: officials say the suspects fired at the officers and the police returned the fire. carter evans is in san bernardino with new information about the shooters. >> reporter: good morning. officials still aren't ruling out terrorism in this case. now, sources have told cbs news that the 28-year-old syed rizwan farook, a u.s. citizen, had been in contact with an individual in the u.s. with suspected ties to terrorism. he was also communicating online with extremists overseas. tashfeen malik, his 27-year-old wife who is originally from pakistan, underwent and pass counterterrorism screening in order to get her k1 visa that was conducted in islamislamabad. inside the couple's house investigators found bullets and pipe dorves and enough materiel and tools to build more. authorities showed us the weapons used in the attack and all of the guns were purchased legally. as many as 80 people were enjoying a holiday lunch in a conference room when the couple stepped inside and simply started shooting. now sources tell cbs news that department managers were the first one to be shot before the couple sprayed the room with as many as 75 rifle rounds. charlie? >> thanks, carter. the senate voted lt night to appeal much of obamacare but failed to pass -- prevent be people on a terror watch list to buy guns or ammunition and stronger treatment for mental illness and substance abuse. four senators voted for expanded background checks and presidential candidate marco rubio was not one of them. the florida senator is with us now in studio 57. why don't i start with that in terms of why you did not. >> first of all, none of these crimes have been completed or what i believe is a terror attack in california and would have been expanded by the background check and the fact of the matter these individuals would have passed a background check and these individuals in california, the terrorist that was able to access these weapons is not someone that would have found up in any database and one of the risks of home-grown violent extremists. they have not done anything before and suddenly become radicalized and months of taking action. >> the president said yesterday it's far too easy for people to get weapons and we need to figure out a way to make it harder for them. in this particular case you're right it wouldn't have make any difference. but it seems other cases it would have made a difference. >> none of the major shootings occurred the last few months in this country gun laws would have prevented them and many existed because local jurisdictions had gun laws stricter than what you find in other jurisdictions. >> we have a violence problem in america. >> why more gun violence than any other violence? >> even nongun-related murders are up. about 60% of the gun deaths in america are due to suicide and a terrible thing. the other remaining 40% of the gun deaths a significant percentage of them is due to other crimes being committed and a process of a gun is being used and horrifying incidents that occur. if you look at it more broadly think the fundamental question why so much violence in america? it is a combination of cultural changes occurred in our country and mental health issues as well. >> you generally agree background checks are a good thing? >> i think background checks that are properly conducted. in florida you have to undergo a background check. my background check is done by a telephone and not a three-day wait period and so forth. it would impede the second amendment right of a large number of americans. >> given why the background checks are commonplace in the law of the land why wouldn't you do them for online gun sales and gun shows? >> you're putting an incredible burden on people. it's not a gun show loophole. it is an individual i want to sell my gun to a friend of mine and you put an extraordinary burden on me to go out and conduct a background check and i'm liable if i get it wrong. as an individual it's difficult to implement and almost impossible to enforce and ignores the fact that despite the background checks we are seeing now, people are still getting access to these weapons. >> you mentioned mental health. a lot of people mention mental health. when you look at the shootings and majority of the cases they aren't conducted by mentally ill people. what about the freedom for people to go to the mall, to church, to school? people talk about the rights of the mentally ill. what about the rights of average americans who just want to live in a world where we can conduct -- >> and not live in fear. >> violence is a big problem and i think they are add to go that problem is the risk of home-grown violent extremism which is the most challenging terrorism problem we have ever faced. >> what would you do? >> a couple of points. robust intelligence gathering capabilities to disrupt plots and one of the reasons i was opposed to this law that some of my opponents running for president were for. the usa act that passed a few months ago. it took away the right to collect med-data and we cannot access the phone records of individuals we either suspect of being involved in terrorism or who carry out an attack to see who they were coordinating and talking to. that is one example of things we need to do more of. ultimately, i will say this in full candor. it is going to be very hard to find someone who has never done anything wrong in nair life and radicalized six months online and u.s. citizen and lived here their whole life and one day the next decidesed to join a radical movement and that is a difficult threat to confront. >> we better find an answer. >> i want to asking what is happening in paris. nations are about to sgroagree a massive climate change deal. i sat down with the president and asked him about what some candidates have leveled at him. when chris christie says i don't see evidence that climate change is a crisis, when marco rubio says, not sure what percentage of it is due to man's activity. there is no consensus on it. you say what? they are just wrong? >> they are absolutely wrong. it's not subject to dispute. mr. rubio is from florida and you can go now to places in south florida where when the sun is out during high tide, you've got fish swimming in the streets because the flooding is so high. the evidence is there right now that drought flood storm surges are hurting people right now. and that is only going to get worse. >> is the evidence -- >> fish swimming in the street? we have had flooding issues on miami beach and one of the reasons might be because of rise in the sea level but primarily it's because miami and all south florida is built on a swamp. miami island is an island built because of dredging. the fundamental issue for a policymaker is what do we do about it? and everything the president is advocating for, even the scientists admit we don't believe it would make a dramatic impact any time in the near future on any trends in the climate. but i can tell you would have a dramatic impact on our economy and here is one more point. the united states has already significantly reduced carbon emissions compared to other countries in the world. all of the carbon emissions will come out of india and china and other developing countries and they don't intend to do anything about it, no matter what document they are going to sign, they don't intend to do anything about it until their economy meets parody with ours. >> you don't believe they are going to follow through on the deal they are signing in paris? >> what deal was china ever followed through on? they said they wouldn't conduct cyber attacks and doing that now. they are not going to hamstring their economy. they have million of people to employee and feed and not cut back on that until they reach parody with us. >> you say paris is a farce? >> i don't think they will arrive at any measures that will solve any problem. i do think there is a potential for the united states to pursue policies that will be very harmful to our economy and basically have no impact on our environment. >> all right, you're going back out on the campaign trail. if you could vote for a republican, other than yourself, who would that be? >> i'd vote for myself again! >> very nice. >> yeah. don't ask me that question. i'd vote for myself. >> i said if you had a choice. >> if i had a choice. >> would it be donald trump? >> i'mupporting the republican nominee and i don't believe that is going to be donald trump. i think that is going to be me. i wouldn't be running for president if i wasn't going to be president. >> president obama is going to talk more about climate change and the political footprint he wants to leave after his mandy patinken is after a bigger challenge than "homeland." he is in our green room. hello there. >> hello. >> he shows us why he is involved in one of the world's most pressing issues. what is that? 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>> keep in mind, these are pledges over a number of years. this is in our interest. take a country like india that = has over a billion people. if they are to develop using, let's say, coal as their main way of generating electricity, with a billion people, four times as many people as the united states, over the next 20, 30 years, you know, you're looking at an amount of carbon that would mean south florida is gone because the oceans would have risen too high. you can't build a border wall when it comes to carbon emissions or global temperatures or the oceans. and so we have got to make sure that people have incentives to work with us. >> reporter: how much of your legacy do you want to be about climate change? >> you know, as i go into my last year, and i think about what i've gotten done and what i still haven't gotten done yet, i don't think any president ends the presidency saying i got everything done. you're always a little dissatisfied, you always wish, if i just had a little more time, maybe this would have happened and that would have happened. but i think about it this say. malia is 17 and sasha is 14. every once in a while, i tear up thinking about how fast it's gone and they are about to go. and i do picture that if i'm lucky, you know, i have enough years left, that 20 years from now, let's say, and i'm still around, i've got some grandkids, i want to be able to take my little grandson or granddaughter on a walk to the park and know that the planet is in pretty good shape. and i want to feel like i contributed to that. and when with i'm holding that little hand or pushing that kid on a swing, if he or she are able to enjoy that sunny day and feel good about it and breathe clean air and go swimming in an ocean and i can watch them play, that will be a pretty good legacy. i'll feel pretty good about that. >> this is a great interview. >> yeah. >> thank you. we have had 13 of the 14 hottest years in the past couple of years. 2015 was the hottest year on record. and it's clear the world wants to do something about it. the question is whether china and india, who are the first and third largest carbon emitters in the country will agree to that. india is a big story two. 3 million people in india without electricity will be coming online in the future and economy is a big issue according to marco rubio. will they slow down and use ways to build their economy -- >> we celebrate warmer temperatures in november and december and that is a problem. >> especially when you live on an island like manhattan. >> we need to find a way to get between this idea what it does to the economy versus what it does to our life. >> agree. agree. but look. you'll see in paris, i think something come out of there where not just 190 countries, but also business leaders are trying to craft some sort of compromise on this. for more of our interview with president obama and the issue of climate change, we want you to go to cbsthis morning.com. >> tiger woods says plenty in a candid new interview. a look at his plans if he can't play golf any more and how he and his ex-wife are moving forward. >> this is a great interview. >> looking forward to this one too. we will be right back. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni, there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems, or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi. side effects may include tiredness and headache. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? 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(voand exceptional customerity pre-ownservice,les... head to your neighborhood enterprise car sales and let the people who buy more vehicles than anyone... flip your thinking about buying your next one. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night,blind. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. ♪ yeah. i like that sound and that voice. i love that voice! welcome to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, you know the voice too. celebrating frank sinatra. las vegas rolls out the red carpet for his 100th birthday and we will talk with john legend and carrie underwood and some other people. >> mandy patinken returns on our green room and stories of season five of"homeland." that is ahead. time to show this morning's headlines. dallas morning news says authorities are investigating a texas teenager accused of afl afflueza. this week a video shows couch violating his probation. he is now 18 and appears to be playing a drinking game at a party. his lawyers has no comment. drug company rahe said on thursday he should have gone even higher. shkreli has gone back on the price to affect the price of darapri daraprim. he says companies are still begging for his business. the trailer for the new season of hbo drama focuses mostly on the johnno sw character or he was killed last season, or at least what we thought. that is what you call a good tease. >> "the game of thrones." >> and showtime. >> and "homeland." >> perfect segue to you. he is in the hit series "homeland." he learns his assistance is a mole for russian's terror. >> you were trying to have carrie killed. she was your friend, allison. >> you were my friend. more than that. >> butchered agents in cairo. that was yours too, wasn't it? what about jill sanders? your key deputy. what did he do to deserve a bullet in the face at extremely close range? tell me, goddamn it. you are a wife and three kids. >> i'm still in touch with them and godmother to their youngest. >> you betrayed them all and then you found out you are a betrayer. all of those networks rolled up and good people blown up. what do you think happened to them? >> wow! >> welcome back to the table mandy patinken. >> hi there. >> man! >> how do you trust anybody when you play such a dark side and you see such dark things on tv? >> i trust everyone. >> yeah, yeah. >> you know, i tell you. i don't know. i mean, i just do -- i'm very hopeful and very optimistic about the world, about the mess that we are all living in right now. i think people tune in to our show because they are looking for an answer, they are looking for some insight too. a world that is on fire. a world that is burning. and you wonder why. my prayer, my hope, sal berenson's hope is there is something in between the lines and something the way we listen to each other, which people aren't doing any more. what that something is, i think, mandy thinks, i believe sal thinks, is we need to come up with a new paradigm because the violence isn't working. the spy master show we did. if you really watch it, if you really watch what those heads of the institutions say and you listen in between the lines, they have failed, they have failed. all of these bombs, you send an incident in paris, you send planes and you bomb more and then it makes more people who are marginalized by society living in towns where they have no education, they have no opportunity. so they are looking for a place to live. what if we bombed all of these people with opportunity with infrastructure, with schools, with medical facilities, with homes, with everything the west has? what if we gave them everything imaginable to make their lives wonderful? so that they have no need to turn away. >> this is so interesting. you're talking about spy masters. incredible documentary where we were able to interview. >> and this described 9/11. because of homeland and because of this you talk to a lot of members of the intelligence community. you're going in january again. is that -- you say you're optimistic. but what is the dark side? >> well, they come in to two hours apiece, three days, ten-hour days, each guy for two hours. we have lunch and dinners and they tell us what they feel. they are very patriotic and care deeply about humanity all over the world and trying to save humidity and try to figure this out. you don't have to be einstein to figure this out this is going to keep happening and this is going to happen long past our children's and grandchildren's lifetimes. >> you talk about you need to listen and listen more. secondly you're talking about writing all kinds things in terms of education and caring and a lot of other things. >> yes. >> what do you think will make it happen? what is required to see your points in action? >> little steps. don't tell me that guns aren't a part of the problem. they are a part of the problem. we need to stop gun violence in america and all over the world. other places have done it. in this country, we can take just the middle east, just gaza and west bank alone and give them the best schools, give them the best road systems, agricultural systems, medical systems, give them everything we have and want for our children. so no one in that epi center of existence can sit back and say we are being cheated, we are not given freedom, justice, and dignity, which is all -- >> will that change the image of our country in their minds? >> absolutely. and we can show that we are the human beings the americans that we claim that our forefathers wished us to be. >> on the bbc the other day, they said another day in america, another shooting. that was at the bbc. for yourself personally, you are always looking for the good in people and you found it you said in greece. >> my friend who played in season four, i said come out for the emmy awards. let me show you my country. let me show you the west. let me take you to the grand canyon and show it to you. he said i can't go there. i said why? he said if i get a fight in this country in europe i'll get hurt. if i go in your country and get in a fight i'll get killed and it woke me up about gun violence and a guy who looks like him and believes in my country and that broke high heart. >> so you did what in greece? >> in the middle of our filming in berlin all season it blew up in greece and all of the immigrants you knew people, millions waiting to flee this violent war and i needed to go there. when filming stopped i went to lezbos i want to hold a baby in high arms and happy a family and i did. it made the difference in the world. i met a family that lost everything in the water. they had no money to get the ferry to get to athens to get to the train to get to europe. and i was fortunate, i gave them the money for that but their boys looked like my boys. we need to connect with these people. i just went to elizabeth, new jersey, yesterday, and spent the day with a family there. they are beautiful and we are going to invite them over for dinner and wherever you are in namerica, 24 centers from the international rescue center and find out where these families are and invite them to your home. >> you have to come back soon. we have a clock problem. >> i understand. i love morning tv. >> thank you. >> okay, thank you. >> we love you. >> thank you, thank you. >> important message about compassion. >> please, please. >> with what we have been covering and listening the past couple of days. >> reach out to all humanity and welcome them to our home, to our country. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> mandy patinken. "homeland" airs sunday on showtime a division of cbs. you can also see spy masters and documentary narrated by mandy ♪ music my k-cup® filter is back. now you can make anything, even a piece of home. the single serve-make-all-your-favorites exactly-how-you-like-it machine. keurig hot. your favorites. your way. it's the holidays. and of course, everyone wants to get online at once. to watch things. buy things. but slow internet makes it hard. that's why it's time to get fios. it has the fastest internet and wifi available. with speeds from 50 to 500 megs. and right now, you'll get 50 meg fios internet, tv and phone for 79.99 a month online for your first year. and with a 2 year agreement, we'll give you all theremium movie channels for a year. plus, 400 dollars back. so go online or call now. get out of the past. get fios. ♪ ♪ i'm more much more than this ♪ ♪ i did it my way ♪ >> the voice. frank sinatra will always be famous for his timeless version of pop music standards but the musicians from almost every genre are celebrating what would be his 100th birthday this month and it airs sunday on cbs. lee cowan reports the party started in sinatra's playground, las vegas. ♪ >> reporter: frank sinatra was a lot of things to a lot of people, but to most, he was simply the voice. ♪ >> reporter: he was the perfect mix of wise guy, cool, and romantic vulnerability. or as his nine-time grammy winner john legend puts it? >> he had the charisma that everyone wanted to be. the guys wanted to be him. >> reporter: legend is just one of more than a dozen grammy greats set to toast old blue eyes during an all-star 100th birthday bash in las vegas. do you have a favorite sinatra song? ♪ when i was 17 it was a very good year ♪ ♪ it was a very good year >> reporter: sinatra has been imitated many a time, but rarely copied. everyone here knows they have big shoes to fill. ♪ come fly with me let's go down to peru ♪ >> you can't sound just like him. >> reporter: no matter how hard you try? >> yeah. even back stage, harry connick jr. was helping me feel out the melodic choices he would make. >> music like his will never, ever die. >> reporter: he made it look easy? >> take it from somebody who does it, it's unbelievable how easy he made it look. ♪ baby i'm a guy pg that y that you came in with ♪ >> reporter: this is not connick's first celebration for sinat sinatra. he sang with him for his 75th birthday or tried to. >> i had a great music on the first line but then i couldn't remember it so taf to save my l. >> reporter: you forting tgot t lyrics? >> he is here now. >> reporter: that is sinatra's youngest daughter tina who had a front row seat to her father's big career. >> i remember being proud at 7, wow, him his little kid. >> reporter: years ago she gave harry connick jr. a wristwatch that belonged to his father. he has kept it in a safe until now. >> listen, i'm going to wear that tonight. i've been wearing it yesterday and it's going back in the safe! ♪ i want to wake up in that city that doesn't sleep ♪ >> reporter: like that gift, sinatra's music is timeless. set the bar year after year, no wonder there were so many very good ears. ♪ let's be a lady >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," i'm lee cowan, in las vegas. ♪ today good night! >> wow! >> that looks good! >> cool a hundred years later people hold you in such high regard they are sill celebrating your life. >> you can watch sinatra 100 all time grammy concert sunday night on cbs. >> when we come back, we will look at the unbelievable moments on "cbs th the only way to get better is to challenge yourself, and that's what we're doing at xfinity. we are challenging ourselves to improve every aspect of your experience. and this includes our commitment to being on time. every time. that's why if we're ever late for an appointment, we'll credit your account $20. it's our promise to you. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. delicious and packaged with nothing to hide. no secrets. just like our family. well there is one. folks, i'm not your grandma. just a handsome kind hearted drifter who wandrered in years ago and stayed for all the yummy sausage. feel bad about lying. nap time. i got her. seriously? i feel like i just woke up. ha ha ha! fully cooked johnsonville breakfast sausage. we don't make sausage. we make family. and sausage. ♪ ♪ that does it for us. be sure to tune into "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight. for news any time were in watch our digital news network 24/7 cbsn. as we leave you, take a look back at the past week on "cbs this morning." >> this is supposed to be a holiday ban fquet and turned in a shooting scene. >> they came prepared to do what they did. >> a long gun, a pistol, tactical type hiclotng. >> the suspects are dead now. they were killed in a rampage. >> one guy down. one guy in the back of a car. >> the street where the suspects lived on is evacuated. it was a concern initially there may be explosives in the area. >> president obama has been juggling the risk to global stability from climate change and the fight against isis. >> we all have a common enemy and that isil. >> to step up efforts on the ground. >> if convicted, thein mimum >>ntence is life without parole. the initial charge, fme first-degree murder. >> some of these dumb ass politicians said, oh, no, oh, no. >> he has gone too far and he is showing a lack of seriousness. >> mark zuckerberg with a pledge to give away 99% of his wealth which is why his daughter's first words were that son of a [ bleep ]. >>iger woods is talking about his struggle to return to professional golf. >> where is the light at the end of the tunnel? i don't know. ♪ take me to the river >> a pattern now of mass shootings in this country that has no parallel anywhere else in the world. >> bullet just a rain of bullets everywhere. >> pray for us. >> surely, there can be something to stop people from getting an ak-47. >> what we are trying to do is make sure that what our response is actually addresses the problems without infringing upon the rights of law abiding citizens. >> 27-year-old mother of a 6-month-old is firing off as many rounds like she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense. >> life is precious. >> why do you want to be president? you've been in the white house. >> there it is. right. well, i'm not doing it to move back in, although it's a wonderful place. >> why are you doing this? >> i really love this country. ♪ i like to be in america >> the first time i had ever played a young hispanic woman who had a sense of dignity. >> i want to know how maurice milklewhite became the sir beb nair michael caine. >> i should get the tea and run to the leading lady. >> i thought that women should look good and strong. >> somebody said they wanted to focus on brains, not bo on obs but the truth of the matter is you can have both. can you have both. >> we don't rush to print, somebody else is going to find these letters and butcher the story. >> a great reporter dedicates his life to his work. >> you can vote for a republican other than yourself, would would you be? >> i'd vote for myself again! >> cbs has -- tape six! that's probably my best. >> that is the magic tape. >> that's when it come news reporters: it's a fish, but it's been changed. genetically altered by scientists. critics call the process creepy, and label it frankenfish. narrator: genetically engineered salmon was just approved by the fda - no labels required. disturbing, right? get this. if your state wants to label gmos, congress is trying a year-end sneak attack to block your right to label. call congress. demand clear labels, not high tech gimmicks. don't let them overturn state gmo labeling. protect our right to know. (all with worry-free ownership. colors in your neighborhood... head to your neighborhood enterprise car sales and let the people who buy more vehicles than anyone... shift your thinking about buying your next one. on top of your health?ay ahh... ahh... cigna customers have plan choices and tools to take control. so they're more engaged, with fewer high health risks and lower medical costs. take control of your health at cigna dot com slash take control. it's the holidays. and of course, everyone wants to get online at once. to watch things. buy things. but slow internet makes it hard. that's why it's time to get fios. it has the fastest internet and wifi available. with speeds from 50 to 500 megs. and right now, you'll get 50 meg fios internet, tv and phone for 79.99 a month online for your first year. and with a 2 year agreement, we'll give you all the premium movie channels for a year. plus, 400 dollars back. so go online or call now. get out of the past. get fios. we're gearing up for the weekend with a new burger joint. and we have a performance ahead of the evangel cathedral christmas celebration. it's friday, december 4. this is "great day washington" ." good morning. my name is chris leary. i'm markette sheppard. we're your hosts of "great day washington" bringing you all things great in the dmv monday through friday. tgif. >> yes, it's friday. we had an exciting night last night, my cohost and myself. it was wonderful. it didn't start as wonderful as it ended but it was lovely. >> let's tell people what the nigh night was. we had cameo roles in the debut performance of the washington ballet's "nutcracker." it was awesome. i played the mary widow. you were the ambassador. i was in full wardrobe. i had to act. i got there 30 minutes before the performance because the national christmas tree lighting traffic was horrible. they were like okay. and this is your role, this is what you're doing, go. >> you are so funny. i was watching. i know one thing, i am not an actor nor will i ever be. i feel sad saying that. but next you to, you were hamming it up the whole way with the hand kerr chief and looking -- hand chief and looking around and going, hey, these are great seats. >> i was the mary witness dough. i had a dramatic role i was playing. thank you so much to the washington ballet for inviting us. >> the traffic was awful with the tree lighting. >> i ditched my car in a parking garage, caught a cab, the train and a bus to get there. i was like the show must go on. >> look at you. >> so, i mean-- >> that's too funny. but it was all really, really worth it and we had a wonderful time. washington ballet, thank you so much once again. i want to give a huge warm welcome to special guests in the audience. american university's graduate school of communications. they're here. jill is my professor and she brought the entire class this friday to learn about how television works. thanks for coming. >> my singing professor is here, pamela. >> really? >> no, she never taught me anything but she'll be singing here and she brought her husband, david. you might have met the browns before. you'll meet them later on. >> meet the browns on great great-- >> "great day washington." >> we're excited about that. we also have our life correspondent

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massacre. >> it was unspeakable. the carnage that we were seeing and the furor panic on the face of those virgin islands that were still in need. >> i can't get my head around the fact that a 27-year-old mother is firing off as many roundsik le she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense, to be honest with you. >> i am convinced that was a terrorist attack. >> the san bernardino shooting and terrorism is dominating the talk on the presidential aicampgn trail. >> it's becoming clearer that we are dealing with an act of terrorism. ne senate republicans rejected unw g control legislation, including the ability to bar suspected terrorists from buying guns. >> defense secretary ash carter ordered all combat jobs be opened to women. >> they will be able to serve as army rangers and green berets and everything else that was previously open only to men. scott weiland, best known as the frontman for the band stone temple pilots was found dead on his bus. >> a flight was delayed after they were removing luggage that caught fire. >> who is going to play in the super bowl 50 halftime show? >> it's coldplay. >> it will be wonderful. >> rodgers, does he have a agvintmee mont in him? >> it is caught! a touchdown! a game ender for the packers. >> and all that matters. >> a national christmas tree shining bright. th president remembers the victims of the shooting in san bernardino. >> their loss is our loss too. we are all one american family. >> on "cbs this morning." i feel bad for barack obama. he has been begging for gun control for six years, and the only major change in the gun debate since he has got into office has been to his tas. -- face. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome back to "cbs this morning." new evidence is leading investigators to suspect the san bernardino shooters may have been terrorists. the married couple killed 14 people wednesday and wounded many more. we are seeing the faces of their victims and hearing from their grieving families. one police officer calls the carnage at a holiday party unspeakable. >> police say syed rizwan farook and his wife tashfeen malik carried out the attacks. they are looking into malik radicalized her husband. >> oh, my gosh! >> this cell phone video captured the violent gun battle with police that killed the couple. carter evans is in san bernardin with the new evidence the authorities have. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. law enforcement still won't speculate on why the couple opened fire, but they have not ruled out terrorism. and cbs news has learned that syed rizwan farook had been in communication with people with suspected ties to terrorism here in the u.s. he had also been communicating online with suspected extremists overseas. investigators continue their search for clues thursday near the bullet-ridden suv where syed rizwan farook and tashfeen malik were killed. for the first time the authorities showed the weapons they used in the brutal attack. >> as i said from day one with the evidence will lead us to the facts. >> reporter: police confirm there were 75 to 80 people in the conference room where farook started shooting employees. he shot first at department managers before spraying the room with as many as 75 rifle rounds. >> so many lives lost over nothing. >> reporter: lieutenant mike madden was one of the first officers on the scene. >> it was unspeakable the carnage that we were seeing. that was evident in the moans we were hearing in the room. >> reporter: the fresh spray of gun powder led authorities to believe the shooters were still at large. >> we went further into the building and that was a difficult choice to have to make as well, passing people we knew were injured and in needing of assistance but our goal had to be at that time locating the shooters. >> reporter: but the shooters were already gone. they left behind this bomb rigged to a remote control toy car that acted as a wireless trigger. it did not explode. >> it just seems so senseless that here people with going into their holiday festivities and now we are dealing with that. >> reporter: farook and malik were killed in a shoot-out with police about four hours later. newly released information shows the ver osity of that battle. the couple fired 76 roupeds at police and 23 police officers returned 383 rounds. on thursday, an fbi evidence response team combed through the home where the couple lived. inside they found more than 4,500 bullets and 12 pipe bombs and enough material and tools to build several more. chief, do you believe they were planning another attack? >> we don't know. clearly, they were equipped and they could of continued to do another attack. we intercepted them before that happened. >> reporter: now the fbi has flown in a special team from washington to study the crime scene and we understand that agents have already sent some evidence back to d.c. for analysis. they are also going to be taking a look at the couple's electronic devices to try and get a better understanding of what could make them commit such a heinous crime. >> thank you, carter. that is the question everyone is asking today. thanks a lot. thousands gathered in san bernardino last night at a candlelight and prayer vigil to honor the victims. relatives and friends are sharing stories to tell us about their loved ones. john blackstone has been speaking with the victims' families and he is outside loma linda medical center where some survivors are recovering. john, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the youngest of the victims was 26. t oldest was 60. we know most of them worked for the county of san bernardino and some worked so closely together, they called themselves family. family and friends of the 14 men and women killed in wednesday's shooting are honoring their loved ones by offering a glimpse into who they were and how they lived their lives. 37-year-old michael wetzel was a father of six. in a statement pted to a fund-raising website his wife renee said i didn't know a better person. without him, this family will never be the same. >> he was so kind to everybody so he was very chivalry. >> reporter: jennifer says her husband nicholas was devoted to his messianicjewish faith. >> they were a tight night group that worked together and some of them that passed away were very good friends. >> reporter: 27-year-old yvette velasco. >> they were a close family and tight-knit. >> reporter: according to iran-born bennetttibet-baddal they fled to america to escape islamic extremism. >> she came here to have a better life and everything else. >> reporter: on facebook one of sierra clayborn's photos is covered in blue, white and red. a tribute to the victims of last month's paris massacre. a message beneath the photo reads, even as you can, your picture is out of love for victims elsewhere. >> he had this grand that made it look like i was up to something. >> reporter: the los angeles reports that daniel kaufman worked at a coffee shop. >> when things were starting to get to you, daniel would show up and it was like -- >> he would pull some stunt and make you laugh. ♪ >> reporter: in addition to the 14 people who died, nearly two dozen were injured. one of the survivors 22-year-old jennifer stephens was shot in the side and lisa stephens is her mother. >> she keeps calling me and i said i have to take this call. mommy, i've been shot. >> reporter: to get a call and your daughter saying she had been shot. >> it was terrible and upsetting and you hear the casualties. >> reporter: other relatives of the injured say they are lucky. >> unfortunately, the other 14 families don't have the story to share and it really breaks our heart that this is happening to all of us. >> reporter: of course, some of the injured are luckier than others. at least three have now been released from area hospitals. but here at the loma linda university medical center, at least two remain in critical condition. norah? >> john, thank you so much. officials tell cbs news this morning that a woman named tashfeen malik attended pharmacy school in paecket and the home country of farook's wife. authorities are going through evidence at the couple's nearby home in redlands. david begnaud spoke with farook's sister farook's family appeared here in the apartment behind me with the couple's 6-month-old baby girl and the closest we have been able to get. for the first time we were able to ask immediate family is there anything they knew that would have indicated how violent this man would be? >> i can never imagine my brother or my sister-in-law doing something like this, especially because they were happily married and had a beautiful 6-month-old daughter. it's mind boggling why they could do something like this. >> reporter: the couple say they share the heartache felt by their community and this country. they can't believe someone so close to them could do something so horrific. >> people can't fathom how a mother and father drop their 6-month-old baby girl off and then commit mass murderer. >> we can't either. >> reporter: does it make you angry? >> of course. >> of course. very upset and angry how they can leave a 6-month-old daughter. >> and he put us in this predicament. >> reporter: farook started searching for a wife they say using an online dating website and he met tashfeen malik and they game engaged in 2013 after he traveled to saudi arabia during the annual pilgrimage known as the hajj. he returned to u.s. to bring malik to the u.s. she passed a counterterrosm screening as part of the vetting process and told cbs news she was not on a terror watch list. this man was shocked when he learned the man accused of gunning down more than a dozen people turned out to be the coworker he sat just feet from for five years. he says farook was different after he returned from saudi arabia. do you believe that he was radicalized? >> yes, by the wife. i think he married a terrorist. >> reporter: he married a terrorist? >> yes. >> reporter: a law enforcement source tells cbs news bombs found in the couple's home are near carbon copies of explosives shown in an issue of al qaeda online magazine "inspire" which printed instructions on how to make a bomb in the kitchen of your mom. what is the one thing you want to say on behalf of your family? >> we can't imagine the loss that everybody has gone through, all of the people that were injured or, you know, hurt badly, our thoughts and prayers are going out to them. >> reporter: she revealed to us during that interview the couple's 6-month-old baby girl who they left behind was actually taken into state custody on the night of the shooting. sarah says she and her husband now plan to adopt that baby girl. charlie? >> thanks, david. a new quinnipiac poll shows most americans believe home-grown jihadist are the greatest terror threat to the united states. the poll compared them to radicalized foreign visitors and terrorists hiding among syrian refuges. michael morale is a former cia deputy director. what questions should we be asking at this moment? >> i think the most urgent question were they working with anybody else? are there any other coconspirators out there? an awful lot of weapons for just two people. that is the most important questions for the fbi to run down now. the other questions what did he do in saudi arabia, who did he meet with? more importantly, what did he do in pakistan and did he get training to do something like this. what motivated them to do this particular event rather than something else. >> what else might they be plannng to do? >> exactly. >> what is your expertise tell us what happened here? they did the shooting at the center and went home and yesterday police found quite an arsenal at their place. >> i'm speculating right now. my expertise tells me that they were radicalized, they were radicalized by either isis or al qaeda, not necessarily just isis. they were planning something big or a series of events. they may not have been planning this particular event, right? that they may have gone to this party, got angry, decided to do this event based on that anger, rather than based on a series of plots that they were actually planning. >> what do you think happens next in terms of tracking down, as we have reported, that he was in contact with a person we believe has ties to terrorism ? >> i want to know what those conversations were, what was actually being said, who that person was. i also want to know the same thing about his reported communications with people overseas. >> and if we have this person that has suspected ties to terrorism under surveillance, why didn't our intelligence or law enforcement know about mr. farook and his wife and what they were doing? >> there is a lot of people, there's a lot of americans who are communicating with isis, reading isis propaganda, even communicating with them on facebook and twitter. too many people for the fbi to survey and follow up on. a lot of americans out there -- >> how many are we talking about? >> thousands. >> in 50 states we have open investigations into isis sympathizers. >> why is there a reluctance to call this terrorism? what do we need to know to call it officially terrorism? >> as odd as it sounds they were terrorists but this event was not terrorism. what it depends on is what was their motivation for doing this? right? was the motivation to do this to be part of al qaeda and isis and sympathize with them, or was this because you were mad at your coworkers? >> you would think if that was the issue, they would have just killed one or two rather than as many as they could. >> they shot their managers first. >> right. >> michael morrell, thank you very much. >> you're welcome. congress is rejecting a new gun control push in the wake of the shootings. they failed to pass a series of measures including more background checks. republicans say they are focusing on fixing the mental health system and renewing the terror fight. >> the san bernardino suspects were holding an arsenal in a state with some of the america's toughest gun laws. the husband and wife team carried two assault rifles and two semiautomatic handguns during the rampage. but in their home, investigators found a dozen pipe bombs and more th 4,500 bullets. jeff pegues has more in washington. >> reporter: good morning. the two shooters were armed to the teeth. officials want to know how the weapons were purchased and paid for. syed farook was a county employee earning about $70,000 a year. an expert told cbs news the cache would have cost between 10,000 and 15,000. police say syed farook and his wife tashfeen malik fired 65 to 75 rifle rounds inside the inland million regional center on wednesday and then fired 76 more rounds at officers during their life ending shoot-out. >> they had over 1,400, 22 3 caliber rounds and nine millimeter rounds on their person as well. >> reporter: at their home, 2,000 9 millimeter handgun rounds and more. this is a former l.a. prosecutor. >> when there is guns on the street and when with there is ammo and large magazine clips, this is bound to happen. >> reporter: are according to the atf the handguns were legally obtained and purchased by farook and they confirm the ar-15 guns in the shooting were bought legally and illegally modified to make them more powerful. california gun act ban those style rifles. a law banned magazines and clips which can hold ten or more but they are readily available online and in other states. chris cox from the national rifle association noted in today an opinion piece that california gun laws didn't stop the attack. quote, the fact remains that california has already adopted president obama's gun control wish list. according to investigators, a lot of the ammunition the shooters used was strong enough to pierce the bullet-proof vest worn by police. >> that's scary. jeff, thank you so much. we have much more to come from san bernardino in our next half. farook's sister talks about what if she could have stopped the bloodshed. that is ahead here on "cbs this morning." many rock music fans are shocked this morning by the sudden death of singer scott weiland. he was just 48 years old. ♪ ♪ when i feel times are gold ♪ he had other hits for the stone temple pilots starting in the 1990s. the band sold more than 13 million albums in the u.s. weiland won two grammys including one with the velvet revolver the group he led after the stone temple pilots broke up. he reportedly died on a tour bus last night in minnesota. the cause is not determined but he had battled drug and addiction for many years. ahead, "60 minutes" investigates the use the president answers skeptics who disagree that climate change poses the greatest threat to the future. donald trump who is the front-runner says you have one of the dumbest mistakes i've heard in politics. >> hear how the president responds to norah coming up. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by jcpenney. where giving begins. moderate to severe crohn's disease is tough, but i've managed. except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing. and when i finally told my doctor, he said humira is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain 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(voand exceptional customerity pre-ownservice,les... head to your neighborhood enterprise car sales and let the people who buy more vehicles than anyone... flip your thinking about buying your next one. may not always be clear. but at t. rowe price, we can help guide your retirement savings. so wherever your retirement journey takes you, we can help you reach your goals. call us or your advisor t. rowe price. invest with confidence. ♪ >> we are averaging more than one mass shooting a day. do you know what? whenever one of these happens, i feel like we have to go through the same emotional roller coaster and it's the most vile roller coaster in history, except for maybe the legendary 1933 world's roller corvette of breakaway railroad. this shooting yesterday was like a couple was radicalized and not sure of that yet and another crazy guy shot up a theater for god knows what reason. the only thing we know for sure as we get off this ride we are a little queasy and legs wobbly and in the pit of our stomach, we know it's not going to be long before we get on this ride again. >> that is the scariest party. when is the next one is what everybody says these days. welcome to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, more from our interview with the sister and the brother-in-law of the suspect in the san bernardino massacre. they talk about the man they knew, their grief for the victims, and whether they could ever forgive him for the massacre. plus our white house interview with president obama, why he considers climate change a bigger threat than isis and his answers to critics like donald trump is ahead. time to show you this morning's headlines. "the washington post" reports on a historic decision to open all jobs in combat units to women. for the first time, females will be eligible to join all infantry universities and special operations. the jobs will open beginning next year. defense secretary ash carter says there will be no exception. "usa today" says the army has grounded all aircraft in active duty units across the country between now and monday, after three helicopter crashes in ten days killed eight people. between now and monday, army leaders will review the flight mission, the briefing process, aircraft coordination training, unit preaccident plans, and maintains training responsibilities. "the post and courier" says they want one to repent for voting against the confederate flag. on the back it says may you take this joyous time to ask forgiveness of all of your sins such as betrayal. cbs chicago shows a video seems to show a toddler smoking marijuana. the media was alerted. police are investigating because the video apparently shows the little joint putting a joint in his mouth and he takes a few puffs while adults off camera encourage him to do so. we have unique insight about one of the san bernardino shooters and comes from his sister. the police searched the home of syed farook and his wife on thursday in redlands, california. the two had apparently been planning something for a long time. they had a giant stockpile of ammunition and homemade bombs. david begnaud in redlands shows us how the gunman's family is responding and coping. david, good morning. >> reporter: charlie, good morning. we are speaking to the sister and i have to tell you she says she is numb and, quite frankly, at a loss for words. for the first time since the shooting on "cbs this morning," the sister representing the immediate family is talking. it is their first interview ever since police told them their brother committed mass murder. >> i want to say i'm sorry, deeply saddened, and, i mean, it's a sad day for all of us. >> reporter: saira khan insists she has most idea what motivated her brother and his wife to go on a shoot rampage. she and her husband farhand are left to wonder could they have stopped it? >> i asked sk myself if i had called him that morning and asked how he was doing and what he was up to. if i had any inclination, could i have stopped it? >> reporter: they had thousands of rounds of ammunition in their garage. >> even i was surprised that somebody can go and buy that much weapons. >> reporter: he didn't talk a lot? >> no. he was always shy and quiet. >> reporter: did you like his life? >> yes. she was also shy and quiet and kept to herself. >> reporter: saira says she hasn't had the time to process what is going on. >> we are also mourning the loss of someone we knew or thought we knew. so we would really want, like, everybody to give us, you know, some time to mourn or, you know, get some time, i guess. just like everybody else out there that need time to mourn. >> reporter: far han, said he felt an obligation to address the people on the night of the shooting. >> i wanted to go there and talk to the victims. people were hurt. i felt responsible. tell us to the people. >> reporter: do you think your brother deserves to be forgiven? >> that's a hard question. i don't even know if i will forgive him. just because of what he did. >> reporter: farhan, could you forgive your brother-in-law? >> not right now. what he did do to his own family, to his daughter, to other families, to the people there, no, i won't forgive him. >> reporter: we spoke with the two attorneys who are representing the shooters' family. they told us yesterday they met with the fbi and based on questions from the fbi being asked of the family, the attorneys believe federal investigators are pursuing a theory that this very well could have been a terrorist attack. norah? >> david, thank you. again, scary that no one even their closest family members could not know they were building this arsenal at home. >> looking at interview you can't help but feel for the couple. david announced they are going to adopt the little girl. >> what seems to me nobody could see the radicalication. >> many questions here. >> indeed. president obama faces criticism from his opponents this morning for suggesting the world's greatest threat is not terrorism, but climate change. we asked him to explain his comments during wednesday's one-on-one interview at the white house. it is his first interview since returning from the paris climate talks. >> reporter: you did say in the state of the union that no challenge poses a greater threat to future generations than climate change. do you mean it's a greater threat than terrorism? >> what i mean by that is that we're going to get isil. they will be defeated. there will be ongoing efforts to disrupt the world order from terrorists, from rogue states from, you know, cyber steakatta. there is always bad people out there trying to do bad things and we have to be vigilant in going after them. but if you see the oceans rise by five, six, seven feet, if you see major shifts in weather patterns so that what had been previously bread baskets to the world, suddenly, can no longer grow food, then you're seeing the kind of crisis that we can't deal with through the deployment of the marines, we can't deal with it through money at it. what we know is that as human beings are placed under strain, then bad things happen, and, you know, if you look at world history, whenever people are desperate, when people start lacking food, when people are not able to make a living or take care of their families, that's when ideologies arise that are dangerous. >> reporter: donald trump who is the front-runner on the republican side, said your remarks are one of the dumbest statements i've ever heard in politics. >> well, you know? mr. trump should run back a tape and listen to some of the stuff he's said. but look. here is what we know. 99.5% of scientists in the world say this is a really urgent problem. the only people who are still disputing it are either some republicans in congress or folks on the campaign trail. >> you know, this is part of the debate, because the president has a view there, along with 190 world leaders. the republican party is debating a different view and i think it's going to continue to play itself out in this campaign. >> yeah. >> i thought it was an interesting analogy he made, because so many people don't believe this is a crisis and all of the experts say it is. >> our polling suggests, however, though, that almost two-thirds do believe that climate change deserves action. okay on. more of our conversation in the next hour. we will talk about his fight to make a deal with the world to limit global warming. that story is ahead. no training and suddenly no backup from police. how a young woman's fear after a drug bust led to a deadly choice. we will preview sunday's "60 minutes" report. if you're heading ought door we understand it's friday! we only ask that you set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time feel like it. certainly you won't want to his homeland star mandy patinkin who is coming to studio 57 today. one touch, and unlike life, no mess. your favorites. your way. keurig hot. and let roomba jufrom irobot®an help with your everyday messes. roomba navigates your entire home cleaning up pet hair and debris for up to 2 hours. which means your floors are always clean. you and roomba from irobot® better together™. the uncertainties i don't wantof hep c.with or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni, there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems, or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi. side effects may include tiredness and headache. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? 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>> absolutely. >> reporter: lock says he was unaware police were using young people as confidential informants until he was hired seven years ago by the family of rachel hoffman, a recent college graduate who was caught with a large stash of marijuana and a few valium and ecstasy pills and her second marijuana arrest. >> she was caught by the tallahassee police department and told if she didn't become a confidential informant she was looking at four years in prison. >> reporter: she signed up and a few weeks later, was sent out to make her first undercover drug buy. it was to be one of the biggest in tallahassee's recent history, 1,500 ecstasy pills, an ounce and a half of cocaine, and a gun. had she ever dealt in any of those things? >> no. >> reporter: a gun? had she ever fired a gun? >> no. rachel was a pothead and rachel sold marijuana to her friends out of her home, but rachel wasn't dealing in ecstasy or cocaine, much less, of course, not weapons. >> reporter: rachel drove her car alone to meet the dealers in this park with 13,000 dollars cash from the police and a wire in her purse. she was to be monitored by some 20 officers. but then the dealers changed the location of the deal so rachel drove away from the police staging area and that is when things went terribly wrong. >> the drug dealers have her out on this road, one drug dealer gets into the car with her. >> reporter: and the 20 cops who were nearby? >> they lost her. >> hoffman is 5'7", 135 pounds. she was seen sunday night near forest meadows park. >> reporter: she shot her seven times when they found the wire in her purse and dumped the body in a ditch 50 miles away. >> watch "60 minutes" on sunday to find out what law enforcement say about using young confidential informants sunday on cbs. ahead, republican presidential hopeful marco rubio is here with his thoughts on announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nationwide. hi, i'd like to make a dep-- ♪ scanner: rescan item. rescan, rescan. rescan item. vo: it happens so often you almost get used to it. phone voice: main menu representative. representative. representative. vo: which is why being put first... relax, we got this. vo: ...takes some getting used to. join the nation. ♪ nnwatioiside on your side representative. working on my feet all day gave min my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain. find a machine at drscholls.com it takesi'm on the move.. to all day long...ss. and sometimes, i just don't eat the way i should. so i drink boost to get the nutrition that i'm missing. boost complete nutritional drink has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. all with a great taste. i don't plan on slowing down any time soon. stay strong. stay active with boost. now try new boost® compact and 100 calories. iand i'm jerry bell the third. i'm like a big bear and he's my little cub. this little guy is non-stop. he's always hanging out with his friends. you've got to be prepared to sit at the edge of your seat and be ready to get up. there's no "deep couch sitting." definitely not good for my back. this is the part i really don't like right here. 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are there any other coconspirators out there? the two shooters were armed to the teeth. officials want to know how the weapons were purchased and paid for. >> the youngest of the victims was 26. the oldest was 60. some worked so closely together, they called themselves family. >> it is their first interview ever since police told them their brother committed mass murder. >> i want to say i'm sorry, deeply saddened, and, i mean, it's a sad day for all of us. >> you did say in the state of the union that no challenge poses a greater threat to future generations than clim chanate c. do you mean it's a greater threat than terrorism? >> what i mean by that is we are going to get isil. they will be defeated. >> several gathered in san bernardino last night at a candlelight and prayer vigil to honor the victims. >> this is my city. what affects one part of the city, affects us all. and we need, at this time, to come together. i'm chilarlie rose with gay king and norah o'donnell. authorities are trying to understand why 14 people were murdered in san bernardino, california. the evidence is pointing them more towards terrorism. thousands attended a vigil last night to honor the shooting victims. all 14 people killed have been identified. they range in age from 26 to 60. families are sharing stories of how they lived their lives. >> authorities will not speculate on the motivate of syed rizwan farook and his wife tashfeen malik. cell phone video captured the police shooting where the couple died. >> oh, my gosh. >> reporter: officials say the suspects fired at the officers and the police returned the fire. carter evans is in san bernardino with new information about the shooters. >> reporter: good morning. officials still aren't ruling out terrorism in this case. now, sources have told cbs news that the 28-year-old syed rizwan farook, a u.s. citizen, had been in contact with an individual in the u.s. with suspected ties to terrorism. he was also communicating online with extremists overseas. tashfeen malik, his 27-year-old wife who is originally from pakistan, underwent and pass counterterrorism screening in order to get her k1 visa that was conducted in islamislamabad. inside the couple's house investigators found bullets and pipe dorves and enough materiel and tools to build more. authorities showed us the weapons used in the attack and all of the guns were purchased legally. as many as 80 people were enjoying a holiday lunch in a conference room when the couple stepped inside and simply started shooting. now sources tell cbs news that department managers were the first one to be shot before the couple sprayed the room with as many as 75 rifle rounds. charlie? >> thanks, carter. the senate voted lt night to appeal much of obamacare but failed to pass -- prevent be people on a terror watch list to buy guns or ammunition and stronger treatment for mental illness and substance abuse. four senators voted for expanded background checks and presidential candidate marco rubio was not one of them. the florida senator is with us now in studio 57. why don't i start with that in terms of why you did not. >> first of all, none of these crimes have been completed or what i believe is a terror attack in california and would have been expanded by the background check and the fact of the matter these individuals would have passed a background check and these individuals in california, the terrorist that was able to access these weapons is not someone that would have found up in any database and one of the risks of home-grown violent extremists. they have not done anything before and suddenly become radicalized and months of taking action. >> the president said yesterday it's far too easy for people to get weapons and we need to figure out a way to make it harder for them. in this particular case you're right it wouldn't have make any difference. but it seems other cases it would have made a difference. >> none of the major shootings occurred the last few months in this country gun laws would have prevented them and many existed because local jurisdictions had gun laws stricter than what you find in other jurisdictions. >> we have a violence problem in america. >> why more gun violence than any other violence? >> even nongun-related murders are up. about 60% of the gun deaths in america are due to suicide and a terrible thing. the other remaining 40% of the gun deaths a significant percentage of them is due to other crimes being committed and a process of a gun is being used and horrifying incidents that occur. if you look at it more broadly think the fundamental question why so much violence in america? it is a combination of cultural changes occurred in our country and mental health issues as well. >> you generally agree background checks are a good thing? >> i think background checks that are properly conducted. in florida you have to undergo a background check. my background check is done by a telephone and not a three-day wait period and so forth. it would impede the second amendment right of a large number of americans. >> given why the background checks are commonplace in the law of the land why wouldn't you do them for online gun sales and gun shows? >> you're putting an incredible burden on people. it's not a gun show loophole. it is an individual i want to sell my gun to a friend of mine and you put an extraordinary burden on me to go out and conduct a background check and i'm liable if i get it wrong. as an individual it's difficult to implement and almost impossible to enforce and ignores the fact that despite the background checks we are seeing now, people are still getting access to these weapons. >> you mentioned mental health. a lot of people mention mental health. when you look at the shootings and majority of the cases they aren't conducted by mentally ill people. what about the freedom for people to go to the mall, to church, to school? people talk about the rights of the mentally ill. what about the rights of average americans who just want to live in a world where we can conduct -- >> and not live in fear. >> violence is a big problem and i think they are add to go that problem is the risk of home-grown violent extremism which is the most challenging terrorism problem we have ever faced. >> what would you do? >> a couple of points. robust intelligence gathering capabilities to disrupt plots and one of the reasons i was opposed to this law that some of my opponents running for president were for. the usa act that passed a few months ago. it took away the right to collect med-data and we cannot access the phone records of individuals we either suspect of being involved in terrorism or who carry out an attack to see who they were coordinating and talking to. that is one example of things we need to do more of. ultimately, i will say this in full candor. it is going to be very hard to find someone who has never done anything wrong in nair life and radicalized six months online and u.s. citizen and lived here their whole life and one day the next decidesed to join a radical movement and that is a difficult threat to confront. >> we better find an answer. >> i want to asking what is happening in paris. nations are about to sgroagree a massive climate change deal. i sat down with the president and asked him about what some candidates have leveled at him. when chris christie says i don't see evidence that climate change is a crisis, when marco rubio says, not sure what percentage of it is due to man's activity. there is no consensus on it. you say what? they are just wrong? >> they are absolutely wrong. it's not subject to dispute. mr. rubio is from florida and you can go now to places in south florida where when the sun is out during high tide, you've got fish swimming in the streets because the flooding is so high. the evidence is there right now that drought flood storm surges are hurting people right now. and that is only going to get worse. >> is the evidence -- >> fish swimming in the street? we have had flooding issues on miami beach and one of the reasons might be because of rise in the sea level but primarily it's because miami and all south florida is built on a swamp. miami island is an island built because of dredging. the fundamental issue for a policymaker is what do we do about it? and everything the president is advocating for, even the scientists admit we don't believe it would make a dramatic impact any time in the near future on any trends in the climate. but i can tell you would have a dramatic impact on our economy and here is one more point. the united states has already significantly reduced carbon emissions compared to other countries in the world. all of the carbon emissions will come out of india and china and other developing countries and they don't intend to do anything about it, no matter what document they are going to sign, they don't intend to do anything about it until their economy meets parody with ours. >> you don't believe they are going to follow through on the deal they are signing in paris? >> what deal was china ever followed through on? they said they wouldn't conduct cyber attacks and doing that now. they are not going to hamstring their economy. they have million of people to employee and feed and not cut back on that until they reach parody with us. >> you say paris is a farce? >> i don't think they will arrive at any measures that will solve any problem. i do think there is a potential for the united states to pursue policies that will be very harmful to our economy and basically have no impact on our environment. >> all right, you're going back out on the campaign trail. if you could vote for a republican, other than yourself, who would that be? >> i'd vote for myself again! >> very nice. >> yeah. don't ask me that question. i'd vote for myself. >> i said if you had a choice. >> if i had a choice. >> would it be donald trump? >> i'mupporting the republican nominee and i don't believe that is going to be donald trump. i think that is going to be me. i wouldn't be running for president if i wasn't going to be president. >> president obama is going to talk more about climate change and the political footprint he wants to leave after his mandy patinken is after a bigger challenge than "homeland." he is in our green room. hello there. >> hello. >> he shows us why he is involved in one of the world's most pressing issues. what is that? we will talk about it after the break ahead with mandy. it's coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ americans. we try to live healthy. but many of us don't know there are nutrients that can help support our metabolism. take new one a day healthy metabolism support multivitamin with chromium to help use carbs from food and b-vitamins to help convert food to fuel. one a day. padvil pm gives you the healingu at nsleep you need, it. helping you fall asleep and stay asleep so your body can heal as you rest. advil pm. for a healing night's sleep. who's the rebel now? no way. yes way! savor an egg mcmuffin any time you like. a fresh cracked egg, melty cheese, canadian bacon and an english muffin with real butter. mcdonald's all day breakfast menu. yeah! it's time to start breaking some rules. ♪ we have more now from our one on on one interview with president obama who is back home but in paris this morning, negotiations from around the world are in the middle of two weeks of talk and they are trying to reach an agreement to limit global warming. during our white house visit, we asked the president about his effort to take historic action and how his climate change priorities could affect his legacy. >> reporter: in order for this deal to work in paris and in order to get developing countries like india to sign on, they want money from developed countries. >> right. >> reporter: you promised $3 billion. if you can't get congress on board, how can you deliver on that promise to the world? >> keep in mind, these are pledges over a number of years. this is in our interest. take a country like india that = has over a billion people. if they are to develop using, let's say, coal as their main way of generating electricity, with a billion people, four times as many people as the united states, over the next 20, 30 years, you know, you're looking at an amount of carbon that would mean south florida is gone because the oceans would have risen too high. you can't build a border wall when it comes to carbon emissions or global temperatures or the oceans. and so we have got to make sure that people have incentives to work with us. >> reporter: how much of your legacy do you want to be about climate change? >> you know, as i go into my last year, and i think about what i've gotten done and what i still haven't gotten done yet, i don't think any president ends the presidency saying i got everything done. you're always a little dissatisfied, you always wish, if i just had a little more time, maybe this would have happened and that would have happened. but i think about it this say. malia is 17 and sasha is 14. every once in a while, i tear up thinking about how fast it's gone and they are about to go. and i do picture that if i'm lucky, you know, i have enough years left, that 20 years from now, let's say, and i'm still around, i've got some grandkids, i want to be able to take my little grandson or granddaughter on a walk to the park and know that the planet is in pretty good shape. and i want to feel like i contributed to that. and when with i'm holding that little hand or pushing that kid on a swing, if he or she are able to enjoy that sunny day and feel good about it and breathe clean air and go swimming in an ocean and i can watch them play, that will be a pretty good legacy. i'll feel pretty good about that. >> this is a great interview. >> yeah. >> thank you. we have had 13 of the 14 hottest years in the past couple of years. 2015 was the hottest year on record. and it's clear the world wants to do something about it. the question is whether china and india, who are the first and third largest carbon emitters in the country will agree to that. india is a big story two. 3 million people in india without electricity will be coming online in the future and economy is a big issue according to marco rubio. will they slow down and use ways to build their economy -- >> we celebrate warmer temperatures in november and december and that is a problem. >> especially when you live on an island like manhattan. >> we need to find a way to get between this idea what it does to the economy versus what it does to our life. >> agree. agree. but look. you'll see in paris, i think something come out of there where not just 190 countries, but also business leaders are trying to craft some sort of compromise on this. for more of our interview with president obama and the issue of climate change, we want you to go to cbsthis morning.com. >> tiger woods says plenty in a candid new interview. a look at his plans if he can't play golf any more and how he and his ex-wife are moving forward. >> this is a great interview. >> looking forward to this one too. we will be right back. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni, there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems, or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi. side effects may include tiredness and headache. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? 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(voand exceptional customerity pre-ownservice,les... head to your neighborhood enterprise car sales and let the people who buy more vehicles than anyone... flip your thinking about buying your next one. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night,blind. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. ♪ yeah. i like that sound and that voice. i love that voice! welcome to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, you know the voice too. celebrating frank sinatra. las vegas rolls out the red carpet for his 100th birthday and we will talk with john legend and carrie underwood and some other people. >> mandy patinken returns on our green room and stories of season five of"homeland." that is ahead. time to show this morning's headlines. dallas morning news says authorities are investigating a texas teenager accused of afl afflueza. this week a video shows couch violating his probation. he is now 18 and appears to be playing a drinking game at a party. his lawyers has no comment. drug company rahe said on thursday he should have gone even higher. shkreli has gone back on the price to affect the price of darapri daraprim. he says companies are still begging for his business. the trailer for the new season of hbo drama focuses mostly on the johnno sw character or he was killed last season, or at least what we thought. that is what you call a good tease. >> "the game of thrones." >> and showtime. >> and "homeland." >> perfect segue to you. he is in the hit series "homeland." he learns his assistance is a mole for russian's terror. >> you were trying to have carrie killed. she was your friend, allison. >> you were my friend. more than that. >> butchered agents in cairo. that was yours too, wasn't it? what about jill sanders? your key deputy. what did he do to deserve a bullet in the face at extremely close range? tell me, goddamn it. you are a wife and three kids. >> i'm still in touch with them and godmother to their youngest. >> you betrayed them all and then you found out you are a betrayer. all of those networks rolled up and good people blown up. what do you think happened to them? >> wow! >> welcome back to the table mandy patinken. >> hi there. >> man! >> how do you trust anybody when you play such a dark side and you see such dark things on tv? >> i trust everyone. >> yeah, yeah. >> you know, i tell you. i don't know. i mean, i just do -- i'm very hopeful and very optimistic about the world, about the mess that we are all living in right now. i think people tune in to our show because they are looking for an answer, they are looking for some insight too. a world that is on fire. a world that is burning. and you wonder why. my prayer, my hope, sal berenson's hope is there is something in between the lines and something the way we listen to each other, which people aren't doing any more. what that something is, i think, mandy thinks, i believe sal thinks, is we need to come up with a new paradigm because the violence isn't working. the spy master show we did. if you really watch it, if you really watch what those heads of the institutions say and you listen in between the lines, they have failed, they have failed. all of these bombs, you send an incident in paris, you send planes and you bomb more and then it makes more people who are marginalized by society living in towns where they have no education, they have no opportunity. so they are looking for a place to live. what if we bombed all of these people with opportunity with infrastructure, with schools, with medical facilities, with homes, with everything the west has? what if we gave them everything imaginable to make their lives wonderful? so that they have no need to turn away. >> this is so interesting. you're talking about spy masters. incredible documentary where we were able to interview. >> and this described 9/11. because of homeland and because of this you talk to a lot of members of the intelligence community. you're going in january again. is that -- you say you're optimistic. but what is the dark side? >> well, they come in to two hours apiece, three days, ten-hour days, each guy for two hours. we have lunch and dinners and they tell us what they feel. they are very patriotic and care deeply about humanity all over the world and trying to save humidity and try to figure this out. you don't have to be einstein to figure this out this is going to keep happening and this is going to happen long past our children's and grandchildren's lifetimes. >> you talk about you need to listen and listen more. secondly you're talking about writing all kinds things in terms of education and caring and a lot of other things. >> yes. >> what do you think will make it happen? what is required to see your points in action? >> little steps. don't tell me that guns aren't a part of the problem. they are a part of the problem. we need to stop gun violence in america and all over the world. other places have done it. in this country, we can take just the middle east, just gaza and west bank alone and give them the best schools, give them the best road systems, agricultural systems, medical systems, give them everything we have and want for our children. so no one in that epi center of existence can sit back and say we are being cheated, we are not given freedom, justice, and dignity, which is all -- >> will that change the image of our country in their minds? >> absolutely. and we can show that we are the human beings the americans that we claim that our forefathers wished us to be. >> on the bbc the other day, they said another day in america, another shooting. that was at the bbc. for yourself personally, you are always looking for the good in people and you found it you said in greece. >> my friend who played in season four, i said come out for the emmy awards. let me show you my country. let me show you the west. let me take you to the grand canyon and show it to you. he said i can't go there. i said why? he said if i get a fight in this country in europe i'll get hurt. if i go in your country and get in a fight i'll get killed and it woke me up about gun violence and a guy who looks like him and believes in my country and that broke high heart. >> so you did what in greece? >> in the middle of our filming in berlin all season it blew up in greece and all of the immigrants you knew people, millions waiting to flee this violent war and i needed to go there. when filming stopped i went to lezbos i want to hold a baby in high arms and happy a family and i did. it made the difference in the world. i met a family that lost everything in the water. they had no money to get the ferry to get to athens to get to the train to get to europe. and i was fortunate, i gave them the money for that but their boys looked like my boys. we need to connect with these people. i just went to elizabeth, new jersey, yesterday, and spent the day with a family there. they are beautiful and we are going to invite them over for dinner and wherever you are in namerica, 24 centers from the international rescue center and find out where these families are and invite them to your home. >> you have to come back soon. we have a clock problem. >> i understand. i love morning tv. >> thank you. >> okay, thank you. >> we love you. >> thank you, thank you. >> important message about compassion. >> please, please. >> with what we have been covering and listening the past couple of days. >> reach out to all humanity and welcome them to our home, to our country. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> mandy patinken. "homeland" airs sunday on showtime a division of cbs. you can also see spy masters and documentary narrated by mandy ♪ music my k-cup® filter is back. now you can make anything, even a piece of home. the single serve-make-all-your-favorites exactly-how-you-like-it machine. keurig hot. your favorites. your way. it's the holidays. and of course, everyone wants to get online at once. to watch things. buy things. but slow internet makes it hard. that's why it's time to get fios. it has the fastest internet and wifi available. with speeds from 50 to 500 megs. and right now, you'll get 50 meg fios internet, tv and phone for 79.99 a month online for your first year. and with a 2 year agreement, we'll give you all theremium movie channels for a year. plus, 400 dollars back. so go online or call now. get out of the past. get fios. ♪ ♪ i'm more much more than this ♪ ♪ i did it my way ♪ >> the voice. frank sinatra will always be famous for his timeless version of pop music standards but the musicians from almost every genre are celebrating what would be his 100th birthday this month and it airs sunday on cbs. lee cowan reports the party started in sinatra's playground, las vegas. ♪ >> reporter: frank sinatra was a lot of things to a lot of people, but to most, he was simply the voice. ♪ >> reporter: he was the perfect mix of wise guy, cool, and romantic vulnerability. or as his nine-time grammy winner john legend puts it? >> he had the charisma that everyone wanted to be. the guys wanted to be him. >> reporter: legend is just one of more than a dozen grammy greats set to toast old blue eyes during an all-star 100th birthday bash in las vegas. do you have a favorite sinatra song? ♪ when i was 17 it was a very good year ♪ ♪ it was a very good year >> reporter: sinatra has been imitated many a time, but rarely copied. everyone here knows they have big shoes to fill. ♪ come fly with me let's go down to peru ♪ >> you can't sound just like him. >> reporter: no matter how hard you try? >> yeah. even back stage, harry connick jr. was helping me feel out the melodic choices he would make. >> music like his will never, ever die. >> reporter: he made it look easy? >> take it from somebody who does it, it's unbelievable how easy he made it look. ♪ baby i'm a guy pg that y that you came in with ♪ >> reporter: this is not connick's first celebration for sinat sinatra. he sang with him for his 75th birthday or tried to. >> i had a great music on the first line but then i couldn't remember it so taf to save my l. >> reporter: you forting tgot t lyrics? >> he is here now. >> reporter: that is sinatra's youngest daughter tina who had a front row seat to her father's big career. >> i remember being proud at 7, wow, him his little kid. >> reporter: years ago she gave harry connick jr. a wristwatch that belonged to his father. he has kept it in a safe until now. >> listen, i'm going to wear that tonight. i've been wearing it yesterday and it's going back in the safe! ♪ i want to wake up in that city that doesn't sleep ♪ >> reporter: like that gift, sinatra's music is timeless. set the bar year after year, no wonder there were so many very good ears. ♪ let's be a lady >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," i'm lee cowan, in las vegas. ♪ today good night! >> wow! >> that looks good! >> cool a hundred years later people hold you in such high regard they are sill celebrating your life. >> you can watch sinatra 100 all time grammy concert sunday night on cbs. >> when we come back, we will look at the unbelievable moments on "cbs th the only way to get better is to challenge yourself, and that's what we're doing at xfinity. we are challenging ourselves to improve every aspect of your experience. and this includes our commitment to being on time. every time. that's why if we're ever late for an appointment, we'll credit your account $20. it's our promise to you. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. delicious and packaged with nothing to hide. no secrets. just like our family. well there is one. folks, i'm not your grandma. just a handsome kind hearted drifter who wandrered in years ago and stayed for all the yummy sausage. feel bad about lying. nap time. i got her. seriously? i feel like i just woke up. ha ha ha! fully cooked johnsonville breakfast sausage. we don't make sausage. we make family. and sausage. ♪ ♪ that does it for us. be sure to tune into "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight. for news any time were in watch our digital news network 24/7 cbsn. as we leave you, take a look back at the past week on "cbs this morning." >> this is supposed to be a holiday ban fquet and turned in a shooting scene. >> they came prepared to do what they did. >> a long gun, a pistol, tactical type hiclotng. >> the suspects are dead now. they were killed in a rampage. >> one guy down. one guy in the back of a car. >> the street where the suspects lived on is evacuated. it was a concern initially there may be explosives in the area. >> president obama has been juggling the risk to global stability from climate change and the fight against isis. >> we all have a common enemy and that isil. >> to step up efforts on the ground. >> if convicted, thein mimum >>ntence is life without parole. the initial charge, fme first-degree murder. >> some of these dumb ass politicians said, oh, no, oh, no. >> he has gone too far and he is showing a lack of seriousness. >> mark zuckerberg with a pledge to give away 99% of his wealth which is why his daughter's first words were that son of a [ bleep ]. >>iger woods is talking about his struggle to return to professional golf. >> where is the light at the end of the tunnel? i don't know. ♪ take me to the river >> a pattern now of mass shootings in this country that has no parallel anywhere else in the world. >> bullet just a rain of bullets everywhere. >> pray for us. >> surely, there can be something to stop people from getting an ak-47. >> what we are trying to do is make sure that what our response is actually addresses the problems without infringing upon the rights of law abiding citizens. >> 27-year-old mother of a 6-month-old is firing off as many rounds like she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense. >> life is precious. >> why do you want to be president? you've been in the white house. >> there it is. right. well, i'm not doing it to move back in, although it's a wonderful place. >> why are you doing this? >> i really love this country. ♪ i like to be in america >> the first time i had ever played a young hispanic woman who had a sense of dignity. >> i want to know how maurice milklewhite became the sir beb nair michael caine. >> i should get the tea and run to the leading lady. >> i thought that women should look good and strong. >> somebody said they wanted to focus on brains, not bo on obs but the truth of the matter is you can have both. can you have both. >> we don't rush to print, somebody else is going to find these letters and butcher the story. >> a great reporter dedicates his life to his work. >> you can vote for a republican other than yourself, would would you be? >> i'd vote for myself again! >> cbs has -- tape six! that's probably my best. >> that is the magic tape. >> that's when it come news reporters: it's a fish, but it's been changed. genetically altered by scientists. critics call the process creepy, and label it frankenfish. narrator: genetically engineered salmon was just approved by the fda - no labels required. disturbing, right? get this. if your state wants to label gmos, congress is trying a year-end sneak attack to block your right to label. call congress. demand clear labels, not high tech gimmicks. don't let them overturn state gmo labeling. protect our right to know. (all with worry-free ownership. colors in your neighborhood... head to your neighborhood enterprise car sales and let the people who buy more vehicles than anyone... shift your thinking about buying your next one. on top of your health?ay ahh... ahh... cigna customers have plan choices and tools to take control. so they're more engaged, with fewer high health risks and lower medical costs. take control of your health at cigna dot com slash take control. it's the holidays. and of course, everyone wants to get online at once. to watch things. buy things. but slow internet makes it hard. that's why it's time to get fios. it has the fastest internet and wifi available. with speeds from 50 to 500 megs. and right now, you'll get 50 meg fios internet, tv and phone for 79.99 a month online for your first year. and with a 2 year agreement, we'll give you all the premium movie channels for a year. plus, 400 dollars back. so go online or call now. get out of the past. get fios. we're gearing up for the weekend with a new burger joint. and we have a performance ahead of the evangel cathedral christmas celebration. it's friday, december 4. this is "great day washington" ." good morning. my name is chris leary. i'm markette sheppard. we're your hosts of "great day washington" bringing you all things great in the dmv monday through friday. tgif. >> yes, it's friday. we had an exciting night last night, my cohost and myself. it was wonderful. it didn't start as wonderful as it ended but it was lovely. >> let's tell people what the nigh night was. we had cameo roles in the debut performance of the washington ballet's "nutcracker." it was awesome. i played the mary widow. you were the ambassador. i was in full wardrobe. i had to act. i got there 30 minutes before the performance because the national christmas tree lighting traffic was horrible. they were like okay. and this is your role, this is what you're doing, go. >> you are so funny. i was watching. i know one thing, i am not an actor nor will i ever be. i feel sad saying that. but next you to, you were hamming it up the whole way with the hand kerr chief and looking -- hand chief and looking around and going, hey, these are great seats. >> i was the mary witness dough. i had a dramatic role i was playing. thank you so much to the washington ballet for inviting us. >> the traffic was awful with the tree lighting. >> i ditched my car in a parking garage, caught a cab, the train and a bus to get there. i was like the show must go on. >> look at you. >> so, i mean-- >> that's too funny. but it was all really, really worth it and we had a wonderful time. washington ballet, thank you so much once again. i want to give a huge warm welcome to special guests in the audience. american university's graduate school of communications. they're here. jill is my professor and she brought the entire class this friday to learn about how television works. thanks for coming. >> my singing professor is here, pamela. >> really? >> no, she never taught me anything but she'll be singing here and she brought her husband, david. you might have met the browns before. you'll meet them later on. >> meet the browns on great great-- >> "great day washington." >> we're excited about that. we also have our life correspondent

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