American Morning

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March 16th, 2010
12:00 PM ET

CIA coming under scrutiny

(CNN) – Does the CIA need an overhaul? In the wake of a deadly December suicide attack against one of its bases in Afghanistan, a lot of experts believe the agency is badly in need of reform.

Former CIA operative Bob Baer has pieced together a chilling account of that suicide attack for GQ magazine. He also has a lot to say about some missteps that preceded it. He joined us on Tuesday's American Morning to break it all down.


Filed under: Terrorism
March 16th, 2010
11:00 AM ET

Dodd on reforming Wall Street

(CNN) – At the height of the financial meltdown, the Obama administration had big plans for reforming the system. Today, a somewhat less ambitious plan is on the table.

Sen. Chris Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, joined us on Tuesday's American Morning to discuss his plans to reform Wall Street. Dodd also answered an amFIX Twitter question about whether he felt any responsibility for his role in the housing collapse that started our economic catastrophe today.

CNNMoney: Dodd: Time to reform Wall Street


Filed under: Politics
March 16th, 2010
10:00 AM ET

Non-melanoma skin cancer rates double in last 15 years

(CNN) – Too many people are ignoring warnings to stay out of the sun. The medical journal Archives of Dermatology says non-melanoma skin cancer is reaching epidemic proportions. Our Dr. Sanjay Gupta joined us on Tuesday's American Morning for the details.


Filed under: Health
March 16th, 2010
09:00 AM ET

Growing Up Behind Bars: Life in prison for teens

Editor's Note: The Supreme Court is considering whether life sentences for teenage criminals who haven't committed a homicide is cruel and unusual punishment. Some of the best legal minds in the country have fiercely debated the issue. The one thing they all seem to agree on: there are no easy answers. CNN's Jason Carroll reports for part two of American Morning's original series, "Growing Up Behind Bars."

By Jason Carroll, CNN

[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/CRIME/09/09/prison.life.lesson.memoir/art.dwayne.betts.jwilson.jpg.jpg caption="Dwayne Betts was arrested at 16 for a carjacking and spent nearly 9 years in Virginia's adult prisons."]

(CNN) - As Dwayne Betts addressed thousands of students at last year's University of Maryland's commencement ceremonies, his thoughts then and now are of how far he has come in his life, how five years before that moment, he was locked up in prison.

“When I was 16-years-old, on December 7th, 1996, I carjacked a man in a parking lot in Springfield, Virginia … at gunpoint,” says Betts.

At the time, Betts says he was a high school honor student who had fallen in with the wrong crowd.

“I think the truth is sort a strange mix of opportunity. … You don't turn 16 and have a gun in your hand. So I think it was a lot of baby steps.”

It was a major step. Although no one was physically hurt during his crime, Betts was prosecuted as an adult. Carjacking in Virginia carries a maximum sentence of life.

Life in prison for teens Video

“There's no way to quantify what a life sentence does to a person," he says. "If I had to wake up every morning to a life sentence, I don't even want to imagine what I would have become.”

Betts, at 16, received the minimum sentence, serving nearly nine years in Virginia's adult prison system, living alongside the state's most violent criminals.

FULL POST


Filed under: Crime • Growing Up Behind Bars
March 16th, 2010
08:00 AM ET

Armey rallying Tea Party groups against health care bill

(CNN) – If everything goes according to plan, Democrats could have a health care reform bill on President Obama's desk by the end of the week. But that's a big "if."

Former House Majority Leader Dick Armey is rallying Tea Party groups around the country to "storm the steps" of Capitol Hill today. His group, Freedom Works, is also supporting another rally called, "Kill the Bill." He joined us on Tuesday's American Morning to talk more about it.


Filed under: Politics
March 16th, 2010
07:00 AM ET

White House puts full-court press on health care holdouts

(CNN) – It's down to the wire for President Obama's health care overhaul.

The key to getting reform done is the thirty seven Democratic congressmen and women who are wavering or voted "no" the first time. Each is being heavily courted by the president and House leaders.

One Democrat not on that list, but still on the fence, is Virginia Rep. Gerry Connolly. You would think the White House would have reached out, but you'd be wrong. Our Jim Acosta caught up with the congressman for this report.


Filed under: Politics
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