3/28: Prime Time with John Dickerson


3/28: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News

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John Dickerson reports on the salvage operation underway after the bridge collapse in Baltimore, Sam Bankman-Fried’s 25-year prison sentence, and a new United Nations report showing the scale of global food waste.

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Family of Boeing whistleblower John Barnett speaks out


Family of Boeing whistleblower John Barnett speaks out – CBS News

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In a CBS News exclusive interview, the family of a Boeing whistleblower who was found dead earlier this month is speaking out. John Barnett, a former Boeing employee, had been giving evidence in a whistleblower lawsuit against the company. A coroner says he died from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. It comes as Boeing’s safety practices have come under new scrutiny due to a series of recent midair incidents. Mark Strassmann spoke with Barnett’s mother and brother.

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3/27: Prime Time with John Dickerson


3/27: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News

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Jeff Glor reports on the NTSB’s focus in the Baltimore bridge collapse investigation, an interview with the family of the Boeing whistleblower, and how misinformation about birth control is spreading online.

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Judge recommends John Eastman be disbarred in California



A judge on Wednesday recommended that John Eastman, a co-defendant of Donald Trump in the Georgia election interference case, be disbarred in California.

“In view of the circumstances surrounding Eastman’s misconduct and balancing the aggravation and mitigation, the court recommends that Eastman be disbarred,” wrote Judge Yvette D. Roland.

“After full consideration of the record,” the court found that the State Bar of California’s Chief Trial Counsel’s Office, had satisfied its burden of proving a vast majority of its allegations against Eastman.

Eastman was hit with 11 disciplinary charges tied to allegations that he promoted a strategy that wasn’t backed by facts or law, which entailed a plan to have then-Vice President Mike Pence reject electoral votes cast for Joe Biden during a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6, 2021. 

Reached for comment, an attorney for Eastman told NBC News his legal team is still processing the judge’s ruling.

The judge’s recommendation comes two years after the State Bar of California announced an ethics investigation into Eastman’s conduct. In 2023, the State Bar asked the court to revoke Eastman’s license to practice law in California.

Eastman is also facing other legal challenges stemming from his conduct in the aftermath of the 2020 election.

In August, he was charged with orchestrating the so-called fake electors scheme designed to keep Trump in office after the 2020 presidential election, was indicted along with 18 co-defendants for allegedly violating Georgia’s racketeering laws.

Four of the defendants have pleaded guilty, while Eastman is among those who, like Trump, have pleaded not guilty.



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Family of Boeing whistleblower John Barnett speaks out following his death


The mother of John Barnett, a former Boeing quality manager-turned-whistleblower who died earlier this month, told CBS News she holds the aircraft manufacturing giant responsible for the grinding treatment that ultimately left her son despondent. 

“If this hadn’t gone on so long, I’d still have my son, and my sons would have their brother and we wouldn’t be sitting here. So in that respect, I do,” Vicky Stokes said when asked if she places some of the blame for her son’s death on Boeing.

Barnett had been in Charleston, South Carolina giving testimony in his whistleblower case against the embattled aerospace company, when on March 9 he was found dead in his car in the parking lot of his hotel. He was 62.

Police are still investigating his death, which the coroner has called an apparent suicide, just before he was set to resume providing deposition testimony against Boeing, which he had accused of repeatedly ignoring safety issues.

Stokes and her son Rodney Barnett told CBS News in their first television interview that they want to see John Barnett’s legacy of fighting for the safety of the flying public preserved.

“He thought of himself as trying to do the right thing. And that’s what bothered him, that nobody would listen as to what was going on there,” his brother, Rodney Barnett, told CBS News.

John Barnett worked at Boeing for 32 years, the last seven of which he served as a quality manager. He became a whistleblower at the South Carolina factory that builds the 787 Dreamliner. He resigned from the company in 2017, citing job-related stress.

Over that time, he developed concerns about the way the company was operating. Before resigning, he filed an administrative complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The agency said it had no reasonable cause to believe Boeing violated whistleblower laws. He then filed a lawsuit in 2021, alleging a litany of safety concerns. Among them: stray titanium shavings falling into electrical wiring, defective oxygen tanks and managers urging him to cut corners.

Rodney Barnett said his brother told him that rather than address his concerns, the company subjected him to retaliation for speaking out, alleging that he was “embarrassed at meetings; he would be called out.” Rodney said his brother was not the type of person to back down.

In the 2022 Netflix documentary “Downfall: The Case Against Boeing,” John Barnett claimed his managers retaliated against him for speaking up.

“Boeing quit listening to their employees. So every time I’d raise my hand and say, ‘hey we got a problem here’, they would attack the messenger and… and ignore the message,” he said in the film.

Boeing has denied both the allegations about safety issues and the claims that the company retaliated against Barnett. The company said in a statement to CBS News: “We are saddened by Mr. Barnett’s passing, and our thoughts are with his family and friends.”

His death occurred in the middle of litigation and came just as Boeing was grappling with weeks of negative headlines about its safety culture — specifically, repeated problems with its 737 Max planes, including a midflight blowout of a door plug on an Alaska Airlines plane.

John Barnett worked on a different plane, but raised similar concerns, according to his attorneys Brian Knowles and Rob Turkewitz.

“He wasn’t trying to hurt Boeing,” said Turkewitz, who told CBS News he believes whistleblower laws that apply to aerospace workers need to be strengthened. “He was trying to save Boeing. He saw this coming and he said, ‘You know, this is all going to come down on Boeing.'”

Barnett’s family told CBS News they are trying to carry on John Barnett’s whistleblower case, which is expected to head to trial in September. Knowles said continuing the case is about “justice and accountability”.

Amid the ongoing image and safety crisis, Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun announced he will be stepping down at the end 2024.



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3/26: Prime Time with John Dickerson


3/26: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News

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John Dickerson reports on the collapse of a major bridge in Baltimore, Trump’s social media company’s stock market debut, and why the Supreme Court is skeptical about restricting abortion pill access.

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Kids as young as 14 were found working at a Tennessee factory that makes lawn mower parts for John Deere and others


Immigrant children as young as 14 were found working illegally amid dangerous heavy equipment at a Tennessee firm that makes parts for lawn mowers sold by John Deere and other companies, according to Labor Department officials.

The company, Tuff Torq, was fined nearly $300,000 for hiring 10 children. As part of a consent agreement with the federal government, the company is also required to set aside $1.5 million to help the children who were illegally employed. Ryan Pott, general counsel for Tuff Torq’s majority owner, the Japanese firm Yanmar, acknowledged the violations to NBC News.

“The department will not tolerate companies profiting on the backs of children employed unlawfully in dangerous occupations,” said Seema Nanda, the department’s chief legal officer, whose office obtained the consent judgment against Tuff Torq. “Tuff Torq has agreed to disgorge profits, which will go to the benefit of the children. This sends a clear message: putting children in harm’s way in the workplace is not only illegal, but also comes with significant financial consequences.”

Tuff Torq Corporation
Tuff Torq Corp. in Morristown, Tenn. Google

The Labor Department did not specify what work the children were doing. But Labor official Juan Coria said what his investigative team found in Tuff Torq’s “very busy” Morristown manufacturing plant was “astonishing.”

Coria, southeast regional administrator for the Labor Department’s Wage and Hour Division, described an environment that he says caused anxiety among his investigators who witnessed children as young as 14 working late at night at the 24-hour manufacturing facility amid power-driven equipment that was being moved around the plant.

Pott, the general counsel for Tuff Torq’s majority owner, said the child workers were temporary and were not hired directly by Tuff Torq. He said they used fake names and false credentials to obtain jobs through a temporary staffing agency, and said Tuff Torq is “transitioning” away from doing business with the staffing company.

“Tuff Torq is dedicated to ensuring that their products and services are produced under ethical conditions, with a strong emphasis on fair labor practices, and Tuff Torq is further strengthening our relevant training and compliance programs,” said Pott. “We are also actively engaging with our suppliers to reinforce our expectations regarding ethical labor practices and collaborate with them on implementing our updated policies.”

According to the Labor Department, within 30 days Tuff Torq must also hang signs at every entrance to the plant that say, “Stop! You must be at least 18 years of age to enter and work in this building.”

Nanda said through such agreements the agency is sending a message to the company and its whole community of suppliers and contractors. “They will look at their supply chain meaning their contractors, their staffing agencies, and make sure that they are doing these things as well.”

John Deere did not respond to a request for comment.

Labor officials say their investigation into the company began almost a year ago, in spring 2023, and investigators visited the facility multiple times. Officials declined to say what sparked the investigation.

The Labor Department has prioritized child labor enforcement since last spring amid a 152% increase in children found to be illegally employed since 2018, according to department figures.



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3/25: Prime Time with John Dickerson


3/25: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News

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John Dickerson reports on the federal raids of homes owned by Sean “Diddy” Combs, Donald Trump’s reduced bond in his New York civil fraud trial, and what to know about ISIS-K after the attack in Moscow.

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8/8: Prime Time with John Dickerson


8/8: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News

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Jeff Glor reports on new developments in Donald Trump’s pushback for a protective order in the January 6 case, how weight loss drugs can help the heart, and how bank downgrades are impacting the market.

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Ex-Trump lawyer John Eastman seeks to postpone his disbarment proceedings


John Eastman, the Trump-allied lawyer who created a memo arguing that then-Vice President Mike Pence could overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory, is asking a California judge to postpone disbarment proceedings against him over concerns that he could face criminal charges after the former president’s federal indictment last week.

In his third indictment this year, Trump was criminally charged last week with four counts of trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election and subvert lawful votes, following special counsel Jack Smith’s months-long investigation.

“[R]ecent developments in the investigation have renewed and intensified [Eastman’s] concerns that the federal government might bring charges against him,” Eastman’s attorneys Randall Miller and Zachary Mayer wrote in a filing late last week.

The lawyers noted that Trump’s third indictment refers to six unnamed and unindicted co-conspirators who assisted Trump in his efforts to overturn the results of the election, including one Justice Department official, a political consultant and four attorneys. They mentioned that “numerous media outlets” have speculated that Eastman is one of the co-conspirators. Eastman’s lawyer had confirmed to NBC News that his client was likely “Co-Conspirator 2” in the indictment and said his client was innocent.

If the disbarment proceedings aren’t postponed, Eastman’s lawyers argued that their client “faces the difficult choice of asserting his Fifth Amendment right” — which allows people to refuse to provide testimony — during the proceedings, which could potentially waive “his constitutional right against self-incrimination.”

Eastman “respectfully requests that the Court stay this proceeding pending resolution of the parallel federal criminal investigation and, depending on the outcome of the investigation, any possible resultant criminal trial,” the lawyers wrote, suggesting that “alternatively” they would seek “a three-month stay to allow for further assessment at that time.”

The counsel for the State Bar of California is asking a court to revoke Eastman’s license to practice law in the state. Eastman faces 11 disciplinary charges for allegedly engaging in a plot to push a far-fetched legal strategy for Pence to overturn Joe Biden’s victory as a joint session of Congress counted the Electoral College votes on Jan. 6, 2021. Prosecutors alleged that Eastman made false and misleading statements with his baseless claims of widespread election fraud, including his remarks at the “Stop the Steal” rally on the Ellipse shortly before the Capitol attack.

The disciplinary hearings for Eastman began in June in Los Angeles but were postponed to late August after proceedings went longer than expected.

The hearings came after the State Bar announced an ethics investigation into Eastman’s conduct last year. Eastman faces multiple allegations that he violated the state’s business and professions code by making false and misleading statements that constitute acts of “moral turpitude, dishonesty, and corruption.” Eastman therefore “violated this duty in furtherance of an attempt to usurp the will of the American people and overturn election results for the highest office in the land — an egregious and unprecedented attack on our democracy — for which he must be held accountable,” the State Bar’s chief trial counsel, George Cardona, said in a release in January. 

Eastman was admitted to the California Bar in 1997, according to the State Bar’s portal. He was a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and is a founding director of the Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, a law firm affiliated with the Claremont Institute, a conservative California think tank.

Eastman was also the dean of the Chapman University law school in Southern California. He retired last year after more than 160 faculty members signed a letter demanding that the university take action against him.



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