it might be a break through for the man who was so vocal for stopping forced sterilization in china. now the government says he can apply to study abroad like any other citizen. a new report shows the unemployment rate fell last month, but we're not celebrating so fast. the number of jobs created was less than expected. the jobless rate fell because workers dropped out of the labor force. the rate dipped to 8.1%. employers added 115,000 jobs. you're going to go live to the new york stock exchange to see how wall street is reacting. and gilbert, arizona, this is near phoenix. this house, a horrible, horrible crime scene. police believe the man shot and killed four people there, including his girlfriend and their 15-month-old granddaughter. they say the man, j.t. ready, then killed himself. he's an admitted white supremacist who organized a private citizen militia to patrol the mexican border. he allegedly kept ties to neo-nazi groups. shagging a fly ball. mare ya na had a misstep near the warning track. immediately grabs his knee. >> he takes a tumble and is hurt badly. a torn acl. the new york yankees superstar wasn't even playing. he was catching fly balls during batting practice. off the field he goes. he might actually need surgery. the buzz is rivera's career might be over. he's been in the majors for 18 seasons all of them with the yankees. the jury of john edwards' corruption trial hearing a second day of testimony from the most colorful witness to take the stand yet. this is interior designer brian hoffman. he's testifying in detail about $725,000 in campaign donations. a flurry of checks that were nicknamed bunny money. diane dimond is a special correspondent for "newsweek" and the daily beast. she's joining us from outside the courthouse in greensboro, north carolina. explain to us first of all this bunny money referring to the heiress and edwards' contributor rachel "bunny" mellon. >> reporter: she is the one that donated the most money that's in dispute here in this courthouse. the reason that john edwards is on trial. rachel "bunny" mellon according to this witness, brian huffman, she was completely enamored with john edwards, loved had i am to pieces, wanted to help him in any way she could. and if you are a mellon, that's money. he testified yesterday he was the conduit through which this money flowed because she did not want her attorneys to find out she was giving $725,000 away. they had been cautioning her to ease up a bit on the millions she was giving away. so that was yesterday. today brian huffman came back to the stand for a little direct and then the cross-examination, and to me it was a lot of rehash about how the checks went from him to andrew young's wife into their bank account, and then ultimately spent to hide rielle hunter. the most fascinating thing with brian today came at the very end of his testimony when the prosecutor asked was mrs. mellon disturbed when she found out how her money had been spent. he said she was in that she didn't particularly condemn people for having an affair, but she thought that you should probably pay for your own girlfriend. this has been a very colorful witness. he's fascinating to watch. and he not only speaks to the person asking him the questions, but he poke to the jury. he was very southern gentlemanly, very well-spoken, impeccably dressed. probably the best dressed witness we've had here in two weeks. >> diane, tell us a little bit about something you mentioned, you write about in your daily beast article, about an awkward encounter between edwards' former aide and rielle hunter. >> reporter: oh, you're talking -- i know who you're talking about. one of the staffers who testified yesterday said that he was convinced that rielle hunter was off the campaign trail, banned by elizabeth edwards who had her suspicions. he was frantically surprised to see rielle hunter in a hotel in detroit some months later, and they exchanged some pleasantries, and he went to his room. rielle came and knocked on the door shortly thereafter and said, i just want you to know that the senator and i are madly in love, deeply in love, and he's upset that you have seen me here, so she asked for discretion. the next morning the aide speaks to the senator who says, first thing out of his mouth, that woman came to my room, quote, she is crazy, you've got to figure out a way to keep her away from me. he said in the end he didn't really believe either one of them, but it was clear that rielle hunter was back on the campaign trail traveling with the senator. >> and, diane, what do we expect this afternoon? >> reporter: well, on the stand now right before the lunch break was a man named peter shirr. he is a highly experienced campaign adviser, worked for the clintons for years, worked for max baucus in the senate years and years ago. very professional gentleman. he says that when he -- and he was an adviser for john edwards during the last presidential run. he said when one of the staffers called, a man named josh brumberger called him and said we have a problem, her name is hunter. she acts crazy around this man. she misbehaves. he said he made an appointment with the senator to meet him at the regency hotel in new york and he warned him, and he said john edwards said to him are you asking me if i'm sleeping you with her. he said, yeah, i'm asking you. he said, no, i'm not sleeping with her. that's at a time that we know rielle hunter was pregnant. but he said the senator agreed she should not travel with him anymore and that was that until october 2007 when -- i'm sorry, 2006, when he says he got another call from a staffer and rielle hunter was back. he was very angry. he picked up the phone. he said, john, what the blank are you doing? and john edwards told him to go blank himself because he didn't need a babysitter and that was that. the relationship was over between the two men. but not with rielle. >> salacious details coming out of that trial. all right. diane dimond, good to see you again. have a good weekend. here is a rundown of some of the stories we're covering over the next hour. 23i 23irs. first, have you ever cheated on someone special with your credit card? you will not believe how many other couples are committing financial infidelity. and then the woman at the center of a sex scandal that brought down members of the secret service. well, now she's speaking out. om. om. people don't like to miss out on money that should have been theirs. that's why at ally we have the raise your rate 2-year cd. you can get a one-time rate increase if our two-year rate goes up. if your bank makes you miss out, you need an ally. i tell you what i can spend. i do my best to make it work. i'm back on the road safely. and i saved you money on brakes. that's personal pricing. wall street reacts to a rather weak jobs report. the up employment job dipped to 8.1% last month but employers added just 115,000 jobs which was actually fewer than expected. want to bring in alison kosik from the new york stock exchange. so explain this to us, alison. you have more jobs, a lower unemployment rate, about you people are looking at this and they're thinking this is not necessarily a good report. >> right. so let me start with that 115,000 figure. 115,000 jobs added to this economy is simply not good enough to dig the job market out of the deep hole it's in right now. but here is the thing about this trend with what's been happening. as far as jobs go, we started out strong. we started the year out strong. in january 275,000 jobs were added to the economy. but what's been happening is job growth has been slowing every single month this year. now we are at less than half of that, and it's kind of not such a big surprise here because, you know, the red lights kind of have been flashing. there have been other signs that the economy is slowing. you look at gdp that was reported and activity in the service sector. both of those have been slowing down. also a dozen countries in europe are back into a recession. so you have to expect all of that to trickle right down into the job market. suzanne? >> how worried is wall street reacting to the slow down now? >> there is big worry, especially when you look at that unemployment rate. when you see that headline in the newspaper tomorrow and it says unemployment down to 8.1%, you think great. but then you pull back that curtain and you see why the unemployment rate is falling. it's falling because people aren't finding work. people are literally dropping out of the labor force. they're getting frustrated, not finding a job and saying forget it, i'm not going to look for a job anymore. what you find now that we have is a labor force that's actually at its smallest since 1981. but it's not all bad. believe it or not, you can blame some of this on the weather because warm weather actually led to more hiring happening in january and february. so what you're seeing is kind of the labor market adjusting a little bit more, growth is, you know, slow right now to compensate for all that hiring during that warm winter. and if you average it out, if you average out all the numbers from january to april, you wind up having about 200,000 jobs added each month. >> it goes back to april. what does wall street expect for the economy going forward? >> so a cnn survey of economists said they expect unemployment to fall to 8% this year. the fed is more bullish. they see unemployment at around 7.8% to 8% this year. bun analyst puts it this way. he says this is kind of like running in place. but some say the problem with even at this slow rate, it's not even weak enough to get the fed to do something, to jump in with more stimulus. so we're kind of stuck right now. you know, many say that expect to see some improvement but nothing to write home about, not just yet. jim going to put you on the spot here, alison. do you lie to your husband about money from time to time? >> never, never. >> never? >> i have no problem saying what i'm spending on. not at all. >> good answer. >> you have to own it. >> good answer on air, too. if you actually admitted that you did lie sometimes, you're not alone. i want to show new report here. turns out that 3 in 10 adults who are actually married or living with a partner admit to financial infidelity, that's what it's called here. the report out says 7% of people have actually kept a work bonus or lottery winnings under wrap. 4%. >> lottery winnings? >> lottery winnings. >> how do you hide that? >> i don't even understand that. i guess it's a little small winning there. they say 4% have a secret savings or retirement accounts. another 4% have withdrawn a significant amount of money from a joint account on the sly. >> that takes a lot of work to lie about what you're spending. there's a lot to be done to hide all that. i'm going to buy my hair of jimmy choos and i'm going to walk proudly into the house holding the bag. >> i have some people in this building who have stories of bags and bags of clothing and things that they buy that they hide. >> i won't hold it against them, to each his own. >> i think honesty is probably better, but more than a quarter they say of married couples say they fight about money more than any other issue, and so to prevent these financial fights, experts are recommending a date night essentially once a month to talk about the money, to talk about the benjamins. >> that should be a fun date night. >> order pizza and a lot of wine. i don't know. >> there you go. a lot of drinks. >> all right, alison. have a great weekend. >> good story, suzanne. >> sure. the prostitute at the center of the secret service sex scandal is now speaking out for first time. she's providing new details about the morning she got into an argument with one of the agents sent to colombia ahead of the president's visit. let's take a listen. >> and i told him to wake up and to give me my gift that i asked him for. and he says, no. just go [ bleep ]. i'm not going to pay you. and then he just put out 50,000 pesos for the taxi, and i was like -- i was in shock in that moment when he just said that. >> want to bring in raphael romo who has been covering this story for us. what have we learned? is there new information coming from this woman? >> there is. i was just listening to this interview. it was like an hour long, and it is very detailed and it describes moment by moment step by step what happened. they met these secret service agents, a friend of hers, a the a bar in cartagena. she didn't know who they were or why they were there. it wasn't until the following morning that she knew who they were. and they get drinks and she describes a night of wild partying, heavy drinking. she says that the agent she was with at one point lifted up his shirt to show his six-pack. they were dancing on the bar. and then after that, after several bottles of vodka, they go to the hotel, and there had been an understanding there that her prize was going to be in the range of $800. the following morning he wants to pay her much less than that, like a tenth of that, and that's when she tries to go to the other member of the group who she knew to ask for help in this. a police officer in colombia at the hotel learns about the situation, and that's when the scandal happens. but let me show you a piece of sound about her when she's actually describing what happened at that hallway that morning in a colombian hotel. >> translator: two more agents showed up and stood at the door and asked me what was going on. i told them. i kept telling them i was going to call more police, more police so may problem would get solved and they didn't care. all they were saying was please, please, no place. they were asking me not to call the police. >> the bottom line question here is was president obama at any danger? what would have happened if she was a terrorist? she was asked that question specifically, and this is what she had to say. >> translator: of course. at that moment if i had been a member of one of those terrorist gangs, it's obvious that i would have been able to get everything. just like the newspapers say, i put them in checkmate. they're a bunch of fools. they're responsible for obama's security and they still let this happen. i told them i'm going to call the police so they would pay me my money. they didn't care. he didn't see the magnitude of the problem even when being responsible for obama's security. i could have done a thousand other things. >> a thousand other things. she's calling the secret service agent a bunch of fools, that they should have known better. it's just an incredible situation. >> she doesn't say she saw anything related to any documents regarding the president or the travel schedule or the maps or anything like that. >> she didn't see anything like that because she says very specifically in the interview, i was only interested about the money. but had i wanted to, i would have been able to. she saw a uniform and she learned that he was she describes it, i thought he was in the military, and that's when she learned there was more there than she knew. >> i'm sure there are more details that will be emerging. thank you, rafael. when we're in school making improvements to your dorm room meant hanging a couple posters up, maybe throwing down a rug. no doubt about it, derek lowe has the coolest college dorm room in the uc-berkeley campus. laser lights, even a disco ball. unless, of course, the college makes him dismantle all of this. here is dan simon with the story. >> i just wanted to do this to learn how to do it. >> reporter: derek lowe is a freshman at uc-berkeley. he's majoring in electrical engineering and he's made his college dorm room his laboratory. it's a technology wonderland. automated curtains, motion se e senso sensors, and voice commands. >> i can be on my bed. i shout out slope mode. >> reporter: it's just a few of the features derek spent three months creating. when he uploaded this video to youtube, he unofficially became recognized as having the coolest dorm room on the planet. what's your favorite thing about it? >> party mode of course. >> reporter: he showed us his party mode, spinning disco ball, lasers, strobe lights, and techno music all controlled from his laptop. here it is in all its glory. ♪ as you can imagine, it's attracted some campus attention. berkeley housing authorities were concerned about electrical wiring modifications but found no issues. nonetheless, derek says he's been summoned to a campus hearing anyway to explain things. >> they said i had some violations of resident hall policies. i broke a few rules. i modified a dorm. my room is a fire hazard. i'm disturbing my neighbors but look around, everything is fine. no one is complaining. >> reporter: as derek showed us he used tape and binder clips to put the equipment in place and didn't drill any holes. the whole system he says can be dismantled in a few minutes. his name is derek but there's a sign on the door that says brad. that's not anybody's name who lives here. it stands for berkeley ridiculously automated dorm. derek also bought a fog machine for the room but hasn't used it in fear it will set off the fire alarm. with only ten days left of school and students now studying for exams, that's probably a good call. dan simon, cnn, berkeley, california. he got famous risking everything to fight against forced abortion. in high school, i had a physics teacher by the name of mr. davies. he made physics more than theoretical, he made it real for me. we built a guitar, we did things with electronics and mother boards. threhe interest in engineeri came fr so now, as an engineer, i have a career that speaks to that passion. thank you, mr. davies. [ female announcer ] the sun powers life. ♪ and now it powers our latest innovation. ♪ introducing the world's only solar-powered home energy system, which can cut your heating and cooling bills in half. call now to get up to 1,375 dollars in rebates. or zero percent financing for 18 months on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 15th. plus download our free lennox mobile app with an energy-savings calculator to show how much you'll save with a lennox system. if your current system is 10 years or older, start planning now and take advantage of special financing. so call now to get up to 1,375 dollars in rebates. or zero percent financing for 18 months on select lennox home comfort systems. offer ends june 15th. and download our lennox mobile app -- free. lennox. innovation never felt so good. here is a rundown of some of the stories we're working on. a deal between the u.s. and china, chen guangcheng made a daring escape from house arrest. now the activist could be heading to the states. and then the king of pop back in a way. he's coming to a pop cam near you. pepsi is hoping the late michael jackson will help sales. and later, everybody, of course, wants to win the battle with sell lcell lighcellulite. the blind man who spent years in prison for criticizing the chinese government might be a step closer to a new live in the united states. chen gngeng ran to the u.s. embassy in beijing when he escaped house arrest. he's pleading with u.s. officials, including secretary of state hillary clinton, to get him out as well as his family out of china. live to beijing now. cnn's stan grant. stan, talk a little bit about what happened today that makes some american officials encouraged by his future. >> reporter: yeah. suzanne, the door has been opened just a little by china. they've now acknowledged that chen can apply for a passport and then submit an application to study abroad. now, the united states has said if he applies for that study visa or student visa she can process that with a priority so his family can clealeave china leave sooner than expected. secretary