react to what happened overseas? the opening bell just 30 minutes aw away. and life-altering disease. jack osbourne diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. how he is coping. plus -- take a look at that. talk about a tennis tantrum. ow! taking out his frustration on the ad board but hitting the ump in the process. not only does he get kicked out of the tourney but the police are considering charges for that ornery tennis player. good morning, everyone. hi there. i'm ashley banfield. we want to begin with your wallet, your money. the reason stock markets around the world are bouncing around this morning because voters in greece are supporting the nation's controversial bailout. finally they're doing so. that's the kind of decision that could have sent that economy and, in fact, the world economy reeling. on wall street the sense of relief is kind of ho-ho so-so. 30 minutes before the opening bell and the markets are mixed. investors are skittish. our business correspondent are christine romans joining me now lo live. this is a critical moment not just for greece and not just for the eurozone but also for americans and sometimes, christine, americans aren't quite so sure why it's so important for us. >> reporter: look, it's so important because you have an election that now has closed the book here. 221 days now there hasn't been an elected government in greece. and so now it looks like it can try to form a coalition and begin to abide by the bailout rules and try to get more money under its bailout so it can keep going here. but even as the election is over, uncertainty isn't. that's what you're seeing in world markets. that rally we saw two, three, four hours ago is starting to fizzle here because everyone is looking forward to how much work greece has to do, looking forward to other problems, quite frankly, in the eurozone including spain and italy. let's talk about the lexicon, if you will, of the greek crisis. words you've been hearing like drachmageddon, people have said if that happened you would have the lehman moment. we would have a small player fail and that could take down the rest of europe. grexit is what you are hearing, too. now this vote, many people home, has thwart add grexit, greece exiting the eurozone. earlier this morning from harvard studied all of the financial crises, more than 3,000 of them, they never planned for something like this. that is the problem. even though there is a little bit -- you have an election under our belt, no one planned when they invented the eurozone and all of that comes at a time twh our own economy is pretty fat and fragile. that's why we care. >> so, christine, we have a winner with which helps with the uncertainty but in a parliamentary system, a winner isn't always a winner. there needs to be a coalition. they have three days to put together a coalition government to actually get this momentum goi going. so what if, what if that coalition is enforced? what happens with us and our global economy? >> reporter: i think you would have a terrible stock market reaction. global markets that would be reacting violently. so even this morning as we talk about a fizzling rally overseas, look, many people said that if you had -- if you didn't have a pro-bailout group winning, it would have been a terrible die day in the markets here. markets are trying to figure out what to do next even as greece isn't the only problem here. you and i have been talking about it. greece is the weakest link in the chain that is europe. for now that weak link stays in but there are other weak links, too, so this is the beginning of the end of the story for greece and its problems. it's not the end of the story. >> yeah, this is the for now part of your reporting. all right. further reporting from you as the bell goes off in about 25, 26 minutes or so. appreciate it. so the sputtering of the economy is the focus of president obama and other world leaders, all of them in mexico for the g-20 summit of the world's largest and emerging economies, looking for ways to ramp up a sluggish economy. the recovery around the world has been a problem but it is unl unlikely that the leaders can agree on any kind of a commitment to a single coordinated plan of attack. switching gears somewhat here, as early as the next hour, the united states supreme court could hand down some of the most important decisions in years. some might say even decades. looming for all americans, president obama's health care law. several issues are under the microscope. the one getting the most attention is the individual mandate. specifically whether it is constitution al to require healh coverage for almost all of us. the justices could also be hand down a decision on arizona's tough immigration law. the big question is whether the states have the authority to write their own immigration laws or only the feds have the power to do so. we'll keep an eye on that for you and we'll come in with breaking news if we do it, in fact, get those decisions today. today or thursday. also switching gears to this, in colorado huge wildfires, one big one in particular engulfing more than 56,000 acres and it's destroyed at least 181 homes. more than 1,700 people are fighting this fire. they're battling the flames which are fueled with very high temperatures and the worst part of it gusty, gusty winds. our cnn meteorologist rob marciano has been watching this fire. it's like a long form. we're into week three. they're having some success but not enough. >> we've been going from state to state. arizona, new mexico, now colorado getting into the act. overall we're below average as far as how much has burned. in colorado, don't tell those folks this. this is now the largest wildfire in kcolorado history. the axis is to the west of ft. collins and the roosevelt national forest there. all sorts of aerial, it's just become a massive, massive area just to the west of ft. collins and now the problem today is, the next couple of days, strong winds will be out of the west/northwest and that will fan the flames. in ft. collins, we continue to get a great deal of smoke from this thing. huge with 56,000 acres. that's bringing it to the largest in colorado history. that sounds like a lot of containment but a fire of this magnitude and size, it's really not that much. when you look at the big weather picture, things are not helping. 50 to 60-mile-an-hour winds all the way up to wyoming and this is the other issue, at least for today, we may not touch 100 but we're going to get pretty close here in denver. very low levels of humidity in that fire zone as well. 3% to 4% today and with winds gusting 50 to 60 miles an hour that's going to be quite the battle they will have on their hands not only today but tomorrow as well. >> just imagine how hard that is to fight the fires in that kind of heat. not with standing how dangerous the heat is for the fire spreading itself. that's really dangerous work after so long. >> backbreaking and dangerous. they are a lot tougher than i am. >> i'll say. keep an eye on things for us, rob marciano. by the way, this is a great piece of video to tail with you, rob. check out this video in south dakota. you may not believe this. ouch. that is the sound of rain pounding a windshield. severe storms hammering south dakota and western minimnesota. probably a little hail mixed in with that to make that sound. and then also look at these clou cloud formations in wheaton, minnesota. just remarkable. the beginnings of twisters. and you can see the lightning in between those funnels. hard to tell whether the funnels ended up touching down anywhere but those are not the kinds of cloud formations. you want to stick around and watch develop into anything bigger or worse. making news today as well, an autopsy is expected soon on rodney king. his body was found on sunday in a pool at his suburban los angeles home. it was king's beating by los angeles police back from 1991 and the acquittal of the officers involved that sparked a deadly riot 20 years ago. many people say they are saddened by king's death. >> i was shocked. because of who it was. i thought he was one of those persons that would always be around. he's one of the icons that you would look up to. with the l.a. riots, he really stopped them, i think, by telling everybody, can we all just get along? everybody just started getting along. >> one of the most famous comments ever, can we all just get along. live in los angeles now, the very latest. so bring me up to speed on whether the police are any closer to figuring out why rodney king drowned in his pool, miguel? >> reporter: it's not clear, ashley, the neighbors have told police or told the media outlets that they heard emotional conversations very early in the morning sunday morning at 5:30, his wife called police because she spotted him at the deep end of the pool on the bottom. police dove into the pool, pulled him out, started resuscitation there and he was pronounced dead sunday morning. a tumultuous life, a completely ordinary man who found himself in extraordinary circumstances who who can forget after all that rioting, all that death, all those arrests, all those injuries in 1991 when los angeles exploded, this man scared out of his mind came out and said the following -- >> can we all get along? can we get along? >> reporter: those words will remind people of this man's life. he changed certainly the los angeles police department, he changed race relations across the country, he changed so much by being there at that point in time and having that beating taped and the white officers being acquitted just an amazing history. he had a very difficult life. he had a lot of demons in his world. and he certainly died in the same way that he lived his life. >> it's a tragic story, and keep an eye on this because i know the investigation is continuing to see if there may have been any kind of drugs or alcohol involved. i know he told don he had yet to really fight off those demons and get that substance abuse. miguel, thank you. a new beginning in the jerry sandusky trial, so to speak. today his lawyers are beginning to present the defense in this case. and you might be surprised with what they are about to say. ♪ what started as a whisper every day, millions of people choose to do the right thing. there's an insurance company that does that, too. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? checking top stories for you. waiting to see how wall street will react to the greek election results. the victory by the new democracy party helped to ease worries greece might break away from the eurozone and while the greek news gave the european stocks an initial bounce there was a pullback over concerns about spain and italy. problems of their own in the eurozone. in money news, an anonymous bidder buying a 1976 apple one computer and paying, guess what, $375,000 for it. that winning bid at the sotheby's auction was more than twice the original estimate. i guess it's because there's only about six working apple one computers in the world. if you are wondering about performance, here you go. it has no monitor. it has no keyboard and it's believed to be 1,000 times slower than an iphone. but it's nice to have. chinese spacecraft launched saturday has docked with an orbiting space lab. china is now the third nation after the united states and russia to complete a man space docking. the three-person crew including china's first female astronaut is including scientific experiments in the space lab. today is set to be a turning point in the child rape trial of jerry sandusky. after a week of extraordinarily emotional and very graphic testimony from his accusers, the prosecution is expected to rest today and his defense lawyers will get their turn to tell his side of this case. our national correspondent susan candiotti is outside the courthouse in pennsylvania. susan, it always looks bad as a prosecution wraps up because that's what the prosecution is supposed to do, make this look very, very bad. but knowing that, there was something interesting that happened this weekend that may give us a clue as to where the defense is going with its case. can you explain? >> reporter: i sure can. it appears he has been examined by two psychologists, one for the prosecution and one for the defense. the prosecution's expert, evidently, examined him over the weekend. and so this is all part of the defense plan as they stated in court papers to say sajerry sandusky has been diagnosed with and suffers from a histrionic personality disorder and that explains the creepy letters that he wrote to his alleged victims in this case and in some of them, and we can show you an excerpt from one of them, it reads in part how he wrote about himself in these letters in the third person. he says, quote, jer may not be worthy but he needs a best friend. jer will not forget and always cares. so prosecutors have argued he used it techniques that would be used by any sexual predator. the defense will argue that's not the case. that he suffers from this personality dis0 order and it has nothing to do with him allegedly being a sexual predator. and, you know, i want to bring you up to date, ashleigh, on what's happening in court right now. outside the jury's presence, they're both discussing some motions and they said that they will get under way with one last prosecution witness. we don't know who this is and then the defense and the prosecution will rest and the defense will begin. also the defense attorney for jerry sandusky is saying that the prosecutors failed to adequately explain each count, and he's telling the judge this is a violation of due process. so he'll likely ask for doing this for a basis of a later appeal after the judge rules on th this. >> all right. getting on the record as they like to say. that's fascinating, susan. you say there's one more witness for the prosecution, who knows. there are still two of those accusers of the it ten who they haven't been able to find and it would be amazing to find 0 out if they had last minute tracked them down or maybe something else. not that we're not going to have big surprises in the defense case, too. i'll let you get back into court so you can bring us whatever transpires in court. thank you very much, susan candiotti live in pennsylvania for us this morning. two brothers hoping for olympic gold. here's the problem. only one of them can make the u.s. olympic team. imagine what it's like for that family. you see us, at the start of the day. on the company phone list that's a few names longer. you see us bank on busier highways. on once empty fields. everyday you see all the ways all of us at us bank are helping grow our economy. lending more so companies and communities can expand, grow stronger and get back to work. everyday you see all of us serving you, around the country, 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[ yawning sound ] get used to that music. the london summer games just 39 days away and of course they will be kicked off in lavish fashion with an epic opening ceremony july 27th. this time around oscar winning director danny boyle is going to direct the cast of thousands. and we're hearing it includes a menagerie of animals. i'm just saying. siblings, speaking of olympics, siblings who are both trampolinists, both vying for one, just one, coveted spot on the u.s. olympic team. can you imagine thanksgiving dinner? it's a case of rivalry but also a case of brotherly love because both are aiming for gold. here is carol kocostello. >> reporter: steven and jeffrey need to jump 30 feet in the air to qualify for the olympic games but that's not compared to their greatest challenge, beating each other. >> sometimes they fight during the training so it's tough. you have to separate them a little. but sometimes when they have rough days they support each other a lot which makes it easier. >> reporter: world champ tatiana trains them both to face anyone but steven knows jeffrey is the one to beat. >> i'm concerned being with my brother, he has natural born talent. he hand so perfectly into the trampoline that if he -- if everything goes his way perfect, he could be the best in the world. >> reporter: yet 19-year-old jeffrey still looks up to steven. >> he has a very good work ethic. he comes into the gym. he trains his hardest and always puts his heart into it. >> reporter: when loretta gluckst gluckstein encouraged them to jump on a trampoline she never thought it would be an olympic sport and sibling rivalry. >> they are so close. they've been doing this together every -- i mean literally together every day for the past 12 years. >> reporter: steven has only lost to jeffrey once but it was big. he lost his national title to his baby brother last year. >> it's a feeling to beat a relative but it's a good feeling inside. >> reporter: steven became determined to beat him even as jeffrey remained more friend than foe. >> we spot for each other with a safety mat on the side of the trampoline. i watch his good trainings but he watches mine as well. you have to focus on yourself, your personal best. you are not worried about anybody else. >> reporter: even if that somebody else is literally your better half. carol costello, cnn, atlanta. >> carol, awesome story. i have a 5-year-old and 6-year-old that bounce together, too. maybe there's hope way down the line. okay. so dueling over deportation as immigration becomes the latest hot topic in the race for the white house. so will it be president obama or governor romney coming out on top on this argument? french fondue tex-mex fro-yo tapas puck chinese takeout taco truck free range chicken pancake stack baked alaska 5% cashback. signup for 5% cashback at restaurants through june. it pays to discover. 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[ male announcer ] glucerna hunger smart. a smart way to help manage hunger and diabetes. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ good morning. i'm ashleigh banfield in for carol costello and some of the stories we're following in the newsroom today, the defense is set to begin in its presentation of its case today in the jerry sandusky child rape trial. yesterday jerry sandusky underwent psychological testing. his lawyers plan to argue that he suffers a personality disorder. fears of a power struggle and more bloodshed as the muslim brotherhood claims victory in egypt's historic presidential election. the state media account shows the candidate mohamed morsi is leading but there are still a lot of votes that have yet to be counted. an autopsy is planned for rodney king today. los angeles police are treating his death as a drowning. the 47-year-old was found it at the bottom of his own swimming pool early yesterday morning. his 1991 beating by los angeles police officers was cau