before tonight's nfl draft, we ask why so many pro football stars end up bankrupt. first as we do every morning, we begin with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. we are looking to see and make sure this was not some kind of stmtic problem. >> reports surface of a new secret service scandal. >> cbs' stalgts station reports they took prostitutes back to their hotel room in el salvador. >> there are open positions at the secret service and it seems like a fun place to work. >> andrew young, once a close friend and aide to john edwards testifies. >> the defense team attacks the star witness. >> at one point andrew young asked if he had fallen in love with edward. when he informed edwards of everything that happened, edwards looked at him and said, you can't hurt me, andrew. you can't hurt me. >> the u.s. supreme court seems poised to uphold parts of arizona's illegal immigration laws. >> even as sonia sotomayor told the administration's top prosecutor, you can see it's not selling well. >> i lost my last page of speech. >> you have to hold it. >> all that -- >> oh, my god, they can't give it to the kid? >> they are actually rubbing it in the kid's face. >> and all that matters. >> time-lapse video showing the construction of one world trade center. >> on "cbs this morning." >> do you ever feel temptation when you see a woman? >> oh, yes, sometimes, oh, this is very nice, but then thinking, oh, problem, like that. the dalai lama. >> forever wise. welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with serious charges of another secret service sex scandal. >> a report from cbs seattle affiliate says last year in el salvador before a visit by president obama, an advance team of agents picked up women at a strip club and brought them back to their hotel. p>> they broke this story, whic you'll see only on "cbs this morning." he's just come back from el salvador. tell us what you saw and learned. >> for lack of a better description, secret service agents partied hard in san salvador in march of 2011 in the days just prior to president obama and his family visiting san salvador, that capital city. we have multiple witnesses who say that the center of this activity took place at a local strip club where they described as van loads of secret service agents and military escorts descended on the club, drinking heavily, getting intoxicated until the wee hours of the morning, paying strippers for sexual favors within the club and then aggressively pursued those same girls to come back to the hotel with them after work. >> has there been an official response from the secret service? >> secret service has not responded to us at all. if they would like to give me a call, i could certainly point them in the right direction. we did talk when we were down there with this whistle-blower, a government subcontractor who was with the group, all week long doing advance teamwork, like canine and explosive sweeps within the city. so, he was well versed -- he's got names. he was there. he witnessed these things. but in order to back him up, we flew to el salvador and also talked to the owner of this particular strip club who backed up his claims. >> and is there any indication -- obviously you mentioned this was march of 2011, san salvador. is there any indication you've had so far that this is wider than that? >> well, here's the thing. this source that i went down to talk about is so credible to me because a full year ago, just a few weeks ago president obama's visit to that country, i was down there on a different investigation, into jet repair facilities in third world countries. and this contractor approached me at that time to tell me these stories. he says he was really bothered the secret service agents in the weeks before had been bragging who they were, telling everybody they were with the secret service for obama, and then acting the way they acted. i immediately thought it was a story. as i pressed him to give me details, he backed off and refused to go on the record. so, over the past year, i've been bugging him to come forward with more details, including the name of the strip club and names of some of the secret service agents he witnessed in this misbehavior. after the colombia story broke this month, i pressured him again. he agreed if i flew down there he would talk to me on camera. we're working on that story still today. we just got home and we'll have more throughout the day. >> are there any indications that the people who were part of this, not the same people, but had the same responsibilities within the secret service? >> excuse me? >> in other words, the question is, were these part of the advance team, is it different in terms of the work they were doing that the people in colombia were doing? >> well, what -- what really bothers the witnesses in this case is that the secret service were part of that advance team just a few days before obama got there. it seems like the salvadorians, and a large subcontracting list, were okay if the secret service was okay if president obama had a safe trip, wheels up. but they believed there was quite a security risk in associating with the strippers and escorts in the days leading up to the visit. >> thank you. >> thank you. on wednesday the cabinet secretary in charge of the secret service told a senate hearing she's heard no other reports of similar behavior. meanwhile as bill plante reports from the white house, there are new questions about u.s. troops connected to the sex scandal. bill, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, charlie. the incident in colombia, remember, involved members of the u.s. military as well as the secret service. and while one group of senators questioned the head of the department of homeland security, others heard a briefing from the military and they're not happy. >> it was a waste of time because they had no information. >> reporter: pentagon officials briefed senators wednesday on the status of a dozen members of the u.s. military who were implicated in the same partying and prostitution incident, which involved members of the secret service. >> i expressed my extreme dissatisfaction with the lack of any concrete information that was provided to us from the national security standpoint. >> reporter: the troops from the army, navy, marine corps and air force, including five special forces, were working in colombia in advance of the president's trip. secretary panetta has said they have had security clearances suspended, they could be revoked, but so far no further hakz has been taken. janet napolitano, whose department is responsible for the secret service, assured senators that their investigation continues, even after nine lost their jobs in the wake of the scandal. >> we are going to get to the bottom of this. we are going to make sure that standards in training, if they need to be tightened up, are tightened. >> reporter: as questions continue to rise over whether this may not have been an is lated incident, senators pressed napolitano for more information. >> to your knowledge, is this the first time something like this has happened or have you had reports of similar incidents over the past? >> over the past 2 1/2 years, the secret service office of professional responsibility has not received any such complaint. >> reporter: but even sew, sources tell cbs news there have been past incidents of secret service partying on the road and some agents who were pushed to retire this time may fight back because they're saying that supervisors have been aware of past rule-breaking and done nothing. there may be as many as 50 more interviews yet to come. charlie, erica? >> bill plante, thank you very much. we have just heard from senator john mccain in the hearings that took place. the arizona republican is with us from capitol hill. senator, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> looking at the response you've heard from janet napolitano as well as the secret service, what's missing in your assessment? >> well, as far as i can tell, secretary napolitano and especially the director of the secret service has been forthcoming in many aspects of this, unlike the pentagon, which has completely stonewalled, using the excuse that a uniform code of military justice. as you know, that's the military law, somehow is a barrier to us receiving information. this could be, and i emphasize the word "could" be a situation where national security could have been compromised. that is the responsibility of congress in general and the senate armed services committee in particular as far as military personnel is concerned. this admiral and general came up to brief us. didn't even know when the president arrived in cartagena. i'm not making that up. they didn't know whether the head of the joint task force was in the united states or cartagena. charlie, i've been in thousands of briefings. i've never been to any quite as stone walling as this one was. the american people need to know, but more importantly, congress needs to know because if there is security problems, we need to address it. and we need to address it quickly. >> so, what would you want the pentagon to say and do? >> what they found out as regards the security of information that could have led individuals to threaten the life of the president of the united states, was there, for example, president as schedule. he was arriving the next day after this happened in cartagena. were there weapons around, in other words, what was the security situation? as far as the behavior part of it is concerned, that's another issue. they do have their rights but we also have to address the situation as to whether the president's security was compromised. >> in terms of that bhaiehaviors we heard from bill plante, there is talk of supervisors being aware of past rule-breaking and i hope you heard the report from our reporter in seattle, what he found out about similar behavior a year ago in el salvador. have you heard any past behavior like that in colombia. >> we continue to hear rumors. i don't know anything about that about that. the military work hand in glove with the secret service. so, i don't know anything about those -- any concrete evidence, but this is a situation, i think, that congress and the american people need to know about as far as a security standpoint is concerned. >> senator, as you know, the supreme court is holding hearings on immigration -- arizona's immigration law. you have said that bill came out of necessity. senator schumer says it's an assault on the domain of the federal government. do you expect the supreme court to rule it unconstitutional? >> you know, i don't know. i understand from the questioning that at least parts of the law seem to be legitimate in their ideas. but long ago i learned not to trust what the questions the supreme court asks. but it is -- there is one thing that's clear because i am a citizen of the state of arizona, is it was extreme frustration about the fact that our border was not secured, that we had drop houses in phoenix, that we have drugs that came across our border up to phoenix and distributed throughout the country. phoenix was a distribution and is a distribution point for drugs throughout the country. and there was great frustration, when we have border patrol agents killed with weapons used in fast and furious and people not feeling secure in their homes, you can understand, i hope over time, the frustration of people of arizona felt, which then triggered the action of the legislation they passed. >> senator mccain, thank you for joining us this morning. >> thanks for having me on. a battle is unfolding in a greensboro, north carolina, courtroom at the trial of aide to john edwards. former campaign staffer, andrew young. young returns to the stand again today. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, erica and charlie. you know, this is former campaign aide andrew young's fourth day on the stand this week, but this now is edwards' lawyer's turn to question him. defense attorney abby lowell zeroed in on young, accusing him of lying and exaggerating. lowell painted a picture of a man who used to think the world of edwards, then turned sour. you really hate him, don't you, asked lowell? i have mixed feelings, replied young. earlier the prosecution had tried to plug potential holes in their star witness's testimony, pointing out blatant inconsistencies. chief among them, why had young written in his tell-all book "the politician" that donations were gifts, entirely proper and not subject to campaign finance laws? young answered that at the time he wrote the donations were legal for a simple reason. i was scared to death, said young. i did this to cover my butt. the prosecution's case hinges on whether the money, nearly $1 million in donations from wealthy donors, was used to simply hide a mistress or help keep edwards' campaign afly. analyst barren says of young's previous testify -- >> mr. young has testified very much to the detriment of the edwards defense in the sense he's said there were a lot of conversations with people about this cover-up and how it was campaign related. >> reporter: but as edwards' attorneys dig in with their attack on young's credibility, edwards himself seemed upbeat as he left the courthouse wednesday afternoon with his daughter. it promises to be a long day ahead for andrew young. defense attorney abby lowell told the judge in closing yesterday afternoon that his cross-examination is going to go on all day long. charlie and erica, back to you. >> anna werner, thank you very much. "48 hours" correspondent erin moriarty and jack ford are following this case. good morning. >> good morning. >> can andrew young survive this kind of credibility test? >> well, that's going to be a big question inside of the courtroom because they have ammunition to use against. a jury will have to decide, is he telling the truth or not in they were going to come after him with all sorts of things. one thing the defense has here that you don't often have is a bock. this guy has a book. >> and i just happen to have it here. well, because i've gone through it all. you know, normally you don't have depositions in a criminal trial. so, here they have this printed deposition. there are real contradictions between -- one of the biggest ones, and i noticed that, when he testified in direct he said, john edwards was really concerned about these checks and didn't want to know about them. and specifically on page 214, these funds and money that came from fred barren were actually gifts and were entirely proper and were actually -- and were not subject to campaign finance laws. >> my question still is, can somebody lie, get away with it and -- >> you can, if you can explain it away. the best way to challenge somebody's credibility in a courtroom it-s to show they've said other things in the past that are different. sometimes you have an explanation for it. the question is, is the explanation he's giving here enough for the jurors to say, well, we're willing to buy into it. the defense is going to argue, look, this is what you say to them. you have lied in the past when it's convenient for you, right? when it comes time for them to sum up the case, they can say to the jury, is there any more convenient time for andrew young to lie than right now for his immunity deal? that book gives the defense a great deal of ammunition. >> and it's complicated by the fact that actually andrew young, when he wrote this book, signed a document with his publisher saying that everything in the book was provably true. he signed that. now you're going to say, were you telling the truth in the book or now when you're under oath? i think there's a real problem with credibility. >> another big question looked at here is what elizabeth edwards knew and when she knew it. how important is that to this case? >> it helps to give a perspective to all of this, because the defense is saying, she knew really early on and as a consequence we're trying to protect her and to try to make sure the humiliation level is not so bad. again, that's another issue. >> erin and jack, thank you very much. now time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. former chinese leader bo xilai spied on other top officials, according to "the new york times." it's part of a scandal that costed bo his job and rocked the chinese government. his wife is accused of arranging the murder of a british consultant. miami herald reports on a flap on the city of miami. they are considering selling ad space on public property, including lamp posts, fire hydrants and sides of public buildings. one calls it an obscenity. chicago tribune says there's been a breakthrough in tauctionz of college football national conference commissioners, who are working to overhaul the bcs, which decides who's number one. the new proposals are expected to bring significant changes. and britain's daily mail reports prime minister cameron's secret meeting with rupert murdoch. murdoch is under a second day of questioning in london today in the phone-hacking investigation. yesterday we learned murdoch had four meetings with cameron that were previously -- that were not previously known. we'll have more on the murdoch hearings coming up in our >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by kay jewelers. every kiss begins with kay. the white house agrees with mitt romney, the republican presidential race is over. as the candidates focus on november, bill o'reilly is here to look at the search for running mate and romney's chances of defeating president obama. and tonight's nfl draft is all about football's next big stars. the many top players are ending their careers with nothing. >> it's an ep dim democridemic four years out of the game are either divorced or bankrupt. >> we'll show you why so many superstars are going broke. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by usaa. proudly serving the financial needs of the military, veterans and their families. ff vietnam i. over the south pacific in 1943. i got mine in iraq, 2003. usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation. because it offers a superior level of protection, and because usaa's commitment to serve the military, veterans and their families is without equal. begin your legacy, get an auto insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve. 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