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Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees

Politicians Behaving Badly; Casey Anthony's Web of Lies; One on One with Michelle Rhee

Aired June 16, 2011 - 23:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

ANDERSON COOPER, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening, everyone.

We begin tonight "Keeping Them Honest" with a question about our politicians today. What exactly does a lawmaker have to do to get fired around here? Why do certain seemingly sleazy acts get you bounced out of office and other sleazy behavior just bounces off some politicians?

This afternoon, after 10 days of man-scaped pecs and bulging shorts and not to mention compulsively sexualized messages to women he never met, including a stripper, Congressman Anthony Weiner, Democrat from New York's Ninth District, stepped down.

If this whole thing has seemed like a circus, today's final act was definitely fit for the center ring. There were reporters in the crowd, as well as supporters, and of course, a Howard Stern prankster, which explains some of the noise you're about to hear.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

REP. ANTHONY WEINER (D), NEW YORK: I'm here today to again apologize for the personal mistakes I have made and the embarrassment I have caused. I make this apology to my neighbors and my constituents, but I make it particularly to my wife Huma.

Today I'm announcing my resignation from Congress.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Bye, bye, pervert.

WEINER: -- so my colleagues can get back to work, my neighbors can choose a new representative and most importantly that my wife and I can continue to heal from the damage I have caused.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: Now Weiner stepped down before the House possibly voted to censure or expel him, before the Ethics Committee voted, before it even issued a report, and with no any evidence that he broke any laws.

He apparently didn't even get physical with any of his online partners, never even met them. Same with Weiner's New York Republican colleague Chris Lee, who posted this shot on Craigslist earlier this year in search of companionship. He was gone in four hours.

On the other hand, there's Idaho Senator Larry Craig arrested allegedly cruising the men's room stalls at the Minneapolis Airport playing "Footsie". Remember his excuse that he had a wide stance. He pleaded guilty to misdemeanor disorderly conduct, stuck it out and finished his term.

New York Congressman Charles Rangel got in tax trouble and was charged with 13 counts of abusing his office by the House Ethics Committee, then he was censured. But he too didn't quit and was recently re-elected with 80 percent of the vote.

GOP Senator David Vitter also got re-elected and is serving today despite the fact that his name turned up on the D.C. madam's client list. He admitted to -- quote -- "a very serious sin" and asked forgiveness. He stayed in the Senate and was re-elected.

Ironically, he originally succeeded this man in the House, Bob Livingston, who resigned after committing adultery. And Livingston had just been chosen to replace Newt Gingrich, who now admits that back then, when he was leading the impeachment effort against President Clinton, that he was having an affair with a woman who would become his current wife, Calista.

President Clinton survived as well, but Anthony Weiner did not. He lost the support of his colleagues, the House Democratic leadership, and President Obama who said he'd resign if he were in Weiner's shoes.

Tonight, on ABC News, the President seemed to be easing him out the door.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: And I wish Representative Weiner and his lovely wife well. It obviously has been a tough incident for him. But I'm confident that they will refocus, and he will refocus, and they will end up being able to bounce back.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: President Obama tonight on ABC.

So what are the rules? Where are the lines, if there are any lines at all?

Joining us now: Dana Bash, and Melanie Sloan of Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington.

So Dana, was this resignation unavoidable? I mean was it just that -- I mean if -- was there another way he could have handed it that that he could have survived? DANA BASH, CNN SENIOR CONGRESSIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Well, I've talk to some of his colleagues, as I have over the past several weeks, particularly today and they say, yes, actually, that the way that he handled it was atrocious. I mean there's really no other way to say it.

Never mind the -- what's at the core of this, which is sending lewd photographs of himself that kept trickling out over and over and over the past couple of weeks, but most importantly it's the fact that he just was so not truthful about the fact that he had done it, the fact that he not only said that he was hacked, which was not true. Then he didn't answer our questions.

Then he didn't tell the truth and actually blatantly lied to us in the media, but even more importantly to his colleagues, that that really as one of his colleagues said to me, it's always the cover-up. And the cover-up at this point and the fact that he didn't tell the truth really did him in.

COOPER: But Melanie, he also didn't really have many friends in Congress. I'm wondering what role that played. I mean if he had been a senator, would -- would he have resigned?

MELANIE SLOAN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, CITIZENS FOR RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS IN WASHINGTON: There's no question but that if he'd been in the Senate, he wouldn't have had to resign.

(CROSSTALK)

COOPER: Why is that?

SLOAN: The Senate really never seems to demand the resignation of even their most egregious offenders.

If you think about it, no one asked for David Vitter's resignation. No even asked for Senator John Ensign's resignation, even though he would eventually have gone on to have been expelled by his colleagues.

COOPER: So none of the fellow senators asked for Vitter to resign or Ensign?

SLOAN: Not a single one asked for it.

COOPER: And this is the first time that Nancy Pelosi has actually asked for somebody to step down.

SLOAN: That's right.

Financial scandals don't seem to bring about nearly the same reactions. Nancy Pelosi never asked for Congressman John Rangel -- Charlie Rangel to resign. And so we have seen numerous members manage to stave off these kind of efforts. And I think part of it for Anthony Weiner is he didn't really have any friends in Congress.

He hadn't built the goodwill that say, Charlie Rangel had over his over 40 years in Congress.

COOPER: Dana, I mean I find that fascinating. Do you agree with that, that if he had been in the Senate, if Weiner had been in the Senate, it would be a different story?

BASH: I think -- I think the best way to say it is that every situation is different. That might sound like a cop-out, but it happens to be true.

I'll tell you, with Larry Craig, I spent some time in Idaho trying to -- following the story and trying to figure out exactly what went on. And at the time -- I covered it real-time -- his colleagues did try to push him out. They tried very, very hard to push him out. They were unsuccessful.

And I'm talking about his colleagues in his own party. They were not successful in doing so. They stripped him of his leadership role and they really tried to get him out the door. He was determined to stay. At a certain point, there's not much you can do.

But I guess the difference -- there are lots of differences obviously, but this was an incident. With Anthony Weiner, again, we're talking about the span of almost three weeks here, Anderson, with new stories, new pictures, new allegations coming out every single day of frankly unsolicited pictures he was taking of himself going to women that he didn't know and, even at the end of the day, really, the straw that broke the camel's back, from many leadership sources and members of Congress that I spoke to, was the fact that he sent some messages to a 17-year-old girl.

He said they weren't indecent, but just the fact that this was on top of everything else, it just -- the story is something that is unique in and of itself.

COOPER: Melanie, do you think this somehow changes things on Capitol Hill in terms of -- that there's now a higher level of -- or a lower level of tolerance for this sort of behavior? How do you think it impacts things?

SLOAN: I think it is a big risk for members of Congress. If they're going to have a standard where any sexual impropriety at all is going to force a member of Congress to be booted, I think we could see a lot of members go out the door.

I think we could see a lot of opposition research on this issue and investigative journalists looking at this. And I think this is a standard member of -- members of Congress need to be very cautious about. There was no ethics rule or federal law violated.

And now, if we're going to start kicking everybody out for sexual misconduct, even not actual misconduct, but just sexual impropriety, I think a lot of members have something to worry about here.

COOPER: Fascinating.

Melanie Sloan, I appreciate it. Dana Bash, you have been covering this from the beginning. Thank you very much. I appreciate it.

BASH: Thanks, Anderson.

COOPER: Anthony Weiner says he'll be going to rehab -- quote -- "to focus on becoming a better husband and healthier person."

I spoke earlier about his prospects with Dr. Drew Pinsky, addiction medicine specialist and host of "Dr. Drew" on our sister network HLN.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: So I mean, Anthony Weiner has -- has talked about, you know, going away for some sort of treatment. Is there rehab for -- I mean, I'm not sure what the treatment would actually be.

Is that just kind of a -- there's a catchall excuse now of, like, well, I'm going to go to rehab and disappear for a couple of weeks and then come back and make a comeback. Is there something that he can be treated for?

DR. DREW PINSKY, AUTHOR, "CRACKED: PUTTING BROKEN LIVES TOGETHER AGAIN": Well, the first to address the rehab, that's a term that really doesn't even have any meaning anymore.

I mean the fact is, is he going to a psychiatric hospital and getting treatment? Is he going to treatment for sexual addiction or drug addiction? Or is this a hospital-based program or a residential program? So he's going somewhere, going to rehab.

Now, in -- I don't know Representative Weiner, obviously, but people that behave like this, I have treated many, many times, and we tend to conceptualize these things as sexual addictions.

And yes, they do -- they can go away for intensive, immersive programs with a deep -- with intense group emotional processes with men who have problems exactly like him. And it's really about --

(CROSSTALK)

COOPER: So it's that like sex therapy, or is that about compulsive behavior? What -- I mean, how would you characterize -- because it does seem a compulsive nature. I mean, you read those tweets. And a woman is tweeting about something he said on TV and he immediately is steering it toward sexual innuendo.

(CROSSTALK)

DR. PINSKY: Yes. That's right. He -- and we would put that -- I would at least put that, not knowing him, but based on what we're seeing here, in the category of sexual addiction, sexual compulsion.

And yes, that has a -- that has a comprehensive group process, individual therapy and 12-step and sometimes medication associated with that. But foremost among that is gaining access to an honest program of recovery that is rigorous and intense and delicate.

And ultimately, it's about reintegrating emotional processes. Men that do this usually have a very barren emotional life, and they're just trying to evoke something. And that seems to be what is going on here with Representative Weiner.

COOPER: You say reintegrating emotional processes, that part of the treatment. What does that mean?

DR. PINSKY: Yes. I know. This is a -- it's a hard -- if you have ever seen "Celebrity Rehab", it's the reason I did that program, is to show people that this is a very intensive process. It's a group process. It's about being called out on your emotions, being open and honest and processing things that you may have put way behind you and thought you had dealt with. And those things need to be brought back into and integrated with the rest of his emotional life.

COOPER: You know, though, some people, maybe a lot of people, listening to this are going to be kind of rolling their eyes and be like, come on.

DR. PINSKY: Yes.

COOPER: All right, he was sexting and now he's going to go for deep treatment? I mean, that, look, he got caught doing something that probably a lot of people do.

DR. PINSKY: Absolutely, that's true. But the fact is that he -- if you have seen -- I have actually read some of the stuff he was engaged in. It's -- it's -- I couldn't repeat it in a room. There's no way. It was pretty intense stuff.

It's not just the blush we have been sort of presented in the media. It went downstream very, very far and very, very quickly in many of these interactions. And that, in the context of there being severe consequences and so much to be at risk, suggested he was not operating at let's call it a normal space emotionally at that point in time.

It's those consequences that bring people to treatment. I know everyone goes, oh, men in power. And that's true. Men go into positions of power to be somebody. But you notice we don't see there's women in power doing this. Women in power often go into power to do something different. But men that need to be somebody often have narcissistic liabilities.

Anderson, you and I have talked about this over the years many, many times. And as such --

(CROSSTALK)

COOPER: Not in a therapeutic setting, but on television.

DR. PINSKY: Yes, on television, we have talked about it. That's exactly right. And -- because -- because these things do happen in celebrities and men in position of power, and it's -- it's not a happy thing for them. It's a very empty life they're leading. They need to be buttressed by these sort of external features around them to make them feel ok about themselves.

And they continue to have deep emotional liabilities, many of them. And that's what's sort of come out here. And so when you roll your eyes and say, oh, men in power, they just wouldn't do anything if they didn't get caught, absolutely that's true. The same is true of my cocaine addicts, and my alcoholics, my pill addicts.

If the legal system didn't come to bear or their family bring them in or their health consequences didn't come to bear, they keep doing it. It's true of all these kinds of -- the compulsive behaviors.

COOPER: Dr. Drew thanks. It's fascinating.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: I will have actually more with Dr. Drew later in the program. We talked about Casey Anthony, who's already established herself as a world-class liar. I will ask whether that's any reason to believe she's also a killer.

And the defense's question about little Caylee that shook up the courtroom today: Did the FBI do a test to see if Caylee's uncle or grandfather could also be her father? And maybe you'll hear what the jury heard about that today.

Let us know what you think. We're on Facebook. Follow me on Twitter @AndersonCooper. I will be tweeting tonight as well.

Up next: the storm over Mitt Romney's joke that he's also unemployed. Was it insensitive or just getting a laugh at his own expense? And does it matter that he made it after attacking President Obama for something he said about the economy? You decide. We're "Keeping Them Honest."

First, let's check in with Isha Sesay -- Isha.

ISHA SESAY, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Anderson, is Moammar Gadhafi ready to step down?

Just ahead, we will tell you what the latest envoy to Libya is saying about it. Also, late word from his son about elections -- that and much more when 360 continues.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

COOPER: So was it something he said? Mitt Romney, today campaigning in Tampa cracking a joke, which he does sometimes. He recently made a pun out of the words hubcap and hollandaise. But this time, the joke was about being jobless. And it came right after he ran an ad slamming President Obama for something he said about the economy.

First, the Romney joke at a Tampa restaurant talking to a group of unemployed Floridians.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

MITT ROMNEY (R), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: And I should also tell my story. I'm also unemployed.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Are you on LinkedIn?

ROMNEY: Yes, actually. And -- and I'm not working.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: A lot better than what we have got.

ROMNEY: And -- but I have my sight on a particular job I'm looking for. So I know exactly what I'm (INAUDIBLE). It's not terribly entrepreneurial, but it's a lot of work.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: Wow. So that was the joke, got a laugh in the room. But it stirred up kind of a political storm.

Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz putting out a statement blasting it, saying in part: "Being unemployed, Mr. Romney, is not a joke, not to my constituents in Florida or to millions of Americans across the country."

She also pointed out that Governor Romney doesn't really need the job. He's reportedly worth more than $200 million and owns several homes around the country.

Asked about his joke later, Governor Romney said he was only making light of himself. You can decide for yourself whether he was or wasn't.

But, "Keeping Them Honest," the joke came in a certain context. Earlier this month, President Obama said this about a shaky jobs report just out.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: There are always going to be bumps on the road to recovery.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: Well, those four words, "bumps on the road," Governor Romney turned them into a campaign ad accusing President Obama of, well, being insensitive to the unemployed.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I am an American, not a bump in the road.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I'm an American, not a bump in the road.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I'm an American.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I'm an American.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Not a bump in the road.

(CROSSTALK)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I'm an American, not a bump in the road.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: So, was the President of the United States comparing Americans to bumps in the road or, at best, somehow downplaying their misfortunes? Or was he just using a slightly clunky metaphor?

Was Governor Romney being insensitive or just being his self?

I asked a pair of professionals, GOP strategist Tony Blankley, and Cornell Belcher, who worked on the 2008 Obama campaign and will be again.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: So Tony, the Democrats are now kind of jumping all over Mitt Romney for the statement about, I'm unemployed as well.

I mean is there a problem here? Or do you think this is much ado about nothing?

TONY BLANKLEY, REPUBLICAN STRATEGIST: It's much ado about a little.

Gore Vidal wrote many years ago that American public likes a genial president, but not a jokester. And I think that's largely true. Someone like Reagan or FDR can get away with it because they have such wonderful personalities.

But whether it was the President making a joke about shovel-ready or whether it's Romney making a joke about unemployment, I think their best interests is in not making jokes.

COOPER: I mean Cornell, I kind of -- we debated even doing this, because when you see it, he was clearly sort of trying to make a light-hearted thing. And the people around the table didn't seem to be particularly offended at all.

But I guess, in the wake of him jumping on President Obama for using the term bumps in the road, he put out a whole commercial making it seem like the President was talking about people, you know, who are laying in the road, and that they weren't just bumps in the road.

I mean do you think this is part of a larger problem for Romney?

CORNELL BELCHER, CNN CONTRIBUTOR: You know, I think he has a connection problem. And you can see his people think he has a connection problem. And he's working real hard to try to connect with the regular guy.

So I think he -- he's trying too hard, and they've -- and they've got to fix it. I mean, look, it's ridiculous that a guy who is worth a couple hundred million dollars is going to talk about him being unemployed. It's almost insulting to people who are unemployed.

But from a larger campaign strategy standpoint, he clearly is trying to sort of connect with the regular guy, and they clearly see this as a problem. But he's just not doing it very well.

COOPER: It is interesting, Tony. I mean, there have been recently kind of a number of pretty devastating accounts by reporters kind of following Romney on the road of just -- he's gotten better, it seems like, in press conferences, in debates. He's become -- he's clearly the front-runner right now.

But on kind of one-on-one moments, which are now increasingly recorded, he seems to have a lot of awkwardness.

BLANKLEY: Well, I think anyone who becomes a front-runner is more vulnerable to these sort of things.

Plus, the media also gets -- gets into the rhythm of a particular critique of one candidate or the other. And right now, they're in that kind of mode looking for little examples. Right now, the rhythm is to see if Romney says anything that's not regular guy.

Well, I mean the truth is, he's not a regular guy. Rockefeller wasn't a regular guy. They got to figure out how to be themselves and be sort of accessible to the public without pretending to be a 9-to- 5er.

COOPER: Yes. I mean, I don't think anyone who's a regular guy or a regular woman runs for president and can actually become president.

BLANKLEY: Yes, exactly.

(CROSSTALK)

COOPER: I mean you have to be kind of extraordinary on -- in many levels.

BLANKLEY: You've got to be something a little different. There's only been 44 of them, yes.

COOPER: Right.

So Cornell, if you were advising Romney how to proceed, because clearly, I mean if he is the front-runner right now and is going to be -- everybody's going to be out for him one way or another, how does he avoid this trap in the future? What would you advise him?

BELCHER: This is -- this is the great sin, is voters can smell inauthenticity a mile away. So he's got to come across as authentic.

When -- in these situations, he comes across as inauthentic. So I would try to get him out of those situations. But the problem is, in New Hampshire and Iowa, that's retail politics 101 at its best. So, you've got to be out there touching the flesh and talking to people.

And to a certain extent, if he's not very good at it, they've got to take him out of those situations as much as possible, because, clearly, here's a guy -- I'm sorry -- he's just not very good at it. So, they have got to keep -- sort of limit those situations. But it's hard in Iowa or New Hampshire.

COOPER: I want to ask just both of you just in general about the GOP field right now.

Tony, as you watch the field right now, what -- what interests you the most? What do you think is most -- what are you going to be watching for, besides anyone new entering the race? But what are you going to be watching for with the current candidates in the next couple of weeks?

BLANKLEY: Well, I think the question is, increasingly, who is going to be the alternative to Romney?

I mean Romney is not quite a front-runner, but he's almost. He's around 25, 30 percent in a split field. So, the question is who is going to emerge as the alternative down -- down the stretch? We're a long way from the stretch. But June is remarkably close to September, which is remarkably close to January.

So it moves faster than you would expect.

COOPER: Cornell, how about you? Because I mean, what's so interesting about races is that they seem one way early on, and then -- I mean you look at Hillary Clinton was thought to be way out in front early on and then all of a sudden here came then-Senator Barack Obama.

BELCHER: And I'm very thankful for that.

COOPER: Right, as his former pollster, yes.

(CROSSTALK)

BELCHER: When you look at sort of the mood of the country, voters were looking for change. And there was an anti-establishment, sort of anti-Washington fervor that was going on in the country two years ago.

And I thought we saw that manifest itself in the Democratic primary. I think we're going to see that same sort of thing manifesting itself on the right this time, particularly with the Tea Party.

I kind of like the outside candidates' chances in this to sort of -- to come in here. And I'll tell you what. A lot of people didn't agree with me, but Michele Bachmann had the -- has the largest sort of upside. And I think she showed herself very well in that last debate.

I think she can speak to the Tea Party. And I think she's the outside candidate who can cut in here.

COOPER: Tony Blankley, it's good to have you on the program. Thank you.

BLANKLEY: It's good to be here.

COOPER: And Cornell Belcher as well -- thanks, Cornell.

BELCHER: Thank you.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: A lot coming up.

The defense starts its case in the murder trial of Casey Anthony, a fascinating day in court. We're going to get the latest on exactly what happened from Gary Tuchman in Orlando, who was there.

And we will hear more from Dr. Drew about what could be going on with Casey, whether she's a pathological liar and what that really actually means -- all that ahead.

Also, al Qaeda names a new leader to take over for Osama bin Laden. But could the delay mean there's dissension in the ranks?

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

COOPER: One of the most intriguing parts of watching the Casey Anthony trial is trying to figure out what is going on with Casey Anthony herself?

I talked with Dr. Drew to get his take on it.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DR. PINSKY: So far, there's really nothing that has been offered that gives me as a clinician a way to understand exactly what this behavior has been.

The way things have played out in court makes it look like she's a psychopath, makes it look like she's a really, egregiously awful parent and probably somebody who's capable of hurting this child.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: We're going to more with Dr. Drew and the latest from inside the court today coming up.

But first, Isha joins us back with a "360 News and Business Bulletin" -- Isha. SESAY: Anderson, Ayman al-Zawahiri has been named the new leader of al Qaeda. Al-Zawahiri was Osama bin Laden's personal physician and one of his closest confidants.

Some analysts say the fact that it took al Qaeda weeks after bin Laden's death to name a new leader could be a sign that there's dissension in the ranks.

Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's son Saif says there could be elections in Libya within three months. Saif Gadhafi told an Italian newspaper that the U.N., NATO or other international observers could be there to make sure it's a fair election. Meanwhile, a Russian envoy who was in Libya says he was told that Gadhafi is not ready to step down.

California Governor Jerry Brown has vetoed the budget that state lawmakers passed. Brown said the budget, the proposed budget adds billions of dollars of new debt, and the state has to do better to solve its $26 billion deficit.

And Anderson, the city of Vancouver is cleaning up the mess from rioting. Cars were overturned, fires were set and police used tear gas after the Boston Bruins beat the Vancouver Canucks to win the Stanley Cup. A local bar owner says it comes down to too many people having too much to drink.

You think?

COOPER: Really surprising stuff.

SESAY: Yes.

COOPER: All right, time for the "Shot."

I had heard about this, Isha, actually from Twitter. A lot of folks tweeted me that this had happened. Are you up for a little "Wheel of Fortune"?

SESAY: Let's do it.

COOPER: All right.

This is from tonight's show. The category is same name. Let's take a look at how this all played out on the show.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

PAT SAJAK, HOST: Andy (ph), it's your turn.

This is going to be close. Oh.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Darn.

SAJAK: Wow.

Sean (ph), what do you want to do? UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I would like to solve, please.

SAJAK: Yes.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Anderson and Mini Cooper.

SAJAK: Yes, that's right.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: I hope they're talking about the car. But --

But I'm sad that I also -- that I bankrupted that person.

SESAY: Oh. Well --

COOPER: I mean I didn't technically bankrupt the person. But --

SESAY: Technically, you didn't. But I'm told that they're watching the show right now.

COOPER: It's that damn Pat Sajak.

SESAY: Yes, indeed. Well, they know not to bet on you anymore.

COOPER: Yes. Well, I'm a good bet. Anyway --

SESAY: As he says of himself.

COOPER: Exactly. It was very exciting, though, to see Vanna White, you know. Is she still doing it? Ok. Yes. See Vanna White turn the things. I got very excited.

SESAY: Ok. If you say so. In the U.K. we have a different version of the show with different people.

COOPER: Oh, really? Do you know who the original host of Wheel of fortune was and the original letter turner? I don't know why I know this.

SESAY: No. But I know you're going to freak everyone out with your geekiness to tell us.

COOPER: Chuck Woolery and Susan Stafford. Thank you very much.

SESAY: There you go.

COOPER: I don't know why I know that. I'm pretty sure that's right. Somebody on Twitter will correct me if I'm wrong.

SESAY: They will indeed. In fact we're going to work to find out if you're right and we'll tell you before the end of the show.

COOPER: Chuck really went on to do "Love Connection". Again why I know this I don't know.

SESAY: Ok. Now you're beginning to scare me. Is there an exit?

COOPER: Exit stage left.

SESAY: Yes.

COOPER: All right. There's a lot more ahead serious stuff starting with "Crime and Punishment"; the latest on the Casey Anthony trial. We'll be right back.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

COOPER: In "Crime and Punishment", a new phase of the Casey Anthony murder trial began today in a Florida courtroom exactly three years after 2-year-old Caylee Anthony was last seen alive. You can see that some people marked the sad anniversary of the site where the toddler's remains were found, paying their respects to the little girl whose mom didn't report her missing for a month.

Now Casey Anthony is facing a possible death sentence if she's convicted. Today with an explosive question her defense team came out swinging. Here's Gary Tuchman.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

GARY TUCHMAN, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Casey Anthony's attorneys have now begun to present their case.

BAEZ: Good morning ladies and gentlemen.

TUCHMAN: Their effort to free her or at the very least save her life started out with some hard ball. At the start of the trial, the defense said Caylee Anthony accidentally drowned. And then put out a shocking claim that Casey was molested by her father and brother. The defense contends the history of incest was a reason she kept her daughter's drowning a secret.

Today her attorneys tried to reignite that legal flame. Listen to what defense attorney Jose Baez asked an FBI scientist.

BAEZ: Were you asked to conduct a paternity test for Lee Anthony as to being a potential father of Caylee Anthony?

TUCHMAN: Prosecutors quickly objected. Baez knew full well the paternity tests had come back negative for both father and brother. But he clearly wanted the jury to know those paternity tests had been done.

(on camera): But so far there is nobody on the defense witness list who will testify about the possible relationship between incest and keeping your child's death secret. One person who might fill that role is Casey Anthony herself. But her attorneys are still not saying if she'll take the stand.

(voice-over): What they focused on today was DNA, specifically the lack of it on critical evidence. Like the duct tape found on the child's skull. BAEZ: Did you test the adhesive side of the duct tape?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Yes, I did.

BAEZ: And was there anything that you were able to find there?

HEATHER SEUBERT, FBI DNA EXAMINER: The information that was generated was inconclusive.

TUCHMAN: But the prosecution asked the same expert what happens to DNA after months in the heat and humidity.

SEUBERT: It is probably that if there were cells contained on there that the cells could start to degrade over time. And the DNA that would be contained in there would also start to be diminished.

TUCHMAN: Not all the testimony on this day was serious. Listen to this crime scene investigator.

BAEZ: Do you speak while you're doing these things?

GERARDO BLOISE, CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATOR: No.

BAEZ: Why not?

BLOISE: Huh?

BAEZ: Why not?

BLOISE: Because I'm by myself.

BAEZ: Ok.

TUCHMAN: It's rare to see Casey Anthony smile in the presence of the jury. But she did today as the defense makes its push to convince those jurors she did not kill her daughter.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: And Gary, you were sitting near Casey Anthony's parents in court today. I'm fascinated, what are their reactions when the whole question of paternity test came up?

TUCHMAN: The rules in the court, Anderson, are no one is allowed to talk whether you're the family, the media, the public. So they follow the rules and they did not talk. But I looked at their faces during this testimony; both George and Cindy looked very serious, very sad.

George had a Bible with him today. He thumbed through the Bible during parts of the testimony. He also had a notebook. And on the notebook he had a badge with a picture of little Caylee.

One other rule, Anderson, I want to talk to you about in the courtroom and that's the rule there's no sleeping allowed or you'd get kicked out. You may wonder why would you go to court and fall asleep.

What's happening is people are camping out. Right now there's about 40 people behind me who have been here for two hours, 12 hours before court starts tomorrow. They're so tired by the time they get into court they fall asleep. And at least four people were kicked out of court today for crashing in the middle of the DNA testimony.

COOPER: Gary, appreciate it. Thanks.

The defense made it clear today they're going to try to build on the accusations they made in their opening statements about Casey Anthony being sexually abused by her father and brother. That's the allegations.

I also talked about that with Dr. Drew Pinsky, host of HLN's "DR. DREW".

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: So Dr. Drew, with as many lies as Casey Anthony has told, is it possible that on some level she actually believes the stories she's told everyone about the death of her daughter?

DR. PINSKY: I don't know about that particular lie, but there's no doubt in my mind that she is one of these people that does believe the lies that she maintains. And when you really look at her, the only thing we know about Casey Anthony for sure of a factual nature is that she is a spectacular liar.

(CROSSTALK)

COOPER: Is she a pathological liar? You hear that term bandied about.

DR. PINSKY: Absolutely. Absolutely.

Now, I will tell you when you read the literature on pathological lying, though, what you see is that a pathological liar never exists as an entity unto itself. It always exists in a context of other personality disorders, drug addictions, some other explanation for a pathological going on.

I've even speculated that no one has been able to answer me on this -- maybe she had a head injury as a child. Maybe there's a neurological explanation for this. Because when you read the lies, they are so stunning. We don't know is she a psychopath who's a cold- blooded killer? Is she a sociopath who doesn't really appreciate that other people have feelings? Is she a drug addict possibly?

I mean none of these things have been presented in court. But so far there's really nothing that has been offered that gives me, as a clinician, a way to understand exactly what this behavior has been.

The way things have played out in court makes it look like she's a psychopath, makes it looks like she's a really egregiously awful parent and probably somebody who's capable of hurting this child.

COOPER: And, you know, they're alleging sexual abuse by her brother and by her father. Is that something, though, that comes out in the ways that they're saying it does in her case, which is the -- her reaction to the death of her daughter?

PINSKY: That's the case they're making. But you know, as I've said on my program several times, which is I treat lots of drug addicts. They're terrible parents. I treat lots of trauma survivors. That doesn't make them murderers. In fact, I never see that. That never happens.

It makes them bad parents, and it may make them do strange things after a loss. I mean that maybe explains her behavior, after being aware that something had happened to her child. But even that, I mean, that's a reach. It really is.

And by the way, especially they've not really proven severe sexual abuse. You'd have to really show chronic, ongoing sexual abuse.

(CROSSTALK)

COOPER: Well, they haven't proven any sexual abuse.

PINSKY: No. They've just alleged that maybe something happened with her brother and maybe something happened with her dad. In my experience, that's not enough to explain wild lying and wild behavior and extreme partying after your child has died.

COOPER: Dr. Drew Pinsky thanks.

PINSKY: A pleasure.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: Let's bring in our legal experts. Andrea Lyon is Casey Anthony's former lead defense attorney. She's the author of "Angel of Death Row" and a law professor at DePaul University. Paul Henderson is a prosecutor.

So Paul, why is the defense raising the question of whether Casey's brother or father were the father of her little girl? Neither of them was the father, according to DNA testing. So they already know that. Is this just a ploy to get this -- put a suggestion in front of the jury?

PAUL HENDERSON, PROSECUTOR: Absolutely. This is just a red herring that they're throwing out there to try and paint a picture without putting her on the stand.

And the reason that you know that that's the case is because up until now, they never requested any of that DNA be tested. And if they really suspected that this was a possibility, they could have easily have asked the prosecution to have the DNA tested for that likelihood.

ANDREA LYON, CASEY'S FORMER ATTORNEY: The prosecution are the ones who requested that it be tested. I think that that might be the purpose of asking the questions in the first place, is to show that prosecution, the police, suspected incest.

COOPER: The jury now still doesn't have an answer about George Anthony. There was an argument between the lawyers. The jury was excused from the room. When they came back, the defense asked about the results of the brother, Lee. The defense didn't ask about George Anthony. And so the question is, perhaps, in the jurors' mind now about George Anthony.

HENDERSON: Look, they know that the only way that they're going to be able to pitch their story in terms of an inference of molestation or an inference of incest is going to be for her to have to take the stand. The only way around that is to show, through some DNA evidence, that does not exist, you know.

I think that this was just a ruse and a red herring to try and distract the jury from what's really going on, which is the ultimate question of was she responsible for the death and the murder of her child?

LYON: To be fair, the prosecution is asking the jury to draw a lot of inferences. She's at a party, she's a murderer. She lies, she's a murderer. So I mean, just to be fair, there's an awful lot of inference slinging in this trial.

COOPER: So how damaging, Paul, do you think it was for the prosecution, the fact that there was testimony today that DNA -- that Casey's DNA was not found on the duct tape? And that in fact, one piece -- part of the duct tape had been contaminated by another technician?

HENDERSON: Whether or not the experts or the people in the labs had mishandled that piece of evidence and how they were processing it, it doesn't take away from the end results, which is that that duct tape was found wrapped around the skull of the child.

LYON: I've got to respectfully disagree with you, Paul, because here's the thing. They're saying that this tape proves homicide. But the tape doesn't have Caylee's DNA on it. It doesn't have Casey's DNA on it. It's still sticky and capable of capturing DNA. It has the DNA of this technician and an unknown male on it.

COOPER: The defense wants to call basically a surprise witness, a man who served 10 years for kidnapping, who the defense says is somehow -- well, they haven't said how he may or may not be connected to Casey's father. They say there were phone calls between Casey's father and this person. George Anthony's lawyer says George Anthony doesn't know the guy.

Paul, in your opinion, is this just another effort to kind of bring George Anthony into this as a possible player?

HENDERSON: Absolutely because there is no shred of evidence, nothing. There is no evidence in the record in its entirety that indicates that anyone -- that there's a tie with this individual.

LYON: You have to remember that the prosecution has thrown up as much stuff to see if it sticks. You tell me that it is relevant to whether or not this young woman killed her child as to whether or not she got a tattoo sometime later.

The point that I'm making is this is a circumstantial evidence case.

COOPER: Would a defense attorney at this point already know whether or not they want to put their client, in this case Casey Anthony, on the stand?

LYON: Not necessarily. They wouldn't necessarily know. And it kind of reminds me of a case where I had a client who was a displaced West Virginia coal miner. And he had good things and important things to say. But he had a very odd way of presenting himself. He didn't express emotions the way normal people do.

And so the decision whether to call him was complicated by the way that I feared that a jury might look at him as a person. And so this is a very complicated decision.

COOPER: And Paul, in particular also because of all the tapes of her lying.

HENDERSON: Well, this is not just a case about someone that has abhorrent behavior or bad behavior. It's the context that those lies are given to the people around her.

LYON: There's no cause of death. You have to remember that. There is no cause of death. They cannot say that this was a -- that this was a homicide based on the medical evidence. They cannot say that.

HENDERSON: And we don't know the cause of death because someone hid the body. Someone removed the body that prevented an autopsy from being done in a timely fashion.

LYON: OK.

HENDERSON: And the facts and the evidence indicate that it was likely the mother, because she was last in control of the body.

LYON: But remember, you're using words like "likely". And likely is not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

COOPER: All right. We've got to leave it there. Andrea Lyon, thank you for being on.

Paul Henderson, as well. Fascinating discussion.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: Up next, "Perry's Principles", Michelle Rhee, the former chancellor of Washington, D.C. Public Schools on her new mission to change education nationwide.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

COOPER: Well, Michelle Rhee is probably one of the most controversial figures in public education. As the former chancellor of Washington, D.C.'s public school, she shook up the system and was the target of a lot of the criticism. Rhee now leads an organization that she hopes will raise a billion dollars to help students worldwide.

In this week's "Perry's Principles", CNN education contributor and high school principal Steve Perry sat down with Rhee to discuss the controversies surrounding her past and what's in store for her future.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

STEVE PERRY, CNN EDUCATION CONTRIBUTOR: You were chancellor of D.C.'s public schools for three very tumultuous years.

MICHELLE RHEE, FORMER CHANCELLOR OF D.C. PUBLIC SCHOOLS: Yes.

PERRY: What do you think the root of the problems that you had was?

RHEE: We wanted to put a system in place where the most outstanding teachers would be paid double what they were in the old system. Right? And on the other side, if you were an ineffective teacher or principal you were immediately terminated. I had the full backing of my boss, the mayor Adrian Fenty, who was one of those incredibly rare politicians who said I'm going to put my entire political career on the line.

PERRY: And what happened?

RHEE: He lost the election.

PERRY: Recently test scores at some schools that were under Rhee's leadership have been questioned.

Some 96 schools were said to have had irregularities on the exams.

RHEE: We hired an external investigator to investigate this. What they said was that in the vast majority of cases they found actually no impropriety. And in a small number of cases that they did see that something was wrong. Then we took the necessary actions against those people.

PERRY: Do you feel like you pressured them into doing it?

RHEE: Absolutely not.

PERRY: You seem to have landed on your feet. You seem to be doing all right. Started your own organization. RHEE: Students First is a new organization that we started, and the basic premise behind it is that our kids are not getting the education that they deserve, that this nation is falling further and further behind. We're in the midst of a national campaign right now called Save Great Teachers. And what we're trying to do across the country is to stop policies that mandate LIFO or last-in, first-out policies.

PERRY: What does that mean?

RHEE: When a school district is in a budget crisis and they have to lay off teachers, that the last teacher who was hired must be the first teacher fired regardless of performance.

PERRY: To the mom and dad who are watching this conversation, what's at stake?

RHEE: It's our children and their livelihood. This group of children who are in school today will be the first generation of Americans who are less well-educated than their parents were for the first time in American history.

PERRY: Just some common beliefs in education; you tell me if they're right or wrong -- quick ones. That poverty impacts student performance. Does it?

RHEE: Poverty does not have to be the determining factor as many people believe.

PERRY: Ok. Neighborhoods are known for bad schools. So where you live determines whether or not you can go to a good school.

RHEE: Right now with an uncanny accuracy, if we look at the Zip Code that kid lives in and the race of the kid, we can tell you what their academic achievement levels are. So we are allowing where our kid lives to dictate their educational attainment levels.

But it's not necessarily what we have to live with. Because you can also find schools where in those same neighborhoods, same Zip Codes, same demographics, kids are soaring academically.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: Michelle Rhee obviously made a lot of friends but also a lot of enemies in Washington, D.C. What kind of impact can a school chancellor really have on education?

PERRY: Well, just look at Michelle. Not only did she make an impact in Washington, D.C. but she really has spearheaded a movement -- a movement of people from all walks of life who want to see changes in public education. She's really become a drum major for education reform.

I think that Michelle has made a significant impact. You don't necessarily have to agree with her politics, but you cannot disagree with the impact that she makes. COOPER: All right. Principal Steve Perry, thanks.

PERRY: Thank you.

COOPER: We'll be right back.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

COOPER: That's it for 360. Thanks for watching.

Piers Morgan starts now.

I'll see you tomorrow.