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tv   CBS Overnight News  KPIX  March 5, 2024 3:12am-4:31am PST

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get her out of the area, get down to a warming shelter. >> she must have been terrified. >> she was scared, yeah. she was -- but she was being a mom. >> reporter: crews across the sierra nevada are working around the clock to clear the roads and the rails. take a look at the train tracks over here covered with snow, and now the solution, this giant snowplow train. even the u.s. mail was briefly brought to a standstill, but the delivery trucks were eventually dug out. local ski resorts are trying to get back to normal now after the storm shut down most operations. now all this new snow could extend the ski season until memorial day. >> it gives us a shot in the arm for the rest of the season. there's no doubt. >> reporter: and there is so much snow here, they have to make piles like this just to be able to clear the roads. and it's like this all over town. there is another storm moving in this evening, and it could bring another foot of snow to some
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areas. norah. >> carter evans, thank you for all your reporting this weekend. well, for a look at when the winter storm warnings will finally break, let's bring in meteorologist chris warren from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, chris. >> good evening, norah. more snow on the way for the west coast. in some of the higher elevations in california and oregon could see another two feet of snow. meanwhile, in texas, firefighting efforts do remain under way from the ground and from the air. a lot of smoke coming from these massive wildfires that are burning. mother nature providing some relief for those efforts. winds are not as strong as they had been over the weekend and especially last week, expecting to stay relatively calm over the next couple of days while that severe weather threat is increasing in areas that had temperatures in the 60s and 70s today. but by tomorrow, norah, temperatures will be in the 30s
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and even 20s. >> chris, thank you. in another major development today, jack teixeira, a member of the massachusetts air national guard, pleaded guilty to one of the most serious national security breaches in years. the 22-year-old admitting to leaking classified military documents on social media. we get details, including how much prison time teixeira faces, from cbs's scott macfarlane. >> reporter: 22-year-old jack teixeira appeared in court today in an orange jumpsuit and handcuffs, acknowledging his actions caused one of the most extraordinary leaks of secrets in years. teixeira, who was arrested last april at his family home, was asked today whether he understood that by pleading guilty to all six counts, he could serve up to 16 years in prison. yes, your honor, i understand, he said. just a few years out of high school, teixeira joined the national guard as a low-ranking tech specialist but with a top security clearance. prosecutors allege he illegally posted classified pentagon
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records including troop movements and war plans in ukraine, uploading them in a serious of 40,000 messages on discord in 2022 and 2023, leaks that shocked and embarrassed the pentagon. >> all of our adversaries were given access to sensitive national defense information. and such unlawful disclosure damages our intelligence capabilities. >> reporter: in a statement, his parents said their son's actions were unfathomable but also blasted the shocking failures revealed by an internal review of the unit in which teixeira works. he had been caught and reprimanded before for accessing improper information. >> do you think this was any kind of wake-up call to the military? >> i hope so. >> reporter: 15 people in teixeira's unit were disciplined, and its leader was relieved of command. >> managing who's accessing, who has access to what levels of information, especially on digital repositories, is something i think duties going to spend a lot more time thinking about.
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>> scott, i understand this isn't the only case of an intelligence leak in the news today, that there's another case we're just learning about? >> reporter: yeah, he's an air force civilian employee named daft slater, accused of sending classify the information on a dating website. the feds say there's a co-conspirator here, norah, somebody claiming to be a woman from ukraine. for now, it is slater's conspiracy case. he makes his first appearance tomorrow in court in nebraska. >> scott macfarlane with that new development, thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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impact on the sport that is unmistakable. >> caitlin clark becomes the all-time leading scorer. >> reporter: iowa's senior guard caitlin clark snaps the 54-year-old record held by pistol pete maravich in front of a sold-out crowd. >> when they announced it and everybody screams, that's when i knew. >> reporter: the magic number, 3,668 points. that's the most in ncaa basketball history, men's or women's. >> it's really like crazy to think about. >> reporter: the praise is pouring in from lebron james, who became the first nba player to score 40,000 points this weekend. he congratulated clark online, along with fans billie jean king and president biden. the basketball phenom and her team are attracting more eyes to women's basketball, inspiring young girls and sending ticket prices soaring. >> and these fans have been -- >> people that are showing up
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and coming to our games, they really love the way our team plays. they love it. we have a really great team and a really great culture, and that's what makes it so fun. >> she's so humble. her career is just beginning. clark announced just last week that she'll head to the wnba draft. she's expected to the number one pick, and the team that holds thattic p, the indiana fever, saw ticket prices double from last season. we will be watching. patients are seeing an unexpected benefit from weight unexpected benefit from weight loss shots like oz did you know... 80% of women are struggling with hair damage? just like i was. dryness and frizz could be damaged hair that can't retain moisture. new pantene miracle rescue deep conditioner, with first-of-its-kind melting pro-v pearls... locks in moisture to repair 6 months of damage in one wash, without weigh down. guaranteed or your money back! for resilient, healthy-looking hair... if you know, you know it's pantene.
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doctors are seeing a positive side effect of those weight loss drugs like ozempic and wegovy, and that's a diminished craving for alcohol. cbs's janet shamlian looks into this in tonight's health watch. >> reporter: megan johnston started taking semaglutide last year. that's the medication in weight loss drugs like wegovy. >> you took the medication thinking i'm going to lose weight or i want to drink less? >> i -- it was definitely that i wanted to lose weight. but, you know, i thought if i can drink less, even better. >> reporter: the 38-year-old arlington, virginia, real estate agent says she gained 30 pounds during the pandemic and was drinking more too. >> my checkup last year, i remember telling my doctor i was drinking upwards of 15 drinks a week. >> and now? >> some weeks none. last week was one. maybe average three. >> reporter: johnston is among many patients who have reported fewer cravings for alcohol while
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taking semaglutide for weight loss. >> what kind of a game-changer would this be? >> if it turns out this this medication is safe and effective for treating addiction, this would become really the largest and most widely used farm aco therapy for addiction medicine that's ever been develops. >> kyle simmons is running several clinical trials to examine whether semaglutide reduces craving for alcohol. >> this region is exhibiting greater activity in this participant. >> reporter: he says the drug effects the brain and appears to remove the pleasure received from drinking alcohol. >> what would you say to people who want to take these drugs now to decrease alcohol consumption? >> we just don't know yet whether or not the medication is safe and effective for the treatment of alcohol use disorder. >> reporter: johnston says she lost 45 pounds over seven months and cut her drinking by 75%. >> do you still join your friends for cocktails or go to a bar? >> absolutely, or i have them over and i'll make them a drink, and sometimes i'll have one, and
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sometimes i won't. >> reporter: a weight loss drug with, for some, a welcome buzz kill. janet shamlian, cbs news, arlington, virginia. all right. for the first time ever, women in the u.s. will soon be able to get birth control pills without a prescription. that's next.
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access to birth control is getting a major boost with the first over the counter pill hitting stores in the u.s. later this month. the hormone-based contraceptive opill is similar to the prescription pills millions of american women have used for decades. it was approved for over the counter sales by the fda last summer. a one-month supply will cost about $20, and a three-month supply will run around $50.
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finally, long time philadelphia eagles center jason kelce announced his rer tiermt after 13 sneenz. he didn't hide his emotions when i delivered his heartfelt goodbye. >> thank you, philadelphia, from the bottom of my heart. thank you for letting me represent this city and allowing me into your homes every sunday. it has truly been a privilege. >> the 36-year-old kelce spent his entire career with philadelphia, played in two super bowls, and won the lombardi trophy in 2018 after the eagles were knocked out of this year's playoffs, he spent the rest of the season cheering on his younger brother travis who plays for the kansas city chiefs. today he paid tribute to his teammates, coaches, the fans, and his family, who were all there today, including travis, crying a bit. brotherly love at its best. jason kelce, tonight's "heart of america." and that's the overnight news for this tuesday.
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for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings," and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. this is "cbs news flash." i'm carissa lawson in new york. cbs news projects that former president donald trump has won the north dakota republican caucuses. trump now has 276 delegates. nikki haley has 43 as they head into super tuesday. cbs news will have special coverage of super tuesday beginning at 10:00 p.m. eastern on cbs and paramount+. jetblue and spirit airlines
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have called off their $3.8 billion merger. a federal judge ruled in january that the deal violated antitrust laws after a lawsuit from the department of justice. and it looks like writing skills are in taylor swift's dna. genealogy company ancestry.com says the singer is the sixth cousin three times removed of famed poet emily dickinson. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm carissa lawson, cbs news, new york. tonight, the supreme court hands donald trump a significant legal victory. >> well, the court has decided unanimously that donald trump cannot be disqualified as a presidential candidate. >> the context and analysis of that landmark decision coming just before super tuesday. >> this does not get former president trump to the finish line. this just gets him to the starting line.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." good evening. i'm norah o'donnell, and thank you for being with us. we want to begin tonight with the news and analysis of that historic decision from the supreme court. the justices ruling that states cannot bar donald trump from running for another term even though he is accused by some of insurrection. colorado and several other states were seeking to disqualify trump because of his actions surrounding the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. now, today's decision was unanimous. all nine justices agreed that trump cannot be barred from the ballot in perhaps the most important ruling by the nation's highest court about a presidential election in more than two decades. this is the key paragraph of the ruling. "states may disqualify persons holding or attempting to hold state office, but states have no power under the constitution with respect to federal offices, especially the presidency." now, the court's three liberal
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members say the court's majority went too far. justices sonia sotomayor, elena kagan, and ketanji brown jackson expressed frustration in a concurring opinion, saying the decision protects donald trump from, quote, future controversy. cbs's robert costa has the former president's reaction. >> reporter: a crucial decision today with sweeping political consequences. the high court ruling that former president donald trump cannot be removed from colorado's ballot due to the state court's view that he stoked the january 6th >> you cannot take somebody out of a race. the voter can take a person out of the race very quickly, but i couldn't shouldn't be doing that. >> reporter: with this ruling, two other states also had their efforts to remove the former president stall. three justices in a separate concurring opinion said allowing the colorado measure to go forward would, we agree, create a chaotic state-by-state
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patchwork amid a tense political landscape. justice amy coney barrett also urged americans to see unity from the unanimous decision, writing, "in this circumstance, writings on the court should turn the national temperature down, not up." colorado's democratic secretary of state offered sharp criticism of the decision. >> i do believe that states should be able under our constitution to bar oath-breaking insurrectionists. >> reporter: the ruling comes a day before super tuesday, the biggest primary election day of the season, when voters in 15 states, including colorado, head to the polls. and trump's legal hurdles continue to pile up as the supreme court weighs another decision next month. >> presidents have to be given total immunity. they have to be allowed to do their job. >> reporter: later this month, trump will also spend six weeks in court, where he is charged with falsifying business records
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related to hush money payments to a porn star. today trump's former cfo, allen weisselberg, pled guilty to two counts of perjury in the new york civil fraud case, but he will not testify against his former boss. looking ahead to tomorrow, top republicans tell me they expect trump to have a strong showing on super tuesday, accumulating a bushel of delegates as he marches closer to the nomination. meanwhile, allies of former ambassador nikki haley tell me she'll likely soon be at a cross roads about whether she's going to stay in the race. norah. >> robert costa, thank you very much. for more analysis on that decision, let's bring in cbs news chief legal correspondent jan crawford. all right. jan, as robert outlined, the court was unanimous, but also many of them let them know they did not agree totally with it. explain. >> well, that happens sometimes on issues where they agree with the outcome but they may have different ways of getting there. that's what we saw today. they all said the same bottom line. the colorado supreme court was wrong, and states can't kick
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donald trump off the ballot. but they disagreed with why, how they got there, and this is where it got interesting. the liberal justices used some very strong language, suggesting conservatives were going too far, perhaps worried how their decision might be applied down the road. and then justice amy coney barrett wrote a separate decision, saying now is not the time to amplify disagreement with stridency. so you see this back and forth between the justices on an issue where they all say they agree. and why is that important? because even where there is agreement, unanimous agreement like we saw today, this court was fractured. and as some of these more controversial cases come down the road, including that one where trump is arguing he should be immune from prosecution, we could see this all play out where they don't agree on the outcome. >> such important context, jan. i was reading that too. justice barrett writing, "the court should turn the national temperature down, not up." >> good luck. >> yeah. thank you.
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president biden tonight says he will not let up pushing for a deal to bring hostages home and provide more relief to the more than 2 million people suffering in gaza. the vice president today met with the rival of prime minister benjamin netanyahu. benny gantz is a key member of israel's war cabinet, yet netanyahu opposed this visit to washington. cbs's imtiaz tyab reports tonight on the urgent need for aid in gaza. >> reporter: more chaos at an aid delivery convoy in gaza city where desperate palestinians again scrambled for a sack of flour to feed their families. but for sharif al ca far none, it's too late for his 10-year-old son, yazin, who he had to bury with his bare hands. our cbs news team in gaza first reported on yazin this past weekend as he lay in bed starving because the food he needed, basics like eggs and bananas, were nowhere to be found. now all that's left to mark his
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short life is a cardboard grave marker, his name written in pen. "i never thought he would starve to death, " al ca far none says. please forgive me, my son. on sunday, vice president kamala harris bluntly called out israel for not doing enough to ease what she called a humanitarian catastrophe and urged both sides to accept a deal. >> and given the immense scale of suffering in gaza, there must be an immediate cease-fire for at least the next six weeks. >> reporter: cbs news has learned the framework of an agreement has been reached by israel and hamas, which includes a six-week pause in fighting and a sharp increase in humanitarian aid into gaza for the release of 40 hostages. but a formal truce has yet to materialize. the biden administration ordered three c-130 aircrafts to air
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drop 38,000 meals in coordination with u.s. ally jordan, a move aid agencies have criticized as inefficient and will do little to alleviate the suffering. and in that meeting with israeli war cabinet member benny gantz, vice president harris said a cease-fire and hostage release deal was urgent, but israel has yet to send a delegation to cairo where those talks are taking place. norah. >> imtiaz tyab, thank you. the [stomach growling]
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." i'm erica brown in washington. thanks for staying with us. the race for the white house will come into sharper focus this week. president biden delivers his state of the union address thursday, and today voters in 16 states head to the polls for
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super tuesday. more than a third of delegates needed for nomination are on the line. one swing state drawing attention is north carolina, where a spirit of bipartisanship has been growing. nancy cordes reports. >> what did you do? >> i was like i jumped for joy. >> reporter: sharon cooper got a letter recently that changed her life. insurance coverage approved after years without it. >> you just went to see the doctor for the first time in how long? >> ten years. >> wow. >> yes. >> what was that like? >> it was wonderful. >> reporter: cooper is a former pharmacy manager in archdale, north carolina, without coverage, her $300 a month anti-seizure pills were also out of reach. >> how were you living your life without that medication? >> it was hard. i was scared to go out because if somebody sees you have a seizure, they freak out. they think what's wrong with her, you know? >> reporter: but the stroke of a pen changed everything. last year, north carolina's democratic governor signed a law expanding medicaid coverage,
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making 600,000 state residents eligible for nearly free health insurance, a bipartisan triumph years in the making. >> we're adding about a thousand a day. >> reporter: state senator jim bergen and state representative donny lamb beth are both republicans with backgrounds in health care. they both started out as skeptics. >> and how did you feel about the idea of expanding medicaid in the state? >> i was personally against it. >> i was also against it early on. >> reporter: early on, as in 2010, when the affordable care act, or obama care, offered all states free federal funds to expand medicaid coverage. most blue states jumped at the cash, but many southern states held out, including north carolina. >> we felt like, you know, is this one of those things that sounds really good and all of a sudden, oi, we're out of money and it goes away? >> reporter: a decade later, the money was still there. $7.5 billion a year that north carolina was leaving on the
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table. >> i like to say the dollars just make sense. it's hard to turn that down. >> reporter: cody kinsley is the state's top health official and a democrat. but he and senator bergen had worked together on other health care issues. >> good morning. how are you? >> reporter: they began discussing medicaid first thing every morning on their daily phone calls. >> i guess some of the right members of his team were in the room. >> when you talk to people and get to know people and develop a relationship with people, you develop the trust. >> because the truth is, is that we all have the same constituents, whether we're in one party or the other, we're serving the same folks. >> reporter: the two sides worked together to reform the state's medicaid system and ultimately to expand it. >> did you ever think to yourselves, maybe i shouldn't do this because it will be a victory for the democratic governor? >> a few times. >> i've heard a lot of people say, oh, i'll get voted out. you know, i live in rural north
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carolina. people have applauded. there has not been anybody that's come to me and said, i'm going to vote against you because of this. >> they want to see us solve problems and get things done. >> reporter: kinsley know what's it means for uninsured parents because his mom was one of them when he was young. >> if i said i don't feel well, she would wrestle with questions of, well, is he really sick, or is he really, really, really sick? >> i want to frame it. >> reporter: with her epilepsy now under control, sharon cooper says she may even be able to go back to work. >> that's exciting. >> i know. it's very exciting. i've got joy in my soul again. >> reporter: lawmakers in the remaining holdout states have taken notice. mississippi's state legislature passed a medicaid expansion bill last week, and the republicans that we spoke to in that piece told us that they have gotten calls from fellow republicans in georgia, in wisconsin, and florida. nancy cordes, cbs news, the
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to get prebiotic, plant-based fiber. with the same amount of fiber as 2 cups of broccoli. metamucil gummies the easy way to get your daily fiber. the nobel prize in medicine has been awarded to two scientists for their pioneering work to manipulate rna to fight diseases. it was instrumental in creating the covid-19 vaccine and is now being used in research to battle everything from hiv to peanut allergies. kelefa sanneh reports on how a chance meeting led to a great discovery. >> katie will tell you i'm a quiet guy who sticks to myself. >> i didn't know about him either. i didn't chit chat around. >> reporter: at the university of pennsylvania medical school, drew weissman and cat alene care aco, known as katie, met by chance at a copy machine in 1998. >> we both used to copy a lot of articles to read.
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we started talking. >> reporter: he was an immunologist studying cells that adapt to mount immune responses against diseases. she was a biochemist working with messen jer rna, known as mrna, the molecule that teaches cells how to make proteins. >> i'd joke it's like the reese's commercial where the chocolate and the peanut butter come together and make a new treat. >> we learned from each other. >> what is it, do you think, that makes a good scientific team? >> respect each other. listen to each other. we didn't try to overpower each other, you know. just -- did you try? >> no, never. >> reporter: their collaboration led to the pfizer and moderna vaccines in 2020. that year the virus spread worldwide, leading to global lockdowns and killing millions. >> i knew the minute i heard about it, it's a virus. it's a respiratory infection. i knew the vaccine was going to work. >> how did the lockdown affect
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your life and your work? >> we never stopped working. >> they worked day and night, different shifts, and minimizing the presence of people in one room. >> this is the frozen vaccine. >> wow. >> for patients, you thaw this out. you dilute it, and you inject it in their arms. >> reporter: the mrna covid vaccine uses mrna to direct the cells to create a spike protein like the one on the surface of the virus so the body builds defenses against that protein. this protection helps fight the virus. the vaccine became available in the united states in december 2020. that month, weissman and carrico were vaccinated with a flourish. >> did you think on that day about all the years and decades of work it took to get to that point? >> yes, yes. i was thinking about that and thinking about what we went through. >> they put up some cameras and took pictures and had fun. >> pfizer, moderna, which one?
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>> pfizer. >> reporter: the covid vaccine reduced the death toll and helped people get back to relatively normal lives. >> was there any disappointment that the vaccine didn't just sort of put an end to covid once and for all? >> in the beginning of the pandemic, i would go into the intensive care units, and every bed would have a covid patient on a ventilator doing poorly. and now when i went into the intensive care units, there were no covid patients at all, and that's because of the vaccine. >> reporter: and their work will be used in the battle against some of the world's most difficult diseases. >> how bright is the future? >> it's truly phenomenal. right now there's 250 phase one clinical trials of rna vaccines. people are making vaccines for hiv, for malaria, for hepatitis c, for tb, for food allergies. talk to a parent with a kid with a peanut allergy, and every day i a panic. >> reporter: the covid vaccines
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were backed by government mandates and sparked an uproar. >> the controversy, i still don't understand people thinking that science and vaccines are out to get them. and i've never heard of such a thing before. >> well, maybe it's just what happens when politics collides with medicine. >> that's not the job of our politicians. they're not supposed to tell people how to live less well, of how to die from diseases. they're supposed to help the world. >> reporter: this past december, three years after the vaccine committee awarded carrico and weissman its 18 carat gold medallion. >> how long does it take for it to sink in? >> it's still happening. yeah, it takes time. >> did you think, finally? >> my finally moment was the phase three clinical trials when we saw that the vaccines were 95% effective.
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that was a life's work has turned into something useful. >> did you take a moment to celebrate? >> nah, i'm not much of a celebrator. i just probably went back to work. >> famously, i ate a whole bag of chocolate-covered peanuts. >> on a day like that, you had definitely earned it. a good scientific lab has top of the line equipment, but a really great scientific lab has a trophy room. when you think about like becoming a scientist, is it somewhere in the back of your head, i might win the nobel prize? >> never. >> no. my parents, when i was maybe 5, they were brought in on a tour of the nobel auditorium. and at one point, they walked up to a pair of seats and said, rec reserve these for us. >> reporter: if weissman's rise seemed predictable, kir ico's did not, born in communist hungary, carrico never knew a scientist, but she knew she wanted to be one.
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in 1985, 30-year-old katie carrico, along with her husband and young daughter, left hungary for a job in a lab in pennsylvania. >> this teddy bear sames like it would be kind of out of place. but this is actually a very important bear, isn't it? >> yes. this is the bear that helped us get to america and start our lives. >> if i turn this over, someone did a little surgery on this teddy bear. tell me what happened here. >> i put $1,000 of british pounds and i sew it back because in hungary, we were not allowed to take any money out of the country. >> your daughter was the mule. nobody found it. nobody suspected. and from there to here, the nobel prize. >> yeah, and some decades in between. >> reporter: decades spent doing what both cat alynn carrico and drew weissman truly love. >> laboratories is a wonderful place and so kind of my home is a laboratory. >> i sometimes get the sense that maybe you would rather be
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in the lab doing your work than talking to journalists. >> yeah, partially it is true. will you bs we realize that it is important to go out and educate the public and explain what we are doing and inspire the next generation of scientists. >> exactly. i mean i'm much happier and nothing personal. i'm still happier sitting in my office or -- >> i don't take offense to this. >> that's my favorite place. >> as a member of the human race, i'm glad to have you working i
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tech companies are now incorporating artificial intelligence into everything from phones to the operating room. bradley blackburn reports. >> reporter: robotic surgery has been around for years, but it doesn't give surgeons the same feel as a hands-on operation. that may be changing. this robot uses artificial intelligence to send sensory feedback to the hand devices so surgeons can feel when they're touching tissue.
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it's just one of many uae products on display at this tech show in barcelona. this smart watch from double point connects to your device and allows you to use your fingers like a mouse to navigate through apps. >> there's a vie kbrags that occurs. that we can pick up with the sensors already in our smart watches. >> what is the population of barsz low na? >> reporter: the company humane is selling a $700 a.i. pin that's operated with your voice. >> barcelona is approximately 1.069 million people. >> reporter: the device can also project information to your hand and allows you to scroll with your finger movements. a.i. is all the buzz right now, but some experts say too much too soon could come with a backlash. >> and this is a risk because from a consumer perspective, if a lot of these brands that you see around us are just throwing a.i. in as buzzwords, it risks becoming increasingly meaningless because a.i. doesn't mean a lot to consumers. it's what it actually enables.
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>> reporter: right now it enables this lenovo laptop to create a transparent display. on this phone, it can turn text commands into a picture instantly. analysts believe this is just the beginning, and a.i. will eventually transform technology. bradley blackburn, cbs news, new york. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm erica brown. this is "cbs news flash." i'm carissa lawson in new york. cbs news projects that former president donald trump has won the north dakota republican caucuses. trump now has 276 delegates. nikki haley has 43 as they head into super tuesday. cbs news will have special coverage of super tuesday beginning at 10:00 p.m. eastern on cbs and paramount+. jetblue and spirit airlines have called off their
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$3.8 billion merger. a federal judge ruled in january that the deal violated antitrust laws after a lawsuit from the department of justice. and it looks like writing skills are in taylor swift's dna. genealogy company ancestry.com says the singer is the sixth cousin three times removed of famed poet emily dickinson. for more download the cbs news app on your cell phon connected tv. i'm carissa lawson, cbs news, new york. tonight, the supreme court hands donald trump a significant legal victory. >> well, the court has decided unanimously that donald trump cannot be disqualified as a presidential candidate. >> the context and analysis of that landmark decision coming just before super tuesday. >> this does not get former president trump to the finish line. this just gets him to the starting line.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." good evening. i'm norah o'donnell, and thank you for being with us. we want to begin tonight with the news and analysis of that historic decision from the supreme court. the justices ruling that states cannot bar donald trump from running for another term even though he is accused by some of insurrection. colorado and several other states were seeking to disqualify trump because of his actions surrounding the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. now, today's decision was unanimous. all nine justices agreed that trump cannot be barred from the ballot in perhaps the most important ruling by the nation's highest court about a presidential election in more than two decades. this is the key paragraph of the ruling. "states may disqualify persons holding or attempting to hold state office, but states have no power under the constitution with respect to federal offices, especially the presidency."
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now, the court's three liberal members say the court's majority went too far. justices sonia sotomayor, elena kagan, and ketanji brown jackson expressed frustration in a concurring opinion, saying the decision protects donald trump from, quote, future controversy. cbs's robert costa has the former president's reaction. >> reporter: a crucial decision today with sweeping political consequences. the high court ruling that former president donald trump cannot be removed from colorado's ballot due to the state court's view that he stoked the january 6th insurrection. >> you cannot take somebody out of a race. the voters can take a person out of the race very quickly, but a court shouldn't be doing that. >> reporter: with this ruling, two other states also had their efforts to remove the former president stall. three justices in a separate concurring opinion said allowing the colorado measure to go forward would, we agree, create a chaotic state-by-state
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patchwork. amid a tense political landscape, justice amy coney barrett also urged americans to see unity from the unanimous decision, writing, "in this circumstance, writings on the court should turn the national temperature down, not up." colorado's democratic secretary of state offered sharp criticism of the decision. >> i do believe that states should be able under our constitution to bar oath-breaking insurrectionists. >> reporter: the ruling comes a day before super tuesday, the biggest primary election day of the season, when voters in 15 states, including colorado, head to the polls. and trump's legal hurdles continue to pile up as the supreme court weighs another decision next month. >> presidents have to be given total immunity. they have to be allowed to do their job. >> reporter: later this month, trump will also spend six weeks in court, where he is charged with falsifying business records
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related to hush money payments to a porn star. today trump's former cfo, allen weisselberg, pled guilty to two counts of perjury in the new york civil fraud case, but he will not testify against his former boss. looking ahead to tomorrow, top republicans tell me they expect trump to have a strong showing on super tuesday, accumulating a bushel of delegates as he marches closer to the nomination. meanwhile, allies of former ambassador nikki haley tell me she'll likely soon be at a crossroads about whether she's going to stay in the race. norah. >> robert costa, thank you very much. for more analysis on that decision, let's bring in cbs news chief legal correspondent jan crawford. all right. jan, as robert outlined, the court was unanimous, but also many of them let them know they did not agree totally with it. explain. >> well, that happens sometimes on issues where they agree with the outcome but they may have different ways of getting there. that's what we saw today. they all said the same bottom line.
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the colorado supreme court was wrong, and states can't kick donald trump off the ballot. but they disagreed with why, how they got there, and this is where it got interesting. the liberal justices used some very strong language, suggesting conservatives were going too far, perhaps worried how their decision might be applied down the road. and then justice amy coney barrett wrote a separate decision, saying now is not the time to amplify disagreement with stridency. so you see this back-and-forth between the justices on an issue where they all say they agree. and why is that important? because even where there is agreement, unanimous agreement like we saw today, this court was fractured. and as some of these more controversial cases come down the road, including that one where trump is arguing he should be immune from prosecution, we could see this all play out where they don't agree on the outcome. >> such important context, jan. i was reading that too. justice barrett writing, "the court should turn the national temperature down, not up." >> good luck. >> yeah. thank you.
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president biden tonight says he will not let up pushing for a deal to bring hostages home and provide more relief to the more than 2 million people suffering in gaza. the vice president today met with a rival of prime minister benjamin netanyahu. benny gantz is a key member of israel's war cabinet, yet netanyahu opposed this visit to washington. cbs's imtiaz tyab reports tonight on the urgent need for aid in gaza. >> reporter: more chaos at an aid delivery convoy in gaza city where desperate palestinians again scrambled for a sack of flour to feed their families. but for sharif, it's too late for his 10-year-old son, who he had to bury with his bare hands. our cbs news team in gaza first reported on yazin this past weekend as he lay in bed starving because the food he needed, basics like eggs and bananas, were nowhere to be found. now all that's left to mark his
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short life is a cardboard grave marker, his name written in pen. "i never thought he would starve to death," sharif says. please forgive me, my son." on sunday, vice president kamala harris bluntly called out israel for not doing enough to ease what she called a humanitarian catastrophe and urged both sides to accept a deal. >> and given the immense scale of suffering in gaza, there must be an immediate cease-fire for at least the next six weeks. >> reporter: cbs news has learned the framework of an agreement has been reached by israel and hamas, which includes a six-week pause in fighting and a sharp increase in humanitarian aid into gaza for the release of 40 hostages. but a formal truce has yet to materialize. the biden administration ordered three c-130 aircrafts to air
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drop 38,000 meals in coordination with u.s. ally jordan, a move aid agencies have criticized as inefficient and will do little to alleviate the suffering. and in that meeting with israeli war cabinet member benny gantz, vice president harris said a cease-fire and hostage release deal was urgent, but israel has yet to send a delegation to cairo where those talks are taking place. norah. >> imtiaz tyab, thank you. my dry eye's made me a burning, stinging, 5-times-a-day,... ...makeup smearing drops user. i want another option that's not another drop. tyrvaya. it's not another drop. it's the first and only nasal spray for dry eye. tyrvaya treats the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease fast by helping your body produce its own real tears. common side effects include sneezing, cough, and throat and nose irritation. relying only on drops? not me. my own real tears are my relief. ask your eye doctor about tyrvaya. "overflowing with ideas and energy."
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that's the san francisco chronicle endorsing democrat katie porter for senate over all other options. porter is "easily the most impressive candidate." "known for her grilling of corporate executives." with "deep policy knowledge." katie porter's housing plan has "bipartisan-friendly ideas to bring homebuilding costs down." and the chronicle praises "her ideas to end soft corruption in politics." let's shake up the senate. with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. - it's so fun to watch jessica in this space.
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- this is a look at those clouds right now in real-time, but let's head underneath this cloud layer and take a look at our rainfall... - [narrator] the virtual view studio, part of "morning edition." weekday mornings starting at 5 on kpix. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." all right. turning now to the weather with a massive blizzard slamming parts of california and nevada over the weekend with up to seven feet of snow in some areas. cbs's carter evans reports the snow and the powerful winds have
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closed roads, knocked out power to thousands, and it's not over yet. >> reporter: this is what nonstop snow looks like. over three days, this historic storm walloped the lake tahoe region with about two months' worth of snow, and the reno area got hit with half a year's worth. wind gusts up to 190 miles per hour were recorded on some mountain peaks, and some woke up to a wall of snow several feet tall. even maneuvering a snowplow was a challenge in the blinding blizzard. >> see, the goal is not to try and look at anything. you just use your peripheral. >> reporter: unrelenting snowfall shut down a stretch of the heavily traveled interstate 80 over the weekend. at one point, there were nearly 200 to 300 cars and nearly 100 big rigs trapped on the mountain highway. california highway patrol officers went car to car, helping drivers, including this stranded mom. >> the battery died. so she's got a baby in the car with her, and my officers did an amazing job figuring out how to
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get her out of the area, get down to a warming shelter. >> she must have been terrified. >> she was scared, yeah. she was -- but she was being a mom. >> reporter: crews across the sierra nevada are working around the clock to clear the roads and the rails. take a look at the train tracks over here covered with snow, and now the solution, this giant snowplow train. even the u.s. mail was briefly brought to a standstill, but the delivery trucks were eventually dug out. local ski resorts are trying to get back to normal now after the storm shut down most operations. now all this new snow could extend the ski season until memorial day. >> it gives us a shot in the arm for the rest of the season. there's no doubt. >> reporter: and there is so much snow here, they have to make piles like this just to be able to clear the roads. and it's like this all over town. there is another storm moving in this evening, and it could bring another foot of snow to some areas. norah.
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>> carter evans, thank you for all your reporting this weekend. well, for a look at when the winter storm warnings will finally break, let's bring in meteorologist chris warren from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, chris. >> good evening, norah. more snow on the way for the west coast. in some of the higher elevations in california and oregon could see another two feet of snow. meanwhile, in texas, firefighting efforts do remain under way from the ground and from the air. a lot of smoke coming from these massive wildfires that are burning. mother nature providing some relief for those efforts. winds are not as strong as they had been over the weekend and especially last week. expecting to stay relatively calm over the next couple of days while that severe weather threat is increasing in areas that had temperatures in the 60s and 70s today. but by tomorrow, norah, temperatures will be in the 30s and even 20s.
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>> chris, thank you. in another major development today, jack teixeira, a member of the massachusetts air national guard, pleaded guilty to one of the most serious national security breaches in years. the 22-year-old admitting to leaking classified military documents on social media. we get details, including how much prison time teixeira faces, from cbs's scott macfarlane. >> reporter: 22-year-old jack teixeira appeared in court today in an orange jumpsuit and handcuffs, acknowledging his actions caused one of the most extraordinary leaks of secrets in years. teixeira, who was arrested last april at his family home, was asked today whether he understood that by pleading guilty to all six counts, he could serve up to 16 years in prison. "yes, your honor, i understand," he said. just a few years out of high school, teixeira joined the national guard as a low-ranking tech specialist but with a top security clearance. prosecutors allege he illegally posted classified pentagon records, including troop
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movements and war plans in ukraine, uploading them in a series of 40,000 messages on discord in 2022 and 2023, leaks that shocked and embarrassed the pentagon. >> all of our adversaries were given access to sensitive national defense information. and such unlawful disclosure damages our intelligence capabilities. >> reporter: in a statement, his parents said their son's actions were unfathomable but also blasted the shocking failures revealed by an internal review of the unit in which teixeira worked. he had been caught and reprimanded before for accessing improper information. >> do you think this was any kind of wake-up call to the military? >> i hope so. >> reporter: 15 people in teixeira's unit were disciplined, and its leader was relieved of command. >> managing who's accessing, who has access to what levels of information, especially on digital repositories, is something i think doe is going to be spending a lot more time thinking about.
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>> scott, i understand this isn't the only case of an intelligence leak in the news today, that there's another case we're just learning about? >> reporter: yeah, he's an air force civilian employee named david slater, accused of sending classified information on a foreign dating website, including secretive information about russia's war against ukraine. the feds say there's a co-conspirator here, norah, somebody claiming to be a woman from ukraine. for now, it is slater's conspiracy case, he makes his first appearance tomorrow in court in nebraska. >> scott macfarlane with that new development, thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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that is unmistakable. >> caitlin clark becomes the all-time leading scorer! >> reporter: iowa's senior guard caitlin clark snaps the 54-year-old record held by pistol pete maravich in front of a sold-out crowd. >> when they announced it and everybody screamed, that's when i knew. >> reporter: the magic number, 3,668 points. that's the most in ncaa basketball history, men's or women's. >> it's really like crazy to think about. >> reporter: the praise is pouring in. from lebron james, who became the first nba player to score 40,000 points this weekend, he congratulated clark online, along with fans billie jean king and president biden. the basketball phenom and her team are attracting more eyes to women 'basketball, inspiring young girls and sending ticket prices soaring. >> people that are showing up and coming to our games, they really love the way our team
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plays. people love. they're not just here for me. i'm sure i help, but at the end of the day, we have a really great team and a really great culture, and that's what makes it so fun. >> she's so humble. her career is just beginning. clark announced just last week that she'll head to the wnba draft. she's expected to the number one pick, and the team that holds that pick, the indiana fever, saw ticket prices double from last season. we will be watching. patients are seeing an unexpected benefit from weight loss shots like ozempic. loss shots like ozempic. that's next. everybody wants super straight, super white teeth. they want that hollywood white smile. new sensodyne clinical white provides 2 shades whiter teeth and 24/7 sensitivity protection. i think it's a great product. it's going to help a lot of patients. wanna know a secret? more than just my armpits stink. that's why i use secret whole body deodorant... everywhere. 4 out of 5 gynecologists would recommend whole body deodorant, which gives you 72 hour odor protection from your pits to your- (sfx: deoderant being sprayed) secret whole body deodorant.
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doctors are seeing a positive side effect of those weight loss drugs like ozempic and wegovy, and that's a diminished craving for alcohol. cbs's janet shamlian looks into this in tonight's "health watch." >> reporter: megan johnston started taking semaglutide last year. that's the medication in weight loss drugs like wegovy. >> you took the medication thinking "i'm going to lose weight" or "i want to drink less"? >> i -- it was definitely that i wanted to lose weight. but, you know, i thought if i can drink less, even better. >> reporter: the 38-year-old arlington, virginia, real estate agent says she gained 30 pounds during the pandemic and was drinking more too. >> at my checkup last year, i remember telling my doctor i was drinking upwards of 15 drinks a week. >> and now? >> some weeks, none. last week was one. maybe average, three. >> reporter: johnston is among many patients who have reported fewer cravings for alcohol while taking semaglutide for weight
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loss. >> what kind of a game-changer would this be? >> if it turns out that this medication is safe and effective for treating addiction, this would become really the largest and most widely used pharmacotherapy for addiction medicine that's ever been developed. >> reporter: kyle simmons is running one of several clinical trials currently under way to examine whether semaglutide reduces cravings for alcohol. >> this region is exhibiting greater activity in this participant. >> reporter: he says the drug affects the brain and appears to remove the pleasure received from drinking alcohol. >> what would you say to people who want to take these drugs now to decrease alcohol consumption? >> we just don't know yet whether or not the medication is safe and effective for the treatment of alcohol use disorder. >> reporter: johnston says she lost 45 pounds over seven months and cut her drinking by 75%. >> do you still join your friends for cocktails or go to a bar? >> absolutely, or i have them over, and i'll make them a drink. and sometimes i'll have one, and sometimes i won't.
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>> reporter: a weight loss drug with, for some, a welcome buzz kill. janet shamlian, cbs news, arlington, virginia. all right. for the first time ever, women in the u.s. will soon be able to get birth control pills without a prescription. that's next.
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access to birth control is getting a major boost with the first over the counter pill hitting stores in the u.s. later this month. the hormone-based contraceptive opill is similar to the prescription pills millions of american women have used for decades. it was approved for over the counter sales by the fda last summer. a one-month supply will cost about $20, and a three-month supply will run around $50. finally, tonight's heart of
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america. longtime philadelphia eagles center jason kelce announced his retirement today after 13 seasons. the nfl tough guy didn't hide his emotions when he delivered his heartfelt goodbye. >> thank you, philadelphia, from the bottom of my heart. thank you for letting me represent this city and allowing me into your homes every sunday. it has truly been a privilege. >> the 36-year-old kelce spent his entire career with philadelphia, played in two super bowls, and won the lombardi trophy in 2018 after the eagles were knocked out of this year's playoffs, he spent the rest of the season cheering on his younger brother travis who plays for the kansas city chiefs, who repeats as super bowl champs. today he paid tribute to his teammates, coaches, the fans, and his family, who were all there today, including travis, crying a bit. brotherly love at its best. jason kelce, tonight's "heart of america." and that's the overnight news for this tuesday.
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for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings," and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. this is "cbs news flash." i'm carissa lawson in new york. cbs news projects that former president donald trump has won the north dakota republican caucuses. trump now has 276 delegates. nikki haley has 43 as they head into super tuesday. cbs news will have special coverage of super tuesday beginning at 10:00 p.m. eastern on cbs and paramount+. jetblue and spirit airlines
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have called off their $3.8 billion merger. a federal judge ruled in january that the deal violated antitrust laws after a lawsuit from the department of justice. and it looks like writing skills are in taylor swift's dna. genealogy company ancestry.com says the singer is the sixth cousin three times removed of famed poet emily dickinson. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. it's tuesday, march 5th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." it is super tuesday, the biggest day of the presidential primary season. voters in more than a dozen states head to the polls including colorado, which lost its fight to block donald trump from the ballot. calling for a cease-fire. a key member of israel's war cbinet and political rival of benjamin netanyahu is in washington as the biden

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