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tv   CBS Overnight News  KPIX  March 19, 2024 3:12am-4:30am PDT

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migrants accused of illegally entering the u.s., meaning they didn't come in through an official port of entry. state judges could also order migrants back to mexico to avoid prosecution. abbott signed sb4 into law last year in response to the record increase in migrant crossings on the texas/mexico border. this is what abbott said about the law in an interview with cecilia vega for "60 minutes." >> we're not imposing a texas border policy. texas very simply is enforcing the laws that are the policy of the united states congress. >> reporter: if it does go into effect, critics like laredo's mayor worry it could lead to racial profiling and will not be effective. >> do you think sb4 makes laredo and texas safer? >> i do not think so. it's going to cause situations that are unfair and unjust. >> do you think this law is a burden for your deputies? >> well, it's a burden to
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everybody. >> reporter: sheriff cuellar says his department is short-staffed, but his main concern is the lack of training from the state on how to enforce the law. >> any new task forces being formed for this law? >> no. >> any new vehicles for this law? >> no. >> any new training yet? >> not yet. >> reporter: i spoke with several law enorcement sources this afternoon. they tell me their police officers and deputies still have not received any state guidance or training on how to enforce this law, and they're just hoping they get some sort of training before this law possibly goes into effect. norah. >> omar villafranca, thank you very much. tonight, the race to evacuate nearly 1,000 americans still trapped in haiti took an even more urgency as armed gangs unleashed new attacks on the capital. the u.s. embassy has urged all u.s. citizens to leave immediately. cbs's manuel bojorquez reports tonight from the city of cap-haitien tonight in northern haiti, where americans are being evacuated. >> reporter: tonight the rush to
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escape haiti. private companies having to air lift americans out by helicopter. the second rescue mission by florida congressman cory mills alone. the first flight out of the country in two weeks touched down safely in miami yesterday. just 47 seats were occupied on the government-chartered flight, officials said. the state department announced it would offer limited charter flights for u.s. citizens from the less chaotic northern city of cap-haitien. but getting on one of these flights is not easy. the journey from port-au-prince to cap-haitien, where flights are taking off, is an extremely dangerous trip by road, with gangs setting up checkpoints along the way. those who did make the flight relieved to be back on american soil after weeks of uncertainty. >> i think everybody want to see if they can get out of there. >> it's mixed emotion. it's good to be back here. but i also need to think about the people back home. >> reporter: this is the airport in cap-haitien, and just look
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around and listen. it is eerily quiet here. this should be bustling. today gangs attacked two upscale neighborhoods in haiti's capital in a rampage that left at least a dozen people dead. bodies can be seen in the streets, some loaded onto trucks. >> we can hear some heavy a attacks, some people trying to attack the building of the government. >> reporter: people are still trying to cross the border to safety to the dominican republic. others to get as far away from the nation's capital. authorities in the u.s. say flights for american citizens from this airport in cap-haitien will continue only as long as it is safe to do so, and they say concerns about haitians fleeing this recent turmoil and headed for the u.s. so far have not materialized. norah. >> manny bojorquez, thank you for being there. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight
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well, tonight there is new evidence in the mysterious disappearance of a college student who went missing ten days ago during a fraternity trip to nashville. newly released body cam video shows him speaking with a police officer on the night he vanished. cbs's errol barnett has the new developments. >> reporter: new tonight, police in nashville releasing this body cam video showing an officer's brief encounter with 22-year-old college student riley strain. >> how are you doing, sir? >> i'm good. how are you? >> good. >> reporter: it's just minutes after strain had been kicked out of a downtown nashville bar. surveillance video from that night shows strain stumbling and falling down. that was ten days ago. he hasn't been seen since. his parents desperate for answers. >> this is a very trying time, emotional. it's a roller coaster.
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>> reporter: over the weekend, another clue. a bankcard found on the embankment of the cumberland river, now the focus of a massive search. strain, a senior at the university of missouri, was in nashville with several fraternity brothers, visiting local bars. he was asked to leave this bar, owned by country music singer luke bryan. the bar says it served strain one drink and two waters. luke bryan posting on social media, "this is scary," praying for his safe return. friends say strain told them he would head back to the group's hotel. he wasn't reported missing until the following afternoon. >> all of our hearts are out, there and we're trying to find him, and we're doing the best we can. >> reporter: now, tennessee's alcoholic beverage commission is investigating the possibility that strain may have been overserved there at luke bryan's bar. but, norah, we should be clear at this stage, police have said they do not yet suspect foul
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play. >> errol barnett, thank you. pope francis reflects on his 87 years. a look inside his revealing new memoir. that's next. ma, ma, ma— ( clears throat ) for fast sore throat relief, try vicks vapocool drops. with two times more menthol per drop, and powerful vicks vapors to vaporize sore throat pain. vicks vapocool drops. vaporize sore throat pain. (coi leray & metro boomin, “enjoy yourself”) new axe black vanilla? yum!
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pope francis just marked 11 years as the head of the catholic church, and this week he's out with his first memoir. looking back on his life and the events that shaped him. cbs's seth doane got insights on the pope from his co-author, including whether he plans to retire. >> reporter: his urgent calls for peace come from the pulpit, where he also regularly pushes for respecting migrants and the environment. and now pope francis is revealing another side, the pontiff as a man. in a new memoir, the 87-year-old chronicles his life through major historic events. his joy at the end of world war ii. >> how sweet the rewards of peace. >> reporter: and cheering the fall of the berlin wall. but he also delves into the more intimate, being briefly, quote, dazzled by a woman. so enamored, he writes, it was difficult to pray. >> where are you, fabio? >> holy father, i am at the
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beach. >> reporter: pope francis is on the other end of the line asking you this? the co-author, a vatican correspondent for an italian tv channel, certainly saw the personal side of this pontiff through hours of interviews and revisions. "it was my pitch, ragona told us. i said there were many people it in the world who don't know him, especially in the states. >> why was america such a focus? >> it's a great country. >> reporter: conservative catholics in the u.s. are among the chief critics of this more progressive pope. >> he says at one point in the book that if he tried to keep track of everything that people say and write about him, that he would never have time to do anything else and would also need a psychologist. >> reporter: father sam sawyer is a jesuit like pope francis, and editor of the catholic magazine "america." >> what are the headlines that stand out to you from this book? >> he talks about his experience from his viewpoint of pope benedict's resignation, of the
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conclave that elected him. >> reporter: despite the resignation of his predecessor and health concerns, regona says the pope only thinks about resignation because journalists ask about it. >> he said, i'm good right now. i don't think i'll resignation. >> reporter: in the book, francis reveals that during hospital stays and medical treatments, he knows others speculate about the next conclave and another pope. relax, it's human, he writes. there's nothing shocking about it. seth doane, cbs news, rome. princess catherine appears in public following speculation into her whereabouts. we're going to show you the video. that's next.
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it's the work behind the scenes, let's take a look at this knee. that truly matters. [ physical therapy staff discusses results ] for your mind. for your body. and for the community. -team! kaiser permanente. princess catherine was spotted over the weekend following months of questions about her whereabouts. tmz obtained this video and says
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the princess appeared healthy and relaxed, stopping at a farm shop near windsor castle with prince william. her last public appearance was at christmas, and she's barely been seen since undergoing abdominal surgery last january. further speculation when kensington palace released a photo the princess admitted she photoshopped. meet 32-year-old new yorker liana scaglione, who was among the 27,000 runners to compete in the new york city half-marathon this weekend. her remarkable finishing time of 2 hours and 14 minutes came just two months after having brain surgery. when she was just 15, she was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis. that's a genetic disorders that causes usually benign tumors to form in the brain, spinal cord, and nerves. after being in a wheelchair for two years, the once aspiring ballerina took up running to challenge herself. >> i realized all the things
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that i have accomplished with having tumors in my body. i was like, you know what? anything's possible, and i shouldn't let this diagnosis and a tumor control my life. i just finished this major surgery, and i'm getting my life back. >> well, she now hopes to tackle the full chicago and new york city marathons this fall. so congratulations. anna scaglione, tonight's "heart of america." that's the overnight news for this tuesday. 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 shanelle kaul in new york.
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the epa announced a complete ban on asbestos monday. the new regulation prohibits the last remaining form of the carcinogen still in use. it comes more than 30 years after efforts to ban it began. asbestos is linked to 40,000 u.s. deaths a year and is banned in more than 50 countries. online sales began monday for the first over the counter birth control pill in the united states. opil was approved by the fda last year. it's expected to be available on store shelves within weeks. and country singer toby keith will be posthumously inducted into the country music hall of fame. keith died from stomach cancer in february at the age of 62. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. donald trump's money trouble. the former president says he can't secure the $454 million bond in his civil fraud trial.
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ae his namesake buildings at risk? >> if i don't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath. >> plus the new questions about what trump meant. >> the events of january 6th, 2021, are recent enough that we know that he would perpetrate a bloodbath rather than allow our constitutional system to work. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." good evening. i'm norah o'donnell, and thank you for being with us. we're going to begin tonight with donald trump facing a cash crunch. the former president is on the brink of being forced to surrender some of his most valuable real estate properties to help pay that $454 million civil fraud judgment in new york. he's already admitted that he doesn't have the nearly half a billion dollars in cash, and today hez lawyers revealed that more than 30 firms said they were unable or, quote, unwilling to accept the risk associted with such a large bond.
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the clock is now ticking with that bond due next week. it's worth remembering the civil judgment stems from a ruling that trump falsely valued parts of his real estate empire for financial gain. and then on the campaign trail, trump is also defending himself after a series of disturbing remarks about migrants, january 6th defendants, and warning of a, quote, bloodbath if he loses in november. it was all while discussing tariffs on chinese-made cars. cbs's robert costa is here, and he'll start us off tonight. >> reporter: former president donald trump could soon be facing a financial crisis. his lawyers today revealing in a court filing that trump has failed to obtain a $454 million bond, calling it a practical impossibility. it's due in just one week, and without it, new york attorney general letitia james could freeze his bank accounts and seize his prize properties,
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including trump tower and 40 wall street. >> the bottom line is this is rigged. >> reporter: trump, who was unable to reach agreement with more than 30 companies that provide appeal bonds, is also scrambling to raise money for the general election. cbs news has learned trump is considering enlisting his former 2016 campaign chairman, paul manafort, a convicted felon who was found guilty of committing several financial crimes in 2018 and later pardoned by trump. ♪ meanwhile, the former president has ramped up his incendiary rhetoric on the campaign trail. >> we're going to put a 100% tariff on every single car that comes across the line, and you're not going to be able to sell those cars if i get elected. now, if i don't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath for the whole -- that's going to be the least of it. it's going to be a bloodbath for the country. >> reporter: trump insists he was referring to a potential bloodbath in the automobile industry. in the past, trump has warned of bedlam if biden wins, suggesting there will be anger if he is convicted of a crime. >> there will be bedlam in the
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country. it's a very bad thing. it's a very bad precedent. as we said, it's the opening of a pandora's box. >> reporter: over the weekend, trump also referred to migrants as animals and described those convicted for crimes related to january 6th as hostages and patriots. that remark drawing criticism from both sides of the aisle. >> it's just -- it's just unacceptable. >> a hostage is someone who's being held by a criminal group or a terrorist group for a financial or political ransom. that's got nothing to do with people who have been criminally charged and given due process. >> reporter: meanwhile, former trump white house adviser peter navarro will likely be headed to jail. today the supreme court rejected navarro's push to stave off his sentence for refusing to comply with a congressional subpoena. he is now set to report to a correctional facility tomorrow in florida. norah. >> that is some big news. robert costa, thank you. president biden and israeli
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prime minister benjamin netanyahu spoke today for the first time in more than a month amid growing tensions over israel's offensive in gaza. and the president warned netanyahu that the u.s. would not support an operation into rafah without a plan to ensure the safety of innocent civilians. cbs's chris livesay reports that israeli forces today raided a hospital in northern gaza as famine there spreads. >> reporter: gunfire cracked at the al shifa hospital complex in northern gaza, where 30,000 palestinians are sheltering. but among them, according to the israeli military, were hamas militants. the course of the war and its humanitarian costs are driving a wedge between israel and its closest ally, the united states. president biden and prime minister netanyahu hadn't spoken for at least a month until today. >> on the call today, president biden asked the prime minister to send a senior interagency team composed of military, intelligence, and humanitarian
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officials to washington in the coming days to hear u.s. concerns about israel's current rafah planning. >> reporter: israel agreed to that request. this comes after senate majority leader chuck schumer last week called for new elections here. now the israeli leader has shot back. >> i think schumer's statements are wholly inappropriate. i think we're not a banana republic. >> reporter: negotiations reconvened in doha today with israel offering a six-week pause for 40 hostages. among those still in captivity, itay chen. last week israel confirmed the american was killed in october, but hamas is holding his body as a bargaining chip, says his father. and tonight the u.s. confirms israel has killed hamas' number three military official, marwan issa. u.s. national security adviser jake sullivan says justice will come for the others hiding in the tunnels. norah. >> chris livesay, thank you so much. back here at home, it was a
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weekend of deadly violence in jacksonville beach, florida, with gunfire erupting as hundreds of young people gathered for spring break and st. patrick's day parties. cbs's cristian benavides reports from fort lauderdale. >> reporter: beachgoers running for cover as gunfire erupts on jacksonville beach. three separate shootings as crowds celebrated spring break and st. patrick's day on sunday night. in one incident, three people were shot, including a tourist who was shot three times. another person was killed in a separate shooting. >> quite frankly i'm pissed off. if -- you know, we have a reputation out here as a law and order city. i'm a law and order police chief. if you're going to commit a crime, don't come here. >> reporter: this comes after a teenager was arrested for pulling out a gun and pointing it towards spring breakers in new smyrna beach on thursday. >> drop the gun! >> reporter: police body cam shows the teenager running away from officers confronting the 16-year-old. >> i've never seen anything like that.
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>> i've never seen that happen and we come here all the time. >> reporter: some beach towns have seen an uptick in rowdy behavior after miami beach urged spring breakers to stay away. as part of its crackdown, the city imposed a midnight curfew. during the first three weekends of spring break, miami beach said there have been no shootings and no fatalities, and the total number of felony arrests is down by 26%. >> here in fort lauderdale, i feel like the beach is a little more wild here. >> reporter: but in fort lauderdale, where there are fewer restrictions, video of fight clubs and sand wrestling matches have popped up on social media. in past years, fort lauderdale has also cracked down on spring break when things get too rowdy. this year the city says there's been an uptick in both crowds and spring break-related arrests. norah. norah. >> cristian benavides, thank oh... stuffed up again? so congested! you need sinex saline from vicks. just sinex, breathe, ahhhh! what is — wow!
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." i'm nicole sganga in washington. thanks for staying with us. for the past four months, a volcanic eruption in iceland wasn't much of a concern for the people who live there. the plume of toxic smoke wasn't affecting air travel, and the lava flow was far from homes and the local power plant. well, that's all changed. a state of emergency has been declared, and evacuations have been ordered. ian lee has the latest. >> reporter: sirens blared at iceland's world famous blue lagoon resort on saturday night as a volcanic eruption forced hundreds of people to race to safety. >> we're evacuating. the lava's coming. >> reporter: officials also urged folks in the nearby town of grindavik to leave their homes as fountains of molten rock burst from the ground.
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lava flows slowed sunday. manmade barriers appeared to help keep the lava from engulfing the fishing town. but parts of the asphalt were still smoldering. >> i've never experienced anything like that before. >> reporter: tourist melissa ezer says she had just sat down for dinner with her husband when they suddenly heard a siren. >> we heard the sound go off. that's when my husband and i looked at each other, and they say evacuations en route. >> reporter: iceland is a hot spot for volcanic activity. officials say this fourth eruption in the country's southwest since december was the most powerful. so far, no injuries have been reported. >> look at that. wow. >> reporter: i'm ian lee. in britain, the disappearance of princess kate continues to make headlines. she dropped from public view more than two months ago following what the palace called abdominal surgery. but when the royal family
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released a photoshopped picture of kate and the kids, it fueled speculation that something may be very wrong with the princess. and the public is demanding answers. holly williams has the latest from outside buckingham palace. >> reporter: well, kate reportedly visited a farm shop near her home over the weekend and watched her children play a sport. but there are no photos, so the conjecture and those conspiracy theories are still whirling. a powerful british tabloid newspaper is warning the monarchy is close to crisis. >> kate hasn't been seen publicly in over 35 days. >> reporter: blaming in part kate's disappearance from public events. >> if you thought the craziest parts of the kate middleton conspiracy were over, well just get ready because they keep getting thicker. >> reporter: followed by the release of this manipulated photo. it sparked speculation and criticism. >> is it time the royal family dropped their strict mantra, never complain, never explain?
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>> reporter: as well as jokes. >> there's a non-zero chance she died 18 months ago. there might be weekend at bernie's in this situation. >> reporter: it's even raised questions about the state of her marriage. >> internet sleuths are guessing that kate's absence may be related to her husband and the future king of england, william, having an affair. >> it's not whack-a-mole. you can't go out and try and stop every story that is coming out on x, on other platforms. >> reporter: julian payne is an expert in crisis public relations, who used to be a spokesman for the king and queen. >> anybody that tells you their press operation is faultless would be kidding you. of course mistakes get made. >> what lesson have they learned? >> they will naturally question how long you can maintain a dignified silence. they may discover that these days, it isn't possible now for us to have three months without absolutely no news.
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>> reporter: kate is now the most popular member of the royal family here in the uk according to one recent poll, eclipsing the king and her own husband. it's a striking similarity with another princess who married into the institution and was adored by the public. but julian payne says members of the royal family are not normal celebrities. >> when we think about hollywood celebrities, they understand that they are the brand. they need the media attention in order to be as successful as they can be. that doesn't translate into the royal family where it is the institution where the focus should be. >> so they're working for the monarchy, not their own brands? >> this is exactly it. when i was in the palace, i can tell you the last thing they ever wanted to do was to increase the personal scrutiny on themselves. >> reporter: the monarchy still has over 60% support in this country according to polls, and not saying very much has
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historically added to the royal family's mystique. it's worth remembering, i think, that some of the media demanding to see kate may have a vested interest because they use fresh photos of the royals to sell newspapers and get clicks online. >> that was holly williams outside buckingham palace. you're watching the "cbs overnight news." wanna know how i get this glow?! i get ready with new olay indulgent moisture body wash. it smells amazing and gives my skin over the top moisture! from dull to visibly glowing in 14 days! ♪♪ see the difference with olay. sometimes jonah wrestles with falling asleep... ...so he takes zzzquil. the world's #1 sleep aid brand. and wakes up feeling like himself. get the rest to be your best with non-habit forming zzzquil. ♪ ♪
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the largest private collection of african american art and artifacts could soon be coming to a museum near you. the kinsey collection documents the black experience in america through painting, sculpture, and much more. the exhibition has traveled the world and is currently on display in houston. bernard and shirley kinsey. >> reporter: inside houston's holocaust museum, america's fight against nazi germany is getting a second look. >> here we have african american troops liberating concentration camps. you never heard that before. >> reporter: this history is being shared through the lens of a family hoping to right the record. >> reporter: the myth of absence is operating at so many levels in the kinsey collection, and we believe when you come through here, you see a different side of this whole story.
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>> reporter: for husband and wife bernard and shirley kinsey -- >> these paintings hanging on the wall are some of my favorites because -- >> reporter: and their son khalil, the whole story covers far more than world war ii. >> this is a marriage record for a young girl named es ta ba na, it's the earliest known black baptismal record in american history. >> reporter: documents from the 1590s of free black people who settled with the spanish in st. augustine, florida. >> how do you know they're black? >> it actually states that in the transcription. >> oh, wow. >> yeah. >> reporter: and other artifacts and artistry. sculptures, paintings, murals. >> these are doors. where are they from? >> from cape coast castle in ghana. 4.5 million people went through these doors. >> reporter: giving context to an era many have tried to forget. >> one of the most profitable businesses in the history of the world was taking people. i mean in 1850, people were more
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valuable than land. land in florida was two cents an acre, and a person was $500. so do the math. >> reporter: and greater understanding for our common connection. >> we are in the holocaust museum. i think some people might wonder what is the connect? >> mm-hmm. we -- we view american slavery as a holocaust as well, one that was studied by adolf hitler. there is no disconnect if we look at this from a holistic, human perspective. and by that, we should and deserve to know more about each other's stories. >> what is the myth of absence? >> that black people, number one, were here at every stage and we participated in everything. that we weren't simply toiling in fields. we were resisting at every
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stage. >> reporter: resistance during the civil rights movement is how bernard kinsey and shirley pooler met at florida a, and m university. >> well, you see this cute 17-year-old getting out of jail, and it took a lot of courage to go down in tallahassee in 1963. people were getting killed, and i just thought that combination was pretty remarkable. so i wanted to meet her. >> reporter: after graduation, they got married, and bernard became one of america's first black park rangers. >> so we began to collect souvenirs at first. >> native american stuff first because our first travel was from los angeles to the grand canyon. >> grand canyon. >> i had never been there, so our first collecting was i've really got kachina dolls. i've got rugs. i've got sand. i got all kind of stuff from these national parks. >> reporter: but once he became a big corporate executive at xerox, their collection grew more nuanced. >> ernie barnes was one of the first pieces we bought because his work always inspired us
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growing up in the south. > what room is this? >> this is where we keep all the good stuff. >> reporter: inside their home, their own ancestry speaks volumes. >> this is my dad, who i just -- >> adore. >> adore. >> reporter: bernard's father was an educational changemaker in florida. shirley's grandmother, a silent protester through her sewing machine. >> well, because whether i was growing up, mama said we don't go to the store and try on clothes. i'll make your clothes. that's when she did. >> reporter: people began entrusting them with their family's possessions. >> this gentleman called up and said he found this in their aunt's attic and wanted to send it to him. i remember he stood there at the door and he was literally shaking. >> reporter: a bill of sale of a human being from 1832. >> i couldn't believe that somebody could own somebody. it's abstract when you read about it. it is different when you're holding this in your hand. >> reporter: that was a turning point, when casual collectors
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became intentional curators. another push came through an assignment for their son in elementary school. >> he came home saying, mom, james can go all the way back to the mayflower, and jimmy can go all the way back to paris. and we could say we could go to florida because we didn't know anything else beyond that. i decided then that all of his reports were going to be about somebody black who did something to help america become america. >> reporter: from authors and thinkers like phyllis wheatley and frederick douglass to the man who ensured washington, d.c. was built to spec, benjamin banneker, for nearly 20 years, the kinseys have taken this show on the road, from hong kong to disney's epcot center, to the smithsonian, and even a super bowl at sofi stadium. >> that's shirley. that's khalil, and that's me. i love this because he's got us looking toward the future. >> reporter: everywhere the kinsey collection goes, it relays writings, inventions, and
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presence in all spaces linking past with present. >> this is dr. selma burke. she actually crafted the relief, sat with president franklin delano roosevelt and the dime that we all still use today was created by this woman. >> reporter: the kinseys are effectively changing that and ecourage others to follow their path. >> this is a pullman porter on the american railroad system. >> my great-grandfather was a pullman porter. >> wow. that's the thing. that's the thing. this history is in all of our homes, in all of our lives. and what we're trying to do is illuminate this in so many ways but also encourage others to do the same because it really is the fabric of our lives. >> tha
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le . an outbreak of measles has health officials concerned. there have been at least 60 cases so far this year.
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that's more than all of last year, and some of it is linked to unvaccinated migrants. sabrina franza reports. >> reporter: chicago is the latest city to be hit with measles. >> to see an uptick in cases where we haven't seen cases in the last five years is concerning for us. >> reporter: 12 confirmed cases so far, including 10 connected to the city's largest migrant shelter. friday, city health officials announced a new policy aimed at stopping the spread. >> now migrants are required to get the vaccine before going into shelters. >> as long as measles is circulating in our city, they can get sick. >> reporter: city health officials launched a mass vaccination campaign for migrants. >> over 900 vaccinations were administered really in response to really doing the strategies that we know work to contain measles outbreaks. >> reporter: this asylum seeker from venezuela told cbs news he was vaccinated soon after arriving.
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nationwide, measles vaccination rates have fallen since 2019. about 93% of kindergartners were vaccinated last year, falling short of the cdc's 95% goal. the first measles outbreak this year was in pennsylvania followed by outbreaks in 16 other states, including 6 cases at an elementary school in south florida. >> there are a lot of people that are not vaccinated right now that need to be vaccinated to stop transmission. >> reporter: if you're planning on traveling internationally for spring break, the cdc has updated its guidance. they recommend you see your doctor six weeks before traveling to make sure you're protected. i'm sabrina franza in chicago. and that's the overnigt news for this tuesday. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm nicole sganga. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york.
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the epa announced a complete ban on asbestos monday. the new regulation prohibits the last remaining form of the carcinogen still in use. it comes more than 30 years after efforts to ban it began. asbestos is linked to 40,000 u.s. deaths a year and is banned in more than 50 countries. online sales began monday for the first over-the-counter birth control pill in the united states. opill was approved by the fda last year. it's expected to be available on store shelves within weeks. and country nger toby keith will be posthumously inducted into the country music hall of fame. keith died from stomach cancer in february at the age of 62. for more, download the cbs news nnected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. donald trump's money trouble. the former president says he can't secure the $454 million
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bond in his civil fraud trial. are his namesake buildings at risk? >> if i don't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath. >> plus the new questions about what trump meant. >> the events of january 6th, 2021, are recent enough that we know that he would perpetrate a bloodbath rather than allow our constitutional system to work. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." good evening. i'm norah o'donnell, and thank you for being with us. we're going to begin tonight with donald trump facing a cash crunch. the former president is on the brink of being forced to surrender some of his most valuable real estate properties to help pay that $454 million civil fraud judgment in new york. he's already admitted that he doesn't have the nearly half a billion dollars in cash, and today his lawyers revealed that more than 30 firms said they were unable or, quote, unwilling to accept the risk associated with such a large bond.
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the clock is now ticking with that bond due next week. it's worth remembering the civil judgment stems from a ruling that trump falsely valued parts of his real estate empire for financial gain. and then on the campaign trail, trump is also defending himself after a series of disturbing remarks about migrants, january 6th defendants, and warning of a, quote, bloodbath if he loses in november. it was all while discussing tariffs on chinese-made cars. cbs's robert costa is here, and he'll start us off tonight. >> reporter: former president donald trump could soon be facing a financial crisis. his lawyers today revealing in a court filing that trump has failed to obtain a $454 million bond, calling it a practical impossibility. it's due in just one week, and without it, new york attorney general letitia james could freeze his bank accounts and seize his prize properties, including trump tower and 40 wall street.
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>> the bottom line is this is rigged. >> reporter: trump, who was unable to reach agreement with more than 30 companies that provide appeal bonds, is also scrambling to raise money for the general election. cbs news has learned trump is considering enlisting his former 2016 campaign chairman, paul manafort, a convicted felon who was found guilty of committing several financial crimes in 2018 and later pardoned by trump. ♪ meanwhile, the former president has ramped up his incendiary rhetoric on the campaign trail. >> we're going to put a 100% tariff on every single car that comes across the line, and you're not going to be able to sell those cars if i get elected. now, if i don't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath for the whole -- that's going to be the least of it. it's going to be a bloodbath for the country. >> reporter: trump insists he was referring to a potential bloodbath in the automobile industry. in the past, trump has warned of bedlam if biden wins, suggesting there will be anger if he is convicted of a crime. >> there will be bedlam in the
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country. it's a very bad thing. it's a very bad precedent. as we said, it's the opening of a pandora's box. >> reporter: over the weekend, trump also referred to migrants as animals and described those convicted for crimes related to january 6th as hostages and patriots. that remark drawing criticism from both sides of the aisle. >> it's just -- it's just unacceptable. >> a hostage is someone who's being held by a criminal group or a terrorist group for a financial or political ransom. that's got nothing to do with people who have been criminally charged and given due process. >> reporter: meanwhile, former trump white house adviser peter navarro will likely be headed to jail. today the supreme court rejected navarro's push to stave off his sentence for refusing to comply with a congressional subpoena. he is now set to report to a correctional facility tomorrow i florida. norah. >> that is some big news. robert costa, thank you. president biden and israeli
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prime minister benjamin netanyahu spoke today for the first time in more than a month amid growing tensions over israel's offensive in gaza. and the president warned netanyahu that the u.s. would not support an operation into rafah without a plan to ensure the safety of innocent civilians. cbs's chris livesay reports that israeli forces today raided a hospital in northern gaza as famine there spreads. >> reporter: gunfire cracked at the al shifa hospital complex in northern gaza, where 30,000 palestinians are sheltering. but among them, according to the israeli military, were hamas militants. the course of the war and its humanitarian costs are driving a wedge between israel and its closest ally, the united states. president biden and prime minister netanyahu hadn't spoken for at least a month until today. >> on the call today, president biden asked the prime minister to send a senior interagency team composed of military, intelligence, and humanitarian
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officials to washington in the coming days to hear u.s. concerns about israel's current rafah planning. >> reporter: israel agreed to that request. this comes after senate majority leader chuck schumer last week called for new elections here. now the israeli leader has shot back. >> i think schumer's statements are wholly inappropriate. i think we're not a banana republic. >> reporter: negotiations reconvened in doha today with israel offering a six-week pause for 40 hostages. among those still in captivity, itay chen. last week israel confirmed the american was killed in october, but hamas is holding his body as a bargaining chip, says his father. and tonight the u.s. confirms israel has killed hamas' number three military official, marwan issa. u.s. national security adviser jake sullivan says justice will come for the others hiding in the tunnels. norah. >> chris livesay, thank you so much. back here at home, it was a
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weekend of deadly violence in jacksonville beach, florida, with gunfire erupting as hundreds of young people gathered for spring break and st. patrick's day parties. cbs's cristian benavides reports from fort lauderdale. >> reporter: beachgoers running for cover as gunfire erupts on jacksonville beach. three separate shootings as crowds celebrated spring break and st. patrick's day on sunday night. in one incident, three people were shot, including a tourist who was shot three times. another person was killed in a separate shooting. >> quite frankly, i'm pissed off. if -- you know, we have a reputation out here as a law and order city. i'm a law and order police chief. if you're going to commit a crime, don't come here. >> reporter: this comes after a teenager was arrested for pulling out a gun and pointing it towards spring breakers in new smyrna beach on thursday. >> drop the gun! >> reporter: police body cam shows the teenager running away from officers confronting the 16-year-old. >> i've never seen anything like that. >> i've never seen that happen,
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and we come here all the time. >> reporter: some beach towns have seen an uptick in rowdy bav behavior after miami urged spring breakers to stay away. as part of its crackdown, the city imposed a midnight curfew. during the first three weekends of spring break, miami beach said there have been no shootings and no fatalities, and the total number of felony arrests is down by 26%. >> here in fort lauderdale, i feel like the beach is a little more wild here. >> reporter: but in fort lauderdale, where there are fewer restrictions, video of fight clubs and sand wrestling matches have popped up on social media. in past years, fort lauderdale has also cracked down on spring break when things get too rowdy. this year the city says there's been an uptick in both crowds and spring break-related arrests. norah.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs
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overnight news." now to some breaking news. supreme court justice samuel alito has extended the temporary pause on a sweeping texas immigration law from taking effect. now, this law would empower local authorities to arrest suspected migrants from unlawfully crossing the border. the department of justice calls it unconstitutional. cbs's omar villafranca reports on the challenges facing border police departments. >> this is a daily occurrence? >> yeah. >> reporter: if the supreme court ever allows it to go through, texas governor greg abbott will get his way, and webb county sheriff martin cuellar and other local law enforcement will join federal agents in securing the texas/mexico border. >> do you feel that law enforcement was consulted enough when this law was being made in austin? >> i don't think so. >> reporter: the law, known as sb4, would allow texas sheriff and police departments to arrest, jail, and prosecute
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migrants accused of illegally entering the u.s., meaning they didn't come in through an official port of entry. state judges could also order migrants back to mexico to avoid prosecution. abbott signed sb4 into law last year in response to the record increase in migrant crossings on the texas/mexico border. this is what abbott said about the law in an interview with cecilia vega for "60 minutes." >> we're not imposing a texas border policy. texas very simply is enforcing the laws that are the policy of the united states congress. >> reporter: if it does go into effect, critics like laredo mayor dr. victor trevino worry it could lead to racial profiling and will not be effective. >> do you think sb4 makes laredo and texas safer? >> i do not think so. it's going to cause situations that are unfair and unjust. >> do you think this law is a burden for your deputies? >> well, it's a burden to everybody.
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>> reporter: sheriff cuellar says his department is short-staffed, but his main concern is the lack of training from the state on how to enforce the law. >> any new task forces being formed for this law? >> no. >> any new vehicles for this law? >> no. >> any new training yet? >> not yet. >> reporter: i spoke with several law enforcement sources this afternoon. they tell me their police officers and deputies still have not received any state guidance or training on how to enforce this law, and they're just hoping they get some sort of training before this law possibly goes into effect. norah. >> omar villafranca, thank you very much. tonight, the race to evacuate nearly 1,000 americans still trapped in haiti took on even more urgency as armed gangs unleashed new attacks on the capital. the u.s. embassy has urged all u.s. citizens to leave immediately. cbs's manuel bojorquez reports tonight from the city of cap-haitien in northern haiti, where americans are being evacuated.
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>> reporter: tonight the rush to escape haiti. private companies having to airlift americans out by helicopter, the second rescue mission by florida congressman cory mills alone. the first flight out of the country in two weeks touched down safely in miami yesterday. just 47 seats were occupied on the government-chartered flight, officials said. the state department announced it would offer limited charter flights for u.s. citizens from the less chaotic northern city of cap-haitien. but getting on one of these flights is not easy. the journey from port-au-prince to cap-haitien, where flights are taking off, is an extremely dangerous trip by road, with gangs setting up checkpoints along the way. those who did make the flight relieved to be back on american soil after weeks of uncertainty. >> i think everybody want to see if they can get out of there. but, you know, not everybody can get out. >> it's mixed emotion. it's good to be back here. i'm safer, but i also need to
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think about the people back home. >> reporter: this is the airport in cap-haitien, and just look around and listen. it is eerily quiet here. this should be bustling. today gangs attacked two upscale neighborhoods in haiti's capital in a rampage that left at least a dozen people dead. bodies can be seen in the streets, some loaded onto trucks. >> we can hear some heavy attacks, some people trying to attack the building of the government. >> reporter: people are still trying to cross the border to safety to the dominican republic. others to get as far away from the nation's capital. authorities in the u.s. say flights for american citizens from this airport in cap-haitien will continue only as long as it is safe to do so, and they say concerns about haitians fleeing tis recent turmoil and headed for the u.s. so far have not materialized. norah. >> manny bojorquez, thank you for being there. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news."
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well, tonight there is new evidence in the mysterious disappearance of a college student who went missing ten days ago during a fraternity trip to nashville. newly released body cam video shows him speaking with a police officer on the night he vanished. cbs's errol barnett has the new developments. >> reporter: new tonight, police in nashville releasing this body cam video showing an officer's brief encounter with 22-year-old college student riley strain. >> how are you doing, sir? >> i'm good. how are you? >> good. >> reporter: it's just minutes after strain had been kicked out of a downtown nashville bar. surveillance video from that night shows strain stumbling and falling down. that was ten days ago. he hasn't been seen since. his parents desperate for answers. >> this is a very trying time, emotional. it's a roller coaster. >> reporter: over the weekend, another clue.
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a bankcard found on the embankment of the cumberland river, now the focus of a massive search. strain, a senior at the university of missouri, was in nashville with several fraternity brothers, visiting local bars. he was asked to leave this bar, owned by country music singer luke bryan. the bar says it served strain one drink and two waters. luke bryan posting on social media, "this is scary. praying for his safe return." friends say strain told them he would head back to the group's hotel. he wasn't reported missing until the following afternoon. >> all of our hearts are out there, and we're trying to find him, and we're doing the best we can. >> reporter: now, tennessee's alcoholic beverage commission is investigating the possibility that strain may have been overserved there at luke bryan's bar. but, norah, we should be clear at this stage, police have said they do not yet suspect foul play. >> errol barnett, thank you.
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pope francis reflects on his 87 years. a look inside his revealing new memoir. that's next. life doesn't stop for a cold. honey... honey... dayquil severe honey. powerful cold and flu symptom relief with a honey-licious taste. dayquil honey, the honey-licious, daytime, coughing, aching, stuffy head, fever, power through your day, medicine. my frequent heartburn had me taking antacid after antacid all day long but with prilosec otc just one pill a day blocks heartburn for a full 24 hours. for one and done heartburn relief, prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. ♪♪ vicks vapostick provides soothing,
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pope francis just marked 11 years as the head of the catholic church, and this week he's out with his first memoir. looking back on his life and the events that shaped him. cbs's seth doane got insights on the pope from his co-author, including whether he plans to retire. [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: his urgent calls for peace come from the pulpit, where he also regularly pushes for respecting migrants and the environment. and now pope francis is revealing another side, the pontiff as a man. in a new memoir, the 87-year-old chronicles his life through major historic events. his joy at the end of world war ii. >> how sweet the rewards of peace. >> reporter: and cheering the fall of the berlin wall. but he also delves into the more intimate, being briefly, quote, dazzled by a woman. so enamored, he writes, it was difficult to pray. >> "where are you, fabio? holy father, i am at the beach." >> reporter: pope francis is on
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the other end of the line asking you this? >> yeah. >> reporter: co-author, fabio marchese ragona, a vatican respondent for an italian tv channel, certainly saw the personal side of this pontiff through hours of interviews and revisions. "it was my pitch," ragona told us. "i said there were many people in the world who don't know him, especially in the states." >> why was america such a focus? >> it's a great country. >> reporter: conservative catholics in the u.s. are among the chief critics of this more progressive pope. >> he says at one point in the book that if he tried to keep track of everything that people say and write about him, that he would never have time to do anything else and would also need a psychologist. >> reporter: father sam sawyer is a jesuit like pope francis and editor of the catholic magazine "america." >> what are the headlines that stand out to you from this book? >> he talks about his experience from his viewpoint of pope benedict's resignation, of the conclave that elected him.
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>> reporter: despite the resignation of his predecessor and health concerns, ragona says the pope only thinks about resignation because journalists ask about it. >> he said, i'm good right now. i don't think i'll resignation. >> reporter: in the book, francis reveals that during hospital stays and medical treatments, he knows others speculate about the next conclave and another pope. "relax, it's human," he writes. "there's nothing shocking about it." seth doane, cbs news, rome. princess catherine appears in public following speculation into her whereabouts. we're going to show you the video. that's next. this thing? it's what's going on inside of me. it's my moderate to severe ulcerative colitis. it wasn't always this calm uc went everywhere i did. wondering when it would pop up next was stressful
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( ♪ ♪ ) ♪ (just one kiss) ♪ ( ♪ ♪ ) with reynolds wrap, cooking becomes so easy you can feel like the chef of your kitchen. easy prep. easy cook. easy clean. reynolds wrap. it's the work behind the scenes, ealet's take a lookk. at this knee. that truly matters. [ physical therapy staff discusses results ] for your mind. for your body. and for the community. -team! kaiser permanente. princess catherine was spotted over the weekend following months of questions about her whereabouts. tmz obtained this video and says
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the princess appeared healthy and relaxed, stopping at a farm shop near windsor castle with prince william. her last public appearance was at christmas, and she's barely been seen since undergoing abdominal surgery in january. further speculation was fueled last week when kensington palace released a photo the princess admitted she had photoshopped. finally, tonight's heart of america. meet 32-year-old new yorker leanna scaglione, who was among the 27,000 runners to compete in the new york city half-marathon this weekend. her remarkable finishing time of 2 hours and 14 minutes came just two months after having brain surgery. when she was just 15, she was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis. that's a genetic disorders that causes usually benign tumors to form in the brain, spinal cord, and nerves. after being in a wheelchair for two years, the once aspiring ballerina took up running to challenge herself. >> i realized all the things
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that i have accomplished with having tumors in my body. i was like, you know what? anything's possible, and i shouldn't let this diagnosis and a tumor control my life. i just finished this major surgery, and i'm getting my life back. >> well, she now hopes to tackle the full chicago and new york city marathons this fall. so congratulations. leanna scaglione, tonight's "heart of america." that's the overnight news for this tuesday. 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 shanelle kaul in new york.
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the epa announced a complete ban on asbestos monday. the new regulation prohibits the last remaining form of the carcinogen still in use. it comes more than 30 years after efforts to ban it began. asbestos is linked to 40,000 u.s. deaths a year and is banned in more than 50 countries. online sales began monday for the first over-the-counter birth control pill in the united states. opill was approved by the fda last year. it's expected to be available on store shelves within weeks. and country singer toby keith will be posthumously inducted into the country music hall of fame. keith died from stomach cancer in february at the age of 62. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new it's tuesday, march 19th, 2024.

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