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tv   CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell  CBS  May 23, 2024 3:30pm-4:01pm PDT

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sure to watch our special roots and resilience and api. celebration tomorrow at 4 p.m.. you can find it on kpx and streaming on the cbs news app. well, thank you so much for joining us for today's important conversation about bay area housing and the rental challenges. we love to hear what you think. post your thoughts online using the hashtag kpx. cbs tv news news is next on kpx and local news continues on our streaming service, cbs news bay area i'll see you at 5. >> norah: tonight, wild weather ahead of memorial day. >> everything i heard was that this was going to be an insane weekend to travel. >> norah: we are tracking severe storms after the wind from the same weather system... [screaming] leads to a deadly stage collapse in mexico. and tornadoes in texas.
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>> i call my daughter, and i tell her, i'm going to die. >> norah: the "cbs evening news" starts now. ♪ ♪ more than 30 million people under threat of severe weather tonight from texas to maine. good evening. i'm norah o'donnell, and thank you for being with us. thunderstorms, damaging winds, very large hail, and even tornadoes, all possible as tens of millions of americans hit the roads and airports. more than 12,000 flights have been delayed, and more than 700 canceled over the last two days. the faa says that today is the busiest day for the airlines this holiday weekend, with more than 53,500 flights scheduled at the nation's airports. cbs's omar villafranca will start us off tonight with the severe weather that turned deadly across the border in mexico. >> reporter: shocking video shows the moment a campaign rally in mexico turned into a
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catastrophe. 10,000 people were attending an event featuring long shot presidential candidate jorge maynaz when wind gusts up to 50 miles an hour blew down the stage he was on. metal beams, lights, and a video screen crashed down onto the crowd below. at least nine people were killed, including one child. more than 120 were injured. bystanders scrambled to help victims trapped under the twisted rubble, as the field became a makeshift triage center. "it hurts a lot and i can't move," said this woman. the local governors as first responders are still on the scene. "we have worked hard. we haven't stopped working since the tragedy happened," he told reporters. the same storm system brought wind gusts over 120 miles an hour to central texas. tore through the city of temple.
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>> i couldn't believe what was going on. everything was over but i couldn't believe what was going on. my house is demolished. >> reporter: an emergency was declared after hundreds of homes in a new subdivision were damaged or destroyed. luckily, no injuries. while in the northeast, heavier rains caused flooding from new york city to new england. in rhode island, traffic came to a halt as flash flooding shut down major roadways, leaving some driver stranded in their cars. about 60,000 people in central texas are still without power after those storms. crews are working nonstop, but norah, there is more severe weather in the forecast. >> norah: omar villafranca, thank you. the threat of that severe weather, as you said, is far from over heading to the holiday weekend. let's bring in meteorologist mike bettes. he is with our partners at the weather channel, for more details. good evening, mike. >> norah good evening. a lot of severe storms in our forecast tonight. tomorrow, and right into the holiday weekend, as well. you can see that through the night tonight, an area through the planes will be very anxious
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with storms, a lot of heavy weather here, including high winds and hail, isolated tornado risks, as well. work our way overnight, a lot of storms through the midwest, those storms hit us in milwaukee, chicago middle of the day tomorrow. and i'm going to the weekend, saturday provides a lot of severe weather in the middle of the country, once again, and then on sunday, a larger salary of severe weather the midwest on the way to the midsouth. memorial day it's all very active in the east, lots of issues on i-95, i-75, i-70, i-40, i-94. heads up chicago and atlanta could absent delays at the airports. the west, though, high and dry. the other big news happening today, norah noaa released its seasonal forecast for hurricanes. the average is 14 named storms each and every year, but that the last few years. forecast of 17-25 falling in line with the forecast for colorado state university. meeting, norah, could be a very active and dangerous hurricane season ahead. >> norah: all right, good information, mike, thank you. today louisville police released two new videos of the arrest of
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the world's number one ranked golfer, scottie scheffler. this is from a pole camera across the street. you see scheffler trying to enter a parking lot before the pga tournament at the valhalla golf club, then stopping as an officer in reflective gear chases him down. he is later handcuffed and then -- camera video shows him being walked to the patrol car. scheffler is accused of felony assault of an officer after allegedly dragging one with his car. something that scheffler denies. louisville's mayor says the city is not aware at this time of any video -- other video at the moment. that includes footage from the arresting officers body cam. that officer has been disciplined for failing to turn it on. ticketmaster, which famously botched the presale of tickets to taylor swift eras tour, was hit today with a sweeping antitrust lawsuit. the justice department is accusing ticketmaster and its parent company, live nation, running an illegal monopoly and driving up prices. we get details from cbs's meg oliver.
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>> it is time for fans and artists to stop paying the price for live nation's monopoly. >> reporter: tonight, there is bad blood between the department of justice and live nation. the entertainment giant that ows ticketmaster. >> it is time to break it up. the american people are ready for it. ♪ are you ready for ♪ >> reporter: self-described taylor swift fan attorney general merrick garland through some shade using some of the superstars lyrics. the doj's civil lawsuit, with 29 states and the district of columbia, alleges a litany of unfair practices, including retaliating against venues that work with rivals to blocking venues from using other ticket outlets. the doj says the massive live entertainment company controls at least 80% of primary ticketing at major venues. manages more than 400 artists, and controls more
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than 60% of concert promotions across the country. >> there were service fees and tax, and it hurts. >> reporter: in a statement, live nation says the lawsuit won't reduce ticket prices or service fees. artists teams set prices for their tickets. so it may break up live nation. what does that mean for consumers pocketbooks? >> in the short term, i would say that the ticketig process could get more chaotic. and prices could go up. in the long term, one would hope it would make things better. >> reporter: last year, live nation raked in close to $23 billion, with 145 million fans going to live events. tonight, here at metlife stadium, unlike other concerts with sky high ticket prices, these fans are getting what they want from the rolling stones. they ca be in the audience for as low as $70. norah? >> norah: sounds like they will get some satisfaction. meg oliver, thank you. louisiana is now on the verge of becoming the first state in the
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country to reclassify two commonly used abortion drugs as controlled and dangerous substances. cbs's caitlin huey-burns is here with the details. this is a big story. what does the bill due? >> reporter: well, this is supposed to be headed to the governor's desk. he is expected to sign it, and it is likely to make it -- it will make it illegal to possess mifepristone and misoprostol without a prescription in the state. and that is punishable by up to ten years in prison and $75,000 in fines. now, this drug combination was used in more than half of abortions nationwide last year, and the fda says it is effective. >> norah: so come abortions are already illegal in louisiana, so what practical effect does this have? >> reporter: this could make it harder for physicians to prescribe the drugs, which are used to treat other conditions and to manage miscarriages. the reclassification would require doctors to have a special license to write a prescription, and the drugs would have to be stored in certain facilities, hundreds of doctors in louisiana say they
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oppose this because it could delay care, and louisiana has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the country. and in the midst of all of this, we are awaiting a decision from the supreme court on mifepristone, which could impose a nationwide band, and a decision on that is expected at the end of june, norah. >> norah: we will be watching very closely. caitlin huey-burns, thank you so much. an american soldier is in critical condition at an israeli hospital tonight, injured in a forklift accident while working on the floating pier off the coast of the gaza strip. two other soldiers were also hurt in a separate accident, but they are expected to return to duty beard and humanitarian aid is once again flowing from that u.s.-made pier, according to the united nations. deliveries were halted over the weekend after a convoy of trucks was looted by palestinians desperate for food and supplies. earlier this evening, police broke up a pro-palestinian protest on the campus of ucla. officers moved in after demonstrators set up tents and
quote
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barricades, and then climbed onto the roof of a building and tried to lock officers out of another building. and earlier today, ucla's chancellor was testifying on capitol hill to the handling of campus protest and a rise in anti-semitic incidents. the presidents of northwestern and rutgers university defended their decisions to end pro-palestinian encampments through negotiations, rather than police force. calls are growing for supreme court justice samuel alito to recuse himself from any cases that involve a january 6th assault. donald trump come at election integrity. and this comes after photos surfaced of provocative flags linked to the cap capitol insurrection, being displayed at two homes owned by alito. cbs's scott macfarlane has the new developments. >> reporter: a political distress flag. tonight, more calls for conservative supreme court justice samuel alito to recuse himself from two pending cases involving january 6th. including on the question of whether donald trump can be prosecuted.
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>> the supreme court has chosen to conduct itself as if the judiciary is above the law. >> reporter: this amid reports by "the new york times" an "appeal to heaven" flag was flying last summer outside alito's new jersey vacation home. the flag represented the fight for independence during the american revolution, but it took on new meaning in 2021, when it was seen wielded on the front lines by january 6th rioters. the revelation came just days after alito acknowledged an upside down u.s. flag, also carried by january 6th rioters, hung briefly outside his virginia home, days after the u.s. capitol siege. alito said he had no involvement whatsoever, that his wife hung the flag amid a dispute with neighbors. many republicans stood by alito today. any concern about there being a flag there? >> people who are judges on the supreme court have personal lives, they have families, and i don't think they are responsible over everything their families
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do or say. >> reporter: and the g.o.p. is expected to block any efforts by democrats to pass new ethics rules for the high court, which has a code, but polices itself. >> there is literally no place else in the federal government in which an allegation against an official is raised, and there is not even fact-finding done. >> reporter: new polling shows public approval of the court has plummeted in just the last four years. >> i think, at the very least, we need more answers to questions about the second flag and about his involvement and about whether he tried to distance himself from it because a flag outside of his house reasonably appears to represent his own views of the merits of the case. >> reporter: justice alito did not respond to our request for comment about the flight controversies, but norah, he and the rest of the court are set to rule on two january 6th, 2020, election cases in a matter of weeks, if not the coming days, norah. >> norah: scott macfarlane, thank you. the good news, it probably won't cost you more to travel this holiday weekend, but it's a different story when you get
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there. we'll explain. and later, "eye on america," young adults are less byob and more be why oc -- bring your own cannabis. ♪ ♪ can't filter out the real you. so go ahead, live unfiltered with the one and only sotyktu, a once-daily pill for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, and the chance at clear or almost clear skin. it's like the feeling of finding you're so ready for your close-up. or finding you don't have to hide your skin just your background. once-daily sotyktu was proven better, getting more people clearer skin than the leading pill. don't take if you're allergic to sotyktu; serious reactions can occur. sotyktu can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections, cancers including lymphoma, muscle problems, and changes in certain labs have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection, liver or kidney problems, high triglycerides, or had a vaccine or plan to. sotyktu is a tyk2 inhibitor. tyk2 is part of the jak family. it's not known if sotyktu has the same risks
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memorial day get away with her grandson. beating the rush scored her a deal on an oceanfront virginia beach hotel. does it feel like it is mark spencer to go places right now? >> it is. but yeah, you have to just keep hoping that things will change and still enjoy yourself as you can. >> reporter: compared to memorial day 2023, the overall cost of travel is actually down slightly. hot hotel prices edged lower. airfare defended by nearly 6%, d rental car costs slowed by 10%. but vacationing in 2024 still cost you 15% more than pre-pandemic. and this year, airlines raised checked bag fees ahead of the summer rush. sally french tracks vacation inflation for nerdwallet. >> that could be $5 and then multiply that by two for your round trip and multiply that by four for your family of four and you are seeing that the cost of travel actually does feel like it is going up. >> reporter: doing things on vacation is more expensive this year, and eating out ■will takea
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bite out of your wallet come up more than 4%, nearly 30% higher than 2019. >> a lot of people won't budget restaurant prices when they are making that initial vacation plan peer their budgeting out the price of their hotel and their airfare. >> reporter: for the 38.4 million americans expected to drive this memorial day, gas prices are only slightly higher than a year ago. most of the summer this year could be very close to last year. prices well below their records that we saw in 2022 and not a bad time for americans to hit the road. >> reporter: you can often save money by being flexible when and where you travel. traveling on off-peak days. we saved hundreds of dollars coming to virginia beach instead of miami beach, experts say don't say those travel points. use them as you get them to cut your costs because they do not hold their value over time, norah. >> norah: good information. the beach looks nice. kris van cleave, thank you. "eye on america" is next, with the generational shift when it comes to marijuana use in the u.s. ♪ ♪
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>> norah: with recreational marijuana now legally and 24 states, the u.s. drug enforcement administration is moving to reclassify the drug to a less dangerous category under the controlled substances act. and for the first time a new survey shows that daily marijuana users now outnumber daily drinkers. in tonight's "eye on america," nikki battiste reports that it is a development driven by ge gen z. >> used incessantly. >> reporter: behind this cloud of marijuana smoke is a new kind of office for gen zers. >> here we smoke because it enhances our work. that is our secret sauce. >> reporter: a shared work space in new york city where, for as little as $15, you can toke while you type. this downtown loft space is capitalizing on a trend among today's young workers. forget after work happy hour at a favorite watering hole. weed is the new way to go. >> i think this is the mecca of
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the cannabis industry. >> reporter: matthew everett chemical to mold off ski, and ellis sudak, all in their mid-20s, i like the people of their age who say they prepare prefer marijuana to alcoholic according to a cannabis research firm. >> there is a limitless possibility for flavors, and i found, like, hey, i don't have a hangover the next day, too. >> reporter: are any of you big cocktail drinkers? >> i was, yeah. >> reporter: marijuana sales among gen z women in particular have more than doubled since the pandemic lockdown in 2020. at work and roll, alcohol is prohibited, but it is perfectly fine to bring your own cannabis, or even have it delivered. cannabis to your door? >> cannabis to your door your door. >> reporter: no stigma, no criminality, no problem. >> it's alarming. >> reporter: the alarm, says addiction psychiatrist colin reiff, comes from the scientific evidence. one recent study associates
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schizophrenia with cannabis use among young men at an age when their brain are still maturing. >> cannot know my cannabis should be around 33 years old. outside the window developing schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and a lot of other -- certainly after 26, the prefrontal cortex is done developing. >> reporter: do patients come in and say i'm smoking pot because it is better for me that alcohol? >> yeah. people come in and tell me, cannabis is healthy, i can use it beer or people say, hey, can. it means it is used as medicine by those people. >> reporter: it is still a drug. >> it it is still a drug. >> reporter: potency is the key. according to the latest figures the average level of thc -- that is the main ingredient in marijuana that triggers a high -- jumped from 4% in 1995 to more than 15% in 2021. a four fold increase. but for these friends, those numbers don't tell the whole story. >> over time as i started educating my parents more, they started to understand that
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cannabis was less destructive to my lifestyle than alcohol. and i even got them to try cannabis. >> reporter: and how did that go? >> they enjoyed it. my mom, she had cancer, and it helped alleviate some of her symptoms, and for my dad's part, he thought it was pretty fun. [laughs] >> reporter: do you ever miss alcohol? >> i never thought about it. being here, honestly. >> i don't miss it. >> reporter: this next generation is new meaning to the phrase "high and dry." for "eye on america," i'm nikki battiste in new york city. >> norah: coming up, a united airlines pilot flies off into retirement after a trailblazing career in the sky. that's next. so this is better. even this. dupixent is an add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma that's not for sudden breathing problems. dupixent can cause allergic reactions that can be severe. tell your doctor right away if you have rash, chest pain, worsening shortness of breath, tingling or numbness in your limbs. tell your doctor about new or worsening
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just one aleve. 12 hours of uninterrupted pain relief. aleve. who do you take it for? ...and for fast topical pain relief,try alevex. >> norah: finally, tonight's "heart of america." meet captain theresa claiborne from emporia, virginia. she is retiring after completing her final flight today from lisbon, portugal, to newark, new jersey, marking 34 years at united airlines with a full water cannon salute. clyburn was the first black woman pilot in the u.s. air force and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1981 and her career service did not end there. she is also the president of sisters of the skies, a nonprofit that mentors young women of color looking to become pilots peered captain claiborne
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had this advice for future pilots. >> number one, you have to know how to do your job. and that's what i tell people. don't look for any handouts. just go in there and do it. you know, you work, work, work, work, work, work, but then at the end of the rainbow, there is a lot of color. >> norah: well, congratulations to captain theresa claiborne. she is tonight's "heart of america." and that's tonight's >> announcer: his girlfriend financed his dreams. >> judge judy: it would be nice to have a camper. >> yeah. >> judge judy: so she got one, and it's on your property. >> yep. >> judge judy: the next thing that was purchased was an atv. >> announcer: but their breakup became her nightmare. >> judge judy: "she's just bitter that she no longer has a boy toy. i owe her nothing." if i had to put a picture in the dictionary next to what a boy toy looked like... >> announcer: "judge judy." you are about to enter the courtroom of you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin.
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captions paid for by cbs television distribution cynthia busch is suing her ex-boyfriend, matthew humphrey, for a camper and atv, and a trip to the ozarks. >> byrd: order! all rise! this is case number 309 on the calendar in the matter of busch vs. humphrey. parties have been sworn in. you may be seated. >> judge judy: mr. humphrey, i think i'm going to start with you, sir. you and the plaintiff were sort of friends for a while, dated for a while, and then lost touch with each other. and then, sort of, according to what i read, you reconnected at some point. when was that? >> well, we've only known each other for about two years, and we saw each other for six, eight months. >> judge judy: and then did you stop seeing each other? >> yes. >> judge judy: and then did you start seeing her again? >> maybe a couple times. >> judge judy: well, i'm talking about the time that you got the camper and the atv. that was later. >> towards the end, yes. >> judge judy: towards the end of what? >> our relationship.

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