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tv   CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell  CBS  May 27, 2024 3:30pm-4:01pm PDT

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♪ ♪ >> tonight, millions of americans are recovering from severe storms and tornadoes. >> i knew something was bad. we heard at the last couple of minutes. devastating. >> and the threat is not over yet. what is ahead for the traveling home on this memorial day? >> nothing is going on today with the weather. we are really upset about it.
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>> "cbs evening news" starts now. ♪ ♪ >> tonight, 62 million americans are under threat of severe weather from alabama to new york. good evening and thank you for being with us on this memorial day. i am maurice dubois in for norah o'donnell. tonight, storms a part of the same system that brought deadly tornadoes to the central u.s. this weekend. this is valley view, texas, where tornadoes bulldozed through, turning homes into unrecognizable piles of lumber and metal. at least 23 people have been killed, including two children, in texas, arkansas, oklahoma, kentucky, and virginia. the force of the winds clear from the sheer scale of the damage tonight. now that system is drenching parts of the northeast, slowing down returning travelers, more than 5,000 flights have been delayed, and major hubs like atlanta, chicago, new york, with alerts posted up and down the east coast. cbs's meg oliver starts us off with more on these catastrophic
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storms. >> reporter: shattered homes and every litter the landscape across valley view, texas, afteo killed seven people, including two children, in cook county. others barely survived. >> the loudest thing i ever heard. never heard anything like that before. >> reporter: a dark, terrifying scene as an ef2 tornado with 135-mile-per-hour winds ripped through this truck stop. hugo parra shouted for everyone to take shelter in the bathroom. mangled metal is all that is left. today, cbs, cbs's dave malkoff spoke with hugo parra who witnesses say saved more than 10 lives. >> i said, let's go to the restrooms. go, go, go! everybody, go to the restrooms. >> i can't do anything! >> cover your head. >> reporter: asked that same tornado hit, best friends velenia gill and brenda danced out they were driving away from
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the storm, but instead, drove right into it. >> i feel for everybody else that is injured and don't have homes or clothes. >> reporter: the powerful series of storms rolled through seven southern states. packing dangerous winds and hail in some parts, responding more than 40 reported tornadoes that killed at least 21 people. >> i would say that i am 100% sure it is going to be delayed. >> reporter: there severe storms are moving here in the northeast. frustration brewed as hundreds of flights canceled and delayed at major airports, including boston, new york, and new jersey. >> trying to find any other flight for today, they said, no, nothing is going out today because of the weather. >> reporter: as millions of people all try to get home tonight, the airports seeing the most delays and cancellations, include atlanta, new york, and here at newark with more than
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100 flights delayed, close to two hours. maurice? >> maurice: oh, boy. okay, meg oliver in new jersey, thank you. there is an more severe weather tonight into tomorrow. let's bring a meteorologist mike bettes from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, mike. >> reporter: maurice come a good weekend. a weekend full of tornadoes and severe storms, that continues, a lot of storms right through the night, even early morning hours. most of that clears by midmorning tomorrow. down into the south including in texas, some discreet super cells. what we are watching four, 75-mile-per-hour winds, the possibility of some incredibly large hail with these norms and can't rule out tornadoes, right through the heart of texas, going to be the target for those of storms. yes, dallas to san antonio and houston all get hit. because there is so much rain in our forecast and isolated pockets, 305 inches of rain, extending all the way through the plains, we could see some flooding, maurice, that asked, could extend all the way through the end of the week. >> maurice: mike bettes,
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thank you. it's really prime minister benjamin netanyahu tonight calling a fiery air strike on a tent camp in rafah a tragic mistake. at least 45 people are dead. hundreds more wounded in that camp for displaced palestinians. those numbers are only increased the international condemnation of israel. cbs's imtiaz tyab is in east jerusalem with the disturbing images of the aftermath. >> reporter: following the series of air strikes by israeli warplanes, fire through the makeshift encampment in rafah tel al sultan area and what is being described as the tent massacre. the horrifying aftermath defies belief. bodies burnt beyond recognition. a man holding the body of a child beheaded from the force of the blast. as first responders rushed to treat those who were sheltering in what was a designated safe zone for civilians. by morning, a "cbs news" team had made it to the western rafah
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neighborhood were survivors, mainly families, gathered in shock at what happened. and as children dug through the scorched remains of the food distribution tent, trying to salvage whatever they could with their bare hands. israel insists it targeted a hamas compound in which "significant hamas terrorists were operating." but at a nearby hospital, one of the few still functioning in gaza, the vast majority of the dead and wounded were children. parents inconsolable with grief. they burned the people. they burned them, he says. they burned the whole neighborhood! just days ago, the yuan's top court ordered israel to halt its offensive in rafah to protect the huge number of civilians. but since then, the israeli military has only intensified its attacks. the air strikes on the safe zone came just hours after hamas launched eight rockets from gaza
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toward tel aviv, the first since january. most were intercepted by the iron dome missile defense system, and there were no immediate reports of casualties or major damage. while for months now, president biden has warned a major israeli offensive there would be a "red line," even pausing a shipment of bombs to israel, over concerns for the safety of civilians. >> maurice: imtiaz tyab in east jerusalem tonight. thank you. police and los angeles are searching for the gunman who shot and killed a former tv soap actor. 37-year-old johnny wactor was best known for his role in "general hospital." family members say johnny wactor was killed early saturday when he approached three men who were trying to steal the catalytic converter from his car. they are a common target and thieves to sell them the precious metals inside. turning to the presidential election. tonight, we are a month away from the first debate, a head-to-head rematch between the current and former president. as donald trump returns to manhattan courtroom tomorrow for
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so-called hush money trial. cbs's robert costa what they look ahead. >> reporter: donald trump spent memorial day weekend campaigning. >> going to be a great race. >> reporter: something he has little time to do during the past six weeks of his historic criminal trial. tuesday kicks off with closing arguments. jury instructions from the judge expected wednesday, followed by jury deliberations. a verdict could come as early as this week. >> closing arguments are the one time that a lawyer is allowed to truly persuade a jury, to be theatrical, if they are theatrical, but to be authentic. >> reporter: the prosecution could remind jurors of stormy daniels' testimony about the alleged sexual encounter with trump and is expected to point a former fixer michael cohen's testimony that trump was directly involved in hush money payments to daniels. trump's lawyers meanwhile will argue michael cohen's word cannot be trusted, and to avoid
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conviction, they will need to persuade at least one juror that prosecutors have failed to prove trump's guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. the jury of seven men and five women, including two lawyers, will deliberate in secret, and there is no time limit. trump is charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records related to the daniels payments, and jurors will need to evaluate each count. trump's attempts to win over libertarian voters at their convention saturday was met by heckles and loud boos. >> the libertarian party should nominate trump for president of the united states. [boos] >> reporter: he fired back at the raucous crowd. >> only do that if you want to win -- if you want to lose, don't do that. keep getting your 3% every four years. >> reporter: 's forces close to president biden tell me he is watching all of this and will
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soon speak out more about trump's character, linking that issue to his broader argument that trump is a threat to american democracy. maurice? >> maurice: robert costa, thank you. today, the nation paused to honor the service members who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. ♪ ♪ biden took part in the solemn memorial day tradition at arlington national cemetery, laying a wreath at the tomb of the unknown soldier. the president said freedom is never guaranteed, and every generation has to fight for it and defend it. tonight, the sports world is remembering basketball hall of famer bill walton, the ttwo time nba champion died tody at 71 after a long battle with cancer. cbs's elise preston on one of the most colorful characters in the game on and off the court. >> reporter: everything about
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bill walton was outsized, from his hall of fame career... >> walton, nice move. >> reporter: to his over-the-top personality. for decades, he treated basketball fans to colorful, quirky commentary. >> this could be eaten, this could be burned as fuel. >> reporter: but on the court, it was his dominant play that did all the talking, winning two national championships at ucla for legendary coach john wooden, and then two nba titles with the portland trail blazers and boston celtics. walton always embraced the counterculture, arrested as a ucla student opposing the war in vietnam, and advocating for marijuana before it became legal. tributes have poured in from some of the game's greatest who see walton as one of the best to ever play. his enthusiasm always infe infectious. >> it doesn't get any better than this! >> reporter: bill walton lived his entire life loud and proud.
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elise preston, cbs news, los angeles. >> maurice: an american original. if you are beach bound this summer, heads up before you grab your sunscreen. why sunblock sold here in the u.s. may not be the most effective. and later, "eye on america" with a group of veterans fighting for medical benefits over a top-secret mission from the cold war. ♪ ♪ love. some things should stand the test of time. long lasting eylea hd could significantly improve your vision and can help you go up to 4 months between treatments. if you have an eye infection, eye pain or redness, or allergies to eylea hd, don't use. eye injections like eyla hd may cause eye infection, separation of the retina, or rare but severe swelling of blood vessels in the eye. an increase in eye pressure has been seen. there's an uncommon risk of heart attack
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good is your sunscreen? a law from nearly a century ago may be blocking the best lotions from your beach bag. it is tonight's "health watch." cbs's manuel bojorquez takes a look at how americans unlock stacks up. >> reporter: alongside sunny miami beach, people lather up, largely unaware that american selection of sunscreen is limited compared to other parts of the world. >> i'm not aware of that. we should be able to have every option. >> reporter: at issue, a 1938 u.s. law that classifies sunscreen as a drug and requires animal testing, rather than as a cosmetic like parts of europe and asia do. that keeps foreign brands off u.s. shelves and limits sunscreen makers. the environmental working group says on average the u.s. sunscreens don't protect as from uva raise, which can cause skin cancer. one of its studies found only 35% of the u.s. sunscreens tested were strong enough to meet e.u. standards. >> the reason all of this is important is because of skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in this country.
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>> almost everyone has been affected by skin cancer. one in five americans has skin cancer. the >> reporter: doctor robert kirsner has a dumb act on mike is a dermatologist would sell bonds sylvester comprehensive cancer center at the university of miami. >> we really would like to get some of those europeans on screens to the u.s. which will give us greater opportunity and options our patients. >> in a statement to cbs news, the says it must balance the health benefits to access to a broader range of sunscreen active ingredients across importance that the safety is safe for regular lifelong use. regardless of what is available now, experts say the important thing is to use it. doctor robert kirsner says that sunscreens currently allowed to the united states are still considered to be safe and effective, as long as they are used properly. in the meantime, there is a bipartisan bill in the house that would require the fda to
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allow nonanimal testing for sunscreens. maurice? >> maurice: okay, manuel bojorquez on the beach in fort lauderdale. you've heard of area 51. but area 52, a group of veterans say they work there, on a top-secret mission decades ago, and now they are being denied their medical benefits. "eye on america" is next. ♪ ♪ ntyvio, offering two maintenance options, including the entyvio pen. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. pml, a rare, potentially fatal brain infection cannot be ruled out. tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms, sores, or are prone to infections. liver problems can occur. entyvio. relief. remission. for real. ♪ entyvio, entyvio, entyvio ♪ no two bodies are the same. some pads, never got that message. but, always flexfoam did! it protects against different flows for up to zero leaks. and it flexes to fit all bodies, for up to zero feel. feel it yourself with always flexfoam.
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♪ ♪ >> maurice: as we honor our fallen troops on this memorial day, we are also focusing on a group of veterans who say they cannot get there desperately needed medical benefits. the vets say they were exposed to radiation during a top-secret cold war mission, so secret the military still will not acknowledge it. dave savini with cbs news chicago on today's "eye on america." >> reporter: it was the mid-1980s. mark ely was in his 20s, a physically fit air force technician, inspecting secretly obtained soviet fighter jets. their engines roaring inside hidden hangers, called hush
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houses. >> when you were at that moment, everything is shaking, your hands are shaking, eyes are shaking, your brain is shaking. >> reporter: the work was part of a classified mission in the nevada desert at the tonnopah test range, sometimes referred to as area 52. the mission was so under wraps, ely had to sign this nondisclosure agreement. >> upholding the national interest was more important than my own life. >> reporter: that is not just talk. >> the loss of my health. >> reporter: ely, now 63 and living in naperville, illinois, is confronting life-threatening consequences. >> it's guard my lungs and cysts on my liver. >> reporter: from the radiation, he says, he was exposed to. >> it's are to having tumors in my body, the lining in my was shed. >> reporter: for decades, the u.s. government conducted nuclear bombs near area 52. according to an estimate from
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1975, those tests scattered toxic and radioactive materials nearby. >> someone made a decision that you are lies and the risk was worth it for the country. >> yes. >> reporter: all of these years later, his service records include many assignments, but not to the mission inside tonopah test range, which means he can't prove he was ever th there. >> coverup? >> right. that's right. there is this slogan people say, deny, deny, until you die. kind of true here. >> and the only reason why it is becoming known now is because of all the illnesses. >> it was because of all the illnesses. >> reporter: dave crete says he worked at the same side as a military police officer. he has breathing issues, including chronic bronchitis, and even had to have a tumor removed from his back. he spent the last eight years tracking down hundreds of other veterans, who worked where he did. >> so you have seen
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bladder cancer, liver cancer, colon cancer, kidney cancer, tumors, lymphomas, blood diseases. >> all kinds of cancers. >> reporter: the federal government's 1975 environmental assessment acknowledged toxic chemicals in the area, but said stopping work ran against the national interest, and the costs are small and reasonable for the benefits received. >> what does it do to you to see all these other men and women suffering? >> how many people? >> reporter: $27.5 billion worth of other federal assistant has helped other government workers, mainly employees of the department of energy. who were stationed in the same area, and are now sick. but these benefits don't apply to air force veterans, like crete and ely. >> it makes me incredibly mad and it hurts me too. they are supposed to have my back. i had there is. and i want them to have mine.
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>> reporter: a betrayal, he says, by the very government he served. for "eye on america," i am dave savini in chicago. >> maurice: we contacted the department of defense for comment. it would only comment and confirm that crete and ely served in the military but would not say where. it just a moment here, a 15-year-old mission to honor american troops who made the ultimate sacrifice. that's next. >> announcer: this portion of the "cbs evening news" is sponsored by. discover, preserve, share. ♪ ♪ le? was that your great aunt, keeping armies alive? drafting the plans. taking the pictures. was it your family members who flew? who fixed. who fought. who rose to the occasion. when the world needed them the most. discover, preserve, and share the stories of your family's heroes. save on ancestry subscriptions
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so clearly you. sotyktu. >> maurice: finally here tonight's "heart of america." but 15-year-old connor nicol on a personal mission to create a dog tag for every american service member who made the ultimate sacrifice, working from national archives information, he packages each tag with additional details, before wheeling around the country willing to anyone to adopt the tag and honor their memory. so far, he has created more than 80,000 of them. after making a dog tag for every soldier who died in the korean war, he is now working to remember those killed in vietnam, including his own great uncle. connor comes from a military family. his father is an active duty marine and his mom a navy
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veteran who helped inspire the project. >> every single time my dad was deployed, my mom had a dog tag by her bed and every single night, she would say his name and have him and her thoughts and prayers. i believe each individual person should be remembered for >> maurice: tonight's "heart of america." job well done but not finished yet. that is tonight's "cbs evening news." for norah o'donnell, i am maurice dubois. have a great nig and a great we >> judge judy: this is one of your two dogs. what's that box? >> that's my dog that's deceased. >> announcer: she puts the blame on the neighbor's pit bulls. >> you could tell that they came through our fence. >> judge judy: why didn't you fix the fence? >> because it wasn't my responsibility. >> judge judy: this is your fence. >> announcer: did bad decisions doom her pet? >> judge judy: knowing what you knew, why in the world would you leave your dogs out for the day, unsupervised? not smart. >> announcer: "judge judy." you are about to enter the courtroom of you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. captions paid for by cbs television distribution
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rickesha jones and her mother, yvonne sherrod, are suing neighbor shuree nunez-trammel and shuree's landlord, son nguyen, for vet bills after shuree's pit bull got into their yard and attacked their dogs. >> byrd: order! all rise! this is case number 101 on the calendar in the matter of jones/sherrod vs. nunez-trammel/nguyen. >> judge judy: thank you. >> byrd: parties have been sworn in. you may be seated. ladies, have a seat. >> judge judy: who's going to speak for the two of you? your first name is? >> rickesha. >> judge judy: rickesha, this is one of your two dogs. >> correct. >> judge judy: what's that box? >> that's my dog that's deceased. >> judge judy: was that a result of this incident? >> yes. >> judge judy: the defendants are your neighbors. and you and your mother were going out to a family event on may what? >> 5th. >> judge judy: and your other dog was also a small dog, like this one. >> correct.

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