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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  June 6, 2024 3:12am-4:31am PDT

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>> i've got a good canopy. easy. brace for impact. right. that was a good landing. >> reporter: my first ever jump out of the way. the next few landings were not as smooth. i was starting to understand the challenges of hitting a drop zone, and nobody is shooting at me. i got a gust, and the next thing i know i'm on the playground. >> reporter: finally, jump five. i needed this to earn my wings. >> what the -- 4,000, check canopy. nailed it! i nailed it! finally. >> reporter: qualified to make the jump into normandy itself. >> fall off. >> reporter: when it's when you get suited up like this that you start to imagine what it must
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have been like for the servicemen, the soldiers that day, jumping into the unknown. the vast majority of those taking part in this jump are u.s. militar veterans, including paratroopers from the 82nd and 101s airborne divisions. more than 13,000 of their own forces spearheaded that initial d-day assault. we boarded pegasus. >> you in. >> reporter: one of three c-47s that will drop us into france. airfields like this across england would have been jam-packed that night. as we make our journey due south, we're mentally running through the same drills those soldiers would have. the big difference here is some of these guys are just 19, 20 years old, and they're carrying 60 to 70 pounds of heavy equipment with them. they're landing in the dark. their aircraft is coming under fire, and so are they. as we crossed the english channel into france, the only sound on board was the roar of the engines.
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until it was go time. our aircraft comes into view, leading the way in the skies, the heart of the d-day drop zones. one by one, we followed in their footsteps. exiting the c-47 was much more violent than the small plane i had tried on. >> 2,000, 3,000. >> reporter: grateful to see an open parachute. >> got to go toward the t. where are these guys going? >> reporter: grateful for the opportunity to take part. okay. i'm parachuting into france. grateful to those who gave their lives in the name of liberating this hallowed ground. >> okay. not too fast, not too fast! >> reporter: finally grateful for a safe landing. >> i did it. >> reporter: even if it wasn't exactly textbook. >> i just landed in france. that was the moment of a
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lifetime, to having the privilege of landing here in normandy. as you can see, the dakotas overhead, my fellow parachuters coming in. >> reporter: we were all able to walk away. not everybody walked away 80 years ago. it is here where they fell and here where they will always be remembered. it took three days of heavy fighting to take over that territory, partly because so many troops landed off target. the american cemetery behind mecon tains the graves of 9,388 military dead, most of whom lost their lives in the d-day landings in the operations that followed. >> that was charlie d'agata in france. cbs news will bring you full coverage of the festivities marking this anniversary. you're watching "cbs news roundup."
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agency. the 13-year army veteran tells cbs' jim axelrod why he feels he can no longer serve. >> reporter: israel's response to october 7th troubled former army major harrison mann from the start. >> they were dropping 6,000 bombs a day. they were burning through munitions, exhausting their supply. you know, it was very easy to link our support, which i was part of, to the killing in gaza. >> reporter: what bothered this intelligence officer specializing in the middle east the most, his view that the israelis were targeting palestinian civilians indiscriminately, and that u.s. weapons made it possible. were the israelis using american weapons against civilians in gaza? >> i can say almost certainly, yes. but were they doing so intentionally? >> i don't know how you kill 35,000 civilians by accident. >> reporter: israel insists it's doing its best to limit civilian
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casualties, and that hamas uses civilians as human shields. but that wasn't enough. weeks later, mann resigned, later explaining in a letter. >> at some point, whatever the justification, you're either advancing a policy that enables the mass starvation of children or you're not. >> reporter: you felt your work was directly connected to starving children? >> yes. there is going to be times when there is members that have different views. it's certainly your right to get out and i'll leave it at that. >> i decide id would resign. >> reporter: more than a half dozen government officials have publicly resigned to protest u.s. support for israel's war. man is the first from the military, the first from the intelligence community, and the first who is jewish. >> i think it's important to understand that this is from a security perspective. israel is not under existential threat. >> reporter: and what do you say to american jews who would say
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to you what are you talking about? if you are somebody who is really motivated to protect jewish life, you should be fighting for them to conduct it in a way that does not turn basically the whole world against them. >> reporter: the grandson of jews who fled the antisemitism of eastern europe knows his stance will create some harsh blowback. >> i didn't feel i can i had that much of a choice. >> reporter: but he feels the only way to influence u.s. only way to influence u.s. policy is to did you know... 80% of women are struggling with hair damage? just like i was. dryness and frizz could be damaged hair that can't retain moisture. new pantene miracle rescue deep conditioner, with first-of-its-kind melting pro-v pearls... locks in moisture to repair 6 months of damage in one wash, without weigh down. guaranteed or your money back! for resilient, healthy-looking hair... if you know, you know it's pantene.
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there is a busy emergency room in florida that's caring for some of the state's most vulnerable residents. cristian benavides has more. >> we really need to make sure he can paddle appropriately with both feet. >> reporter: at the pelican harbor sea bird station in miami, renata schneider is the emergency veterinarian on duty. >> we're doing surgeries. we're doing ekg monitoring on our patients. we're using appropriate pain medications. we're cautiously using antibiotics. . >> reporter: founded in 1980, the seaboard station functions as an e.r. for local wildlife. >> is it an injured animal? >> reporter: lately, it's gotten busier. >> we had our highest numbers in 2020, 2021. this year has been a very busy year. i don't know if we're going to break those numbers. >> reporter: staff here says south florida has an invasive species problem, a growing human
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population, that presents challenges to marine animals. costa is in charge of marine rehabilitation. she has worked here 12 years. >> with more people, more buildings going on, we see a lot more hit by cars or birds flying into windows or buildings. >> reporter: then there is the sea bird was fishhook line injuries or who have swallowed plastic waste. the pelicans in this case have life altering injuries, including this guy, that makes them ineligible for release. so the harbor station cares for them. hey, buddy. >> reporter: they become permanent residents at the wildlife center, so-called ambassadors, a public face to the sea bird station during what schneider says is a critical time. >> south florida is in trouble right now. we keep building. we keep destroying habitat. without our work, how are these pelicans and gulls supposed to continue to thrive? >> reporter: for most of the birds that get treated, this is the goal. after 55 days of treatment for botulism and an eye infection,
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this brown pelican was successfully released back into the wild. >> some people will make the argument well, they would just die and leave them be in the wild. however, we don't buy into that. most of the injuries that we see are caused by us. we have to correct the balance. >> reporter: a balancing act to help us co- ist
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climate change is confusing the biological clocks of many animals and insects, including those noisy cicadas. ben tracy has more. >> there is nothing like it. it's just wow, is this what we're watching in front of our eyes? >> reporter: christy shirley can't get enough of the sudden cicada invasion near her home in southern illinois. thank god we kind of know what's going on here, because if we really didn't know what this was all about, this would be scary. >> oh, yes. someone would think that zombies would be next. >> reporter: the arrival of
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these rather unique looking bugs that crawl out of the ground and up into the trees was quite predictable. periodical cicadas have emerged like clockwork every 13 or 17 years, depending on their brood. it's been about as easy as astronomers predicting a solar eclipse. >> now we're seeing periodical cicadas coming out of the ground predicted by entomologists. at a time when people have lost faith in science, this shows that science works and we get it right. >> reporter: biologist gene kritsky has been studying cicadas for decades, but he says climate change may be changing the cicadas timing. they count years throug the fluid flow in tree roots. when their year to emerge to arise, they stay until the ground reaches 64 degrees. but on our warming planet, precipitation changes. spring is arriving earlier, and
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so are the cicadas, showing up in georgia last month nearly two weeks ahead of schedule. do i have a cicada on my back? >> yes, you do. oh, it was a big run. >> reporter: kritsky found the same thing happening around cincinnati. >> before 1940, the average date was the 18th of may. in 2021, they emerged 11 days, almost two weeks earlier. this is true for baltimore, for washington, for philadelphia, for indianapolis. zones are moving north, and the cicadas are responding. >> reporter: in 2017, a brood of 17-year cicada arrived years ahead of schedule, making these normally punctual insects a bit more unpredictable. but once they do appear, cicadas live for just a few weeks, and have only one thing on their little minds, making sure their species survives. so it sounds kind of crass, but this is just kind of one big sex party. these things are here for that.
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>> oh, yes. it's a giant cicadas singles bar. >> that's a nicer way of saying it. >> reporter: i'm ben tracy in charleston, illinois. and that's the "cbs news roundup." reporting from new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. hello and thank you so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." terror alert in france as one suspect is arrested coinciding with president biden's visit. sensational new details from witnesses from hunter biden's drug use and alleged behavior
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during testimony in his criminal trial. and an attack on the u.s. emassy in beirut heightens fears of a wider war in the middle east. police in france have arrested a russian-ukrainian citizen and suspected terrorist who was reportedly badly burned after an explosion in his hotel room near paris' charles de gaulle airport. french investigators are now trying to determine if he was part of a wider terror plot. this comes during president biden's trip to commemorate the d-day landings in normandy. cbs' ed o'keefe is traveling with the president. >> reporter: word of this incident comes at the start of president biden's five-day visit to france. it is having no effect on his movements and the fbi is monitoring the situation. reports say the 26-year-old unnamed suspect was involved in an explosion monday afternoon at a hotel near the charles de gaulle airport outside paris. french prosecutors have opened an investigation into the suspect, who is originally from
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the russian-occupied donbas region of ukraine. reports say the suspect is recovering from injuries sustained in the blast and is cooperating with police. french media reports guns and false passports were also found. the incident comes ahead of d-day commemoration events, a major speech by the president at normandy, a military parade in the streets of paris on saturday, and a little more than a month before the summer olympics begin. ed o'keefe, cbs news, paris. turning now to the trial of hunter biden as jurors heard vivid and salacious details on wednesday about his addiction and alleged behavior. this all took place prosecutors say during a period when president biden's only son is accused of illegally buying a firearm. he is facing three criminal charges. cbs' scott macfarlane was inside the courtroom for the second day of testimony. >> reporter: first lady jill biden spent a third day at the courthouse, again, seated behind hunter biden as prosecutors tried to prove he illegally
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purchased this colt .38 handgun while using drugs in late 2018, lying on the application form. they called two women formerly in his life to the stand to help make their case. his ex-wife kathleen buhle testified she found a crack pipe at their washington, d.c. home in 2015, was rejected when she urged him to go to rehab, and would scour his car to make sure their kids didn't find drugs. but under cross-examination, hunter biden's attorney, abbe lowell got buhle to admit she never actually saw hunter biden do drugs. >> the key evidence is going to be provided by people intimately close to hunter biden, ex-wife, ex-girlfriends and the like. i can only imagine this is probably excruciatingly painful for hunter biden, among other people, to sit in court and hear this. >> reporter: the former girlfriend zoe kestan who dated him for much of 2018 testified hunter biden frequently bought and used crack, at times using a chopstick to clean out his crack
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pipe. >> i went one time for 13 days without sleeping. and smoking crack and drinking vodka exclusively. >> reporter: kestan said the president's son was using drugs as late as 2018, weeks before he bought the gun, and again weeks later in 2018. prosecutors showed the jury a series of photo of drugs reportedly used by hunter biden and image of a video of a shirtless biden allegedly with drug person paraphernalia. >> it doesn't give much room for the defense to argue that he wasn't at some point in time addicted. >> reporter: still on the witness list is hallie biden, beau biden's widow, a woman who hunter had a romantic relationship with at the time of the gun purchase. hunter biden has pleaded not guilty to all three felony charges. scott macfarlane, cbs news, wilmington, delaware. israel's military says it made a deadly strike on a u.n.
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school building in gaza on thursday morning but claims the building was the site of a hamas compound. the hamas media office says at least 39 people were killed in the strike and dozens wounded. this comes as u.s. embassies across the middle east remain on high alert following an attack on wednesday morning outside the u.s. embassy in beirut. a suspected isis gunman was shot by security forces and arrested. no americans were hurt, but it comes as tensions rise along the israel-lebanon border, increasing the threat of a widening war. more now on this from cbs' imtiaz tyab in israel, where he was roughed up while covering a demonstration in jerusalem. >> reporter: this cell phone video captured what appears to be the shooter as he exchanged fire with the lebanese army outside the u.s. embassy. the attacker a syrian national was shot and has been hospitalized as investigators continue to search for a motive.
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the incident comes amid heightened tensions between israel and lebanon's powerful iran-backed hezbollah movement, who have been trading cross-border fire since the war in gaza began. israel's prime minister warned of a very strong action in the north with fears only growing israel could engage in a wider war with hezbollah. tens of thousands of israelis marched through the old city for jerusalem day, an annual celebration of what israel calls the reunification of east and west jerusalem following the 1967 arab-israeli war. what makes this part of the march so controversial is the muslim quarter of east jerusalem, and it's seen as a real provocation to march through here like this. as the groups marched, palestinians and journalists were attacked. and as some chanted "death to arabs," they tried to block our
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cameras from filming. >> i'm trying to do my job. >> reporter: then kicked and shoved us as we were forced to leave by police. and cbs news has learned the white house's top middle east adviser has been sent to egypt and the head of the cia to qatar as part of the attempts to push for breakthrough on the israeli plan outlined by president biden to end the war in gaza and see the hostages released. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, tel aviv. severe weather and a flash tornado are now being blamed for the death of a 2-year-old child in a suburban detroit city of livonia. alongside the boy, his mother was critically injured. this according to rescue workers when a tree fell on their home wednesday afternoon. a 2-month-old was also inside the home when this happened, but is expected to be okay. and take a look at this video inside a tornado that ripped through montgomery county, maryland. officials say the violent tornado toppled a tree on to a
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house, trapping five people inside. rescuers say at least two other buildings collapsed in that storm on wednesday afternoon. don't go away. plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after the break. after cooking a delicious knorr chicken cheddar broccoli recipe you will want to close your delivery apps. because nothing beats a perfect combo of sweet tomatoes, and smooth silky zucchini. make your own knorr taste combo. it's not fast food, but it's so good.
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul. the united states has more senior citizens than ever before. nearly 56 million, according to the last census, and many will end up spending time in a nursing home. a growing number of deep-pocketed investors from real estate companies to private equity firms are now taking over nursing homes. in tonight's eye on america, lisa ling looks into whether these firms are putting profits
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over patients. >> that's where all the complications started, at oakland heights. >> reporter: oakland heights is the nursing home where 85-year-old ruby fraser spent a month after a fall sent her to the hospital in november 2022. her granddaughter myesha and daughter yolanda told us ruby struggled to get the attention of staff. >> my mom would push the button for help, and they wouldn't acknowledge her. >> reporter: how often was she telling you this? >> every time we went. >> all the time. >> reporter: myesha and yoland say they watched as ruby's condition quickly deteriorated until one visit when ruby, who was bed-bound, began gasping for air. >> i say, would you all please call. no. we're not going call. yes, you are. >> reporter: emergency room doctors diagnosed ruby with pneumonia and severe sepsis. she had also developed these bed sores on her heels, wounds the
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family says oakland heights staff hid from them. >> they weren't even turning her. it's like they didn't give a doggone. >> reporter: oakland heights is operated by aspen skilled health care, a for-profit chain of more than two dozen california nursing homes. our cbs news investigation found in 2022, aspen facilities moved more than $25 million, much of it medicare and medicaid reimbursements to companies related to aspen. >> nursing home ownership has become very complicated. >> reporter: last year, the biden administration forced individual nursing homes to disclose more information about their owners. but harvard professor david grabowski told us that still doesn't explain where tax ppaye money is flowing. >> there is no ability to peel that back with the federal data. basically, we need to know for every nursing home in the country how they're spending public dollars. >> reporter: research suggests within the nursing home industry extracting payment through inflated rents and management fees to related companies is
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widespread. so how did things change when aspen took over operations? >> for the most part, i would say the care became suboptimal. >> reporter: dr. takeshi is a private physician who sees some of his patients in this l.a. nursing home, which aspen took over from a nonprofit in 2016. >> just taking care of some basic needs, like for example taking care of the residents' dentures. the dentures were still caked with old food. >> i just feel like she suffered. >> reporter: myesha and yolanda told us ruby's wounds never healed. she died last year, five months after she left oakland heights. they've sued aspen, alleging the company knowingly and deliberately understaffed and unfunded oakland heights to maximize profits at the expense of patient care. >> reporter: if you had an opportunity to address the folks at aspen skilled health care, what would you say to them?
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>> well, if the shoe was on the other foot, if it was your loved one, and your loved one wasn't being treated correctly? >> reporter: aspen skilled health care declined to comment for this report. in a court filing, the company denied all of myesha and yolanda's allegations. an industry lobbying group said financial moves like the ones a spen made were common business practices to help streamline services and notes there have been thousands of closures, ownership changes, and bankruptcies in recent years. >> that was cbs news contributor lisa ling. you're watching "cbs news roundup." sfx: [birds chirping] for nourished, lightweight hair, the right ingredients make all the difference. new herbal essences sulfate free is now packed with plant-based ingredients your hair will love. like pure aloe. and camellia flower oil. and none of the things it won't. hair feels deeply nourished, soft and lightweight.
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gre gin greenwich village for "girls just want to have fun", the song that launched her career in 1983. a career that's carried her from pop stardom -- ♪ she bob ♪ >> reporter: to the broadway stage. she won a tony writing the score for "kinky boots" in 2013. >> i never wanted just a hit song. i wanted a song that meant something, like the songs that got me through, like the songs i used to chant walking along when i felt like oh my god, how am i going to live, why the hell was i born? >> reporter: those were hard questions for lauper. you learn in the new documentary, "let the canary sing" on paramount+, a division of our parent company. she grew up in a catholic family
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in queens, new york with her younger brother, fred, and older sister, ellen. you guys were really close? >> oh my god, i was so close to ellen. i would have been on the other side of her. my sister and i, we wrote songs together. she was my first writing partner. >> reporter: as kids, you had a really tough time with your stepfather. >> yeah. i think he had some serious mental issues. >> reporter: it made it really hard for you? >> oh, yeah, really bad. >> reporter: the worst came after ellen had moved out. your sister was away. you were home. >> and something happened, and i called my sister and told her about it. she said okay, just -- just come here now. don't stay there anymore. it's probably not safe. >> reporter: how old were you at this point? >> well, all the [ bleep ] went
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down when i was 12. but it really started at 8. and i'm not sure if it started at 4 1/2. i just found that music made it better. >> reporter: her mother was a music fan, and in 1964 -- >> this rock 'n roll group has taken over -- >> reporter: when the beatles came to america, she took cyndi to see them arrive. >> to see them drive by. >> reporter: did you see them? >> i would have seen them better if i didn't close my eyes and scream. ♪ ♪ i'm going to be strong ♪ >> reporter: lauper's strong voice got her noticed when she was fronting the band blue angel. she signed a solo deal, and the label brought her the song "girls just want to have fun" ♪ the phone rings in the middle of the night ♪ >> reporter: you said you didn't want to sing that song
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originally. >> well, it was written by a guy. it was like hey, deb, we're the fortunate ones because they just want to have fun. with who? me? >> reporter: and rick the producer. >> and rick kept saying yeah, but look what it could be. it could be an anthem for girls. when see said that, i started thinking. what can you do? ♪ that's all they really want ♪ >> reporter: she added reggae and motown influences. and decided to sing it really high. ♪ they just want to, they just want to ♪ >> reporter: and then all of the sudden the girls just want to have fun that everyone knows now was born. i've had some incredible moments in my life, areally magical and mystical. one of them was with patti labelle. i herd her sing "time after time." i thought okay, i can drop the
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mic now. i just heard one of the greatest singers sing my song. oh my god. ♪ time after time ♪ >> reporter: another came in 1985 when she was invited to be part of the all-star chorus that sang "we are the world" seen in the recent documentary "the greatest night in pop." >> okay, guys. >> reporter: but coproducer quincy jones complained she messed up takes with heratling bracelets. have you seen what quincy said about her? >> that i was a trouble maker? >> reporter: yes. >> poor thing. i didn't -- i really admired quincy. look, i'm sorry. i still wear janglely things. i'm sorry. >> reporter: so what's your memory of that experience? did you have a good time? >> magical. just to be included. but then again, i was very famous then.
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♪ ♪ realize oh, that a change can only come ♪ >> reporter: you weren't very happy with fame. >> nah. you need fame to continue your work. >> reporter: right. >> but what i really wanted, anthony, my big dream was really, really, really to be a great artist some day. >> reporter: yeah. >> and i still feel like i can do it. >> reporter: but you've done that your whole life. >> yeah, but something that's undeniable, something that nobody could tear down. >> reporter: where did you stand? >> here. around here somewhere. >> reporter: after our interview at the old power station studio in new york, we stood in the exact spot where lauper recorded "true colors." ♪ but i see your colors shining
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through ♪ ♪ i see your true colors ♪ >> i don't even know where that came from. ♪ so don't be afraid to let them shine ♪ >> heaven. i don't know. i'm just glad i was the conduit. >> reporter: back in 1986, she'd just lost a friend to aids. >> that was really opening up a vein. and i remember the first time i heard it, i went and hid in the closet. i was like oh my god, i can't believe i did that. why did i do that? that's so over the top vulnerable, too much. >> reporter: it felt too personal? >> it was. ♪ true colors ♪ >> reporter: and this is you right here. ♪ so don't be afraid to let them show ♪ >> it feels like a different life. >> reporter: does it? >> a different person.
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very different person. but i am my ancestors. i am her. >> that was our anthony mason with the one and only cyndi lauper. the "cbs news roundup" will be right back. liz neeley: you know, you've probably heard it said that some people have to hit rock bottom before they really come to the lord and give him their life. and that's what happened. i probably had a lot of anxiety at that point about my future, but as i began to study the word and a lot of dr. stanley's teachings and sermons, i began to realize that,
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through the love of jesus, god saved me for a purpose. - it's so fun to watch jessica in this space. - this is a look at those clouds right now in real-time, but let's head underneath this cloud layer and take a look at our rainfall... - [narrator] the virtual view studio, part of "morning edition." weekday mornings starting at 5 on kpix.
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in southern california, a manhunt is now under way for a thief who has been stealing surfboards from right under the feet of surfers. actually, it's not really a manhunt, rather an otter hunt. carter evans has more. >> reporter: these are the latest mug shots of otter 841, america's most wanted marine mammal. last summer she terrorized surfers in santa cruz, california, biting boards, even hijacking them. now she is back and surfers are on the lookout. are people excited to see this otter? >> i think they're excited to see it first, and then they kind
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of get scared. >> reporter: in an effort to do a deep dive, we hit the water. she's been cited at surf spots like this, but so far no outlaw otters. >> when i saw her, she was feeding, real close to the cliffs. >> reporter: photographer mark woodward snapped the latest pictures of 841, the number on her tag, over the memorial day weekend. >> and she was being very respectful of the surfers. >> reporter: he also captured the images of otter mania that went viral last year when crowds tried to get too close. so with paddle borders and kayakers doing through kelp boards where otters sleep, it's dangerous. it is illegal. >> reporter: someone could get hurt, they set up dragnet. it failed every time. eventually the ornery otter disappeared, but in october made a surprising return, her pup. experts now think pregnancy may explain her aggressive behavior. what would you like to see
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happen here? >> i hope she can be left alone, she lives her best life. hopefully she will refrain from getting on the boards. but who knows. >> reporter: we may just find out the next time the otter pop back is back up. carter evan, cbs news. cbs news will bring you live coverage of the events mashing the 80th anniversary of the d-day invasion of france. in normandy, president biden will join french president emmanuel macron. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy, and leaders from across europe honoring those who made the ultimate sacrifice in that battle. on saturday, there is a military parade through paris and a state dinner. and then on sunday, the president will visit a cemetery where american soldiers and marines who fought in world war i are buried. and that's i it for today's cbs news roundup. for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for cbs mornings. and follow us online at cbsnews.com for news any time.
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reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. hello and thank you so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." terror alert in france as one suspect is arrested, coinciding with president biden's visit. sensational new details from witnesses about hunter biden's drug use and alleged behavior during testimony in his criminal
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trial. and an attack on the u.s. embassy in beirut heightens fears of a wider war in the middle east. police in france have arrested a russian-ukrainian citizen and suspected terrorist who was reportedly badly burned after an explosion in his hotel room near paris' charles de gaulle airport. french investigators are now pt part of a wider terror plot. this comes during president biden's trip to commemorate the d-day landings in normandy. cbs' ed o'keefe is traveling >> reporter: word of this arrest comes as part of president biden's five-day visit to france. it is having no effect on his 3406789 movements in the country, and the fbi is monitoring the situation. the 26-year-old unnamed suspect was involved in an explosion monday afternoon at a hotel outside the charles de gaulle airport outside paris. french investigators have opened an investigation who is
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originally from the russian occupied donbas region of ukraine. the suspect sustained injuries in the blast and is cooperating with french police. french media reports guns and false passports were also found. the incident comes ahead of d-day commemoration events, a major speech by the president friday at normandy, a major military parade in the president's honor in the streets of paris on saturday, and a little more than a month before the summer olympics begin. ed o'keefe, cbs news, paris. turning now to the trial of hunter biden as jurors heard vivid and salacious details on wednesday about his addiction and alleged behavior. this all took place prosecutors say during a period when president biden's only son is accused of illegally buying a firearm. he is facing three criminal charges. cbs' scott macfarlane was inside the courtroom for the second day of testimony. >> reporter: first lady jill biden spent a third day at the courthouse, again, seated behind hunter biden as prosecutors tried to prove he illegally
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purchased this colt .38 handgun while using drugs in 2018, lying on the application form. they called two women formerly in his life to the stand to help make their case. his ex-wife kathleen buhle testified she found a crack pipe at their washington, d.c. home in 2015, was rejected when she urged him to go to rehab, and would scour his car to make sure their kids didn't find drugs. but under cross-examination, hunter biden's attorney abbe lowell got her to admit she never actually assault saw hunter biden do drugs. former prosecutor tom dupree. >> the key evidence is going to be provided by people intimately close to hunter biden, ex-wife, ex-girlfriends and the like. i can only imagine this is probably excruciatingly painful for hunter biden, among other people, to sit in court and hear this. >> reporter: the former girlfriend zoe kestan who dated him for much of 2018 testified hunter biden frequently bought and used crack, at times using a chopstick to clean out his crack pipe.
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>> i went one time for 13 days without sleeping. and smoking crack and drinking vodka exclusively. >> reporter: kestan said the president's son was using drugs as late as 2018, weeks before he bought the gun, and again weeks later in 2018. prosecutors showed the jury a series of photo of drugs allegedly used by hunter biden and an image of a video of a shirtless biden, allegedly with drug paraphernalia. >> it really leaves no doubt that hunter biden was using controlled substances. it doesn't give much room that he wasn't at some point in time addicted. >> reporter: still on the list is hallie biden, beau biden's widow, a woman who hunter had a romantic relationship at the time of the gun purchase. hunter biden has pleaded not guilty to all three felony charges. scott macfarlane, cbs news, wilmington, delaware. israel's military says it made a deadly strike on a u.n. school building in gaza on
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thursday morning but claims the building was the site of a hamas compound. the hamas media office says at least 39 people were killed in the strike and dozens wounded. this comes as u.s. embassies across the middle east remain on high alert following an attack on wednesday morning outside the u.s. embassy in beirut. a suspected isis gunman was shot by security forces and arrested. no americans were hurt, but it comes as tensions rise along the israel-lebanon border, increasing the threat of a widening war. more now on this from cbs' imtiaz tyab in israel, where he was roughed up while covering a demonstration in jerusalem. >> reporter: this cell phone video captured what appears to be the shooter as he exchanged fire with the lebanese army outside the u.s. embassy. the attacker a syrian national was shot and has been hospitalized as investigators continue to search for a motive.
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the incident comes amid heightened tensions between israel and lebanon's powerful iran-backed hezbollah movement, who have been trading cross-border fre since the war in gaza began. israel's prime minister warned of a very strong action in the north with fears only growing israel could engage in a wider war with hezbollah. tens of thousands of israelis marched through the old city for jerusalem day, an annual celebration of what israel calls the reunification of east and west jerusalem following the 1967 arab-israeli war. what makes this part of the march so controversial is the muslim quarter of east jerusalem, and it's seen as a real provocation to march through here like this. as the groups marched, palestinians and journalists were attacked. and as some chanted "death to arabs," they tried to block our cameras from filming.
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>> i'm trying to do my job. >> reporter: then kicked and shoved us as we were forced to leave by police. and cbs news has learned the white house's top middle east adviser has been sent to egypt and the head of the cia to qatar as part of attempts to push for a breakthrough on the israeli plan outlined by president biden to end the war in gaza and see the hostages released. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, tel aviv. severe weather and a flash tornado are now being blamed for the death of a 2-year-old child in a suburban detroit city of livonia. alongside the boy, his mother was critically injured. this according to rescue workers when a tree fell on their home wednesday afternoon. a 2-month-old was also inside the home when this happened, but is expected to be okay. and take a look at this video inside a tornado that ripped through montgomery county, maryland. officials say the violent
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tornado toppled a tree on to a house, trapping five people inside. rescuers say at least two other buildings collapsed in that storm on wednesday afternoon. don't go away. plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after the break.
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welcome back to "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. president biden is in france for festivities marking the 80th anniversary of the d-day invasion. the massive allied assault on german forces in normandy turned the tide of world war ii. history books often focus on the infantry brigades that stormed the beaches, but allied paratroopers also played a key role.
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this week, hundreds of reenactors jump from the sky to honor their bravery and sacrifice, and that includes our very own charlie d'agata. >> reporter: not much has changed in the training of those paratroopers who risked and lost their lives storming into normandy 80 years ago. >> step forward quick, march! >> reporter: how to jump, land, and pack your own parachute safely. a lot can go wrong, and mistakes can be fatal. in the netherlands, we put that training to the test. there are no practice runs for jumping. we climb to a height of 2,000 feet. there is no turning back now. . >> hit the door, charlie. hands down, hands down! >> reporter: i free fall for five terrifying seconds and then check to see if my parachute has fully opened. >> i've got a good canopy. easy.
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brace for impact. right. that was a good landing. >> reporter: my first ever jump out of the way. the next few landings were not as smooth. i was starting to understand the challenges of hitting a drop zone, and nobody is shooting at me. i got a gust, and the next thing i know i'm on the playground. >> reporter: finally, jump five. i needed this to earn my wings. >> what the -- 4,000, check canopy. nailed it! i nailed it! finally. >> reporter: qualified to make the jump into normandy itself. >> fall off. >> reporter: it's when you get suited up like this that you start to imagine what it must have been like for the servicemen, the soldiers that day, jumping into the unknown.
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the vast majority of those taking part in this jump are u.s. military veterans, including paratroopers from the 82nd and 101s airborne divisions. more than 13,000 of their own forces spearheaded that initial d-day assault. we boarded pegasus. >> you in. >> reporter: one of three c-47s that will drop us into france. airfields like this across england would have been jam-packed that night. as we make our journey due south, we're mentally running through the same drills those soldiers would have. the big difference here is some of these guys are just 19, 20 years old, and they're carrying 60 to 70 pounds of heavy equipment with them. they're landing in the dark. their aircraft is coming under fire, and so are they. as we crossed the english channel into france, the only sound on board was the roar of the engines.
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until it was go-time. our aircraft comes into view, leading the way in the skies above carentan in the heart of the d-day drop zones. one by one, we followed in their footsteps. exiting the c-47 was much more violent than the small plane i had tried on. >> 2,000, 3,000. >> reporter: grateful to see an open parachute. >> got to go toward the t. where are these guys going? >> reporter: grateful for the opportunity to take part. okay. i'm parachuting into france. grateful to those who gave their lives in the name of liberating this hallowed ground. >> okay. not too fast, not too fast! >> reporter: finally grateful for a safe landing. >> i did it. >> reporter: even if it wasn't exactly textbook. >> i just landed in france. that was the moment of a lifetime, to having the
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privilege of landing here in normandy as you can see the dakotas overhead, my fellow parachuters coming in. >> reporter: we were all able to walk away. not everybody walked away 80 years ago. it is here where they fell and here where they will always be remembered. it took three days of heavy fighting to take over that territory, partly because so many troops landed off target. the american cemetery behind me contains the graves of 9,388 military dead, most of whom lost their lives in the d-day landings in the operations that followed. >> that was charlie d'agata in france. cbs news will bring you full coverage of the festivities marking this anniversary. you're watching "cbs news roundup."
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can no longer serve. >> reporter: israel's response to october 7th troubled former army major harrison mann from the start. >> they were dropping 6,000 bombs a day. they were burning through munitions, exhausting their supply. you know, it was very easy to link our support, which i was part of, to the killing in gaza. >> reporter: what bothered this intelligence officer specializing in the middle east the most, his view that the israelis were targeting palestinian civilians indiscriminately, and that u.s. weapons made it possible. were the israelis using american weapons against civilians in gaza? >> i can say almost certainly, yes. >> reporter: but were they doing so intentionally? >> i don't know how you kill 35,000 civilians by accident. >> reporter: israel insists it's doing its best to limit civilian casualties, and that hamas uses civilians as human shields.
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but that wasn't enough. weeks later, mann resigned, later explaining in a letter. >> at some point, whatever the justification, you're either advancing a policy that enables the mass starvation of children or you're not. >> reporter: you felt your work was directly connected to starving children? >> yes. there is going to be times when there is members that have different views. it's certainly your right to get out and i'll leave it at that. >> i decided i would resign. >> reporter: more than a half dozen government officials have publicly resigned to protest u.s. support for israel's war. man is the first from the military, the first from the intelligence community, and the first who is jewish. >> i think it's important to understand that this is from a security perspective. israel is not under existential threat. >> reporter: and what do you say to american jews who would say to you what are you talking about?
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if you are somebody who is really motived by the concern to protect jewish life, you should be fighting for them to conduct it in a way that basically does not turn the whole world against them. >> reporter: the grandson of jews who fled the antisemitism of eastern europe knows his stance will create some harsh blowback. >> i didn't feel i can i had that much of a choice. >> reporter: but he feels the only way to influence u.s. policy is to no longer assist those who make it. those who make it. jim axelrod, cbs news, if you spit blood when you brush, it could be the start of a domino effect. new parodontax active gum repair breath freshener. clinically proven to help reverse the four signs of early gum disease. a new toothpaste from parodontax, the gum experts. when it comes to your wellness routine, the details are the difference. dove men body wash, with plant based moisturizers in harmony with our bodies for healthier feeling skin. all these details add up to something greater.
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there is a busy emergency room in florida that's caring for some of the state's most vulnerable residents. cristian benavides has more. >> we really need to make sure he can paddle appropriately with both feet. >> reporter: at the pelican harbor sea bird station in miami, renata schneider is the emergency veterinarian on duty. >> we're doing surgeries. we're doing ekg monitoring on our patients. we're using appropriate pain medications. we're cautiously using antibiotics. >> reporter: founded in 1980, the sea bird station functions as an e.r. for local wildlife. >> is it an injured animal? >> reporter: lately, it's gotten busier. >> we had our highest numbers in 2020, 2021. this year has been a very busy year. i don't know if we're going to break those numbers. >> reporter: staff here says south florida has an invasive species problem, a growing human population, that presents challenges to marine animals.
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uriel costa is in charge of marine rehabilitation. she has worked here 12 years. >> with more people, more buildings going on, we see a lot more hit by cars or birds flying into windows or buildings. >> reporter: then there is the sea birds with fishhook line injuries or who have swallowed plastic waste. the pelicans in this case have life altering injuries, including this guy, that makes them ineligible for release. so the harbor station cares for them. hey, buddy. >> reporter: they become permanent residents at the wildlife center, so-called ambassadors, a public face to the sea bird station during what schneider says is a critical time. >> south florida is in trouble right now. we keep building. we keep destroying habitat. without our work, how are these pelicans and gulls supposed to continue to thrive? >> reporter: for most of the birds that get treated, this is the goal. after 55 days of treatment for botulism and an eye infection, this brown pelican was
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successfully released back into the wild. >> some people will make the argument well, they would just die and leave them be in the wild. however, we don't buy into that. most of the injuries that we see are caused by us. we have to correct the balance. >> reporter: a balancing act to help us co-exist responsibly with native wildlife.
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than lysol disinfectant spray. climate change is confusing the biological clocks of many animals and insects, including those noisy cicadas. ben tracy has more. >> there is nothing like it. it's just wow, is this what we're watching in front of our eyes? >> reporter: christy shirley can't get enough of the sudden cicada invasion near her home in southern illinois. thank god we kind of know what's going on here, because if we really didn't know what this was all about, this would be scary. >> oh, yes. someone would think that zombies would be next. >> reporter: the arrival of these rather unique looking bugs
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that crawl out of the ground and up into the trees was quite predictable. periodical cicadas have emerged like clockwork every 13 or 17 years, depending on their brood. it's been about as easy as astronomers predicting a solar eclipse. >> now we're seeing periodical cicadas coming out of the ground predicted by entomologists. at a time when people have lost faith in science, this shows that science works and we get it right. >> i was here in 1990. >> reporter: biologist gene kritsky has been studying cicadas for decades, but he says climate change may be changing the cicadas timing. scientists believe they count years through the changes in fluid flow in tree roots. and when their year to emerge arrives, they stay under ground until the soil temperature reaches 64 degrees. but on our warming planet, precipitation changes. spring is arriving earlier, and so are the cicadas, showing up
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in georgia last month nearly two weeks ahead of schedule. do i have a cicada on my back? >> yes, you do. oh, it is a big one. >> reporter: kritsky found the same thing happening around cincinnati. >> before 1940, the average date was the 28th, 29th of may. in 2021, they emerged 11 days, almost two weeks earlier. this is true for baltimore, for washington, for philadelphia, for indianapolis. zones are moving north, and the cicadas are responding. >> reporter: in 2017, a brood of 17-year cicada arrived years ahead of schedule, making these normally punctual insects a bit more unpredictable. but once they do appear, cicadas live for just a few weeks, and have only one thing on their little minds, making sure their species survives. so it sounds kind of crass, but this is just kind of one big sex party. these things are here for that. >> oh, yes. it's a giant cicadas singles bar.
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>> that's a nicer way of saying it. >> reporter: i'm ben tracy in charleston, illinois. and that's the "cbs news roundup." reporting from new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. june 6, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." d-day 80 years later, president biden, world leaders, and the last of the greatest generation converge on the beaches of normandy to mark a definitive turning point in world war ii. deadly and dangerous weather. tornadoes hit two states killing a toddler asleep in bed while on the other side of the country they're breaking records for the scorching heat. and wrappith

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