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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  July 1, 2024 3:00am-3:31am PDT

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hello and thanks for watching. i'm courtney kealy in new york. and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." get ready for a busy holiday travel week ahead with the tsa predicting new records. outrage in utica, new york after police shoot a 13-year-old suspect. and more democrats are losing confidence in president biden after last week's debate. americans this week are on the go. nearly 72 million are expected to be traveling this 4th of july holiday. cbs's adam yamaguchi is at l.a.x. with details on record-setting travel numbers. >> reporter: the holiday travel rush is on at l.a.x. and airports across the country, with long lines at tsa checkpoints and ticket counters. >> it's annoying, but it's like we kind of expected that it was going to be this bad. >> reporter: this summer's surge of travelers has tsa screening passengers in record numbers. six of their busiest days in its history have been this june.
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record crowds are also expected this coming wednesday july 3rd. air travel is up 7% from last 4th of july. helping to pack those planes, ticket prices that are about 18% lower than a year ago. >> we got ours, what, two, three months ago so i wouldn't say they were too bad. >> reporter: aaa forecasts that most americans, close to 90%, will travel by road this holiday. these trips cost californians the most, with gas at an average of $4.80 a gallon. but overall prices are down about 6 cents. navigating traffic, weather and airport crowds can be stressful. but for many the final destination justifies the travel headaches. >> our trip out here was really nice and things weren't too crowded and we spent a few days in l.a. at the beach and now we're heading back home. >> reporter: with so many traveling all week, aaa expects another mad rush july 7th as millions of americans head back to work. adam yamaguchi, cbs news, los angeles. residents in utica, new york are demanding justice following the police shooting death of a
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13-year-old boy. new bodycam footage shows the moment officers shot the teen. michael george is in utica. and a warning, some viewers might find these images disturbing. >> reporter: utica police say they stopped this 13-year-old and another teen friday night because they matched the description of robbery suspects. >> can i just pat you down and make sure you have no weapons on you? >> reporter: the teen runs. police say he pointed what looked like a gun at officers. >> he's got a gun! he's got a gun! >> reporter: it was later confirmed to be this pellet gun, police say designed to look like a glock with a detachable magazine. one officer wrestles the teen to the ground and punches him. another officer fires. [ gunshot ] >> oh, my god! joe, he just -- he just shot him! >> reporter: the teen identified as niah emwe died at the hospital. this witness, who asked us to hide her identity recorded the video of the incident. >> from what you witnessed, do you believe the officer was justified in shooting?
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>> no. that's somebody's baby. and he didn't fight back. even when y'all laid him on the ground and was punching him on him and stuff. that boy didn't fight back. >> reporter: the officers are on paid leave pending an investigation to see if they followed protocol. after the shooting officers performed chest compressions. initially there's confusion about who was shot and who fired. >> he shot me. >> check him. >> are there any more shots? >> there's just one shot. it was me. >> reporter: emwe was a refugee from myanmar and a part of the karen ethnic minority. at a vigil saturday night community members prayed for him and demanded justice. and karen community leaders are condemning the actions of utica police, calling it excessive force. the new york attorney general's office is investigating. michael george, cbs news, utica. nearly half of democrats in a new poll say president joe biden should drop out of the election race based on his performance in last week's
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debate. but the biden campaign says it's full steam ahead. cbs's skyler henry reports from the white house. >> reporter: democrats are hitting several swing states and the airwaves, telling their voter base to stay the course following president biden's debate performance. >> the president had a difficult night just like every single one of us do. but i think we know that when we get knocked down we get back up. >> reporter: however, maryland congressman jamie raskin says rigorous talks within the party are taking place. >> we're having a serious conversation about what to do. but one thing i can tell you is that regardless of what president biden decides our party's going to be unified. >> reporter: democrats called the debate bad for both presumptive nominees, critical of trump's lies and embellishments. though just released cbs news polling shows 46% of registered democratic voters think president biden should not run, up 10% in four months. >> i would not be running again if i didn't believe with all my heart and soul i can do this
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job. >> reporter: the biden-harris campaign says it's instead highlighting moments like the president on the trail in north carolina as they're characterizing the race as a binary choice. republicans say it's an easy decision. >> everyone's talking about should joe biden even stay in the race. that's never happened in our history. it was such a dominant performance by president trump in this debate. >> reporter: president biden is at camp david celebrating the 4th with his family. his campaign says the money keeps rolling in, raising $33 million since the debate. skyler henry, cbs news, the white house. israeli forces are pushing further into neighborhoods in northern and central gaza. the prolonged campaign in gaza and mounting civilian casualties are raising new concerns about the conflict expanding to include hezbollah in lebanon. cbs's imtiaz tyab in tel aviv has the latest. >> reporter: israeli forces on the advance, seen here in
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shejiya in eastern gaza city. four days ago israel sent reinforcements back into the area to target what's been described as hamas gunmen and infrastructure above and below ground. at least two israeli soldiers have been killed in the fighting. so too have several palestinians. some of the dead and injured have been taken here to one of the last semi-functioning hospitals in the central city of deir al bala where this young man didn't make it. >> so this lung is normal. >> reporter: also there is dr. mohammed sabe, an e.r. doctor from california now on his second humanitarian mission to the gaza strip. >> people are hungry. people are malnourished just by looking at the skin on bones. this can be stopped now. >> reporter: earlier this week we traveled with the u.s. military to the $230 million humanitarian pier off the coast of gaza. since becoming operational in mid-may it's been plagued with
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problems, only functioning as it's meant to for around 18 days. in that time over 8,000 metric tons of aid, or around 500 truckloads, have made it in. the same amount that would normally have gone into gaza in a single day before october 7th. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, tel aviv. the caribbean is preparing for its first major hurricane of the season. people began boarding up on sunday ahead of the powerful category 4 storm. the national hurricane center says beryl will bring life-threatening winds and storm surges. when "cbs news roundup" returns, we'll take another look at last week's debate with cbs at last week's debate with cbs news chief for the more than 1 million people living with parkinson's disease... the parkinson's foundation celebrates movement at moving day. a movement toward lifesaving resources. movement toward advancing research and care. movement toward a better life.
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we care. we fight. we move. to beat parkinson's. move with us. at movingdaywalk.org. most hiring algorithms would screen me out. some bosses couldn't see me as a leader. i've run this place for 20 years, but i still need to prove that i'm more than what you see on paper. i've been writing code as long as i've been able to reach a keyboard. this is what i do. it's second nature for me, coordinating a hundred details at once. it's the way my mind works. i have a very mechanical brain. i sold them on my skills. you gotta be so good they can't ignore you. my magic is... analytics and empathy. that's how i gain clients. you have to have the confidence in yourself to show up and defy the odds. forget what you see on paper. i am more than who i am on paper. i never got a college degree. and today i'm the ceo of my own company. people wanna tell me i'm one in a million,
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when actually i'm one of millions. stars are all around us. it's time for them to shine. our kids spend hours a day glued to their screens. but social media is addictive by design. hooking our kids on content full of lies, extremism, hate, drugs and violence. youtube, tiktok, facebook and instagram make billions of dollars by exposing our children to danger and face no consequences. these companies don't care, and congress won't act. so, it's up to us. we at the center for countering digital hate are holding these companies accountable. join us at protectingkidsonline.org this is "cbs news roundup." i'm courtney kealy in new york. president biden and former
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president trump will be back on the campaign trail for their first full week of rallies and fund-raisers after last thursday's debate. president biden's halting delivery shocked many supporters. a cbs news poll shows 3/4 of registered voters say biden should drop out of the race. that includes 46% of democrats. but democratic party leaders have rallied around the president, who shows no sign of giving up. robert costa has more. >> everything we have to do with -- look, if -- we finally beat medicare. >> thank you, president biden. president trump? >> reporter: for democrats thursday night's debate was a nightmare. >> i'm going to continue to move until we get the total ban on the -- the total initiative relative to what we're going to do with more border patrol and more asylum officers. >> president trump? >> i really don't know what he said at the end of that sentence. i don't think he knows what he
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said either. look -- >> reporter: president joe biden's performance at the atlanta face-off, viewed by more than 50 million, sparked a panic, with a flurry of editorials and commentators pleading with 81-year-old biden to drop out. >> it's kind of a defcon 1 moment. >> i do think people feel like that we are confronting a crisis. >> we're still far from our convention. and there is time for this party to figure out a different way forward if he will allow us to do that. it's not just panic. it's pain. of what we saw tonight. >> what are members of the inner circle saying privately in the wake of this debate? >> there is an acknowledgment writ large that the president performed badly, it went poorly. it was a bad night. but there have not been any big sit-downs, big soul-searching sessions. it's just right back to work. >> reporter: "new york times" reporter katie rogers covers the biden white house. and wrote a book that deeply examines the influence of first lady jill biden.
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>> based on your reporting, is there any sort of movement, any budging inside the biden family about whether this run for re-election is worth it? >> i have not picked up on that. >> reporter: in fact, rogers says calls for biden to step aside will likely only strengthen the first family's resolve for him to stay in. >> the naysayers are key to understanding him. they drive him. they help reinforce his idea of who he is. you can't overcome an obstacle if people don't put it in your way or life doesn't put it in your way. >> reporter: for biden barreling through a thicket of pain, be it personal tragedy or political humiliation, is nothing new. after more than a half century in washington he has endured setbacks time and again, including when many democrats and pundits counted him out in
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2020. biden of course ultimately prevailed in that race, defeating then president donald trump. this past week made clear that winning i arematch will be no easy feat. trump is on the march in the polls. and often makes false statements, which he did at the debate. on january 6th, abortion, and his record. >> after this debate are democrats more alarmed about trump's possible return? >> oh, for sure. yeah. of course. more alarmed, absolutely. >> reporter: faz shakir is a top adviser to bernie sanders and managed sanders' 2020 campaign, when the vermont senator ran against biden for the nomination. >> we've seen all the headlines about major democrats, president obama, president clinton, former speaker pelosi, name after name is coming out and saying they stand with biden. is that what's going on behind the scenes as well? or is there a bit of a different
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dynamic? >> i think there's some degree of trepidation behind the scenes as people line up behind him. obviously, president biden has to make a decision about whether he stays in this race. and i hope he does. and i hope that if he does he has to make some changes. >> reporter: think biden will be replaced at the democratic convention this august in chicago? think again. biden already has won almost all of the roughly 4,000 pledged delegates. unless he withdraws, they are expected to vote for him on the first ballot. >> the speculation about a possible shake-up of the democratic ticket is almost feverish. what's the reality? is anybody credible making moves behind the scenes? >> no. there's a lot of people looking ahead four years. at this point this party is his, this nomination is his, and he's really the sole decider of the future course of where he's going to go. >> reporter: for a while you could make the argument that you know, boy, it was tough
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defending donald trump as a republican, that we were going to get behind him. but today it's a much harder thing for democrats to explain why they would stick to joe biden. >> reporter: new hampshire governor chris sununu supported nikki haley in the republican party. >> she's genuine, she's likable -- >> reporter: but has since endorsed trump. trump has his critics and his challenges, including a sentencing date in july for his criminal conviction in new york. but sununu says the party is largely with him. and after this past week's debate they are feeling better than ever. >> so you don't see any democrat trying to make a play against biden? >> no. no one -- if they're smart. i think they're going to have that kind of realization that as much as they want a new candidate they had their shot, they missed it, they've got to ride it out, hope that there's a second debate, hope that he does much better, hope that trump creates a bigger problem for himself.
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>> reporter: the day after the debate with his wife at his side -- >> when you get knocked down, you get back up. >> reporter: the president sought to reassure democrats in north carolina. >> i intend to win this state in november. >> reporter: "the new york times'" katie rogers says for now the bidens seem convinced he has one more comeback left. in what is very likely the last campaign of his long career. >> both of them, when they feel the odds are rising against him, that is when they get feistier. they view obstacles as part of his long life in politics almost associated with his political brand. but age is not an obstacle. it's a reckoner. and it is a different problem than the ones he has faced before. >> that was robert costa. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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>> reporter: despite its name, the town of waterville, minnesota has never seen anything like this. >> did you ever think that this would happen? >> no. not for a second. >> reporter: situated between two lakes, with a river in between, the community received as much as 18 inches of o'total rain over the last week, submerging much of the town where nearly 2,000 people live. >> our electrical panel is in the basement. so that was our biggest fear is our electrical panel going underwater and shorting out everything. >> reporter: nicole rosas and chad doering lost a dog and tens of thousands of dollars worth of property in the floods. there was no requirement to purchase flood insurance when they bought their house six years ago. so they decided against it. >> we could have gotten it, but there was no call for it. there was no threat of a flood. and it was so expensive at the time we were just like no, that's insane. >> reporter: according to data from fema homeowners in
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waterville pay an average of $941 per year on federal flood insurance. there are only 33 total active policies in the town. aaron koching is the president of the insurance federation of minnesota. >> the enrollees in the flood insurance program in minnesota over the last several years are down and actually down considerably. which i think is the result of people looking at this and thinking this is not going to affect me. >> our furnace is down there. our electrical panel's down there. our children's memories are down there. everything. >> it's like even if we had insurance, you know, flood insurance, it's like none of it -- you can't replace the memories. >> reporter: a changing climate and changing costs, changing how and changing costs, changing how many people live. (♪♪) this is a hot flash. this is a hot flash.
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where they're from, how they feel, or just best wishes. the pub, called for sale, has been selling drinks since the mid '90s. it prides itself on not being pretentious. you can even toss your peanut shells right on the floor. "it gives people a sense of freedom," he says. it's a notable place for both locals and tourists to rub shoulders and share a pint before writing their review. but it's the posts on social media that sent the pub viral. >> i found cool the fact that there were notes and the little papers on the walls all over. >> reporter: and when it's time for the last call, the writing's on the wall. be s
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it's monday, july 1st, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." debate fallout. president biden huddling with his family at camp david. how they told him to proceed in the presidential race amid

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