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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  July 12, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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nearly 40% of anti-semitic incidents in the world last year took place in europe, with a spike after october 7th. in germany, they nearly doubled. in the uk, they more than doubled. and in france, they nearly quadrupled. now requests from french jews to relocate to israel have jumped 430%. gaza is literally about 15 miles in that direction, and yet you feel safer here than in paris? >> i feel safer here, yes. >> reporter: sarah zohar and her family lived a comfortable life in france until her children were attacked while walking to sports practice. so they packed their bags and moved to the southern city of ashdod, only a few minutes from where hamas attacked on october 7th. >> how are your kids adjusting? do they feel safer here? >> i have a children 12 years old, and he's told me, i don't
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want to go to israel because i don't want people come to my house and kill me with a knife and take my head off. and i told him, you have nothing to be afraid. we have an army to defend us. >> reporter: rabbi tom cohen says in paris, jews are remembering the anti-semitism of world war ii. >> they all of a sudden realize we didn't get past it. it is still here. it just has changed form like many viruses change and mutate. >> home sweet home. >> reporter: guila and eitan elbazis are moving in from london as we speak. >> this is the bomb shelter room. >> the bomb shelter? >> yeah. so hopefully, please god, there won't be any rockets. but as you can see, this door, bullet-proof, and it locks up like this. >> reporter: as they start a family, they'd rather contend with hamas and hezbollah than scenes like these. >> hitler knew how to deal with these people! >> i think there's a general sense of fear and anxiety and lack of comfort in london.
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>> i have to hide who i am to be safe. >> where do you feel safer, here in israel or back in europe? >> here, definitely. >> here. >> yeah, hands down. >> without even thinking about it. >> you've had october 7th happen. the war isn't over. what are you thinking? >> we have institution here to defend us. >> it might be a war country, but this is home. >> reporter: and in this home, guila and eitan say, they don't have to hide who they are. chris livesay, tel aviv. there's a lot more ahead on there's a lot more ahead on "cbs news roundup." (peaceful music) - time to get up, sweetie! (kissing) - [child voiceover] most people might not think much about all the little things you do every day,
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worried you'll laugh so hard you'll leak? well always discreet can hold your biggest gushes with up to zero leaks and odor. so you're not just dry. you're laugh until you cry dry. we've got you, always. always discreet. a rhode island judge renowned for his compassion is feeling the love from fans around the world following a cancer diagnosis. judge frank caprio announced in december he had pancreatic cancer. recently he finished radiation treatment, and our david begnaud sat down with him to reflect on the lessons he's learned from the bench. >> now, we're talking about your father, right? now, you're going to say guilty or not guilty. what do you say? >> guilty. >> guilty.
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>> reporter: judge frank caprio is beloved, not for his sense of humor but for his mercy. >> we all have life's challenges. we can face them in two ways. we can either crumble and succumb to them, or we can rise above them. i'm sure you have the strength and the courage to rise above them. the one thing you don't have to worry about are these tickets. these are going to get dismissed. ♪ >> reporter: his tv show "caught in providence," highlighting his day-to-day life reviewing traffic cases and misdemeanors in rhode island -- >> your case is bothering me. >> reporter: -- became syndicated around the country in 2018. >> say "mommy not guilty." >> not guilty. >> yay. >> reporter: and thanks to the help of social media, it turned this 87-year-old into a renowned figure internationally. >> this is my wonderful husband. i got the ticket. he was driving my car. i'm not guilty. >> oh. >> he is.
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>> you go through this every day? >> yes, your honor. >> we've been happily married for 43 years, right? >> yes, dear. >> reporter: but what has captivated judge caprio's millions of fans over the past year is his ongoing battle with pancreatic cancer, which he completed treatment for just a few weeks ago. ♪ happy days are here again ♪ >> why did you want to go public with it? >> well, i really thought i could be an inspiration to other people if i survived. >> you are an inspiration as you are surviving. >> so far, so good. so far, so good. it's not a pleasant experience to go to bed at night, say your prayers, and all of a sudden, you have one extra thing you
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have to ask for, and that is "please help the treatments be successful." and i think we're on our way. >> we're going to give this with you to take with you today. >> your honor, you know i don't have a dollar to my name? i really thank you for that. >> reporter: the kindness and the compassion that judge caprio has shown in his courtroom is finding its way back to him in the form of letters and gifts. there are thousands of them. >> you are an inspiration to all. you've touched more lives than you can imagine with your heart of gold. i hope these warm your heart and your feet. so i guess we know what these are. happy days will be here again, and best wishes, paula. >> reporter: those heartfelt messages have also been pouring in from some of the judge's more famous fans. >> i am sending you a boatload of prayer, and also i'm a fangirl. >> it's been a pleasure to get
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to know you just through social media, and i'm so glad you're with us. you are a treasure. >> judge frank, we know you're a fantastic guy, kind, family man. just a wonderful, wonderful individual. this video is not about you, though, frank. it's about me. i got a speeding ticket out here in los angeles. i was wondering if you knew anybody that could get me out of it. >> after you, your honor. >> reporter: together we visited the courtroom which is now named for him. judge caprio called this home for 38 years before he retired in 2023. >> i've watched so many of your videos. tell me about one or two of those that you will always remember. >> i remember victor colella. he was 96 when he came in. he was charged with speeding. >> mr. colella, you are charged with a school zone violation. >> i don't drive that fast, judge.
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i'm 96 years old, and i drive slowly, and i only drive when i have to. i was going to the blood work for my boy. he's handicapped. >> you were taking your son to the doctor's office? >> yeah. i take him for blood work. >> mm-hmm. >> every two weeks because he's got cancer. >> how old is your son? >> 63. >> and daddy is still taking care of him, right? >> i only drive when i have to. >> yeah. i wish the best for your son, and i wish you good health, and your case is dismissed. >> reporter: of all the cases for the judge to recall, we were so happy that he mentioned victor because -- >> i have a surprise for you. victor is here. >> come on. victor! >> oh, my gosh. the best friend i ever had.
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god bless you. i hope you live to be my age and over. >> over? >> yeah, and do everything and help everybody. there's not a better man on earth than you. you help everybody. god bless you. >> thanks, victor. thanks, pal. >> reporter: judge caprio's deep empathy for others stems from the hardships he faced in his own life. growing up in poverty in providence without hot running water, just blocks from the courthouse. >> this corner, that was my corner. i shined shoes. >> oh, you did? >> it just so happens that i have my shoeshine box with me. it's in the back seat. >> you have the shoeshine box? no way. >> come on. get out of the car. >> okay. >> put your foot down. i can't shine your shoes because they're not leather. >> but this is where it happened?
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>> i would be like this. i would be like this, shining shoes right here. >> every time you talk, it's like a testimony. you're like a little street preacher from the bench. >> i'm just a small-time municipal court judge who is trying to do good. that's all i am. who tries to take into consideration the circumstances surrounding the people before me. >> you know what it's like to not be able to afford shoes that match. >> oh, i know. i know what it's like shining shoes on the corner. >> yeah. >> you know about that. >> i know about that. to think i didn't even have a dime to pay you or a nickel to tip you, judge. >> yeah. i was only stiffed twice in my life. there was one guy and you. twice i get stiffed. i didn't get paid my 10 cents. >> reporter: well, here's two cents more. if you're going to judge someone -- >> never met a judge or a person like you. you're amazing. >> reporter: make sure you do it the frank caprio way.
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>> we're just doing what we think is right. good luck to you. >> thank you. have a wonderful day. >> remarkable. that was david begnaud reporting, and this is "cbs news roundup."
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finally this half hour, the story of a massachusetts man finding his voice again.
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marty kedian recently received a rare total larynx transplant. he's one of the first cancer patients to have this procedure, and our jarred hill checked in on his progress. >> reporter: marty kedian is so grateful he's regained his voice. >> i want people to know this can be done, and it's a process, but it's worth it. >> reporter: dozens of surgeries over a decade for a rare form of laryngeal cancer eventually robbed kedian of his ability to speak, swallow, and breathe normally. his wife, gina, found a clinical trial at the mayo clinic in arizona. dr. david lott determined marty was a good candidate, and surgeons removed his larynx and transplanted a donated one. >> my patients tell me, yeah, i may be alive, but i'm not really living. so to me, if you look at it from that perspective, being able to give that gift back to somebody, to me, that really is a vital organ. >> reporter: six surgeons performed the 21-hour transplant. using new microsurgical techniques, they connected nerves critical for marty to
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feel when he needs to swallow and move the vocal cords. transplants usually aren't an option for people with active cancer, making marty's case the first of its kind globally. >> i think there's a fair number of patients that would benefit from this. it's important in this case and in all of medicine that we do trials so that we can establish the safety. >> i can talk to my 82-year-old mother on the phone, and she can hear me. >> reporter: the transplant took place in february. marty still sounds hoarse, but he can have conversations, even zooming with his young granddaughter. >> i said no matter what, gina, i'm getting my voice back. i'm keeping my voice. for her. >> reporter: marty is excited to return to his family in massachusetts next week. jarred hill, cbs news. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for
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"cbs mornings" and follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm carissa lawson. ♪
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hello and thanks for staying up with us is. i'm carissa lawson in new york. here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." during a highly anticipated press conference, president biden declares he is staying in the race. but on capitol hill, debate over the president's ability to win re-election heats up. and nearly a million people in texas still have no power with a brutally hot weekend just ahead. we begin with president biden's televised press conference watched by many. it became a make-or-break moment for the president, trying to convince nervous democrats that he is up for the challenge of running for re-election. cbs's skyler henry has more details from the white house. >> reporter: president biden held his first news conference since last month's debate set off a firestorm over his fitness for a second term in the white house. >> there's a long way to go in
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this campaign, and so i'm just going to keep moving. >> reporter: after brief remarks, the president took questions from reporters, including white house correspondent nancy cordes. >> have you spent time thinking about what it would mean for your legacy, which you've worked decades to build, if you stay in the race despite the concerns that voters say they have and you lose to someone who you, yourself, have argued is unfit to return to the oval office? >> i'm not in this for my legacy. i'm in this to complete the job i started. >> reporter: biden was asked about moves to cut the length of his workday in the debate's aftermath. >> have you looked at my schedule since i made that stupid mistake in the campaign -- in the debate? i mean my schedule has been full bore. i've done -- where's trump been? riding around in his golf cart, filling out his scorecard before he hits the ball. >> reporter: thursday's event marks the end of washington's nato summit and his first solo
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news conference in close to eight months. at a nato event, president biden verbally stumbled when introducing ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy, but he corrected himself. >> ladies and gentlemen, president putin. [ applause ] president putin? he's going to beat president putin. president zelenskyy. i'm so focused on beating putin, we got to worry about it. anyway -- >> reporter: behind the scenes, senior campaign advisers met with senate democrats, trying to assure them the president can win in november. skyler henry, cbs news, the white house. the white house is hoping president biden's performance at that news conference will now silence critics, but it remains an uphill battle. four democratic sources tell cbs news they expect dozens of democratic lawmakers over the next 48 hours to call for the president to step out of the race. as scott macfarlane discovered thursday, the president's future is a hot topic of discussion on capitol hill. >> reporter: as president biden tries to regain his footing with democrats on capitol hill --
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>> we just want to make sure that donald trump is not president. >> reporter: -- the ground is getting more slippery. >> you think a single press conference can change things? >> heavens no. the mere fact we're sitting here having a conversation about whether or not our candidate for president can get through a press conference on nato, by the way, and we're having to talk about, hope he gets through it, that's not what you want. >> reporter: several more house democrats publicly urged the president to withdraw as the top democrat in the house acknowledged he's getting an earful. >> did they confer with you, try to get your blessing, notify you in advance? >> as you can imagine, there have been a lot of conversations, and those conversations are private. >> reporter: three top biden campaign officials met privately with senate democrats, trying to prevent bleeding support. >> can we honestly say we're on the path to defeating donald trump? >> reporter: but they've already lost one, vermont's peter welch was the first to say the president should bail on re-election. >> why was this the time, sir? >> who knows when the right time is? >> reporter: the president's most vocal supporters in congress include members of the
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congressional black caucus, but the nevada democrat who chairs the group says the biden chain still needs to prove itself. >> the need to make change, structural change in the campaign, change around strategy, change around how we make investments in spending, to do what? to win in november. >> reporter: cbs news has learned the biden campaign is circulating a memo among house members and house aides, arguing the president's campaign is within the margin of error in the battleground states as they try to stop the bleeding of support here. scott macfarlane, cbs news, the capitol. as high heat continues to bake much of the west, there's growing anger in texas over power outages. residents are getting desperate, demanding answers for why it's taking so long to turn the lights back on. cbs's janet shamlian reports from a sweltering hot houston. >> thank you. >> reporter: this is the excruciating wait for water and
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a few basic food items in searing 90-degree heat. >> how are you faring? >> it's been hard. it's been hard. like yesterday all of our food ruined the day before yesterday. so we haven't eaten since the day before yesterday. >> reporter: more than a million people in the houston area are without power for a fourth day. at one of more than a dozen colling centers across the city, temperatures are running hot. >> every knew days ahead that we were getting a hurricane, right? so i would expect them to be more prepared and quicker to resolve issues. >> reporter: in the west, a relentless heat wave. it's the sixth consecutive day temperatures in las vegas have hit 115 degrees. >> we were going to walk up and down the strip, but it's just way too hot to do that. >> reporter: there have been about 90 suspected heat-related deaths in the west since the start of july. back in houston, a sports arena has been outfitted with cots, a temporary shelter for people discharged from a hospital but with no power at home.
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and this is the building where those patients are being housed. centerpoint says it expects to restore power to another 400,000 people friday, but that will still leave hundreds in the dark through sunday, almost a week after the storm. janet shamlian, cbs news, houston. >> tough situation there. well, we turn now to the involuntary manslaughter trial of actor alec baldwin. testimony is focusing on the gun and the ammunition involved in a deadly shooting on the set of his movie, "rust." cbs's elise preston reports from outside the courthouse in new mexico. >> reporter: as the prosecution builds its case, baldwin's defense is trying to poke holes in the evidence, claiming the actor had no idea that the prop gun could be deadly. alex baldwin looked on as a crime scene technician testified that live bullets were discovered mixed in with dummy rounds in several places on the set of "rust." at first glance, both types of ammunition appear similar, but a
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slight color variation differentiates the two. the film's armorer, hannah gutierrez-reed, who is already convicted of involuntary manslaughter, could be called to the stand tomorrow but is expected to plead the fifth. elise preston, cbs news, santa fe, new mexico. strong winds are fanning the flames of a wildfire burning through a national forest on the hawaiian island of maui. firefighters say the blaze is now 15% contained. you can see the video here. however, they worry that rising temperatures, strong winds, and decreasing humidity could make this fire worse. when "cbs news roundup" continues, evictions like these are up in cities across the nation. how rising rents are having an impact. day 1: the hardest day. the day you hear... i'm sorry...this is a type of blood cancer. but day 1 is just one day. at the leukemia and lymphoma society, we are here to help you move past day 1. on day 45, i discovered an online community.
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm carissa lawson in new york. the u.s. labor department says inflation cooled a bit from may to june. the consumer price index marks the first monthly decline in the cost of goods and services since may 2020. but the drop is not across the board. rent is up 5.2% nationally, and when rents increase, so do the number of eviction notices. cbs news correspondent kris van cleave reports from the hardest hit community in the u.s., where evictions are leaving people homeless. >> reporter: when mahogany kennedy knocks at a door in phoenix -- >> constable. >> does the person understand that they're getting evicted? >> reporter: it usually means someone is about to become homeless. >> grab your bag. we're going to change the locks. >> reporter: she's one of 26 maricopa county constables. it's her job to serve eviction notices. >> eviction numbers have truly gone up over the past few months. >> so pretty much every day you're evicting people? >> every day i'm evicting, five
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days a week. >> reporter: on this day, she'll attempt to serve three evictions. >> she's gone. >> reporter: including at this apartment. >> this is a three-bedroom apartment. >> reporter: which used to be home to seven people. >> you can use my phone. >> reporter: kevin glassco was the last to leave. >> just trying to get it together. i'm sorry. >> it's okay. it's a lot. >> it is, and everything is just so expensive right now, which is crazy. >> reporter: eviction filings in the phoenix area are surging to record highs. >> you know, i was just like not today, not today, please. >> this judgment does say that you need to move out by the 26th. >> reporter: in her south phoenix courtroom, judge anna huberman hears as many as 500 eviction cases a month, more than when the pandemic era eviction moratorium ended three years ago. >> there was a belief that there would be a large number of filings, that the evictions would go up, and they did not go up. there wasn't a tsunami.
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>> do you think you're getting that tsunami of evictions now? >> that's what it appears to be, yes. >> reporter: since march of last year, maricopa county has led the nation in eviction filings. the numbers are up 21% here compared to pre-pandemic, topping 83,000 filings. nationally, about 3.6 million evictions are filed annually. but what's changing is where they're happening. at least 14 cities have seen double-digit increases from 2019. most are in the sun belt, where populations are growing and rents are rising. >> it's parents and children who are at the heart of the eviction crisis. >> reporter: dr. carl ger schennson runs the eviction lab at princeton university which tracks the issue in 34 cities. >> these families are just one expected expense away from eviction. >> schedule time and come get whatever else that you need in the house. >> reporter: christopher aranda lived with his girlfriend in this home for seven years. >> so this is what you need right now? >> reporter: the lease was in her name when she lost her battle with cancer in january.
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after not working for months to care for her, aranda says he couldn't come up with the $3,000 needed to stay. >> how are you feeling today? >> a lot of memories. it is what it is. >> where are you going to go now? >> i have no idea. i got to start from scratch. >> reporter: starting over as constable kennedy heads to another door with another eviction order. kris van cleave, phoenix. there's a lot more ahead on "cbs news roundup." instead of trying the latest weight loss fad join over 5 million people that have switched to golo as a better way to lose weight with golo you simply take one release supplement with each meal and follow the golo for life plan the seven natural plants and three key minerals in release helps support weight loss by targeting body fat
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and stabbing pain in my hands, so i use nervive. nervive's clinical dose of ala reduces nerve discomfort in as little as seven days. now i can help again feel the difference with nervive. in today's health watch, as many as 33 million americans suffer from jaw joint disorders commonly called tmj issues. an investigation by cbs news and kff health news in april found many people suffering from tmj get surgeries that do more harm than good. now we're learning how out of pocket costs are driving patients into debt. here's senior consumer investigative correspondent anna werner. >> reporter: working in the music industry was kyra weiden keller's dream and before 2019,
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she says, she was living it, managing musical acts, even working for the owner of "american idol". >> i absolutely loved it. i loved what i was doing. >> reporter: but in 2019, she says, a minor problem with ear popping led to a diagnosis of tmj, problems with her jaw joint. >> it was the start of -- the start of hell. it led me down a path of no return. >> reporter: she says a series of dental treatments led to damage to the cartilage in her jaw. then joint deterioration and ongoing, unrelenting pain. >> i'm sitting here like in agony. >> in agony? >> in agony. so it's just crippling, you know. the worst part is that people don't understand because, you know, it's invisible. but it's -- it's torture. >> right, because you look -- you look good. >> that's not how i feel. >> reporter: not only that, but she says nearly all those treatments weren't covered by insurance. >> so the device was $3,000.
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>> reporter: medical records she provided show she's paid more than $100,000 out of pocket. >> that's a lot of money. >> that's a lot of money. >> you spent tens of thousands of dollars on these treatments? >> yes. >> and at the end of the day, where did they leave you? >> i paid for pain. i paid for pain i didn't have before. >> reporter: her story echos the findings of a 2020 report from the national academies of science, engineering, and medicine, which found tmj patients are often harmed by overly aggressive treatment. and because that treatment often falls between health and dental insurance, patients may be left to assume all costs. dr. tony schwartz says he sees many of those patients. >> i'd say the average patient that comes into my office has seen seven or eight other dentists already, and they've probably spent $20,000, $30,000 on treatment. >> reporter: dr. schwartz is the
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president of the american board of oro facial pain, which is trying to change how tmj is treated. its specialists avoid surgery or adjusting the bite, instead using gentler techniques like counseling, exercises, and diet changes to avoid making irreversible changes. >> you can't undo surgery. once you've entered the jaw joint, it's never the same no matter how nicely you close it back up. >> reporter: yet that national academy's report concluded when insurance companies do cover tmj treatment, they tend not to pay for this kind of low-risk and effective care. what is more often covered, higher-risk options like jaw surgery, which it said leads to patients getting the care that is best reimbursed rather than the care that is best. dr. james frickton studies insurance coverage of tmj care. >> patients will assume that the insurance company knows what they're doing. if that's all that's covers, what do you think they're going to get? surgery. >> reporter: kyra weiden keller
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said she's been told she now needs another surgery, but that, she says, could mean spending tens of thousands of dollars more for another treatment that might not work. >> this has stolen my life. it's been, you know -- it's been years now of just constant pain. >> that was anna werner reporting, and this is "cbs news roundup." this delectable knorr ramen noodle recipe will put an end to your drive-thru dinner rituals. throw that knorr bouillon in that tasty combo of delightful carrots
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stuck in space. two astronauts are on board the international space station who are not really supposed to be there. butch wilmore and sunny williams should have left weeks ago, but problems with boeing's starliner spacecraft have delayed their return to earth. as cbs news correspondent mark strassmann reports, they've spoken to the public, saying they're fine even though it looks like their stay on the space station could last several more weeks. >> human space flight is not easy. >> reporter: astronauts butch wilmore and sunny williams, five weeks into their planned one-week mission, talked from space about starlinr's ongoing troubles. >> this is a test flight. we were expecting to find some things, so we are finding stuff. >> and liftoff of starliner and atlas 5. >> reporter: the boeing-built spacecraft launched with one small helium leak. now it has five. starliner also lost five small maneuvering engines on the final approach to the space station. four were recovered. >> you could tell the thrust, the control, the capability was
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degraded. the handling qualities were not the same. >> reporter: nasa wants to make sure both issues are fully understood before starliner tries to fly the astronauts home. >> so really what we're doing is just taking the time to make sure that we have looked under every rock and every stone and just to make sure that there's nothing else that would surprise us. >> reporter: all of starliner's issues are in its service module, under the crew capsule. but the service module is discarded before starliner re-enters the earth's atmosphere. studying its problems in space is the only option. >> we trust that the tests that we're doing are the ones that we need to do to get the right answers to give us the data that we need to come back. >> reporter: for now, nasa says the astronauts are not stranded, and there is no need for a rescue mission but admit they have looked at contingency plans. >> certainly we've dusted off a few of those things to look at relative to starliner just to be prepared. but, again, our prime option is to return butch and sunny on
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starliner. >> reporter: despite starliner stake knit history. >> i have a good feeling in my heart this spacecraft will bring us home no sooner. >> reporter: that homecoming will come no sooner than the end of the month. mark strassmann in atlanta. >> "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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it's friday, july 12th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." >> i'm not in this for my legacy.

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