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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  July 18, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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there he is! >> reporter: before rushing him inside the er. over an hour earlier, the alleged assassin, thomas matthew crooks, was caught on video wandering around. a local tactical sniper also snapped this photo of him roughly 26 minutes before he climbed on to a building and attempted to kill the former president. >> get down, get down, get down! >> reporter: crooks had on him a phone and what appears to be a remote transmitter, potentially intended to set off suspicious devices he had in his car and home. according to a law enforcement bulletin obtained by cbs news, crooks received multiple packages over the last several months, some possibly containing hazardous material. a cbs news analysis has found the sniper team closest to the shooter would have had their line of sight likely obscured by trees, making it difficult for them to see him clearly. the team farther away had to reset before taking the single shot that neutralized the
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target. a private funeral is planned on friday for corey comperatore, the retired firefighter killed. meanwhile, two others have been upgraded from critical to serious condition, including 74-year-old james copenhaver shot twice. >> he loves this country. he is somebody you would want as your next-door neighbor. >> reporter: crystal barr is copenhaver's family friend. how is he doing? >> i think he is definitely on the road to recovery. people went there for an exciting day, and instead lives were changed. >> reporter: tonight, multiple federal agencies have launched investigations into the secret service failure here. we're also learning tonight that secret service director kimberly cheatle will testify before the house oversight committee this month. >> that was meg oliver reporting. at the gop convention in milwaukee, former president donald trump's running mate, j.d. vance, was greeted with a standing ovation as he addressed the party faithful. that enthusiasm could end up
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playing a deciding roll in the upcoming november election. tony dokoupil has more. >> reporter: they've been dancing in the aisles at the republican national convention. but even before saturday's shooting, there was just something different about trump supporters. as we found over bratwurst -- >> this is great! >> reporter: -- a couple of beers and a whole lot of wisconsin cheese. you planning dinner or a party? that's the question. >> reporter: we set out to answer a few bedrock questions about 2024. are you following the presidential campaign? >> absolutely. >> reporter: at the brat stop in kenosha, nearly everyone said they're paying attention to politics. are you going to vote? >> yes. >> oh, definitely. >> reporter: definitely? >> definitely. hands-down. >> reporter: ask them how they feel about that vote, however, and you start to notice a difference. are you excited? are you apprehensive? >> no, i want jesus to come before the election. >> my heart gets real tense
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thinking about it. i'm just really worried. >> reporter: biden supporters often have reservations or even dreams of another option. do you know who you're going to vote for? >> yes. >> reporter: who is it? >> president trump. >> reporter: but trump supporters? they're all in. are you excited about your choice? >> absolutely. >> reporter: it's not just the brats talking. a poll last month here in wisconsin found 61% of trump voters describe themselves as very enthusiastic about their candidate, compared to 39% of biden supporters. and nearly half of democrats all across the country now think biden should step aside, according to a cbs news poll following last month's worrying debate performance. >> we finally beat medicare. >> reporter: still, a vote is a vote, no matter the feeling. and down the road at the mars cheese castle, in between the curds and accessories, we found quite a few of those not so excited biden voters.
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>> we all can dream of something better, but you've got one guy and he is there. >> reporter: and here you have a defining reality of 2024. most voters have big doubts about both candidates. two-thirds feeling little or no confidence in biden's physical fitness. and a majority doubting donald trump would act ethically if allowed back into the white house. are you excited about your choices? >> no. >> no. >> reporter: no? a lot of people feel that way also. >> i think either one of them are perfect. >> reporter: but there is still a sizable number of voters watching and waiting to see if something changes. so you going vote? >> i don't know yet. i haven't decided, to be honest. >> reporter: you might stay home? >> yes. >> reporter: what are you making your decision based on? >> just trying to see what they end up doing. you are hearing rumors that some people are going to drop out. who knows. >> reporter: back over by the free cheese samples --
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>> i don't like who we have running for office. >> reporter: i met a shopper fed u with all of it. >> they make us look like idiots. >> reporter: you're talking about everybody, all your options? >> where is the kennedys? where is the bushes? where is the honorable people to step up? >> reporter: by the end of our day, over a local pilsner at city lights brewing in milwaukee -- >> thank you very much. >> reporter: we'd learned that while america has many acknowledged problems, a lot of voters believe the two major party candidates vying to fix them might not even be able to fix their own. >> i'm definitely not voting for biden. >> reporter: there was a doubt? >> i'm definitely not voting for trump. but i can't say i'm voting for biden eithe. >> reporter: amazing. >> i can't say 100% i'm going to vote for trump either. we still have a couple of months to see who comes out of the woodwork. >> that was tony dokoupil in milwaukee. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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not only for the president, but for donald trump as well. dr. jon lapook reports. >> there is an old saying among doctors. if you seen one 80-year-old, you've seen one 80-year-old. some will act like they are 60 or 70, while others seem a lot older. you hear a lot of people asking, how old is too old. shouldn't it be how old is too old for what function? >> absolutely. i could not agree more. >> reporter: is part of you just getting sick and tired of this discussion? >> no, i am never tired of discussing aging. >> reporter: dr. louise aronson is a geriatrician and professor of medicine at the university of san francisco. her best-selling book "elderhood" is about redefining old age. >> i honestly think anybody who has lived past their 40s knows age matters, right? your body changes. your brain changes. what i would like to see is a conversation where we actually discuss the things that matter. >> reporter: it gets tricky, right? >> absolutely.
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>> reporter: things like wisdom. >> right. >> reporter: brushing up against decreasing cognitive function. >> right. there is a lot of variability. >> reporter: a healthy human brain has up to 100 billion nerve cells making trillions of connections with each other. recent research suggests a normal part of aging involves forgetting less important memories to help make room for new ones. the problem comes when normal forgetting is coupled with an abnormal process causing dementia. i would say by far the biggest fear my patients have is that they're losing it. >> right. >> reporter: and very often it will start with i couldn't think of the name. it is somebody i know so well. >> right. >> reporter: how important is that? how worried should they be? >> i would say they should not be worried. >> reporter: what about misplacing objects? >> sometimes it's a matter of attention. what may be happening in situations where people said i couldn't find my keys, is they weren't paying enough attention to the keys. maybe talking to someone when they put them down, and
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consequently, that memory isn't within their grasp the way they would hope. >> reporter: if you find the keys and you don't know what they do? >> oh, that's a bigger problem, yes. >> reporter: that distinction between normal and abnormal aging is increasingly important as the number of older workers continues to grow. and in most cases, mandatory retirement at a certain age is illegal. >> congress today gave final approval to a bill that outlaws mandatory retirement for most workers at any age. >> reporter: but there are exceptions when public safety is at stake. for example, fbi agents must retire at 57. commercial airline pilots at 65. but there are no age limits for surgeons. >> doctors think that they know best. >> reporter: dr. mark catholic is a thoracic surgeon and chief of surgery for life bridge health in baltimore. >> let's go. >> reporter: in 2018, he created the aging program, a two-day
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physical and cognitive program open to surgeons anywhere in the world, demonstrated here. >> okay, kurt, you can stop. >> almost everyone comes kicking and screaming and not wanting to come. >> reporter: and what precipitates them being sent there in the first place? >> something has been identified as being problematic. >> i want you touch the block that i touch. >> okay. >> reporter: aside from evaluating surgeons flagged with a possible problem, life bridge is one of the few hospital systems in the country where all doctors and nurses over the age of 75 receive a neurocognitive assessment every two years. >> our doctors are very opn-minded about it. >> reporter: dr. catholic, age 72 says tests like this help fight ageism by focus on function rather than chronological age. >> you can make a very strong case to anybody who is in a high impact profession, doctors, airline pilots, high government officials, they should have a screening at some age. in fact, i would take away the
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mandatory retirement for airline pilots and others if you are okay, the test shows you are okay. >> we've added a couple of decades, essentially, an entire generation on to our lives, and we haven't kind of socio culturally figured out to handle that. and i think it's important. we need to discuss age. >> reporter: figuring out how to handle that, says dr. aronson, might mean embracing the realities of getting older while realizing the end of working doesn't have to mean the end of a meaningful life. >> we need ways of letting people work when they still can and helping them to stop working when that's in their interest and the interests of the common good. >> that was dr. jon lapook. stay with us. you're watching "cbs news roundup."
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a growing number of americans are taking their vacations on the road, getting on food and drink journeys known as trails. wendy gillette has the story. >> reporter: you're probably familiar with the kentucky bourbon trail, where you can dip your own bottle in red wax at maker's mark distillery outside louisville. and at heaven hill distillery, see some of its more than two million aging barrels, taste samples, and bottle your own bourbon. a personalized tour often includes a bourbon 101 class. >> all of our palates are like snowflakes. maybe understand what things you do and don't like. >> reporter: a lesser known kentucky trail centers around beer cheese, a spread invented in the '40s, right next to hall's on the river. the restaurant in winchester near lexington serves all manner of beer cheeses. >> it's a spicy food. it was originally invented to help customers drink beer. some of god's greatest inventions, if you think about it, beer and cheese. >> reporter: one market stop makes freshly made dip.
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from the pepperoni roll in west virginia and pim meant know cheese in south carolina to fermented food in pennsylvania, donuts in ohio, and tacos in california. another food journey here in north carolina caters to oyster lovers. the oyster trail features some of the more than 300 oyster and clam farms along the state's coast. bennie the chihuahua is your ambassador on tours of cape hatteras oyster company in the outer banks. standing guard while owner ryan belter retrieves oysters ready for sale. >> he does eat oysters also. he'll eat them raw. >> reporter: visits include sampling a few freshly shucked oysters. >> and a ride along with sticky bottom oyster gives a glimpse of what it takes to farm them. >> it is a full-time job seven days a week. there is always something broke. there is always oysters to baby, take care of. >> reporter: they start this small, slowly growing in what's called an upweller before they transferred into pimlico sound. >> an oyster connoisseur can tell the difference between an oyster here and six miles down. >> reporter: also oysters at
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blue water grill, jewelry inspired by oyster shells at empty nest studio, and very live seafood including oysters for sale at whalebone market. >> look at my office. >> reporter: it's another look at life away from the usual shore stops. wndy gillette, cbs news, buxton, north carolina. >> it looks like a really fun way to spend a day. and that's today's "cbs news rundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul.
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. j.d. vance, the republican vice presidential candidate, addressed the party faithful at the gop convention in milwaukee. >> i stand here humbled, and i'm overwhelmed with gratitude to say i officially accept your nomination to be vice president of the united states of america. >> vance has only been a senator for 18 months, and his elevation to vp nominee is just the latest in a busy news cycle that started even before the assassination attempt on former president donald trump. as mark strassmann found out for eye on america, for many people, just trying to follow along is stressful enough. >> usa, usa! >> hello to pennsylvania. i'm thrilled to be back. >> reporter: already on edge, already divided. millions of us absorbed dizzying drama this past weekend, a series of extraordinary
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headlines. >> a judge has just dismissed the classified documents case against former president donald trump. >> reporter: 72 hours straight from a shadow realm of the news cycle. >> were the weekend news stressful for you? >> they were absolutely stressful. >> reporter: could you feel your blood pressure rising? >> absolutely. >> reporter: matthew motta of boston university's school of public health does more than follow the news. he studies how consuming it affects people's health. >> a major decision today, trump selecting ohio senator j.d. vance as his running mate. >> reporter: what his research says about news events, especially extraordinary moments like this might surprise you. >> the people who consume the most news, they're there for a reason. they enjoy this type of content. even news that might stress them out. >> reporter: they enjoy to some degree being miserable? >> yes. i think that's a fair way of putting it. there are a relatively small number of people in the american electorate, but they're precisely the people who are
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most likely to vote. >> reporter: normally, only 38% of americans pay close attention to the news. but there was nothing normal about this three-day news cycle. bloodied in the trump assassination attempt, his right ear and our sense of what's wrong in our country. a moment grafting next level news trauma on the american psyche. and as a society, our mind-set was already racing. the pandemic, racism and racial tension, inflation and climate disasters. the american psychological association calls where we are now the impact of a collective trauma. >> it's a shame that my vote counts the same as your vote. >> it's a shame that you aren't in the same reality that we are. >> reporter: but remember, most people, the other 62%, try to tune out lack of interest or as a coping response. >> president biden's campaign in crisis mode. >> reporter: sometimes in our 24/7 digital world, the biggest headlines chase them down eventually. this is one of those times. what are the consequences of a
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news cycle like this? >> if people disengage, then we potentially run the risk of losing their opinions at the ballot box. >> reporter: so strap in. the extraordinary in this news cycle seems to have staying power. mark strassmann in boston. "cbs news roundup" will be right back. “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar i & ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. anti-depressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke.
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the atlantic hurricane season is now in full swing, and although no major storms have made landfall in the u.s. so far, the hurricane center expects this season to set records. experts say if you live along the shore, you should be prepared for the worst. manuel bojorquez reports on the latest in disaster planning. >> reporter: it turns out a disaster expo is exactly where you'd want to be if a disaster struck. the latest in emergency supplies of food, first aid, temporary shelters, even massive pumps, to name a few things. these hands-free umbrellas are marketed to help keep emergency workers cool and dry. >> that's nice. this would be very convenient on a hot day. >> reporter: this particular expo started in the uk. jack moss is managing director at fordham international. >> we started it off as a flight exhibition, and we saw a gap in the market to be able to expand
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and cover all different types of disasters, which has landed us here in the united states of america. >> reporter: and we have plenty of disasters here in the united states. >> yes. >> reporter: in fact, last year the united states saw the highest number of separate billion disasters on record, 28, according to the national oceanic and atmospheric administration. the national hurricane center is using an interactive virtual reality tool to educate the public about following evacuation orders. i got try it out. >> oh, boy, here we go. so now we've got wind and rain coming into the house. oh, wow, okay. now the furniture is starting to float. it's pretty realistic. >> a lot of people don't believe it can happen to them. >> reporter: jamie rhone is with the national hurricane center. >> the whole point of the vr technology is to help people to understand a phenomenon that they'd never seen before. >> reporter: so this is a real-life scenario of what i went through in the vr. >> correct. >> reporter: here is that
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real-life scenario, a house eventually swept away in southwest florida during hurricane ian in 2022. this was my vantage point covering ian in fort myers, fortunately from several floors up. water is the number one killer during these storms. but scientists are also studying the destructive winds. in this simulator called the wall of wind at florida international university, engineers can create wind speeds similar to a category 5 hurricane. their goal, to test the limits of structures and help develop better building codes. so the research here could save lives? >> bottom line, that's what it's all about. there is a lot of science and research here, but the end user, it's us. it's you and me living in homes. >> reporter: just outside the wall of wind we spoke with fema administrator dan criswell about this year's season. >> fema no longer prepares for a
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busy hurricane season. it's is all year wrong. we are ready. our commodities are replenished from last year, and we are going to be able to support and get in there early to help communities if they're impacted by one of these events. >> reporter: one challenge, regardless of how many hurricanes the season brings, is how rapidly they can intensify. what in your view going into this hurricane season is the biggest threat? >> i think the biggest threat lack of respect for the severity that these storms can bring to a community. because we want to keep people safe, and we want to keep them out of harm's way. >> reporter: all while noaa predicts up to 25 named storms this year, the highest number it's ever forecast for the i got this $1,000 camera for only $41 on dealdash. dealdash.com, online auctions since 2009. this playstation 5 sold for only 50 cents. this ipad pro sold for less than $34. and this nintendo switch,
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medical foster home program. >> you're going to play catch with charlie? >> reporter: an innovative approach to an old problem. >> catch it, pete! >> reporter: taking care of veterans who need extra care later in life. give me what some of the advantages are of living here in a home as opposed to a nursing facility. >> it's nice here. and being in a nursing home, they just throw you away. they ignore you. but here we're like part of the family. >> reporter: all three men served in the military in the late '60s and early 70s. charles in the navy, peter and eckhart in the army, which is is the subject of some good-natured ribbing in their home. what do you guys like about each other? >> nothing. [ laughter ] he's like a brother to me, yeah. >> good job. >> reporter: chantel's career began in a nursing home, but she realized she could provide a more comfortable environment in her home. >> very good. >> reporter: medical professionals and social workers
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visit the vets. >> i know you're doing it, charlie. >> reporter: chantel also takes them to services outside the home. >> the day-care center they go to is wonderful. we take the guys out to the mall. let them do some walking, somebody might want coffee. we get them ice cream. >> our caregivers treat the veterans as their own family. >> reporter: dana cooper is the v.a.'s director of home care. she overseas the medical foster care program. >> the caretakers have to live in the home with the veteran. so we really see that family bond and relationship. >> reporter: it takes a different person to do this, ms. cooper. >> yeah. >> reporter: why? >> i believe that every veteran has a right to remain and age in place and be with people who surround them with love. >> reporter: almost half of the veteran population is 65 and older. nursing homes can cost over $100,000 per year out of pocket. the medical foster program costs vets less than half that.
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caregivers receive, on average, $2800 per month from each veteran living in their home. chantel, what do you get out of this? >> a lot. it gives me a peace of mind to know that i'm able to help others and give back. i love helping others, and i love giving back. >> reporter: the program began in 2002 in arkansas, florida, and puerto rico. today, it's found in 47 states where over 700 veterans receive home care from approximately 500 caregivers. how long do you envision yourself doing this? >> forever. i don't ever want to stop. >> reporter: any veteran enrolled in the v.a. system is eligible for this program, a program that serves as a powerful reminder about the
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