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tv   CBS Overnight News  Me-TV  February 29, 2016 3:08am-4:00am CST

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the young police officer is being remembered tonight. she was killed this weekend during her first day on the job. following an awful series of events in northern virginia. >> reporter: prince william county police department posted this picture of rookie officer ashley gwendon, about to start
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the caption -- be safe. >> she was literally sworn in the day before, on friday. >> she interned for the police department. >> she clearly had a passion to serve others in a way that went beyond herself. >> reporter: she and two other officers responded to a domestic disturbance on saturday. when they arrived, suspect ronald hamilton opened fire from the front door. >> we have three officers that have been shot. >> reporter: guher training officer along with jessie hempen were wounded and are expected to survive. >> officers provided first aid to the wounded officers, and as rescue staff could get on scene later in the afternoon, officer
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hamilton is an active duty staff sergeant who works at the pentagon. no one knows which he fired on the officers. neighbor leon harris described him as a gentle giant. >> the guy was a great guy. great neighbors, just something must have snapped. >> reporter: early sunday morning, more than 100 patrol cars lined up outside the hospital where the officers what taken. they provided escort to a young woman whose first day on the job tragically became her last. hamilton is expected to be in court tomorrow. he faces one count of capital murder of a police officer and is held without bound. and the state's attorney will seek the death penalty. anger over a police shooting sparked dangerous protests that shut part of downtown salt lake city. >> reporter: violence exploded
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lake city police officer shot a 17-year-old black teenager in the chest and stomach. his friend saw the shooting. >> when the cops came, they ran up and told him to stop. and when he was turning around, they shot him. i know he got, i seen his chest and his stomach. >> reporter: police responded to a call to break up a fight outside this homeless shelter. police say they opened fire after mohammed refused to drop the weapon. kutvs jeremy harris was one of the first reporters on the scene. >> the witnesses were very worked up. very angry. you could tell there was a lot of passion. so many people saw this. at any given time there were 50 or more people standing outside the homeless shelter. >> reporter: protesters launched bottles and rocks at police. >> the witnesses say this was about race. in fact, several people were walking by, chanting "black
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>> reporter: also the officers wear body cameras and will release the video of the shooting as soon as possible. meanwhile, mohammed is in critical condition. and two officers are on routine paid administrative leave. in hestonshesston, kansas, we have a survive story. >> reporter: adam miller came face-to-face with the shooter. >> i saw him come around the corner, and he just looked kind of confused. so i told him he needs to run, there's a fire. and he just looked confused. so i told him again, and he said i know, and then he shot me. >> reporter: cedrick ford shot 17 people, including 14 co-workers, quilling three of them before police shot and killed him. investigators believe he acted out in violence after being served with a protective order taken out by an ex-girlfriend.
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time to come together. at sunday's services to honor the victims, and at a town hall meeting where sergeant chris carter, one of the first on the scene was embraced by the community. >> the people that worked at that place were phenomenal. their actions were heroic that day. >> reporter: hesston strong has become a motto here. >> they're all going through a really tough time. the least i could do is come out and help. >> reporter: for many, healing means forgiveness and compassion, even for the killer. >> i don't know what he was going through, but obviously, he felt this was the way out, and so my heart just aches for him. >> reporter: there will be a memorial service tonight at hesston high school. next week, ford's ex-girlfriend is expected to face a judge for giving him weapons knowing he was a convicted felon.
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calm, two days into a he cease-fire, but the quiet has brought little comfort. >> reporter: three years a the city of homs was the fiercest front line of the war. then they moved on, leaving a wasteland and hundreds of thousands of homeless people. in some parts, residents are trickling back, reestablishing the essentials of life, commerce, even school. this is day two of the partial cease-fire, and people are holding their breath, hoping it will hold. right on the edge of town, we can hear the sounds of fighting, though. but with no monitors anywhere, it's impossible to say who is attacking whom. the numerous reports of violations today underline what a fragile thing the partial truce is. but 48 hours in, everybody agrees, things are much quieter than they've been in years. though the kind of lasting peace
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still feels a long way off. elizabeth palmer, cbs new, homs. in iraq, dozens were killed and about a hundred hurt. a group affiliated with isis claimed responsibility. a series of gas explosions in a russian coal mine have killed at least three dozen. it happened in northern russia, above the arctic circle. 81 minors were rescued after the original blast, but those still trapped are presumed dead. coming up, we follow the new e-mail trail in a flint water crisis. and a cruise ship threatened
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thousands of e-mail released this weekend show how the michigan governor's office struggled to handle a water crisis in flint. we've been reporting on this story for months. we have this update. >> reporter: just weeks before governor rick snyder declared
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unsafe to drink, there was a push to discourage a push back to the old water-source. the governor's aide was told, gentlemen, in the attached is a description of what it would cost to reconnect to detroit water. the estimated cost was $12 million a year. the city eventually did rekent to detroit water in october of 2015, days after the governor declared flint's river water unsafe. the announcement was triggered by an independent study that linked lead poisoning in children to the river water. one thing we keep hearing is that the governor is not involved or is detached. this would be good to show that he's there and he cares. and if we don't announce until he's there, we can avoid the protests and still get the optics.
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the fallout was eerily predicted in an e-mail sent more than a year ago when the governor's special prongs projects manager wrote, this is a public reasons crisis waiting to explode nationally, friday the government admitted he should have been more directly involved back when his aides first e-mailed about the problem. >> that's where i'm kicking myself every day. i wish i would have asked more questions. i wish i wouldn't have accepted answers. i'm not going to have that happen again. >> reporter: snyder says he's working to expand health care coverage for residents and subsidize their water bills.
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five-hour tantrum. this time it seems better safe than sorry. the ship was damaged by 30 foot waves and hurricane-force winds earlier this month. it is one year old and based off new jersey. a frightening scene at a hindu festival in india. an elephant went on this rampage. started picking up truck and flinging them around. no one was hurt, including the man who was on the elephant's back. some winners on the baseball field will no longer get their just desserts. the baltimore orioles have banned the tradition of smashing a pie in a player's face after wins. they say it's about safety and
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>> still ahead, the gymnast who has the internet flipping out. every day it's getting closer
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a love like yours will surely come my way hey, hey, hey babies aren't fully developed until at least 39 weeks. if your pregnancy is healthy, wait for labor to begin on its own. a healthy baby is worth the wait. o0 c1 travel is part of the american way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings. [ cheering ] everyone plays a role in keeping our community safe. whether you're traveling for business or pleasure, be aware of your surroundings. if you see something suspicious,
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finally, tonight, talk about gymnastics floor routines and many picture something like ballet set to classical music. but we introduce you to a gymnast stretching the limit to a different beat. >> reporter: gymnastics is all about grace. >> nice. >> reporter: power. and hip-hop? it's not just the high notes that ucla gymnast sophiena hits, it's those moves.
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sport, and what you did was very non-traditional. she and her teammates are changing this. >> i feel that it's much more about entertainment now than the ridge id sport as perfection. >> reporter: she is getting high marks from judges. but even higher marks on social media, where her floor exercise earlier this month, the first time she ever performed it, went viral. >> i woke up, and my mom called, and she said do you know you have like 5 million views on your floor routine? i didn't know it was posted anywhere. >> reporter: it's now been viewed more than 40 million times. tell me some of your responses. >> some of my favorite ones have been marriage proposals and prom proposals. >> reporter: and a lot of celebrities have taken notice.
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i found out that chris brown posted it on his facebook. i was like oh, my gosh. no way. >> reporter: even her teammates have gotten into the groove, along with her coach, who admits you can please a crowd but still not please everyone. >> i think there are judges that still don't like it. i've always compared it to a picasso. there a lot of people who would not put a picasso in their home because they don't like it. but that doesn't mean it's not excellent art. >> reporter: sophiena says she has danced professionally. ly not find the nae nae, the whip and the dab in reno. >> the one performance i did, that was my olympics. >> reporter: and a moment as good as gold. carter evans. cbs news, los angeles. that is the overnight news for this monday. for some of you, the news
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for others, check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. the biggest day in presidential races comes tuesday. clinton came away with 72% of
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trump has the support of 40% of primary voters, compared to 27% for marco rubio and 22% for ted cruz. trump is also at 40% in georgia. but in his home state of texas, cruz is out front with 42%. 11 points better than trump. marco rubio's in third. cruz discussed the race on "face the nation." >> i think super tuesday is the most important day of this primary election. it is the most delegates awarded in a single night will be awarded on super tuesday, and i think we are positioned to have a very good night on super tuesday. about 65% of republicans believe that donald trump is not the best candidate to go head to head with hillary clinton, and we are the only campaign that has beaten donald trump, and we're the only candidate that can beat donald trump.
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states, we are running neck in neck with donald all across states in super tuesday. it's important that they recognize that nominating a candidate who agrees with hillary clinton, who has a very similar record, is not the path to victory. if conservatives stand together, we're going to have a great night on tuesday. >> reporter: if you don't, is he unstoppable? >> there is no doubt, that if he wins everywhere with big margins, then he may well be unstoppable. but if you are at home and you don't want donald trump to be the nominee, then the only candidate who can beat donald is our campaign, and so i would encourage you, even if you like another candidate, stand with us, if you don't want donald to be the nominee, because if and when we stop him on super tuesday, that's how we end up beating donald and nominating a proven conservative, which is what it's going to take to beat hillary. >> reporter: what did you make
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>> i don't think that was a big surprise. i think it was a blow to the rubio campaign. but at the end of the day, the washington establishment is going to go where they're going to go. this super tuesday is a battle to determine where conservatives go. and i think the debate this week was really some powerful moments of clarity. we saw that donald trump has the same issues on issue after issue as hillary clinton. he agreed with hillary clinton on libya, toppling the government in libya. that led directly to benghazi, led to handing that country over to radical islamism. he agreed with hillary clinton supporting john kerry, he agreed with hillary clinton on being quote, neutral on israel and the palestinians. as president, i'm not going to be neutral. america will stand unapologetically with israel. then he agreed with barack obama and hillary clinton on the tarp bailout of big banks. i think the government ought to
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working men and women, then you put on top of that the ethical issues, whether it is refusing to release his taxes, and that's a real problem. >> reporter: why is that a problem? >> he said in the debate, he said gosh, i'm being audited for two years, then he said three years, then he said maybe five years. listen, if there's a problem in his taxes, the voters have a right to know. because come september, october, the general election, folks in the media are going to make a heyday about any problems in his taxes, and voters have a right to know. and the excuse that he's being audited, that makes it more important for him to release his taxes so the voters can see, mitt romney suggested there could be a bombshell there. i don't know if there is or not, but donald is hiding them from the voters and he owes candor to the voters. >> reporter: speaking about candor, he's said some bracing things about you.
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>> reporter: he didn't say charming things about you. >> he can turn on you. overnight he can turn on you and get nasty and personal and virks. listen, i treat him as an entertainer. i laugh him off. it's like going to the circus and seeing the acrobats and dancing bears. he's willing to say things that are patently false. so, for example at the debate this week, he backed off of his health care position for 20 years. for 20 years he has agreed with hillary clinton and bernie sanders on socialized medicine saying obamacare doesn't go far enough. he wansts the government to pay for everyone's health care and control it, is it true or false the government saidhould pay for everyone's health care. we had video of him a few months ago saying exact lit opposite. and what i think the debate this week did is gave real clarity to
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hillary, we need a consistent conservative, someone who has stood for free market principles, who has stood for the constitution, and critically, who's stood for the working men and women of this country. you know, you look at, we talked a lot about donald's record on immigration. there's iranony that he made the center of his campaign on immigration. he faced a judgment for a conspiracy to hire illegal aliens. just this week, news broke that he has hired foreign workers at his fancy hotel in florida. he did an interview where he said you can't find americans to do these jobs, to be waiters or waitresses or bellhops. what ridiculous nonsense. the new york times reported roughly 300 americans applied for those jobs. he only hired 17.
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and i think the american men and women are getting hammered right now. they want someone they can trust to stand with them. and part of the reason so many conservatives are uniting behind our campaign is i'm the only one who lid the battle against amnesty, led the battle to secure the borders, led the battle for the working men and women. >> let me ask you about your position with immigration, bill o'reilly presented you with a hypothetical about somebody who overstayed their visa and he said president cruz is going to send the feds to his house, take him out and put him on a plane, and you said you better believe it. but in an interview with jake tapper you said we don't have a system that knocks on doors in every case in america. in one case you're knocking on doors and the other you aren't. >> we don't have storm troopers to knock on the doors of every american citizen. but when we have evidence that a particular person has committed a crime, we send law enforcement
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and the specific question was visa overstay. right now current law requires a biometric entry system when you come in on a visa. and the obama administration is ignoring federal law. 40% of illegal immigration is not people who cross the borders illegally, it's people who come on a visa laundry can wreak havoc on our clothes, ruining them forever. sweaters stretch into muumuus. and pilled cardigans become pets. but it's not you, it's the laundry. protect your clothes from stretching, fading, and fuzz. ...with downy fabric conditioner... it not only softens and freshens, it helps protect clothes from the damage of the wash. so your favorite clothes stay your favorite clothes.
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as we head into super tuesday, marco rubio's looking to went his first primary state and ripping into drum, calling him a con man. john deckerson spoke with both rubio and trump for "face the nation". >> i'd like to ask you about a washington post headline that says rubio's strategy for super tuesday is survival. do you agree with that characterization? >> no, i don't. we're not the front runner,
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and i relish that. i've been an underdog in personal life and in politics. they're awarded proportionally. and we're going to move on. here's what's never going to happen in this race. there's never going to be a time when the republican party rallies around and says you have to get out for purposes of rallying around donald trump. he's not a republican, he's not a conservative. he's trying to pull off the biggest scam in american political history, a conjob where he's trying to take over the republican party by telling people he's somebody he's not. we're going to be in this race as long as it takes, as many states to ensure that i'm the nominee and that donald trump never gets the 1,236 delegates which is what he needs to be the nominee. >> your campaign's got and lot scrappier. is it too little too late? >> i don't think so. for a couple reasons. one, i never wanted it to get to this point.
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the way media covers politics, people would open this eyeeir eyes and see who he really is. but he's been able to fool a significant number of people into believing that he is something that he's not. he is a world class con artists. he conned all these people who signed up for trump university. now he's trying to persuade us that he's fighting for american workers, but he's hiring foreign workers for his hotels, that he's going to bring back jobs from mexico and china, but he's creating jobs in china and mexico, because that's where all the suits and ties that he sells are made. it's a scam. and we're going to unveil it and reveal it and the more people learn about that, the less support he's going to come. >> you said he's running a big scam, it's a con job. how can you retain the position that if he's the nominee you'll
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>> because he's never going to be the nominee. so i'm not worried about a hypothetical that's never going to happen. >> well, i think you understand exactly what's going on. you pick up any paper, and it's always talking about how are we going to overthrow donald trump? i'm representing millions of people that really feel angry an disen franchised. and these are great people. i love them. and we're not being treated right. the republican party is not treating me right. and they're not treating the people that i represent right. >> let me ask you a question about their questionis question of taxes. what about releasing a summary? that's sometimes what candidates will do, show your income, charitable deductions, tax rate, would you do that? >> i've already released my financials, which are massive, and by the way, we've shown a tremendous company, it's over $10 billion in net worth that i built with a very, very small
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and i've already done that, and that's down and filed in the federal elections office, and if people want to see it, they can go see it. and obviously, all of your coe mores have gone through them in great detail and i've been given great reviews for what i've done. you don't learn very much from tax -- hey, john, you don't learn very much from tax returns, let me tell you right now. but when you're under audit, you don't give your papers. i've been under audit for so many years. every year i get audited for maybe ten years, 12 years. i think i'm being singled out. and it's not a fair situation. but the irs audits me every year. i have friends who are very wealthy, i say, do you get audited? they don't know what i'm talking about. >> it's been raised about foreign workers in florida. the "new york times" said there were people who wanted the job.
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foreign workers because there weren't americans who wanted the job. but the new york times said there were people who applied. >> they have to be qualified. it's very, very hard to hire people, qualified people. and a lot of people don't want the job because it's a three or four month job. it's very hard to get people. it's just one of those things. everybody is working. then during the off-season, it's easy, but we don't have the people during the off seenason, because the club closes. a lot of people don't want a part-time job. >> you say people should come back to america, build their products here, have american workers, but why wouldn't those companies say a version of what you're saying, if they can't find the workers here and they have to go other places, why wouldn't they do what you're saying? >> they're full-time jobs. a lot of the people that we've made offers to and where we make offers, when they hear it's a part-time job or a four month or
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they're not interested. but what you don't talk about is the thousands of people that i do hire. i have thousands and thousands of people on my payroll, over the years i've had tens of thousands of people that work for me. you're picking up one club where it has a high season where it's very, very hard, it's very hard to get people in palm beach during the season, during the social season. >> michael hayden is the director of national security agency said if you ordered u.s. forces to kill the families of terrorists, which you've suggested and to use water boarding as you've also suggested that they would refuse you. what's your response to that? >> i don't know what he means by refuse. i can only tell you, there's a lot of bad things going on. they're chopping off head the in syria and all over the middle east. isis is doing a number of, plenty of others beyond isis is doing it now. all i know is when they start chopping off heads we have to be very frm.
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we have to be very vinl length. and i heard the statement and disagree. we have to be very strong. can you imagine these people that chop off heads of christians and plenty of other people and do it routinely and drown people in big steel metal cages, they leave it in for a half hour and pull it up and everybody's dead. when they hear us talking about water boarding, give sometimes we use k-y ultragel to enhance my body's natural moisture so i can get into it a bit quicker. and when i know she's into it, i get into it and... feel the difference with k-y ultragel.
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bernie sanders insists hislop sided loss to hillary clinton in saturday's south carolina primary will not be repeated in the super tuesday states. he got only 26% of the vote to clinton's 73%. in virginia, it shows sanders trailing clinton. sanders discussed the race with john dickerson for "face the nation". >> it was a disappointing loss in south carolina last night. coming up, there's georgia, virginia, texas. when analysts look at that map, they say there as not a plausle path for you to the nomination, what is your response? >> my response is we're in minnesota. i think we're going to win in minnesota, colorado, and massachusetts and vermont, and i think we've got a number states coming up that we're going to do
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including california and new york state. so i think we do have a path to victory. now i won't tell you that we didn't get beaten and beaten very badly yesterday in south carolina. i congratulate secretary clinton on her victory, but john, i think for us, that is about as bad as it's going to get. >> when you look at the progress you've made, which surpasses all analysts who would have looked at your campaign from the beginning, even given the progress you've made, is there enough time left? you've mentioned some places where you think you've done well, but isn't time kind of running out? >> well, no. i don't think so. i think you've got, on tuesday, we're going to have over 800 delegates being selected. i think we're going to went a very good share of those delegates. i think you have major states coming up. and i think the important point is that people throughout this country are resonating to our message, and the message is that super pacs and a corrupt
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we're proud that we have received 4 million individual contributions, more than any candidate in american history at this point, and i think, john, people understand that the economy is rigged. they're working longer hours for low wages, almost all is going to the people on top. and even if south carolina, as badly as we did, and we did very badly, we won the votes of people 29 years of age or younger. the future of the democratic party, the future of this country, is involving young people in the political process, getting them to stand up for their rights, dealing with student debt, which i got to tell you is just crushing people all over this country, making public colleges and universities tuition free, those are the ideas we are bringing out, demanding the wealthy and large corporations start paying their fair share of taxes.
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that is the future of the democratic party. >> but in order to create the kind of movement you've been suggesting and that you want, you're going to need to attract african-american voters, and your economic justice message just didn't seem to hit home in south carolina and in other places. isn't that kind of a fatal flaw? >> well, no question, i mean, let me be very clear. we did really, really badly with older african-american voters. i mean, we got decimated. on the other hand, if you look at the younger people, african-american younger people, and whites, we did much better. so, again, i think our message, the clinton campaign was very strong, remember, this is their fourth campaign in south carolina. two for bill clinton, two for hillary clinton. they had it well organized. they did well tonight, i congratulate them. we came into that state something like 7%, 8% in the polls.
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but i want to thank all of our supporters, the members of the south carolina state legislature who stuck with us. but we are confident in the yeah. >> our polls show that one bright spot for you is that a big majority think you are more hillary clinton. what does it say to you, though, that voters may believe that and clinton? >> well, i think people cast their votes for a number of reasons. i think, if you look at your polls, you'll probably find that many, many people think that our views are closer to what they believe the future of america should be. our views are closer on economic issues. a lot of those polls come down to demographics, to age, to how much money you are making. look, the bottom line is, we started this campaign, john, 3% in the polls. in the last two weeks, that means in national polls actually
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close to secretary clinton. if you were with me yesterday in texas, you would have seen 10,000 people in austin, 8,000 people out in dallas. we had a wonderful turnout in rochester, minnesota last night. i believe we have a lot of momentum. sometimes the media says this state out of elections, it is embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove i know prostate exams can save lives. so, if you are a man over 50, talk to you doctor to see if a prostate exam is right for you. if we can do it, so can you.
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most ducks fly south for the winter, but one very special duck just gets under the covers. steve hartman found this heartwarming story on the road. >> reporter: a lot of kids go to the park to see ducks. but kylie brown of freeport, maine takes her duck to see the park. snowflake comes here to swim around the pond and returns when called. because snowflake truly believes kylie is his mother, and the duck is not alone in this
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>> i'm his mom. >> reporter: are' not really his mom. >> yes, i'm his mom. >> reporter: how did you first find out? >> that he was a duck? >> reporter: no. kylie is unbearably cute. and since i never did recover to ask that question again, let he just tell you that kylie first noticed snowflake's attachment the day the browns brought her home last summer. >> look, look, look, he follows her. >> reporter: for whav reason, the duck imprinted on kylie and just had to be by her side no matter what the hour. when snowflake refused to stay in the back yard, her parntss had no choice but to give him a diaper and make him a house duck. >> he goes everywhere the ducks are allowed and almost everywhere they're not allowed. i don't know if you have a 2-year-old or 4-year-old that won't leave home without her blankie?
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at that point, nothing's negotiable. >> reporter: he goes to the beach in summer and sledding in winter. he's gone to soccer practice, gone on sleepovers and went tricker treating as olaf, the snowman from frozen, and over time, because they both sincerely believe they belong together, snowflake and kylie have formed a bond like most of us will never know. >> it's special even at 5 years old that i know that's the type of person she is going to be. >> reporter: she really is going to make a great mom some day, mostly because she already is. unisom day, he's going to grow up and go to college. >> what? >> reporter: steve hartman, often the road in freeport, maine. that is the overnight news for this monday. for others, clerk back with us a
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news and "cbs this morning." captioning funded by cbs it's monday, february 29th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." i'm here at the academy awards! otherwise known as the white people's choice awards. the academy awards. the year's best films share the limelight, but it was a lack of
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killed on her first day on the job. a virginia community mourns the death of an officer who was sworn in the day before she was gunned down, and an army sergeant is behind bars charged in her killing. and campaign 2016. new questions about donald trump and the kkk, and marco rubio rips trump below the belt. >> you know what they say about men with small hands? good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. we begin with the oscars, where an underdog won for best picture and the politically charged atmosphere just about overshadowed the winners. host chris rock took no prisoners as he took on the uproar of the lack of diversity. for the second straight year, all of the major nominees were white.

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