tv Through the Decades CBS February 10, 2016 5:00pm-6:00pm MST
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team coverage tonight on a murder investigation involving the death of a 6-year-old boy. police found the young victim inside of an app row county apartment building and a man inside with self-inflicted knife injuries. critically hurt after getting into a car crash, and investigators still on the scene there. >> police were called to an apartment on harvard avenue, the accident involving the deputy was nearby at illif avenue. rick sallinger updates the deputy's condition. scene. as mentioned, investigators still there as well? >>reporter: yeah, take a look at this, jim, you can see that the mobile command unit here now, it's been out here all day long. they're investigating an apartment on the upper floors there, inside of that building, a crime scene, now, neighbors also say a car has been towed from this area, believed to be long to the family involved in
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police responded to the westwood apartments to investigate a sex assault. a woman inside ran for help, calling the police from a neighbor's house. >> i heard a loud knock on my door, like 4:30 in the morning, could have been my door, could have been loud enough it was somebody else's. i went out and looked to the people, didn't see anything. >>reporter: police arrived around 5:00 a.m., the woman's apartment was quiet, according to the police. the woman's partner and children were still insidement in the apartment, unfortunately, they did find a 6-year-old deceased, additionally, they found a 2-year-old male unharmed. as well as an adult male with self-inflicted wounds. >>reporter: police say the man is the father of both children, the woman is the mother of the two-year-old child, but not the six-year-old child. police are investigating both the sex assault and the death of the child. >> we know we're working with a knife involved in the attempted sexual assault or the sexual
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appeared to be from the knife. >> awful. terrible. 6-year-old child. who does that? >>reporter: now, police say it is too early to determine who is the suspect in this homicide. as for that child, we're told that the coroner will have to release the name and the manner of death. i do want to mention that a judge has now put a suppression on this case. they're not able to release more information to the public. jennifer brice, cbs 4 news. now, more on the deputy hurt in a crash while following an ambulance on the way to the hospital. the deputy is in critical condition. cbs 4's rick sallinger continues our team coverage tonight from the scene of the accident. and ill live and valencia. how did this happen, rick. >>reporter: karen, an ambulance was travelling in this direction down illif, followed by the deputy's car, a pickup truck was
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into valencia and struck the deputy's vehicle. >> unnoin how many vehicles. >>reporter: rescuing to save a life, the arapahoe county deputy nearly lost his own. driving west on illif behind a ambulance with lights flashing, he neared the intersection with valencia, terry was at work: about a half minute later, you hear the big, huge pop. like, bang. we came outside to see what it was. >>reporter: the red ford pickup truck going east on illif had turned towards valencia after the ambulance passed. it struck the deputy's car. a short time later, these women, saw the frightening scene. >> the cop car was crashed into, a truck was turned pretty much sideways. >> jaws for life was cutting the police officer out. >>reporter: the driver of the pickup, was not injured. but the deputy was taken to aurora south meddle cal center with serious injuries -- medical
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>> i hope it's nobody i know and i said a quick prayer. >>reporter: fellow deputies came by the nopt their cruisers, and on motorcycle. after a morning with the horrifying crime scene. now a deputy in distress. >>reporter: that deputy remains in critical condition, his name has not yet been released. the colorado state patrol is investigating this accident, so far, no charges have been filed. live in arapahoe county, rick sallinger, cbs 4 news. thanks, rick. new information now on a teenager accused of gravely wounding a mesa county sheriff's deputy, today, the sheriff's office identified that suspect as 17-year-old austin holser, he is currently charged with attempted second-degree murder. investigators say holser shot deputy derek geer during a monday. deputy geer is now on life support, his family says, until organ donations are complete. the suspect ran away after the shooting, but was found a short
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he will likely be tried as an adult. and developing tonight, the investigation after two women are stabbed in fort collins. one has died. the larimer county coroner says cathy died of stab wounds to her head and neck. the other victim, is in critical condition. it all happened before midnight tuesday, in a home on stover street. then, several hours later, the police arrested one suspect, about a mile away. afternoon. >> kind of scary because you just don't know who is going to people. >> it's traumatic, it's the neighbors and people in town. >> the suspects are now in the larimer county jail, facing and attempted homicide. now, to an update on a flight diverted to dia last night, due to an i rate passenger, the alaska airlines flight was supposed to fly from boston to san diego, fwut pilot decided to land in denver.
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live from dia, and mark, we are learning that it was actually the pilot's call to go ahead and land that plane. >>reporter: yeah, the pilot decided that this passenger was too drunk to fly. authorities say he caused so much of a scene that that pilot made a detour to dia. 181 passengers aboard an alaska airlines flight bound for san diego, made a pit stop in denver. this after an alleged drunk man became disruptive a few hours after leaving boston, 8:30 p.m. the passenger in question became agitated and verbally abusive. >> he got up and moving towards another passenger on the plane. >>reporter: another passenger's cell phone caught the passenger being escorted off the plane. the man was taken to detox but will not face charges because
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want to press captain. the captain decided to land at the nearest airport which was denver international airport. >> what the alaska airlines crew did, i probably would have done the same thing. >>reporter: larry from the colorado pilot's association, flew for major airline for 37 years. he says it's touch the discretion of the pilot to say if someone is too drunk to fly. >> as far a as when, what is too much. there's no guidelines. >>reporter: now, because there will be no charges filed against this passenger, his identity will not be released. that alaska airlines flight continued on to san diego, and landed at about 10:30 last night. live at dia, mark taylor, cbs 4 news. new video shows the aftermath of a house fire in boulder this afternoon at a home in the table mesa neighborhood. firefighters put a ladder up to the second floor window to help a woman get out. nick got a picture of that rescue. that woman is okay. well, checking that weather,
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about the spring-like temperatures, but there are some people dealing with very powerful wind gusts right now. justin mcheffey in the mobile weather lab, checking in from boulder county, justin, we can thank that wind for the warmer temperatures. >>reporter: yeah, jim, the jet stream winds are positioned over the northern front range mountains. it made it warm outside. downtown denver had a temperature of 68 degrees. quick look at the wind while we have it. gusting up to about 27, maybe 35, every couple of minutes, the fastest we have seen was 42 miles per hour. back to the temperature in denver, 68 was the high. average high this time of the year is 45. so we're talking about temperatures about 25 degrees above average. so along with these gusty winds, snow, kicks off the continental divide there and for a time, these winds produced what we call a mountain wave cloud, over the front range mountains.
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off a little bit later on tonight with colder temperatures moving into the picture for tomorrow. and for now, pretty breezy up here in boulder county, anything going on in re dar? >> the only moisture is the wave cloud that you talked about. we have that high pressure ridge bringing the storms down over the eastern side of that ridge and back to the east where they continue to see snow. this continues for quite a while. how long, coming up. also, coming up, as the number of cases of the soars, globally -- zika virus soars. >> the world war ii veteran reunited with his sweetheart. how this wonderful reunion happened. . >> i'm mark haas at the viewhouse centennial, later in sports, why the broncos will benefit by having young guys play this year.
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,, the field of presidential candidates got smaller today, chris christie finished his campaign. and republican carly fiorina, is also out of the rashgs but in a post on facebook, the former business exec says she'll continue to travel the country and fight more americans who want change. among republicans, new hampshire voters gave donald trump a big victory margin with john kasich second. democrat bernie sanders thumped hillary clinton. zika virus, the brain tissue of two babies who died in brazil. that's the strongest link between the virus and the birth defect. it's still not definitive.
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reported case of zika virus. and 17 states, five cases just added yesterday. cbs 4 health specialist cathy walsh joins us now. >> there's a lot of work to be done here, karen, the nation's leading medical experts say it will spread to a significant number of cases in the united states. the experts are pressing for 1.8 billion dollars in emergency aid. >> there's the enemy. >>reporter: the nation's top health officials gave lawmakers a graphic description of the ver rashs mosquito behind the zika virus. >> it can bite four or five people in the course of one blood meal. meaning it can spread disease quite quickly. >>reporter: 80% of people who get zika don't show symptoms, but the cdc director revealed the virus has been linked to the birth defect through brain tissue of two infants in brazil. who died. >> this is the strongest evidence to date that zika is
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>>reporter: he says the cdc is working around the clock to research, inform the public, and reduce the risk to pregnant women. >> zika virus is new. >>reporter: president barack obama has asked for emergency funding of nearly 2 billion dollars to fight t zika. the head of the national institute of allergieses and infectious disease called emerging disease the challenge. >> talking about zika today, and next month, or next year, we'll be talking about something else in the same way as last year, we spoke about ebola. >> now, there's novak seen for the zika virus, the cdc is warning pregnant women to avoid travel to caribbean countries and puerto rico. women who are in those countries should protect themselves have mosquitoes, you use the spray or sleeves.
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in third world country, says no animal kills more humans than mosquitoes. >> west nile. exactly. >> thank you. a world war ii vet and his long-lost girlfriend are back together in time for valentine's day. >> a great story. 93-year-old norwood thomas and 88-year-old joyce morris hugged for the first time in nearly 70 years. they met in london, shortly before d-day, then when the war ended, he went back to the u.s., she moved to australia. well, thanks to the internet and social media, morris's son was able to track down her long-lost love. >> about the most wonderful thing that could have happened to me. >> yes, good. >> to find somebody who loves you, you love them, the latter years of your life, it would rather be special, wouldn't it? >> they reunited in australia yesterday, thomas is scheduled to stay two week, but of course that could change, karen. with this torrent romance. >> sure could.
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on the warm weather. >> we had a nice day today. if we didn't have the clouds, how warm we might have gotten today. as we take a look at the big picture, the same old situation, high pressure here in the east and we have this low pressure trough in the east. in the west, we are the high pressure. that takes all of those storms down and feeds the snow in there, that's what's continuing to do. on the futurecast, the hour-by-hour, and you can see that circulation of that snow, now, watch how this snow comes down into and feeds right into it and just enhances the snow once again. the ridge shows just a few signs of breaking down, here's why. see this little line of storms, watch how they start to come through, they don't make it. but it is getting closer and closer to our area. now, the ridge will build back up, and we'll warm back up again, you'll see that in the five day forecast. not too much to worry about.
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the 80s, 65 in billings, 66 today in 63 in albuquerque, 71 in wichita, but back east, the return flow shows those single digits, teens, 20s, all the way down to atlanta, miami, today. only 64 degrees. cold for them. 66, we were warmer than miami today. 66 degrees officially, 68 downtown. 45 is normal. that's where we should be. and look at the lows, 35 and 37, shoulgd be at -- should be at 18. 71 and 14 below are the records. high temperatures from the weather watchers, south aurora, 67 degrees. pueblo, 76 degrees, set a record high today. the old record was 75. 62 and 55. west 12 for the winds. 24% humidity a great day to go cross country skiing, this from larry pierce and this one from pete, you can see a little guy looking at you up in the tree in
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in the 20s, 30s in the front range. single digits and teens above and below 0 for the high country. then tomorrow, little bit cooler, still well above normal for this time of the year. 40s, 50s, 60s for the east. looking at 20s, 30s, 40s for the mountains. 30s, 40s out west. now, let's take a look at your denver forecast and for tonight. we'll find temperatures to be mild again, 35 and 33 with mostly clear skies. winds will become light. then for tomorrow. partly sunny skies. 60 degree mark downtown. as we take a look at the next several days, little up and down on the temperature. 55 friday. 59 on saturday. 51 sunday. but the president's day holiday, 56 and partly sunny. >> very nice. >> yeah. >> thanks, ed. denver taxpayers have paid a city worker more than $200,000 to sit at home for more than a year and hey half. cbs 4 investigator brian mosz. >>reporter: he sits at home, day after day.
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day. >>reporter: denver taxpayers have been forking out $143,000 a year for him to stay home. and this has been going on since 2014. we're looking for answers. well over 200 grand to stay home and the clock is still ticking still flowing. the buck stops with you, but you're not going to answer any of my questions? >> brian looks for answers in home. we hope you'll join us tonight at 10:00. >> we know our broncos are good at football, but today a few of them showed off their other talents.
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,, ,, and welcome back to the viewhouse centennial, excited to have bennie and shaq barrett joining us later tonight. they played a role in the denver broncos super bowl run. you think about shaq, he stepped in when demarcus ware had an injury. tied for most on the team. fowler had big catches in the playoff, including catching what may have been peyton's final pass on the 2-point conversion in the super bowl. gary kubiak knows moments like that for the young guys will help the team in the long run. >> they've got a lot of games under their belt now, snaps under their belt, even though they're very young players, year 2-3, when we come back and go to work, they're going to be very seasoned. not many guys go off the playoff
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the young players got so much better. it should make us more competitive as a team every day we hit the practice field. >> handful of broncos sfent day at -- spent the day at espn headquarters. showing off the blocking skills, we know he's a good blocker and danny showsing off his basketball spinning skills, love the perks of being the champs. nascar, a smart move by furniture row racing, a while back, they scheduled their denver media day for yesterday, but with the contingency plan they would move it to today if there was a broncos parade. media day, for the team, they've added bass pro shops as a sponsor and switching to shef is i have. 78 car looking for better ways of competing with the big boys of nascar, an under dog story last year, making it to the championship race and raising the expectations for 2016. >> definitely a little bit more anticipation this winter, i
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new things coming, coming off the season last year, we're really all itching to get on the racetrack and see what we need to do and see what it's going to take to have a season as good or better than last year. looking forward to the challenge. >> finally, check this out, german soccer fans were upset about high ticket prices, they showed up 20 minutes late to a game and threw tennis balls on the field, a lot of tennis balls, all at once, it was raining tennis balls, had to stop p the match, and the players had to help pick them up. i'm hoping that the fans here at the viewhouse don't throw tennis balls at me if they get upset with how i'm doing the show tonight.
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thanks for watching colorado's news channel. >> thank you! >> pelley: one taste of victory, and trump is hooked. >> will you win south carolina? >> oh, i'm going to win south carolina. >> pelley: also fresh from his new hampshire win, sanders takes us to his brooklyn roots. what hardship formed the character you have now? a cbs news investigation, dubious medical tests unapproved by the f.d.a. ap and at 93, he found love online, the love he lost seven decades ago. >> and i said, "i'll see you soon," and away i went, and i
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captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: new hampshire shook up the presidential race with huge wins by democrat bernie ns sanders and republican donald trump. today, chris christie and carly fiorina dropped out of the g.o.p. race. o. that field is now down to seven. trump beat john kasich two to one, but now kasich rises to become a trump alternative with ted cruz in third, just ahead of jeb bush and marco rubio. sanders trounced hillary clinton by 22 point. an major garrett is with the republicans in the next battleground, south carolina. >> the light overcame the darkness of negative campaigning, and i feel great about it. ( applause ) >> reporter: john kasich's second-place finish in new in hampshire was propelled by moderate republicans and independents. >> kasich! kasich! >> i think there's a variety of things that need to be done. >> reporter: here in south
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conservative electorate, but kasich said he's in the race for the long haul. >> we're going to do as well as we can here and then we're moving on. and, you know, i'm really looking forward to the south. i'm really looking forward to the midwest. i can't wait to go to michigan. dw >> oh, wow, work wow! fi >> reporter: fresh off his first victory in presidential politics, donald trump told "cbs this morning" he will win south carolina, and he noted his an similarities to democratic a primary winner bernie sanders. >> i think i am a little bit against the establishment, and he probably is, also. >> what an incredible, incredible evening. >> reporter: iowa winner ted cruz finished third in new hampshire and cast himself here as trump's worst nightmare. wo >> and one of the most important conclusions coming out of these mi first two states is that the only candidate who can beat donald trump is me. ld >> i'm disappointed. >> reporter: marco rubio finished fifth and, aboard his campaign plane, admitted overly- scripted answers in saturday's debate hurt him. in >> i thought i don't want to get rt
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it doesn't look good. and-- but, you know, it didn't work out well. >> reporter: is one of the lessons that you need to bring more knives? es. >> sometimes you're just going to have to deal with what they're throwing at you. you don't have to start it, but if someone starts it, you have to finish it. >> reporter: jeb bush arrived here with criticism to everyone. m scott, trump is too insulting, tr kasich too moderate, and cruz is too calculating. >> pelley: major garrett, thanks. now to the calculations of john dickerson, anchor of "face the nation" and the moderator of the next republican debate. john, what are you expecting in south carolina? >> reporter: well, i'm not expecting a lot of southern cordiality. the south carolina republican primary has a bit of a history hi for being bruising, particularly for the winner of the new hampshire primary. in 2000, john mccain won in new hampshire, came to south carolina with a big head of steam. he had beaten george bush by 18 points. he ran into a brick wall in south carolina, a bruising and personal fight with bush. mccain ended up losing by 12 points. ng in 2012 it happened all over
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mitt romney won in new hampshire then lost to newt gingrich. the state has more conservatives and more evangelicals than new hampshire which means it sets up well for senator ted cruz, but donald trump is ahead in the polls and he greeted ted cruz with a bruising ad calling cruz's integrity into question. ng with 10 days to go, scott, it's not going to get any nicer. >> pelley: john, thanks very much. john will moderate the ninth republican debate from greenville, south carolina, this saturday evening at 9:00 eastern here on cbs. bernie sanders' win last night was a rout after essentially tying clinton in iowa. today, in his boyhood neighborhood in brooklyn, we od asked about his plan for america and whether he can win on the harder road ahead. you looked like you were having fun at your victory party. >> i was. >> pelley: might be your last one. it only gets harder from here. >> no, i don't think it's going to be our last one. >> pelley: but new hampshire, largely white.
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>> pelley: a more liberal population than the states you're headed to next, south carolina, nevada. you're going to be facing african american voters, latino voters. how do you appeal to those people? ho >> well, the same way we appeal to all americans. me look, if you and i were having this conversation nine months ago, what would you have said to me? you would have said, "bernie, nobody knows who you are. you're regarded as a fringe candidate. you don't have any money. you don't have any political organization. ha last poll we saw you in, 4%. how are you possibly going to do well in iowa or new hampshire? well, a lot has happened in nine months. >> pelley: what is your tax plan? >> my tax plan is at a time of massive income and wealth inequality, where the top 1- tenth of 1% now owns almost as much wealth as the bottom 90%, yes, we are going to ask the wealthiest people in this country and the largest corporations to start paying their fair share of taxes. >> pelley: but tax increases,
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how low? v >> well, the vast bulk of the tax increases would come from families making $250,000 a year or more. >> pelley: what's your top individual income tax rate? >> 52%. >> pelley: 52%? >> yeah, for people making $10 million or more. >> pelley: all that tax money, he says, will pay for free , college tuition for students and free medical care for everyone, administered by the government. >> it's a government insurance program. ur people still go to the doctors that they want. it's the same thing as medicare he now, which exists for seniors. we would expand it to all people. >> pelley: you have vowed to le increase the federal minimum t wage to $15 an hour. t >> over several years. >> pelley: aren't employers going to start laying people can't afford to keep you anymore." >> quite the contrary. every worker in this country d will be earning at least a is living wage, and what that means is that those workers will have disposable income, and when you
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>> pelley: every one of these ng >> no, it's not. change always takes place when millions of people stand up and fight back. and what we are talking about in mp revolution. >> pelley: the republicans in congress are going to say, "you e go ahead and have your revolution, but we're not going ha to have one here." go >> republicans, for better or for worse, are going to be drawn into this revolution. >> pelley: you're going to >> no, i'm not going to change their minds. nd their minds. >> pelley: later in the broadcast, we will talk to sanders about the hardships that shaped his ideas. nancy cordes is covering the rd clinton campaign for us. nancy? >> reporter: scott, new hampshire was just one state, but it exposed a coup of serious weaknesses for her campaign-- softening support among women t and almost no support among millennials. >> i know i have some work to do, particularly with young people. >> reporter: clinton identified the problem last night. now, she needs to solve it and
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energy that was a hallmark of the obama campaign and now surrounds bernie sanders. >> feel the bern! feel the bern! >> reporter: part of her challenge is that younger voters and her opponent, once again, is to her left. voters under 30, like suzanne jones, went for sanders last night by more than 60 points. >> for me, i don't really care about gender or race or anything like that. heir they have my vote. to acknowledge she needs to reconnect with women who flocked to her first bid. in 2008, she won new hampshire women by 12 points. last night, she lost them by nearly the same margin. teacher jessie colley was one of the defectors. was it a tough decision for you? >> it was, yeah, it was. you know, i think there's a female draw to hillary for me as i well, and i do. i go along with a lot of her-- definitely her values as well. j but i'm just-- yeah, bernie won
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so that's where i'm at. >> reporter: clinton did win over these three high school seniors who diagnosed her dilemma this way: >> i think because young voters my age tend to be idealistic, and when bernie sanders promises you the world, promises you four years of tuition-free college and free health care and all f these things, it sounds great. >> reporter: and there's another looming challenge for clinton-- fund-raising. in pressure from sanders has made the optics of those ritzy, big- dollar fund raisers problematic for her, while he's on track, scott, to raise $6 million online just in the 24 hours post-victory. >> pelley: great insight, nancy. thank very much. we're going to turn now to a disturbing investigation at an elementary school near washington, d.c. a teacher's aide there has been charged with sexually abusing ha students. ab the police say that they know of ten victims, but that could more , than double.
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jeff pegues. >> reporter: 22-year-old deonte carraway was a paid teachers' assistant and director of a youth choir. d police believe during the school day at this elementary school in glenarden, maryland, and at this aquatic center, he was videotaping sexual acts between minors and sexually abusing some of the victims, ranging in age from nine to 13. so far, detectives say they have uncovered approximately 40 videos. a victim's relative called police after discovering a nude photo sent via the imagining app kik on the child's cell phone. kik allows users to remain anonymous. a lawsuit has been filed alleging that the abuse was common knowledge at school, and that the principal refused to take any action. that principal is now on leave, le and the school district says it will cooperate fully with the investigation. io scott, carraway is being held on $1 million bail, and according to court records, does not yet have an attorney. >> pelley: jeff, thanks very much.
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department sued ferguson, missouri, after the city rejected an agreement to reform its police and courts. ts 18 months ago, a white ferguson wh cop killed michael brown, an unarmed black teenager, setting off violent protests. io vinita nair is following this. >> i'm going to call this meeting to order. >> reporter: the decision to file the lawsuit against ferguson comes after angry ft residents debated the ferguson city council's concerns that it will cost too much to comply. >> my fear is that with your vote tonight, if it is to sign the consent decree, that ferguson will cease to exist. >> protecting the citizens of ferguson should be our priority. >> reporter: the council voted to approve the d.o.j.'s .' agreement with conditions-- no additional salary increases for the police department or city employees. control over hiring contractors, ct extended compliance deadlines,
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agreement if the police department is ever dissolved. mayor james knowles: >> what we did last night was take out some things that we felt were immaterial to constitutional policing. >> reporter: the city has a $14 million budget and is nearly $3 million in debt. the negotiated consent decree was estimated to cost $10 de million over the next three years. t ten-year ferguson resident aisha alisha jordan says the price tag t of the agreement is less than the cost of doing nothing. so much of this seems to be around money. >> it is. and i understand-- and i do understand, you know, because i'm living it. we're all living it. but at the end of the day, we have to do what's right. >> reporter: the mayor told us it will be less expensive to fight the lawsuit in court than it would be to implement the decree as it was originally drafted. scott, now there's a possibility al the city could end up paying for both. ty >> pelley: vinita nair, thanks. some laminate flooring sold by
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eye, nose, and throat irritation and breathing difficulty, according to the c.d.c. today. concerns were raised by a "60 0 minutes" investigation into formaldehyde in the flooring. the c.d.c. says the cancer risk is low. coming up next, tests for cancer are being sold without proof that they work. and, the search for a lost love across seven decades and 15 time zones when the cbs evening news continues. hi hey you look good. thank you, i feel good. it all starts with eating right. that's why i eat amaz!n prunes now. they're delicious and help keep my body in balance. i love these.
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doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness of a life-threatening condition. if you can't empty your bladder on your own or have a urinary tract infection, or uti. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, fatigue, uti, painful urination and difficulty emptying your bladder. tell your doctor your medical history. muscle or nerve conditions, medications including botulinum toxins, antiplatelets and blood thinners, may increase the risk of serious side effects. ask a urology specialist pif botox can help pcalm your bladder. pvisit botoxoab.com pand learn how botox pcan be a low cost option. >> pelley: last night on the ig company making remarkable claims for a home cancer test. what we learned that home medical tests sometimes go on m
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and jim axelrod continues our report. a >> reporter: last september, a company called pathway genomics launched a blood test making game-changing claims. >> cancer intercept can detect a growing tumor in the body before the patient may notice symptoms. >> reporter: we were intrigued. so a few weeks ago, we sat down with pathway's c.e.o., jim plante, to ask him about the evidence. you can tell me about it. >> before we launched the test, we had a clinical study of more than 100 participants. >> reporter: is 100 enough? >> well, it depends on what you're-- you're looking for, right. i mean, you could make an argument that there's never enough data, right? d >> reporter: my question is r about the testing. has your product been clinically validated? >> uh, our test has been validated under the current regulatory requirements. >> reporter: which doesn't mean
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regulations, labs that develop ve tests like these don't have to prove their claims before putting them on the market. it's become a profitable ec business model. >> they sell. they sell before they're ready. >> reporter: and a big concern for researchers like dr. theodora ross, who runs the cancer genetics program at the university of texas southwestern i think that people are not waiting long enough before they send a test out. . >> reporter: do you feel sometimes the science gets shortchanged in the face of the business? >> yes. if the f.d.a. were to come in and say, "show me your data," they couldn't show the data, they should not be testing these patients. >> reporter: why not? >> because it's useless. >> reporter: many lab-developed tests may be useful, but right now, there is no way to know. that may change later this year when the f.d.a. is set to finalize more stringent regulation. jim axelrod, cbs news, san diego. >> pelley: in a moment, welcome
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senator sanders takes us to brooklyn. struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may too. know your options. once-daily toujeo is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus . it releases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours. toujeo also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. toujeo is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. p don't use toujeo to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, r during episodes of low blood sugar, t or if you're allergic to insulin. allergic reaction may occur and may be life threatening. don't reuse needles or share insulin pens, even if the needle has been changed. the most common side
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,, >> pelley: after new hampshire, we wanted to know more about bernie sanders. he served four terms as mayor of burlington, vermont, eight terms in the u.s. house, and was elected to the senate in 2006. but he grew up in brooklyn, the son of poor jewish immigrants of from poland. >> so most of the kids lived in the apartment houses. i i grew up in that one. p good friends across the street. it was my mother's dream to get out of the apartment, and get a home of her own. but she died young, and she never achieved that dream. >> pelley: how old was your mother when she passed away? >> 46. >> pelley: how old were you? ld w >> 19, i think. >> pelley: how did that affect you?
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not having enough money was a cause of constant tension, and when you're five or six years of age, and your parents are yelling at each other, it's, you know-- you think back on it now. . you know, it's traumatic, and it's hard. >> pelley: must have been a lot of joys up and down this block as well. ve >> of course. ys are you kidding? we i would get up on a saturday morning when we weren't in school. we used to play with what we called the smoldering rubber ball and you would throw it starting off with the red brick, white brick, red brick, and you would win, i guess, if you threw it all the way up there. literally, i would leave at 9:00, 10:00 in the morning and d would come back at 5:00 in the n evening exhausted. i had been running all day long, but it was a happy exhaustion. and by the way, i learned something also about democracy. we didn't have much adult supervision, so the games were isio all determined not by adult cultures, kids themselves. we would choose up teams. there was no other person dictating anything. p we worked out all own rules. it was a very interesting way to
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>> pelley: bernie sanders in brooklyn. an american travels to the other side of the world to find a long-lost love. next. during its first year, a humpback calf and its mother are almost inseparable. she lifts her calf to its first breath of air, then protects it on the long journey to their one of the most important things you can do is help the next generation. at pacific life, we offer financial solutions to accomplish just that. ask a financial advisor about pacific life.
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i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn because you can't beat zero heartburn! ahhh the sweet taste of victory! prilosec otc. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. working on my feet all day gave me pain here. in my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain.
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93, never forgot his first love. in 1944, the 21-year-old g.i. stationed outside london met a british 17-year-old named joyce durant. >> i knew she was the girl i wanted to marry. >> reporter: the war couldn't wait. he headed to normandy and d-day. id >> and i said, "i'll see you soon," and away i went and never saw her again. n. >> reporter: they swapped letters after the war, but wa communication broke down. they married other people. thomas, now a widower, always remembered the girl who got away. >> i had placed her on a pedestal, untouched, pure, and pu unobtainable, because in my mind, that's really what she was. >> yes, i'm here. >> reporter: last year, out of the blue, joyce's son tracked him down on the internet, and for the first time in more than 70 years, the two talked to each o other again via skype. >> i still dream of you. >> you do?
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) oh, thomas. >> reporter: joyce morris, now 88 and divorced, lives in australia. >> the only one big problem is i can't take you in my arms and give you a squeeze! ( laughs ) >> oh, here we are. >> reporter: problem solved. thomas landed yesterday in adelaide, australia. >> hello! >> let me give you that squeeze! >> you know, to find somebody who loves you, you love them, it would rather be special, wouldn't it? >> reporter: americans and brits have always had a special relationship. mark strassmann, cbs news, norfolk, virginia. >> pelley: and that's the cbs 's evening news for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. ig captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh
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developing right now, at 6:00, an arapahoe county sheriff's deputy in critical condition, after this accident. happened about 6:00 a.m., at east illif and valencia, as the deputy was on his way to investigate the death of a 6-year-old child. the driver of a pickup truck turned into the cruiser. we're learning what happened before investigators found the 6-year-old boy. >> crime investigators still on that scene, right now, it's at the westwood apartments on east harvard, near quebec. jennifer brice is there now. jen, what's the latest? >>reporter: well, jim, i can tell you, take a look at this mobile command unit, it is still out here from early this morning, they are still processing the scene, they are
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