tv CBS Evening News CBS December 13, 2015 5:30pm-6:00pm CST
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why did officers keep firing as the suspect crawled away? and, lifting the curtain on a broadway stage secret, how some stars avoid flubbing their lines. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news." >> glor: good evening, i'm jeff glor. seven weeks until the iowa caucuses, first in the nation. and tonight, two new polls show a shakeup in the race for president. in one poll, senator ted cruz has surged ten points ahead of donald trump. in the other, cruz leads trump 28 percent to 26 percent, among likely iowa caucus-goers. in the bigger picture, a new national poll out today shows cruz has emerged as the strongest challenger to trump, just five points behind. ben carson has fallen into fourth place behind senator marco rubio. we begin tonight with juliana goldman in washington. >> i don't go down, i go up. >> reporter: donald trump has said he only likes polls that treat him well.
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showed him slipping, he dismissed it as bias. >> i'm leading in virtuallly every state. i'm leading in iowa although des moines register does the poll negative. >> reporter: that poll was conducted by one of the state's most respected and accurate pollsters; it has ted cruz surging. senator cruz has spent months courting the voters with whom he is now leading. evangelicals and tea party conservatives. he's capturing supporters fleeing ben carson who has faltered with the increased focus on national security. >> you look at the which he's dealt with the senate where he goes in there like a-- you know, frankly like a little of a maniac. >> reporter: in the fox news interview the billionaire front-runner says cruz doesn't have the right temperament to be president. but the poll of iowa republicans has the texas senator leading on that quality. on sunday trump enthusiastically tweeted out a different national poll showing him with a new high. cruz's five points behind in second place. marco rubio is third.
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>> reporter: these current and former trump supporters in virginia were part of a recent focus group conducted after his inflammatory proposal to bar muslims from entering the u.s. >> if trump gets elected, he will have people that will coach him, to insure that-- ensure that these types of things don't come out. >> the republican party has failed us last two times times with weak candidates, first with mccain who was weak, and romney who was weak. there is no number two to trump. >> reporter: as the republican contest sorts it self out, it is looking more and more like the po text for protracted primary between trump as the anti- establishment pick, someone like cruz who carries conservative and religious voters, and then there is the establishment candidate who republicans have historically nominated, whoever that may be this cycle. >> glor: julianna goldman in washington. >> glor: weather extremes across the country tonight. this picture from western oklahoma, the definition of white out conditions. this one from new york, which is experiencing record high
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let's bring in wbz's chief meteorologist eric fisher. we will start in the northwest getting slammed by the storms, what is happening with that system? >> jeff, this storm has a lot more cold air to work with so we are seeing a lot more snow all across the inner mountain west over the next 48 hours and eventually that energy spins out into the plains. as we head into tuesday and wednesday, into nebraska, parts of south dakota and every state in the west picking up some much needed snow fall. every state all the way until the plains picking up fresh snow over the next 48 hours. the east, totally different story. a feel of spring, long-standing record high temperatures, in detroit that record in 1881. baltimore hit 72. more record highs possible tomorrow. especially with a little wedge of warm air in the east. also some rainy travel to kick off the week. there is a change toward the middle and later stages of the week, colder air working its way farther east and, jeff, for some who haven't felt much of it, a little feel of winter in the air. >> glor: thank you very much. that system in the pacific
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but it's still doing damage. david begnaud is in tillamook, oregon tonight. >> good evening, seven families live along this hillside in western oregon in part because of the view. but now all seven homes are in danger of being condemned including this one right above me that they are working to protect at this hour. some 11 inches of rain fell in this area over a seven day period causing a landslide that, look at this, opened up a hole big enough to fit almost 11 suvs. >> so this is the road that leads to your house. >> yes, well, at least it used to be. now it just kind of leads to a cliff. >> reporter: morgan has watched the landslide on her family's property for the last six days. what started as a crack caved into a crater. bob flaccas is her neighbor. >> you just woke up, you walked out and it looked like this. >> yes. did not hear a sound, not a sound one. it's just, the land went away.
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front door is now a cliff. a week's worth of nearly nonstop rain in this picturesque part of oregon has left bob and his wife of 36 years dee, literally living near the edge. people are pitching in to help. more than 200 sand bags are holding down a tarp intended to stop the ground from sliding any more. >> i could cry. >> reporter: why? >> people that i never knew and probably might not see again, came up here to help me save this hill. it is overwhelming. that's hard. >> reporter: 30 yards from the flaccas home the landslide has pushed into a barn owned by cottry's family. >> i mean right now this is the only thing holding that hillside up. >> cottry's relatives live alongside the barn in this home. they are now staying in a horse trailer because the home is in danger of being condemned.
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far, says sand bags have been ed best and only option. >> with you have to do something. >> bob is willing to try anything. if it means staying in the home he and his wife called paradise. >> if it starts to move, i'm not going to be stupid on and stay, i will get the hell out. but until it starts to move, i'm staying. >> reporter: the hole in front of bob's house is 100 feet long and 50 feet wide. tomorrow he'll find out if his home is condemned. jeff, his insurance company told him this week they will not pay for the damage. >> glor: david begnaud in oregon. the los angeles county sheriff's department is investigating a deadly shooting tonight. officers fired dozens of rounds and kept shooting while the suspect was on the ground. chris martinez has this story with this warning, the video can be disturbing to watch. >> reporter: dramatic video captures the moment two los angeles county sheriff's deputies fire multiple shots at nicholas robertson in the lynwood neighborhood of los angeles. robertson falls to the ground and after a short interval he's seen crawling on his stomach as he is repeatedly struck by additional gunfire.
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gathered at the shooting scene. pamela brown is robertson's mother-in-law. >> he left three kids behind, two daughters and a son. they could have tasered him or anything. >> reporter: today, hours after the shooting, the sheriff's department held a press conference. l.a. county sheriff jim mcdonell. >> we came out today to try to be as transparent as we can with the information we can, share at this time that say hey, here's what we have, what we know about it. >> the sheriff's department released this video showing robertson minutes before his encounter with deputies walking down a busy street carrying a gun. investigators say the confrontation started when deputies responded to multiple - 911 calls about a man firing shots into the air. l.a. county homicide detective captain steve katz: >> he did not comply with their repeated requests to drop the weapon. the movement of the suspect and the way he was holding the fire
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motioning in the direction of the deputy sheriffs. >> reporter: the video then captures the moment the deputies began firing, a total of 33 rounds. robertson was pronounced dead at the scene. community activist naj ali says the video is disturbing. >> because it appears that this young man crawled to his death, he was shot again, again, and again. >> reporter: local civil rights leaders have asked for an independent investigation into robertson's death. chris martinez, cbs news, los angeles. >> glor: this week the federal reserve is expected to raise interest rates for the first time in more than nine years. the expected increase, a quarter point. for more on what this means we turn to cbs business news analyst jill schlesinger. we figure it will happen this week. >> it's almost certain and here's why. the fed slashed rates ten times over 14 months until we got down to zero percent during the financial crisis. that was an effort to stimulate the economy. now all these years later, what
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the economy is growing about a 2 and a quarter percent a year for the last few years. we've got job creation, unemployment down at five percent. the fed thinks it's time to normalize interest rate policy. they'll start this week. >> glor: if this happens, who wins, who loses? >> finally good news for savers who have gotten basically zero percent interest on their checking, savings and cds. borrowers could pay a little more for all kinds of loans whether it's credit cards, auto loans, mortgage rates are not tied to these rates but they could go up as well. investors could be kind of murky out there, i think stock and bond prices could be quite volatile in the next few weeks. >> glor: the global economy is slowing down a bit. there is some concern the american economy will slow down. some economists think this is too early. >> these are people like larry t summers the former treasury secretary. and they even cite the fact that crude oil, which fell by almost 11% last week down to seven year lows, that that is a sign of the slowdown. janet yellin, the fed chair has said look, don't worry about that. things slow down, we don't have to keep raising rates, and if things speed up and we get
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percent and more often. so everything will be data dependent. we'll have to see. >> glor: thanks very much. this weekend fbi divers wrapped up their search of a lake in san bernardino, california. investigators won't say if they found evidence possibly dumped there by terrorists who killed 14 people and injured nearly 20 others. tonight john blackstone tells us how some in the community fear a backlash against them. >> reporter: since the san bernardino shootings, ron has changed the way she covers her hair so she looks less muslim. >> instead of wearing the traditional way, i start wearing hats so that way i can blend in to minimize any, you know, possibility of someone retaliating or saying anything to me. >> reporter: as a mother of five who lives just three miles from the scene of the shooting, she was already concerned about the safety of her family. then she learned the attackers were muslim. >> when i knew the name of the shooter, i was devastated. the first thing i did was i end up writing an e-mail to all the
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letting them know that i am a muslim, we're a muslim family. that we condemn these kind of attacks. >> reporter: since the paris attacks, there have been several attacks on muslims. a pregnant muslim woman assaulted in san diego. two airline passengers ordered off a flight in chicago after a passenger heard them speaking arabic and felt threatened. and after the san bernardino massacre, a copy of the koran filled with bullets left outside an islamic clothing store in southern california. on friday, it was the fire bombing of a mosque in coachella, 70 miles from san bernardino. police have arrested a 23 year old man for arson and committing a hate crime. rone albana has decided her best defense is not to hide, but to show the true nature of her religion, beginning with covering her hair. >> now i feel like i'm more determined to keep it on and let everyone know what the muslim community is all about.
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i should use it. i cannot think of any place on this earth that i would want to be in other than the u.s-- this is my country, as much as anybody else's country who are americans. >> reporter: for this muslim- american family, the message is that they are as outraged over the attack that took place here and just as united in grief as any other american family. >> glor: john blackstone, thank you. a dramatic program trying to keep kids away from trouble. and the only thing better than winning the heisman trophy? the family's celebration. when the cbs evening news
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lamont adams died in 2004... >> by the time you get here, the odds have been stacked against you. >> reporter: ...has been turned into a school of hard knocks. >> when he came in he wasn't breathing at all. >> reporter: throughout the year hundreds of philadelphia students visit the trauma unit at temple university hospital for the cradle 2 grave program. >> we're going to tell the story of a young man named lamont adams. >> reporter: they learn about adams, his life from birth to death. dr. amy goldberg and outreach coordinator scott charles have been re-enacting the night adams died for nearly ten years. >> a bullet wound right there and right there. >> reporter: charles uses dozens of red stickers to mark where the bullets hit adams. >> and another here. >> i'm not trying to politicize this issue for them. i'm simply saying this is the thing that is more likely to kill you, in philadelphia than anything else when you are young. and i want them to take ownership of this.
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that the students didn't really seem to know the true ramifications of what bullet injuries and gun shot wounds can cause. >> if the things that i'm showing you are-- if they are too troublesome for you, talk to me. >> reporter: the students watch a video showing graphic pictures of more gun shot victims. some students can't bear to look. >> sometimes i go in the bathroom and i close the door. and i get down on my knees and i cry. >> reporter: the pain adams grandmother describes hit home for 16 year old roshelys sanchez. >> i can imagine my mom crying because something happened to me or one of my family members. >> reporter: 15 year old jordan barreto first went to the program in may. >> i was with the wrong people, doing the wrong things. and the program really opened my eyes, that people are getting killed for nothing. and it ain't no means to-- to
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>> reporter: the students also visited a morgue. so far more than 10,000 students have come to the cradle 2 grave program at temple university hospital. jeff, organizers say that fewer than a dozen of those students returned back to that hospital's trauma unit with a gun shot wound. >> glor: jericka duncan, thank you very much. up next here, a christmas
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>> glor: for the first time women have been elected to office in saudi arabia. yesterday was also the first time women were allowed to vote in the country. more than a dozen women won local elections. a wonderful reaction last night after this year's heisman trophy winner was announced, alabama runningback derrick henry. ( cheers and applause ) >> glor: that is a family in hospital in florida where henry's grandmother has been undergoing treatment. henry broke the conference record for rushing. the nba golden state warriors are undefeated no more. saturday they lost to the milwaukee bucks 108-95. the warriors are now 24 and 1 this season. it was the team's first regular season loss since april 7th. it took nearly a lifetime but a man in england has finally gotten his christmas wish.
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put a letter to santa in his chimney, asking for any toys he had to spare. more than 70 years later builders found that letter while working on the house. so they located mr. heylock who had long since moved away, and made sure he got everything he requested, including toy soldiers and a pencil box. still ahead here, the modern
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>> glor: finally tonight most s >> glor: finally tonight most stage actors say their biggest fear is forgetting their lines. so now some are getting extra help, as jamie yuccas reports, that has prompted criticism. >> it's a star studded season on broadway. al pacino in "china doll," bruce willis in "misery." and james earl jones in cicely tyson in "the gin game." but while those actors draw big lines at the box office, some of them are having trouble remembering their lines. each has reportedly used teleprompters on an earpiece so someone off stage can cue them. the reviews are not great. in fact, al pachono's "china doll" may be the worst reviewed
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"the wall street journal" says yes, he's using teleprompters. and that he was not at ease with his lines. "the new york post" writes al pacino needs teleprompters for lines in terrible new broadway play. >> the more they use celebrities to drive ticket sales for plays or musicals, you have this problem with that you need assistant. >> date cote is time out new york's theater editor. he says audience members walked out after the first act, watching pacino search for the teleprompters. >> they will have more difficult when they are in a play and have to sustain a scene over several minutes. >> cote doesn't hold back on willis' performance either. calling it stiff. willis and pacino did work through numerous script changes during previews. that gave them less time to memorize their parts. for actors like jones and tyson, reciting their lines is complicated by having to also play a card game throughout the entire play. >> even broadway great angela lansbury needed some help.
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earpiece in the 2009 production of "blithe spirit." but she won her fifth tony for that performance. >> as you get older, it gets worse, it gets more difficult. >> mark wing-davey chairs the graduate acting program at nyu. he says remembering lines is challenging, especially for older actors who have been away from the stage. earpieces can be a solution. >> if you want to see a major movie star, you don't necessarily want to see an incredible feat of memory. you want to see them become relaxed and responsive. if that's what it takes, then it seems to me that is fine. >> james earl jones, cicely tyson, al pacino, were fabulous. >> reporter: new yorker cheryl rubin is a big theater fan. she says she didn't even notice any of the actors getting prompted. >> theater-goers are not getting ripped off. they're seeing great acting by great actors. >> great actors doing whatever it takes to keep their names on broadway. jamie yuccas, cbs news, new
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>> that is the cbs evening news tonight. later on cbs, "60 minutes" and first thing tomorrow, cbs this morning. i'm jeff glor in new york. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org paris: there's a lot to do on a dairy farm. nobody's gonna do it for you. you have to get out there and do it yourself. bernie sanders is a well-known friend of family farms. bernie cannot be bought out by big money. bernie's opinion cannot be purchased. it's time for our next president to get in there, roll up his sleeves, take off the gloves, and take on wall street, take on big business, take on big money, and get the working class back to where they should be. he's a rock.
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captioning funded by cbs and ford. we go further, so you can. >> pelley: michael botticelli is the president's new drug czar. just don't call him that. >> it's actually a title that i don't like. >> pelley: why? >> because i think it connotes this old "war on drugs" focus to the work that we do. it portrays that we are clinging to kind of failed policies and
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