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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  October 27, 2015 1:37am-4:30am CDT

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the pentagon has released dramatic video of last week's rescue operation in iraq. helmet cameras caught the action as kurdish fighters backed by u.s. special forces soldiers swooped in and raided an isis operation center. the raid freed 69 prisoners and captured a half dozen isis gunmen. t also led to death of an american soldier, master sergeant joshua wheeler. the u.s. involvement in the battle against yes has been mostly limited to the air war against targets in iraq and syria. david martin got a firsthand
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look inside thehe commandnd center in the persian gulf nation of qatar. boy the b-1 is carrying 17.5 tons of bombs and 170,000 pound of jet fuel. it strains t t get airborne in the reduced lift of 100-degree heat. it will take nearly three hours to reach the target. with two aerial refuelings along the way. mr. martin welcome to t t combat operations floor. >> yeah. >> reporter: lieutenant colonel david hayworth takes us in to watch as b-1 and all the other aircraft carry out the day's attack p pn against isis. >> doesn't have any windows but nice view. >> good look at arabian golf through iraq and syria. >> reporter: the air war going o 14 months. this is the first time news cameras haha been alled into its nerve center. >> the weapon of choice here is information. the more information we have about the enemy and our friendlies, the better we are able to make decisions.
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showing the location of every plane. green or american and allied. the blue are commercial aircraft. on another a video feed from an unmanned drone. one of dozens orbiting over iraq an syria. we make our way around the floor to a spot in the center called the crow's-nest. >> you were standing right now at the nexus, the center of the air campaign against isil and daish. >> reporter: general charles brown is the commander of the air war. how much effort doess it take to mount a strike like that? >> from just the one airplane, schedule wise, a three day process. some of those we looked at for, for -- days, weeks, sometimes months. >> i can't from here see any human activity around there. >> there is today's target. on the wall of the command center the a live video feed from an unmanned drone pointing
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its camera at a clustst of buildings belilied to be hiding isis explosives. we can see the green track of the b-1 on the screen as it approaches the target. while the drone takes one last look, lieutenant g geral brown explains what is happening. >> it is a weapons cache as well as a -- vehicle borne ied. >> exactly. reporter: the firstst planes over the target are a pair of tch f-16 a awe decrease. >> here we go. >> now is that a second ear? >> probably a second ear. >> thatteans they were explosives in there? >> correct. going off. >> right. >> so i guess if there were any body in the other three you would have seen them running out by now. >> exactlyly >> thehe gizoes thevehicle. >> next the b-1 with the bombs.
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>> the second earary are going off. and indication. level of explosives inside the buildings. >> teeotal of 16 weapons. prob blowably a weapon. >> for a month and a half. u.s. and allied planes have struck 47 facility like this one. >> they're going to go set up another factory in another building s se place. >> potentially. and, our goal is to -- to haunt them wherever they are and take the things out so we can rely on security and stability in this region. >> how does today, this one day of strikes we have witnessed, how does that -- bring the u.s. closer to -- to defeating isis? >> well, every day we go out and strike, it's one step closer. i can't tell you how many steps it is going to take. handful. that's for sure.
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unpacked and assembled. these are the 2,000 bunker busters used in the attack we witnessed. and insert fuses and dial in delay of several millisecond. so the explosives inside wonon go off until after the bomb penetrated its target. next, tailfins that will guide the bombs are attached. the geographic coordinates of the targets will be programmed into the bombs and gps satellites, the same ones you use to navigate your car wl steer them. the bombs are haul out to one of the busyiest airfield in the world and along with smaller 500 bombers. the u.s. is spending $10 million a day. launching aircraft from bases in kuwait, qatar, the united arab emirates. jordan, turkey. counting al lid inging inging allied planes.
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the air campaign began last year, president obama warned, it would take me. >> it seems like it is taking even more time than -- than people thought. >> it is in somee regard. rt of this, not only working at the pace and the way we would operate, it is also the pace at our partners operate. a tee effortam effort. we look to move faster. >> one hold-up is the iraqi army. still trying to regroup after being routed by yes last year. the strikes are supposed to pave ground. but now, iraqiqi officials from the primim minister on down, are saying publicly, we are not getting enough air strikes. frustrating. because we have air purr over 24/7. just for the record are the iraqis calling for more strikes than you are tableable to deliver? >> no we, have a lot of air purr out there. >> every time the iraqis call for a strike.
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wear's able to deliver. >> were's there. >> why are they complaining? >> that's a good question. because the i think we have been a great support of what the iraqis have been doing. so i guess i take, i have a different opinion the i'vee really do. >> reporter:r:he answer at lest according to american military officers, is that the iraqis are making excuses for their failure to take greater advantage of the strikes. which pentagon statistic shoz have destroyed toree damaged nearly 14,000 isis targets. everything from tanks to buildings to staging areas. and although the pentagon refuses to put out an official body count,t, lieutenant colonel hey hayworth. >> i'm seeing it. enemy fighters being killed in action. at aate on par numbers you are hearing 1,000 a month. >> reporter: isis has been able to replace its dead with snu recruits. the estimated number of enemy
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,000, 30,000 last year. 20,000, 30,000 this year. >> so as long as they can keep bringing fighters in there, are you just shuffling sand against the tide? >> i don't know if that's the way i would put it. you have to eliminate the folks. you have off to take then me off the bat ltd fieldtledfieldttlefield. thth're not as seseoned. we'll l ke them out. >> best measure of progress is the amount of ground isis has lost. the pentagon released a map to show how much land has changed hand since the air campaign began. some territory held by isis, the areas in green, have been retaken by friendly forces. isis has also made some gains seen here in dark red. but overall, isis apares to be the net loser. >> this is, this is isis controlled here. >> you know that is an interesting term. isis controlled. i have seen a lot of maps. reports about the pieces. there is bigarge swaths of red
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territory, isis controls. but really you are seeing very small pockets of where isil really is. this is vast open desert. really, they're concentrated on a a w small locations along these lines of communications leading into syria. >> syria, where isis has its headquarters and where the civil war only promises to get hotter now that the russian air force has intervrved on the side of syria's dictator bashar al assad. the russian jets in yellow on the screen are tracked by the command center. >> whale thehe intend to operate in syria. and we intend to operate in syria like the past year. >> you don't want the russians to come too close, obviously? >> right. >> how close is too close? >> well, i don't't know. i throro a defininion out there the what we didn't want is to have a midair. we want to maintain level of safe sepp rationaration. >> russianan a acraft have come
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within 500 feet of u.s. planes. russian defense ministry released the video of one of the pilots checking out an american drone. the f-15, e strike fighters armed with m msiles that could shoot down aussian plane. this pilot doesn't thing it will ever come to that. >> if russians might be be us. say hi. driving by. and continue to pros kout tourecute our targets. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. that's max-strength and fights mucus.
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police in los angeles say they have broken up a gang of what they call porch pirates going from house to house stealing packageseft on the front ststp. maria villareal has the story. >> reporter: rick was expecting ups to leave two packages on his porch instead home surveillance video captures an unexpected visitor pulling up in a u-haue stealing his stuff in second. >> i was blown away. i couldn't believe this was actually happening. he was in such a hurry to go get the box, get out of here and follow the ups truck to another location. >> reporter: police raided the alleged thieves apartment using a license plate captured by deckman's surveillance video. inside they found hundreds of packages police believe were stolen and would have been resold. >> they were doing this for a very long time then? >> correct. there were just piles of stuff evevywhere. >> reporter: porch piracy is happening across the country.
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in pittsburgh, a woman pushing a toddler in a stroller swiped door. in chicago, a neighbor filmed this interaction on his cell phone after he saw a man taking packages from a front porch. >> why you picking them up? you are not delivering. you went and picked them up! >> reporter: law enforcement says the problem is growing, as shopping habits are changing. according to the nrf, consumers say all most half of their shopping will be online this holiday season with free shipping and shipping promotions meaning major selling point. when we are talking about an increase in the crime, how big of an increase is this? >> i would say an increase i see, or calls i get is 50% more. items being stolen that it was last year. >> reporter: developers in san francisco say they have a solution. a new app called doorman that will hold your packages in a warehouse and deliver them to
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your home when you are hope. >> delivery. >> the whole idea of the company is, be able to schedule packages on your schedule. we deliver from 6:00 p.m. to midnight. seven days a week. >> reporter: as for rick deckman, he still has his packages, but from the police.erformed 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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a high school football player in tennessee left in critical condition after suffering a head injury during a game friday night. the injury comes as a high school in chicago mourns the death of student athlete andre smith. he was badly hurt during a game. it has got a lot of parents taking a hard lack at alug t tir kids on to the field. dean reynolds reports from bogan high school in chicago. >> reporter: while high school fofoball fatalities are down from the 1960s and 1970s. but in a sport by its nature is violent, the question remains whether it can ever be made
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friends and family gathered this weekend too remember 17-year-old andre smith, who suffered a fatal injury playing football for his high school. he was rushed to a low cull hospital. he died there the following morning. >> he was always there. heheas always there for anybody who ever needed him. >> reporter: over the weekend the cook county examiner ruled it accidental by blunt force injuries due to football. >> you understand the risk i's a game, you know. it's a game. >> reporter: smith is the seventh high school football player to die in the u.s. this year. just days ago, cameron matthewspassed away. and last month evan murray died from a lacerated spleen he suffered during a game. >> high school football deaths are disturbing.
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>> reporter: the americaca academy of pediatrics issued new guidelines aimed at improving the safety of youth football. recommendations included having athletic trainers on side lines of games, offering nontackle football games as an alternative and zero tolerance for illegal head-first hits. >> too many head-to-head hits. leading with the head. known as spearing. been against the rules since 1976. >> we thank you. >> reporter: to andre smith's teammates his brother had this to say. >> just be aware, you know. protect yourself. be cautious. because, something just as simple as a football injury can -- can, can end a whole life. >> reporter: now the chicago public school system says it follows all off the rules governing high school football. andre smith is the first high schooler to die in illinois, playing the game. since 2012. and that is the overnight
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news for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little bit later for the "the morning news" and cbs this morning. from the broadcastenter here in new yorkity, i'm michelle miller. a new warning from the world healththrganization about some of most popular foods and their link to cancer. also tonight the fbi director on the rise in violent crime since ferguson. >> what's going on? it is likely a chill wind that has blown through law enforcement over the last year. >> the story behind the vice president's big decision. >> look at it this way -- >> absence of mallards, seniors fight the government for the return of their beloved juanita. >> it doesn't seem right. i want that duck back. >> announcer: this is the "cbs
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an international panel of f experts says that eating processed meats such as cold cuts and bacon increases the risk of colon cancer. and eating red meat likely does the same.. after monday's report by the world health organization, everyone seemed to be asking -- how great is the risk? so we asked dr. jon lapook. >eporter: the w.h.o. . committee pled processed meat, hot dogs and ham in the same cancer risk category as tobacco. but the amount of increased risk is nowhere near the same. lifetime risk of getting colon cancer is 5%. eating the equivalent of one hot dog a day raises that to 6%. by comparison, one study found the lifetime risk of lung cancer is 1.3% ininale nonsmokers and 17% in smokers. the evidence was strongest for a cancer link with processed meat. the internatioiol panel of
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experts said the cancer link f red meat like steak and pork is weaker. but that red meat probably also causes cancer mainly colon but possibly c cls prostate. the committee described the number of possible mechanisms. dr. marianna stern of usc served on the panel. >> processed meat are treated with checals to preserve the meat. some are nitrates, and nitrates can react in the body and form carcinogens. >> shalene mcneill is a registered dietitian. >> what we see with reports. they often confuses. easy to build a healthy diet with foods like these and nothing in the report should change that. >> jon, we are talking about red meat. whatatalls in the category? >> red meat is mammalian muscle comes from there. beef, veal, lamb, yes, pork. >> pork is red meat? >> yes. why is if it placed in the same category as tobacco?
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>> this led to confusion. being in the highest risk, you have a s sstance and good evidence it can cause cancer and says nothing abut the degree to which it increases the risk. we know smoking tobacco increases the risk dramatically. ocessed meat increases risk of colon cancer less. still, 20% increase if you have equivalent of a hot dog every day. now we have the number, the new thing the study is giving us. it can give an idea to estimate the risk and make the decisions for ourselves. >> the take away in a word is moderation. >> everything in moderation including excess. >> thank you, jon. dr. lapook answering your questions on facebook.com/cbseveningnews. the head of ththfbi has a theory about what is behind a rise in gun violence in big cititi. he talked abououit today in chicago. and hehe's justice correspondent jeff pegues.
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28 were wounded in gun violence over the weekend in chicago. >> homicides in chicago are up 19% this year. in other major cities there have been sharper increases. up 44% in washington, d.c. 62% milwaukee. 73% in nashville. fbi director james comey discussed the spike with a group of police chiefs today. >> some part of what is going on is likely a chill wind that has blown through law enforcement over the last year. that wind is made up of a series of viral videos and the public outcry that followed them. >> reporter: the skrult knee of police began after the shooting of michael brown in ferguson, missouri, comey believes cell phone video of deadly encounters posted on line from freddie gray's arrest in baltimore, to eric garner's in new yk has put police officers to the test. and could be changing how they work.
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officers are reluctant to get out of their cars and do the work that controls violent crime. >> reporter: comey's remarks put him at odds with president obama. white house spokesman josh ernest. >> available evidence at this point does not support the notion that law enforcement officers are shying away from fulfillingheir responsibilities. >> reporter: comey says he has no data on the youtube effect but his hunch was strong enough scott others say the rise in crime is due to drug related violence and gang activity. >> jeff, thank you. we saw it again late today. social media circulating a new video of alleged abuse by an officer. it is a little bit difficult to today a sheriff avenue deputy in columbia, south carolina, forcibly removed a student from a classroom at spring valley high school.
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late today the school district said it is deeply concerned by this. sheriff's department is investigating. today we learned that the woman accused of driving her car into a crowd at the oklahoma state university homecoming parade may have been suicidal. adacia chambers is held on $1 million bail and faces for counts of murder. one of the victims was a toddler. today her father spoke and adriana diaz has more on that. >> i'm very sorry for the victims and the people who lost their lives. >> reporter: floyd chambers spoke out about his daughter minutes before she was due in court. he said she spent two weeks at a mental hospital four years ago
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district attorney laura says officers asked chambers if she was suicidal? >> her answer was i was suicidal at the team of the accident but not now at book in. >> reporter: prosecutors say chambers ran a red light and drove into the crowd. >> they didn't know what hit them. they didn't have time. anthony wyatt tried to stop her. >> i see this car hit this barricade. i jumped out andndo, no you are going the wrong way. stop. stop. and she floored it. i could see the wall of people the i knew what was going to happen. she hit that motorcycle and people went everywhere. >> reporter: among those killed, 23-year-old nikita prabhakar, a business student, marvin and bonnie stone were 65 retired from o o, 2-year-old nash lucas was an only child. chambers is held on four counts of second degree murder. the da said a fifth victim is an extremely fragile state. chambers' blood is being test ford drugs and alcohol. her attorney said the results could take ten days. he also said there was no indication she had been drinking. scott, she will undergo psychological evaluation from jail. >> adriana diaz in stillwater.
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will be right back. almost sixty million americans are affected by mental illness. together we can help them with three simple words. my name is chris noth and i will listen. from maine to maui, thousands of high schoho students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities chris young: action teams of high school students are joining volunteers of america and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next generatioio of volununers. carlos pea: it's easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the action. get in on the action at actionteam.org.
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yes, you'll be in my heart from this day on now and forevermore... narrator: if animals are our best friends, shouldn't we be theirs? visit your local shelter, adopt a pet. ou'll be in my heart no malter what... cbs cares.
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it's the dawning of the age of aquarius. yeah, and something else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventable. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bones, protect them. all: cbs cares! moving on to the presidential race. republican donald trump is feeling the heat from his closest rival. jor garrett has that. confronted with three polls showing him trailing ben carson in iowa, donald trump went on the attack. >> by the way, carson is lower
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i don't get it. i saw him being interviewed. he is lower energy than bush. >> reporter: that was today in new hampshire. this was friday in florida. >> donald trump has fallen to second place behind ben carson. we informed ben, but he was sleeping. >> reporter: carson a retired neurosurgeon offered a less cutting response. >> i would look to see him stand up for 18 hours and operate on somebody. >> reporter: trumpmp reaction to losing ground in iowa. disbelief. >> i don't believe the polls. i see the response from the people from iowa. >> reporter: tru offered a glimpse into what he conoiders hardships of his early real estate career. >> it ha not been easy for me. i started off in brooklyn the my father gave me a small loan i came into manhattan. him back with interest. >> reporter: trump entered the real estate market in 1971, $1 million adjusted for inflation would equal $5.8 million today. trump tried to take credit for a ford motor company decision to
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plant in mexico. >> mexico took aford plant. i have been very tough on the you heard me talking about ford. i heard last night. ford is moving back to the united states. >> ford is moving about 1,000 jobs from mexico to ohio. a decision the company approved in 2011. and one a gop rival of trump's, ohio governor john kasich helped to engineer. sich said this entirir controversy was another example of trump's "empty, false rhetoric." >> major garrett, thank you. vice president biden is letting us is on how he decided not to c cllenge hillary clinton for ththdemocratic nominatioio in an interview for 60 minutes. came done to the calenenr. let me put it this way. i gave my word as a biden. i think that the first caucus we probably would be running. because there is time. >> how often did the two of you
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every night? >> well, some mornings we would say, like i remember a month ago on the porch at home. i said. maybe we should just. i don't know if we will get there in time. maybe we should say we are not gogog. joe said what about the supreme court. >> what about education, what about community colleges. everything we had worked so hard for in this administration, could all -- could just all change. >> did you make a list of pros and cons? >> no. >> no, no. >> uh-uh. >> we knew why we wanted to run. we knew that two years ago. two and a half years ago. i have known that since i joined the administration. but the other side was, it wasn't just since may 30th, when beau passed away, it was for the last year. we have been dealing with this -- with, being up and down, and beau would go through a protocol with few people in it.
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there would be hope. initial signs. okay. beau wouou say, come on dad, we are going to be all right here, you know? so it was -- it was a roller coaster ride. but look, i can die a happy man, we can be a happy family, mine never having been president as long as we continue to stay true to what we believed in and keep pushing on the thing that have animated our life. >> vice president joe biden on "60 minutes." today in the canadian pacific. the search continued for a sixth victim after a tourist boat capsized yesterday, five body were recovered from the whale watchingngour off vancouver island. 21 were rescued. no word on the cause. tonight we are getting a look inside st weak's mission to rescue prisoners that were held by isis in iraq. kurdish troops backed by u.s. special operations forces freed and american master sergeant joshua wheeler was killed in the fire fight. elizabeth palmer is in northern iraq.
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the video cacaured on a helmet camera shows dazed prisoners emerging one by one from their cells to be patted done by kurdish speciaiaforces. although you can clearly hear the american backup. the kurds released this individually to show their close partnership with american might. on the well fortified front line near the key oil city of kirkuk, a morale booster for the peshmerga fighters who make e with outdated weapons and get their salaries late or not at all. general kamal kirkuki its the area commander. >> it was great thing for america and us to liberate these civilian people's lives. >> reporter: to isis fighters hiding and watching g ss than a mile away the pictures will come as a blow.
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but freedodohas a price. in this case, a compulsory camera call for the prisoners to embrace their kurdish liberators and say thank you. saad khelef ali feraj, a policeman, he was overcome as isis told him he had only an hour left to live. with this video the kurds want to underscore how with american help they are winning against isis. in contrast to the iraqi army, which gets four times as much money from the u.s., but is struggling to take back the country from extremists. the fact is though, scott, the kurds have pretty well consolidated most of their territory in northern tie rack whereas the iraqi army has thousands of square miles to take back from isis. they are making progress, at last, but it is painfully slow. >> liz palmer in northern iraq for us tonight. liz, thank you. we were struck today by pictures from a drone that captured the scope of the refugee crisis in europe.
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a grim procession of thousands walked through a field in slovenia after escaping the wars in syria and afghanistan. their march to freedom in western europe was detoured by border closures, yet they marched on. joined each day by thousands more. doctors want to change the way high school football is played after another tragedy. and -- what happened after part of a plane's landing gear fell off? the cbs overnight news will be right back. it's the final countdown! the final countdown! if you're the band europe, you love a final countdown. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico.
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today a medical panel urged high school football leagues to ban certain types of tackling to save lives. another player died last week in chicago and dean reynolds was there. >> reporter: friend, neighbors and coaches of andre smith gathered over the weekend to mourn the 17-year-old d nior whose life was cut short playing a game he loved. his brother eric had a warning
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for andre's teammates. >> protect yourself. be cautious. because, something just as simple as a football injury can -- can, can end a whole life. >> terrell alexander is a coach. >here is no practice for something like this. you know, it is not something you can write down and come up with a script fofothese young men. >> reporter: smith played for chicago's bogan high school and injured in a collision on the last play of the last game of the season. he is the seventh high school player in the country to die in 2015 from a football related injury. in his case, blunt force trauma to the head. now, the amerin academy of pediatrics says the way we play the gaga must change. proper tackling techninie must be emphasized and there must be zero tolerance for illegal head first hits. dr. greg landry co-authored the policy statement. >> tse are high risk maneuvers, associated with catastrophic injury to both the
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brain and the neck. >> reporter: landry said athletic trainers should be available to assess injuries. nationwide, 37% of high schools have full time athletic trainers like brian robinson. >> why aren't you on the sidelines at every game? >> the most common exkus i hear is budget. i think in today's society, schools who use that excuse are making a mistake. >> reporter: nevertheless, 30% of the high schools in the country, scott, have no athletic traiairs. >> dean reynolds. thank you very much. a university has removed a
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back. the deep south in deep water tonight. the gulf of mexico washed up on highways in dauphin, island, alabama. streets turned into rivers in hancock county, mississippi. and these are the remnants of hurricane patricia, the most powerful cyclone ever in the western hemisphere. it hit mexico friday night. but the damage wasn't nearly as bad as feared.d. all that moisture now iseaded north. a sign of changing times at the university of mississippi. the school removed for the last time, the state flag because it includes the confederate battle emblem. the student and faculty senates urged ole miss to take it down. it is the last state flag to incorporate the emblem in 2001, voters decided to keep it. today a british airways 737 crash landed in johannesburg, south africa, after part of the landing gear came off in flight. sparks f fw as the left wing
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but no injuries. the folks at a home for seniors are fighting to get a beloved pet back. and ththr story is next. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your uppepestomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. bipolar disorder is a brain cocoition that causes unusual or dramatic mood swings. it affects millions of americans and compromises their ability to function. when diagnosed, bipolar disorder can be effectively treated by mood stabilizers.
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each spring in california, the swallows return to the san juan capistrano mission. did you know, 400 miles to the nonoh there is a mission this fall to have a duck returned to san anselmo. john blackstone is there. >> reporter: in a locked pen at a wildlife hospital near san francisco, a ducucnamed juanita is tied up in red tape. meanwhile at bello gardens assisted living center residents are campaigning to win freedom
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for juanita. >> it doesn't seem right. i want that duck back. >> reporter: norma manning misses having juanita in the backyard. >> she was just a nice pet. everybody loved her. >> reporter: juanita arrived two years ago an orphan duckling. the cook, walter paredes fed her back to health and she quickly became part of life here. neysa hinton. >> the staff built this area for her put the pond in and the water fall. >> reporter: one day in september, juanita wandered away. someone found d r and took her to wild care a local animal hospital. that's where the red tape started. she gets checked into wild care. all of a sudden she belongs to the state of california. not to wild care. in this situation, unfortununely, not to bello gardens. >> wild care insists giving the duck back would be a federal
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>> we would lose our license. >> reporter: the federal governrnnt would close you d dn if you gave back one duck to a see year center? >> yes. >> wild care is helping bello gardens to apply for a permit to keep a wild duck as a pet. >> you're looking fine. the residents can visit juanita trying t tmake the best of a situation that is all fowled up. john blackstone, cbs news, san anselmo, california. >> that's the "cbs overnight ws" for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning.
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york city, i'm scott pelley. welcome to the overnight news, i'm michelle miller. there is a major shakeup in the race for the republican party presidential nomination. donald trump is no longer the clear front-runner at least not in iowa. which holds the first in the nation caucuses february 1. a cbs news poll shows a dead heat, trump and ben carson both at 27%. but a monmouth universy shows carson with a wide lead. 32% to 1%. 32% to 18%. amid the new numbers, thingsgsre
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major garrett takes a look. >> reporter: confronted with three polls showing him trailing ben carson in iowa, donald trump went on the attack. >> by the way, carson is lower energygyhan bush. i don't get it. i saw him being interviewed. he is lower energy than bush. >> reporter: that was today in new hampshire. this was friday in florida. >> donald trump has fallen to second place behind ben carson. we informed ben, but he was sleeping. >> reporter: carson a retired neurosurgeon offered a less cutting response. >> i would like to see him stand up for 18 hours and operate on somebody. >> reporter: trump's reaction to losing ground in iowa. disbelief.
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i see the response from the people from iowa. >> reporter: trump offered a glimpse into what he considers hardships of his early real estate career. >> it has not been easy for me. i started off in brooklyn the my father gave me a small loan of $1 million. i came into manhattan. i had to pay him back and pay him back with interest. >> reporter: trump entered the new york real eseste market in 1971, $1 million adjusted for inflation would equal $5.8 million today. trump tried to take credit for a ford motor company decision to shift some jobs to ohio from a plant in mexico. >> mexico took a ford plant. i have been very tough on the ford. you heard me talking about ford. i heard last night. ford is moving back to the united states. >> ford is moving about 1,000 jobs from mexico to ohio. a decision the company approved in 2011. and one a gop rival of trump's, ohio governor john kasich helped to engineer. kasich said this entire controversy was another example of trump's "empty, false rhetoric." >> major garrett, cbs news, washington. > as for the democra it is shaping up to be hillary
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senator bernie sanders gets his nene shot at derailing hillary clinton in iowa.a. cbs news hosting the democratic debate. as for vice president joe biden biden's decision not to to challenge, clinton for the nomination. he discussed that with nora o'donnell for "60 minutes." >> the oval office. this is right before you went out to the rose garden and told everybody that you weren't running for president. what advice did the president give you? >> i called the president early y in the morning.. he was in the gym working out. and he took my call. i said, "mr. president, i said, we have decided." i'm not going to run. he knew how close it was. what was going on. and i said, i'm going to go out and announce it to -- this morning. or early afternoon. he said, joe, i would be proud to stand with you. >> did the president want you to run?
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what i thought was best. >> that speech in the rose garden sounded a aittle bit like a campaign platform, d d you have a speech written for whether you were going to run or weren't going to run? because partrtf the speech unded like, i'll be e ady. i have a p pn if you need me. at some point. >> the truth is, there is some truth to that. because what i wanted. >> but are you leavinghe door open if something happens? >> no, no. i was making the case that i do want to influence the democratic party. i want t tmake no bones about that. i don't want the party walking away from what barack and i did. you said you will not be silent? >> i will not be silent. i want to the extent that i can influence the democratic party. >> you didn't mention hillary
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speech but did seem to be referring to her if i don't think we should look at republicans as our in mes. was that a referencece- >> that wasn't directed to llary. >> she c cled republicans enemies in the debate. >> i think she was being more humorous than direct about that. >> she said that in the debate. she said which enemy are you most proud of the she said the iranians. then mentions the republicans. >> she was smiling when she said the republicans. i don't take it that is her view. i do know it is the view of many people. when i made the statement, there were two big articles, why is biden so naive. these people are our enemy. serious people. they're not my enemy. how, how in god's name can be govern this country? if we view the opposition as an enemy? >> did y watch the democratic debate. did you watch hillary clinton?
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>> i didn't think that. what i thought was she did a great job. i thought bernie did a great job. look, i have debated hillary, 13 times in national presidential debates. i know hillary. i know her debating skills. i know mine. i have never had any dut about her intellect or capacity to debate. i thought she did, comforted herself really well. >> but you wouldn't have kidded running for president unless y y thought, or had some doubts, about hillary clinton? >> not at all. that has nothing to do with it. i said from the beginning. look, i like hillary. hillary and i get along together. the only reason, i still think i could do a better job than any body else could do. that's the reason to run. >> wouldn't run against hillary. >> but you also said in the rose garden. democrats should run on the record. >> that's right. >> the president's record. >> i believe that. do you t tng hillary is running on that or something else? >> will she will run on part or not. she has made a decision on two important things. doesn't mean she won't be a great president. >> when "the new york times" reported there is real tension between yoyoand hillary clinton n that the mere mention of her name makes you fume according to some advisers. >> well, let me till you
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it must be the same guys who knew i was going to run. because that's never been the case. go back and find anybody who says for the four years we worked together, hillary and i weren't friends. >> what do you think uh donald trump? >> the one thing i, i am disappointed in donald trump, i know what a showman and all he is. but i really, i really don't think it's healthy and i hope he reconsiders this sort of attack on all immigrants. i think that is q think that is beneath the country. i don't think it is where the american people are. i hope he doesn't really believe it. >> you have 15 months le in office. what one or two things do you think you can get done? >> i think we can get a number of things done. one i think we can really begin to nail down this commitment to work on cancer and -- head toward a moon shot. the president and i have talked
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about that. number two, i think we can -- make some real progress with paul ryan, a good guy on working toward an accommodation on the budget and keeping the government open. >> this white house has not been able to get much done with this congress. do you think, as speaker ryan will change things? >> yes. this is a decece guy. he knows you cannot function, this government can't function without reaching some consensus. he wants to do that. why are you touching your armpit? i was just checking to see if it's dry. don't, that's weird. the first ever dry spray antiperspirant from axe. >> i'm alex trebek. if you're age 50 to 85, this i ian important message. so please, write down the number on your screen. the lock i want to talk to you about isn't the one on your door. it's a rate lock for your life insurance that guarantees your rate can never go up at any time, for any reason. but be careful. many policies you see but you can get a lifetime rate lock through the colonial penn program.
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this is lime-a-way. it destroys limescale in seconds without scrubbing. tough hard water buildup - gone! no scrubbing. turbo power destroys it. for lime, calcium and rust, lime-a-way is a must! the pentagon has released dramatic video of last week's rescue operation in iraq. helmet cameras caught the action as kurdish fighters backed by u.s. special forces soldiers swooped in and raided an isis operation center. the raid freed 69 prisoners and captured a half dozen isis gunmen. but also led to death of an american soldier, master sergeant joshua wheeler. the u.s. involvement in the battle against yes has been mostly limited to the air war
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syria. david martin got a firsthand look inside the command center in the persian gulf nation of qatar. boy the b-1 is carrying 17.5 tons of bombs and 170,000 pound of jet fuel. it strains to get airborne in the reduced lift of 100-degree heat. to reach the target. the way. operations floor. >> reporter: lieutenant colonel watch as b-1 and all the other aircraft carry out the day's attack plan against isis. >> doesn't have any windows but >> good look at arabian golf >> reporter: the air war going this is the first time news cameras have been allowed into its nerve center. >> the weapon of choice here is information. the more information we have about the enemy and our friendlies, the better we are
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able to make decisions. >> on one wall, a giant map showing the location of every plane. green or american and allied. the blue are commercial aircraft. on another a video feed from an unmanned drone. one of dozens orbiting over iraq and syria. we make our way around the floor to a spot in the center called the crow's-nest. >> you were standing right now at the nexus, the center of the air campaign against isil and daish. >> reporter: general charles brown is the commander of the air war. how much effort does it take to mount a strike like that? >> from just the one airplane, schedule wise, a three day process. some of those we looked at for, for -- days, weeks, sometimes months. >> i can't from here see any human activity around there. >> there is today's target. on the wall of the command center the a live video feed from an unmanned drone pointing
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its camera at a cluster of buildings believed to be hiding we can see the green track of the b-1 on the screen as it approaches the target. while the drone takes one last look, lieutenant general brown explains what is happening. >> it is a weapons cache as well as a -- vehicle borne ied. >> exactly. >> reporter: the first planes over the target are a pair of >> here we go. >> now is that a second ear? >> that means they were >> correct. >> right. >> so i guess if there were any body in the other three you would have seen them running out by now. >> exactly.
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>> next the b-1 with the bombs. >> look at that. >> the secondary are going off. and indication. level of explosives inside the buildings. >> total of 16 weapons. >> probably a weapon. >> for a month and a half. u.s. and allied planes have struck 47 facility like this one. >> they're going to go set up another factory in another building some place. >> potentially. and, our goal is to -- to haunt them wherever they are and take the things out so we can rely on security and stability in this region. >> how does today, this one day of strikes we have witnessed, how does that -- bring the u.s. closer to -- to defeating isis? >> well, every day we go out and strike, it's one step closer. i can't tell you how many steps it is going to take. it is going to be more than a handful. that's for sure.
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>> and every day, more bombs are unpacked and assembled. these are the 2,000 bunker busters used in theattack we witnessed. and insert fuses and dial in delay of several millisecond. so the explosives inside won't go off until after the bomb penetrated its target. next, tailfins that will guide the bombs are attached. the geographic coordinates of the targets will be programmed into the bombs and gps satellites, the same ones you use to navigate your car will steer them. the bombs are haul out to one of the busiest airfield in the world and along with smaller 500 pounders, loaded aboard b-1 bombers. the u.s. is spending $10 million a day. launching aircraft from bases in emirates. jordan, turkey. counting allied planes.
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year, president obama warned, it would take time. >> it seems like it is taking even more time than -- than people thought. >> it is in some regard. part of this, not only working at the pace and the way we would operate, it is also the pace at our partners operate. a team effort. we look to move faster. >> one hold-up is the iraqi army. still trying to regroup after being routed by yes last year. the strikes are supposed to pave the way for it to retake lost ground. but now, iraqi officials from the prime minister on down, are getting enough air strikes. >> i tell you that is a bit because we have air purr over iraq. 24/7. just for the record are the iraqis calling for more strikes than you are able to deliver? no. out there.
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for a strike. >> we're there. >> why are they complaining? >> that's a good question. because the i think we have been a great support of what the iraqis have been doing. so i guess i take, i have a different opinion the i've really do. >> reporter: the answer at lest according to american military making excuses for their failure to take greater advantage of the which pentagon statistic shoz nearly 14,000 isis targets. everything from tanks to buildings to staging areas. and although the pentagon refuses to put out an official body count, lieutenant colonel hayworth. >> i'm seeing it. enemy fighters being killed in action. at a rate on par numbers you are hearing 1,000 a month. >> reporter: isis has been able to replace its dead with snu
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the estimated number of enemy fighters remains unchanged. 20,000, 30,000 last year. 20,000, 30,000 this year. >> so as long as they can keep bringing fighters in there, are you just shuffling sand against the tide? >> i don't know if that's the way i would put it. you have to eliminate the folks. you have off to take then me off the battlefield. they're not as seasoned. we'll take them out. >> best measure of progress is the amount of ground isis has the pentagon released a map to show how much land has changed hand since the air campaign began. areas in green, have been isis has also made some gains seen here in dark red. but overall, isis apares to be but overall, isis appears to be >> this is, this is isis controlled here. >> you know, that is an interesting term. isis controlled.
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i have seen a lot of maps. reports about the pieces. there is big large swaths of red territory, isis controls. but really you are seeing very small pockets of where isil really is. this is vast open desert. really, they're concentrated on a few small locations along these lines of communications leading into syria. >> syria, where isis has its headquarters and where the civil war only promises to get hotter now that the russian air force has intervened on the side of syria's dictator bashar al assad. the russian jets in yellow on the screen are tracked by the >> whale they intend to operate in syria. and we intend to operate in syria like the past year. >> you don't want the russians to come too close, obviously? >> right. >> how close is too close? >> well, i don't know. i throw a definition out there the what we didn't want is to
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we want to maintain level of safe separation. >> russian aircraft have come within 500 feet of u.s. planes. russian defense ministry released the video of one of the pilots checking out an american drone. the f-15, e strike fighters armed with missiles that could shoot down a russian plane. this pilot doesn't thing it will ever come to that. >> if russians might be be us. say hi. driving by. and continue to prosecute our targets.
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they have broken up a gang of what they call porch pirates going from house to house stealing packages left on the front stoop. maria villareal has the story. >> reporter: rick was expecting ups to leave two packages on his porch instead home surveillance video captures an unexpected visitor pulling up in a u-haul stealing his stuff in second. >> i was blown away. i couldn't believe this was actually happening. he was in such a hurry to go get the box, get out of here and follow the ups truck to another location. >> reporter: police raided the alleged thieves apartment using a license plate captured by deckman's surveillance video. inside they found hundreds of packages police believe were stolen and would have been
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>> they were doing this for a very long time then? >> correct. there were just piles of stuff everywhere. >> reporter: porch piracy is happening across the country. in pittsburgh, a woman pushing a toddler in a stroller swiped packages from inside a screen door. in chicago, a neighbor filmed this interaction on his cell phone after he saw a man taking packages from a front porch. >> why you picking them up? you are not delivering. you went and picked them up! >> reporter: law enforcement says the problem is growing, as shopping habits are changing. according to the nrf, consumers say all most half of their shopping will be online this holiday season with free shipping and shipping promotions meaning major selling point. when we are talking about an increase in the crime, how big of an increase is this? >> i would say an increase i see, or calls i get is 50% more. items being stolen that it was last year. >> reporter: developers in san solution. a new app called doorman that will hold your packages in a warehouse and deliver them to your home when you are hope.
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>> delivery. >> the whole idea of the company is, be able to schedule packages on your schedule. we deliver from 6:00 p.m. to midnight. seven days a week. >> reporter: as for rick deckman, he still has his packages, but from the police. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you.
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a high school football player in tennessee left in critical condition after suffering a head injury during a game friday night. the injury comes as a high school in chicago mourns the death of student athlete andre smith. he was badly hurt during a game. it has got a lot of parents taking a hard look at allowing their kids on to the field. dean reynolds reports from bogan high school in chicago. >> reporter: while high school football fatalities are down from the 1960s and 1970s. but in a sport by its nature is
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violent, the question remains whether it can ever be made truly safe. friends and family gathered this weekend to remember 17-year-old andre smith, who suffered a fatal injury playing football for his high school. he was rushed to a low cull hospital. he died there the following morning. >> he was always there. he was always there for anybody who ever needed him. >> reporter: over the weekend the cook county examiner ruled it accidental by blunt force injuries due to football. >> you understand the risk i's a game, you know. it's a game. >> reporter: smith is the
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player to die in the u.s. this year. just days ago, cameron matthews of texas passed away. and last month evan murray died from a lacerated spleen he suffered during a game. >> high school football deaths are disturbing. >> reporter: the american academy of pediatrics issued new guidelines aimed at improving the safety of youth football. recommendations included having athletic trainers on side lines of games, offering nontackle football games as an alternative and zero tolerance for illegal head-first hits. >> too many head-to-head hits. leading with the head. known as spearing. been against the rules since 1976. >> we thank you. >> reporter: to andre smith's teammates his brother had this to say. >> just be aware, you know. protect yourself. be cautious. because, something just as simple as a football injury can -- can, can end a whole life. >> reporter: now the chicago public school system says it follows all of the rules governing high school football.
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andre smith is the first high schooler to die in illinois, playing the game. since 2012. and that is the overnight news for this tuesday. carcinogen. car a new warning from the world health organization about some of most popular foods and their link to cancer. also tonight the fbi director on the rise in violent crime since ferguson. >> what's going on? it is likely a chill wind that has blown through law enforcement over the last year. >> the story behind the vice president's big decision. >> look at it this way -- >> absence of mallards, seniors fight the government for the return of their beloved juanita. >> it doesn't seem right. i want that duck back. >> announcer: this is the "cbs
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an international panel of experts says that eating processed meats such as cold cuts and bacon increases the risk of colon cancer. the same. after monday's report by the world health organization, everyone seemed to be asking -- how great is the risk? so we asked dr. jon lapook. >> reporter: the w.h.o. committee placed processed meat, hot dogs and ham in the same cancer risk category as tobacco. but the amount of increased risk is nowhere near the same. lifetime risk of getting colon cancer is 5%. eating the equivalent of one hot dog a day raises that to 6%. by comparison, one study found the lifetime risk of lung cancer is 1.3% in male nonsmokers and 17% in smokers. the evidence was strongest for a cancer link with processed meat. the international panel of experts said the cancer link for
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being in the highest risk, you have a substance and good evidence it can cause cancer and says nothing abut the degree to which it increases the risk. we know smoking tobacco increases the risk dramatically. processed meat increases risk of colon cancer less. still, 20% increase if you have equivalent of a hot dog every day. now we have the number, the new thing the study is giving us. it can give an idea to estimate the risk and make the decisions for ourselves. >> the take away in a word is moderation. >> everything in moderation including excess. >> thank you, jon. dr. lapook answering your questions on facebook.com/cbseveningnews. the head of the fbi has a theory about what is behind a rise in gun violence in big cities. chicago. and here's justice correspondent
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jeff pe guchltgues. >> homicides in chicago are up 19% this year. in other major cities there have been sharper increases. up 44% in washington, d.c. 62% in milwaukee. 73% in nashville. fbi director james comey discussed the spike with a group of police chiefs today. >> some part of what is going on is likely a chill wind that has blown through law enforcement over the last year. that wind is made up of a series of viral videos and the public outcry that followed them. >> reporter: the skrult knee of police began after the shooting of michael brown in ferguson, missouri, comey believes cell phone video of deadly encounters posted on line from freddie gray's arrest in baltimore, to eric garner's in new york has put police officers to the test. and could be changing how they work. >> in today's youtube world our officers are reluctant to get out of their cars and do the
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him at odds with president obama. ernest. >> available evidence at this point does not support the notion that law enforcement fulfilling their responsibilities. >> reporter: comey says he has no data on the youtube effect but his hunch was strong enough publicly. scott others say the rise in crime is due to drug related violence and gang activity. >> jeff, thank you. we saw it again late today. social media circulating a new officer. watch. today a sheriff avenue deputy in columbia, south carolina, forcibly removed a student from a classroom at spring valley high school. late today the school district said it is deeply concerned by
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this. sheriff's department is investigating. today we learned that the woman accused of driving her car into a crowd at the oklahoma state university homecoming parade may have been suicidal. adacia chambers is held on $1 million bail and faces for counts of murder. one of the victims was a toddler. today her father spoke and adriana diaz has more on that. >> i'm very sourrry for the victims and the people who lost their lives. >> reporter: floyd chambers spoke out about his daughter minutes before she was due in court. he said she spent two weeks at a mental hospital four years ago but had improved. distrack it toern laura temperature mass says, officers asked chambers if she was suicidal? >> her answer was i was suicidal at the team of the accident but not now at book in. >> reporter: prosecutors say chambers ran a red light and drove into the crowd. >> they didn't know what hit
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them. they didn't have time. anthony wyatt tried to stop her. >> i see this car hit this barricade. i jumped out and go, no you are going the wrong way. stop. and she floored it. i could see the wall of people the i knew what was going to happen. she hit that motorcycle and people went everywhere. >> reporter: among those killed, 23-year-old nikita prabhakar, a business student, marvin and bonnie stone were 65 retired from osu, 2-year-old nash lucas was an only child. chambers is held on four counts of second degree murder. the da said a fifth victim is an extremely fragile state. chambers' blood is being test ford drugs and alcohol. her attorney said the results could take ten days. he also said there was no indication she had been drinking. scott, she will undergo psychological evaluation from jail. >> adriana diaz in stillwater. thank you.
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will be right back. moving on to the presidential race. republican donald trump is feeling the heat from his closest rival. major garrett has that. confronted with three polls showing him trailing ben carson in iowa, donald trump went on the attack. >> by the way, carson is lower energy than bush. i don't get it. i saw him being interviewed. he is lower energy than bush. >> reporter: that was today in new hampshire. this was friday in florida. >> trimdonald trump has fallen to second place behind ben carson.
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we informed ben, but he was sleeping. >> reporter: carson a retired neurosurgeon offered a less cutting response. >> i would look to see him stand up for 18 hours and operate on somebody. >> reporter: trump's reaction to losing ground in iowa. disbelief. >> i don't believe the polls. i see the response from the people from iowa. >> reporter: trump offered a glimpse into what he considers hardships of his early real estate career. >> it ha not been easy for me. i started off in brooklyn the my $1 million. i came into manhattan. i had to pay him back and pay him back with interest. >> reporter: trump entered the real estate market in 1971, $1 million adjusted for inflation would equal $5.8 million today. trump tried to take credit for a ford motor company decision to shift some jobs to ohio from a plant in mexico. >> mexico took aford plant. ford. you heard me talking about ford. i heard last night. ford is moving back to the
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united states. >> ford is moving about 1,000 jobs from mexico to ohio. a decision the company approved in 2011. and one a gop rival of trump's, ohio governor john kasich helped to engineer. kasich said this entire controversy was another example of trump's "empty, false rhetoric." >> major garrett, thank you. vice president biden is letting us is on how he decided not to challenge hillary clinton for the democratic nomination. in an interview for 60 minutes. he told nora o'donnell it all came done to the calendar. let me put it this way. i gave my word as a biden. i think that the first caucus was april 1st. we probably would be running. because there is time. >> how oftft did the two of you talk about this decision? every night? >> well, some mornings we would say, lake i rimike i remember a month ago on the porch at home. i said. maybe we should just.
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i don't know if we will get there in time. maybe we should say we are not going. joe said what abouthe supreme court. jill said awhat out supreme court. >> what about education, what about community colleges. everything we had worked so hard for in this administration, could all -- could just all change. >> did you make a list of pros and cons? >> no. >> no, nono >> uh-uh. >e knew why we wanted to run. we knew that two years ago. two and a half years ago. i have known that since i joined the administration. but the other side was, it wasn't just since may 30th, when beau passed away, it was for the last year. we have been dealing with this -- with, being up and down, and beau would go through a pretty kol that protocol with few people in it. there would be hope. initial signs. okay. beau would say, come on dad, we are going t t be all right here,
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so it wawa -- it was a roller coaster ride. but look, i can die a happy man, we can be a happy family, mine never having been president as long as we continue to stay true to what we believed in and keep pushing on the thing that have animatedur life. >> vice president joe biden on "60 minutes." today in the canadian pacific. the search continued for a sixth victim after a tourist boat capsized yesterday, five body were recovered from the whale watching tour off vancouver island. 21 were rescued. no woror on the cacae. tonight we are getting a look inside last weak's mission to rescue prisoners that were held by isis in iraq. kurdish troops backed by u.s. special operations forces freed dozens of them. and american master sergeant joshua wheeler was killed in the fire fight. elizabeth palmer is in northern iraq. the video captured on a
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helmet camera shows dazed prisoners emerging one by one from their cells to be patted done by kurdish special forces. although you can clearly hear the american backup. the kurds released this individually to show their close partnehip with american might. on the well fortified front line near the key oil city of kirkuk, a morale booster for the peshmerga fighters who make do with outdated weapons and get their salaries late or not at all. general kamal kirkuki its the area commander. >> it was great thing for america and us to liberate these civilian people's lives. >> r rorter: to isis figigers hiding and watching less than a mile away the pictures will come as a blow. but freedom has a price. in this case, a compulsory camera call for the prisoners to embrace their kurdish liberators
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and say thank you. saad khelef ali feraj, a policeman, he was overcome as isis told him he had only an hour left to live. with this video the kurds want to underscore how with american help they are winning against isis. in contrast to the iraqi army, which gets four times as much money from the u.s., but is struggling to takak back the cocotry from extremists. the fact is though, scott, the kurds have pretty well consolidated most of their territory in northern tie rack whereas the iraqi army has thousands of square miles to take back from isis. they are making progress, at last, but it is painfully slow. >> liz palmer in northern iraq for us tonight. liz, thank you. we were struck today by pictures from a dren thatone that captured the scope of the refugee crisis in europe. a grim procession of thousands
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walked through a field in slovenia after escaping the w ws in syria and afghanistan. their march to freedom in western europe was detoured by border closures, yet they marched on. joined each day by thousands more. doctors want to change the way high schoollootball is played after another tragedy. and -- what happened after part of a plane's landing gear fell we're all familiar with this, axe daily fragrances. but what you wouldn't haveeen is this, axe dry spray antiperspirant. why are you touching your armpit? i was just checking to see if it's dry. don't, that's weird. the first ever dry spray antiperspirant from axe.
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today a medical panel urged high school football leagues to ban certain types of tackling to save lives. another player died last week in chicago and dean reynolds was there. >> reporter: friend, neighbors and coaches of andrere smith gathered toourn the 17-year-old senior whose life was cut short playing a game he loved.
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fo andre's teammates. >> protect yourself. be cautious. because, something just as simple as a football injury can -- can, can end a whole life. >> terrell alexander is a coacac >> thehe is noractice for something like this. you know, it is not something you can write down and come up with a script for these young men. >> reporter: smith played for chicago's bogan high school and injured in a collision on the last play of the last game of the season. he is the seventh high school player in the country to die in 2015 from a football related injuju. in his case, blunt force trauma to the head. now, the american academy of pediatrics says the way we play the game must change. proper tackling technique must be emphasized and there must be zero tolerance for illegal head first hits. dr. greg landry co-authored the policy statement. >> those are high risk maneuvers, associated with
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catastrophic injury to both the brain and the neck. >> reporter: landry said athletic trainers should be available to assess injuries. nationwide, 37% of high schools have full time athleticrainers like brian robinsoso why aren't you on the sidelines at every game? >> the most common exkus i hear is budget. i think in today's society, schools who use that excuse are making a mistake. >> reporter: nevertheless, 30% of the high schools in the country, scott, have no athletic trainers. >> dean reynolds. thank you very much.
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back. the deep south in deep water tonight. the gulf mexico wofld up on highways in dauphin, island, alabama. and these are the remnants of huhuicane patricia, thehe most powerful cyclone ever in the western hemisphere. it hit mexico friday night. but the damage wasn't nearly as bad as feared. all that moisture now is headed north. a sign of changing times at the university of mississippi. the school removed for the last time, the state flagag because it emblem. the student and faculty senates urged ole miss to take it down. it is the last state flag to incorporate the emblem in 2001, voters decided to keep it. today a british airways 737 crash landed in johannesburg, south africa, after part of the landing gear came off in flight.
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sparks flew as the left wing scraped the runway. but no injuries. the folks at a home for seniors are fighting to get a beloved pet back. and their story is next. every day it's getting closer going faster than a roller coaster a love like yours will surely come my way
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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 o oplace. [ 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, say something to local authorities. [ vocalizing ] [ buzzing ] [ tree crashes ]
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visit worldwildlife.org. each spring in california, the swallows return to the san juan capistrano mission. did you know, 400 miles to the north there is a mission this fall to have a duck returned to san anselmo. john blackstone is there. >> reporter: inn aocked pen at aa wildlife hospital near san francisco, a duck named juanita is tied up in red tape. meanwhile at bello gardens assisted living center residents
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are campaigning to win freedom for juanita. >> it doesn't seem right. i want that duck back. >> reporter: nor ma manning misses havinin juanita inn the backyard. >> she was just a nice pet. everybody loved her. >> reporter: juanita arrived two years ago an orphan duckling. the cook, walter paredes fete her back to health and she quickly became part of life here. neysa hinton. >> the staff built this area for her put the pond in and the water fall. >> reporter: one day in september, juanita wandered away. someone found her and took her to wild care a local animal hospital. that's where the red tape started. she gets checked into wild care. all of a sud sheenden she belongs to the state of california. >> wild care insists giving the duck back would be a federal
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offense with dire consequences. >> we would lose our license. >> reporter: the federal government would close you down itch you gave one duck to a senior center? >> yes. >> wild care is helping bello gardens to apply for a permit to keke a wild duck as a pet. the residents can visit juanita trying to make the best of a situation that is all fowled up. john blackstone, cbs news, san anselmo, california. >> that's the "cbs overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs t ts rning.
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york city, i'm scott pelley. >> announcer: this is the "cbsbs overnight news." > welcome to the overnight news. i'm michelle miller. there is a major shakeup in the race for the republican party presidential nomination. donald trump is no longer the clear front-runner at least not in iowa. which holds the first in the nation caucuses february 1. a cbs news poll shows a dead heat, trump and ben carson both at 27%. but a monmouth university shows carson with a wide lead. 32% to 1%.
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getting testy on the campaign trail. major garrett takes a look. >> reporter: confronted with three polls showing him trailing ben carson in ioio, donald trump went on the attack. >> by the way, carson is lower energy than bush. i've don't get it. i saw him being interviewed. he is lower energy than bush. >> reporter: that was today in new hampshire. this was friday in florida. >> donald trump has fafaen to second place behind ben carson. we informed bebe but he was sleeping. >> repororr: carson a retired neurosurgeon offered a less cutting response. >> i would like to see him stand up for8 hours and operate on somebody. >> reporter: trump's reaction to losing ground in iowa. disbelief. >> i don't believe the polls. i see the response from the people from iowa. >> reporter: trump offered a glimpse into what he considers hardships of his early real estate career. >> it has noteen easy for me. i started off in brooklyn the my father gave me a small loan of $1 million.
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i came into manhattan. i had to pay him back and pay him back with interest. new york real estate market in 1971, $1 million adjusted for inflation would equal $5.8 million today. trump tried to take credit for a ford motor company decision to shift soso jobs to ohio from a a ant in mexico. >> mexico took a ford plant. i have been very tough on the ford. you heard me talking about ford. i heard last night. ford is moving back to the united states. >> ford is moving about 1,000 jobs from mexico to ohio. a decision the company approved in 2011. and one a gop rival of trump's, ohio governor john kasich helped to engineer. kasich said this entire controversy was another example of trump's "empty, false rhetoric." >> major garrett, cbs news, washington. as for the democrats it is shaping up to be hillary
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senator bernie sanders gets his next shot at derailing hillaryry clininn in iowa. cbs news hosting the democratic debate. as for joed by any decision not nomination. he discussed that with nora o'donnell for "60 minutes." >> the oval office. this is right before you went out to the rose garden and told everybody that you weren't running for president. what advice did the president give yoyo >> i called the presisint early in the morning. he was i i the gym working out. and he took my call. i said, "mr. president, i said, we have decided." i'm not going to run. he knew how close it was. what was going on. and i said, i'm going to go out and announce it to -- this morning. or early afternoon. he said, joe, i would be proud to stand withyou. >> did thehe president want-up to run? >> the president wanted me to do what i thought was best.
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sounded a little bit like a campaign platform, did you have a speech written for whether you were going to run or weren't going to run? because part of the speech sounded like, i'll be ready. i have a plan if you need me. at some point. >> the truth is, there i i some truth to that. because what i wanted. >> but are you leaving the door open if something happens? >> no, no. i was making the case that i do want to influence the democratic party. i want to make no bones about that. i don't want the party walking away from what barack and i did. you said you will not be silent? >> i will not be silele. i want to the extentnthat i can influence the democratic party. >> you didn't mention hillary clinton at all during your speech but did seem to be referring to her if i don't think we should look at republicans as our in mes. was that a reference -- >> that wasn't directed to hillary.
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enemies in the debate. >> i think she wasas beingore humorous than direct about that. >> she said that in the debate. she said which enemy are you most proud of the she said the iranians. then mentions the republicans. >> she was smiling when she said the republicans. i don't take it that is her view. i do know it is the view of many people. when i made the statement, there were two big articles, why is biden so naive. these people are our enemy. serious people. they're not my enemy. how, how in god's name can be govern this country? if we view the opposition as an enemy? >> did you watch the democratic debate. did you watch hillary clinton? did you think she is unbeatable? >> i didn't think that. what i thought was she did a great job. i thought bernie did a great job. look, i have debated hillary, 13 times in national presidential debates.s. i know hillary. i knono her debating skills. i know mine. i have never had any dut about
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her iellect or capacity to debate. i thought s(e did, comforted herself really well. >> but you wouldn't have kidded running for president unless you thought, or had some doubts, about hillary clinton? >> not at all. that has nothing to do with it. i said from the beginning. look, i like hillary. hilllly and i get along together. the only reason, i still think i could do a better job than any body else could do. that's the reason to run. i wouldn't run against him ear. >> but you also said in the rose garden. democrats should run on the record. >> that's right. >> the president's record. >> i believe that. do you think hillary is run og in that or something else? >> will she will run on part or not. she has made a decisioio on two important things. doesn't mea she won't be a great president. >> when "the new york times" reported there is real tension between you and hillary clinton that the mere mention of her name makes you fume according to some advisers. >> well, let me till you something. it must be the same guys who knew i was going to run.
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case. go back and find anybody who says for the four years we wowoed together,, hillary and i weren't friends. >> what do you think uh donald trump? >> the one thing i, i am disappointed in donald trump, i know what a showman and all he is. but i really, i really don't think it's healthy and i hope he reconsiders this sort of attack on all immigrants. i think that is i think that is beneath the country. i don't think it is where the american people are. i hope he doesn't reaeay believe it. office. what one or two things do you think yo can get done? >> i think we can get a number of things done. one i think we can really begin to nail down this commitment to work on cancer and -- head toward a moon shot. about that. number two, i think we can -- make some real progress with paul ryan, a gooooguy on working toward an accommodation on the
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budget and keeping the government open. >> this white house has not been able to get much done with this congress. do you think, as speaker ryan will change things? >> yes. this is a decent guy. he knows you cannot forget about the cowboy walk because of a saggy diaper it's time to dance freely thanks to new pampers cruisers the first and only diaper that helps distribute w wness evenly into three extrarabsorb channels.. so it stays drier and doesn't sag like other diapers so wiggle it jiggle it and do, whatever that is, in new pampers cruisers love, sleep and play. pampers this is lime-a-way. it destroys limescale in seconds without scrubbing. tough hard water buildup - gone! no scrubbing. turbo power dederoys it.
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the pentagon has released dramatic video of last week's rescue operation in iraq. helmet cameras caught the action as kurdish fighters backed by u.s. special forces soldiers ooped in and raided an isis operation center. the raid freed 69 prisoners and captured a half dozen isis gunmen. but also led to death of an american soldier, master sergeant joshua wheeler. the u.s. involvement in the battle against yes has been mostly limited to the air war syria. david martin got a firsthand
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look inside the command center in the persian gulffation of qatar. boy the b-1 is carrying 17.5 tons of bombs and 170,000 pound of jet fuel. it strains to get airborne in the reduced lift of 100-degree heat. it will take nearly three hours to reach the target. with two aerial refuelings along the way. mr. martin welcome to the combat operations floor. >> yeah. >> reporter: lieutenant colonel david hahaorth takes us in too watch as b-1 and all the other aircraft carry out the day's attack plan against isis. >> doesn't have any windows but nice view. >> good look at arabian golf through iraq and syria. >> reporter: the air war going o 14 months. this is the first time news cameras have been allowed into its nerve center. >> the weapon of choice here is information. the more information we have about the enemy and our friendlies, the better wee are abab to make decisions.
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showing the locatio of every plane. green or america and allied. the blue are commercial aircraft. on another a video feed from an unmanned drone. one of dozens orbiting over iraq and syria. we make our way around the floor to a spot in the center called the crow's-nest. >> you were standing right now at the nexus, the center of the air campaign against isil and daish. >> reporter: general charles air war. how much effort does it ke to mount a strike like that? >> from just the one airplane, process. some of those we looked at for, for -- days, weeks, sometimes months. >> i can't from here see any human activity around there. >> there is today's target. on the wall of the command center the a liviv video feed from an unmanned drone pointing its camera at a cluster of
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buildings believed to be hiding isis explosives. we can see the green track of the b-1 on the screen as it approaches the target. while the drone takes one last look, lieutenant general brown explains what is happening. >> it is a weapons cache as well as a -- vehicle borne ied.d. exactly. >> reporter: the firir planes over thehe target are a pair of dutch f-16 a awe decrease. >> here we go. >> now is that a second ear? probably a second ear. >> that means they were explosives in there? >> correct. going off. >> right. >> so i guess if there were any body in the other three you would have seen them running out by now. >> exactly. >> there gizoes the vehicle. >> next the b-11 with the bombs.
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>> the second earary are going off. and indication. level of explosives inside the buildings. >> teeotal of 16 weapons. >> prob blowably a weapon. >> for a month and a half. u.s. and allied planes have struck 47 facility like t ts one. >> they're going too go set up another factory inn another building somom place. >> potentially. and, our goal is to -- to haunt them wherever ty are and take the things out so we can rely on security and stability in this region. >> how does today, this one day of strikes we have witnessed, how does that -- bring the u.s. closer to -- to defeating isis? >> well,very day we go out and strike, it's one step closer. i can't tell you how many steps is going to take. it is going to be more than a handful. that's for sure. >> and every day, more bombs are
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unpacked and assembled. these are the 2,000 bunker busters used in the attack we witnessed. and insert fuses and dial in delay of several millisecond. so the explosives inside won't go off until after the bomb penetrated its target. next, tailfinss that will guide the bombs are atatched. the geographic coordinates of the targets will be programmed into the bombs and gps satellites, the same ones you use to navigate your car will steer them. the bombs are haul out to one of the busyiest airfield in the world and along with smaller 500 pounders, loaded aboard b-1 bombers. the u.s. is spending $10 million a day. launching aircraft from bases in kuwait, qatar, t t united arab emirates. jordan, turkey. counting al lid inging inging allied planes.
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the air campaign began last year, president obama warned, it would take time. >> it seems like it is taking even more time than -- than people thought. >> it is in some regard. part of this, not only working at the pace and the way we would operate, it is also the pace at our partners operate. a tee effortam effort. we look to move faster. >> one hold-up is the iraqi army. still trying to regroup after being routed by yes last year. the strikes are supposed to pave the way for it to retake lost ground. but now, iraqi officials from the prime minister on down, are saying publicly, we are not getting enough air strikes. >> i tell you that is a bit frustrating. because we have air purr over iraq. 24/7. just for thehe record a a the iraqis calling for more s sikes than you are tableable to deliver? >> no we, have a lot of air purr out there. >> every time the iraqis call for a strike.
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wear's able to deliver. >> were's there. >> why are they complaining? >> that's a good question. because the i think we have been a great support of what the iraqis have been doing. so i guess i take, i have a different opinion the i've really do. >> reporter: the answer at lest according to american military officers, is that the iraqis are making excuses for their failure to take greater advanange of t t strikes. whwhh pentagon statistic shoz have destroyed tore damaged nearly 14,000 isis targets. everything from tanks to buildings to staging areas. and although the pentagon refuses to put out an official body count, lieutenant colonel hey hayworth. >> i'm seeing it. enemy fighters being killed in action. at a rate on par numbers you are hearing 1,000 a month. >> reporter: isis has been able to replacece its dead with snu recrui. the estimated number of enemy
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20,000, 30,000 last year. 20,000, 30,000 this year. >> so as long as they can keep bringing fighters in there, are you just shuffling sand against the tide? >> i don't know if that's the way i would put it. you have to eliminate the folks. you have off to take then me off the bat ltd fieldtledfieldbattlefield. they're not as asoned. we'll take them out. >est measure off progress is the amount of ground isis has lost. the pentagon released a map to show how much land has changed hand since the air campaign began. some territory held by isis, the areas in green, have been retaken by friendly forces. isis has also made some gains seen here in dark red. but overall, isis apares to be the net loser. >> this is, this is isis controlled here. >> you know, that is an ininresting rm. isis controlleded i have seen a lot of maps. reports abobo the pieces. there is big large swaths of red
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territory, isis controls. but really you are seeing very small pockets of where isil really is. this is vast open desert. really, they're concentrated on a few small locations along these lines of communications leading into syria. >> syria, where isis has its headquarters and where the civil war only promises to get hotter now that the russian air force has intervened on the side of syria's dictator bashar al assad. the screen are tracked by the command center. >> whale they intend to operate in syria. and we intend to operate in syria like the past year. >> you don't want the russians to come too close, obviously? >> right. >> how close is too close? >> well, i don't know. i throw a definition out there have a midair. we want to maintain level of safe sepp rationaration.n.
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within 500 feet of u.s.planes. russian defense ministry released the video of one of the pilots checking out an american drone. the f-15, e strike fighters armed with missile that could shoot down a russian plane. this pilot doesn't thing it will ever come to that. >> if russians might be be us. let's get these dayquil liquid gels and go. but these liquid gels are new. mucinex fast max. it's the same difference. this one is max strength and fights mucus. mucinex fast max. the only cold and flu liquid gel that's m m-strength and fights mucusus
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police in los angeles say they have broken up a gang of what they call porch pirates going from house to house stealing packages left on the front stoop. maria villareal has the story. >> reporter: rick was expececng ups to leave two packages on his porch instead home surveillance video captures an unexpected visitor pulling up in a u-haul stealing hisistuff in second. i was blown away.( i couldn't believe this was actually happening. he was in such a hurry to go get the box, get out of here and follow the ups truck to another location. >> reporter: police raided the alleged thieves apartment using a license plate captured by deckman's surveillance video. inside they found hundreds of packages police believe were stolen and would have been resold. >> they were doing t ts for a very lonon time then? >> correct. ththe were just piles of stuffff erywhere. >> reporter: porch piracy is happening across the country.
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toddler in a stroller swiped packages from inside a screen door. in chago, a neighbor filmed this interaction on his cell phone after he saw a man taking packages from a front porch. >> why you picking them up? you are not delivering. you went and picked them up! >> reporter: law enforcement says the problem is growing, as shopping habits are changing. according to the nrf, consumers say all most half of their shopopng will be online this holidayeason with free shipping and shipping promotions meaning major selling point. when we are talking about an increase in the crime, how big of an increase is this? >> i would sayn increase i see, or calls i get is 50% more. items being stolen that it was last year. >> reporter: developers in san francisco say they have a solution. a new app called doorman that will hold your packages in a warehouse and deliver them to your home when you are hope.
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>> delivery. >> the whole idea ofhe c cpany is, be able too schedule packages your schedule. we deliver from 6:00 p.m. to midnight. seven days a week. >> reporter: as for rick deckman, he still has his packages, but from 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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a high school football player in tennessee left in critical condition after suffering a head injury during a game friday night. theenjury comes as a high school in chicaca mourns the dedeh of student athlete andre smith. he was badly hurt during a game. it has got a lot of parents taking a hard lack at alug their kids on to the field. dean reynolds reports from bogan high school in chicago. >> reporter: while high school football fatalities are down from the 1960s and 1970s. but in a sport by its nature is violent, the question remains whether it can ever be made truly safe.
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friends and family gathered this weekend to remember 17-year-old andre smith, who suffered a fatal injury playing football for his high schoolol he was rushed to a low cull hospital. he died there the following morning. >> he was always there. he was always there for anybody who ever needed him. >> reporter: over the weekend the cook county examiner ruled it accidental by blunt force injuries due to football. >> you understand the risk i's a game, you know. it's a game. >> reporter: smith is the seventh high school football player to die in the u.s. this year. just days ago, cameron matthewspassed away. and last month evan murray died from a lacerated spleen he suffered during a game. >> high school football deaths are disturbing.
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academy of pediatrics issued new guidelines aimed at improving the safety of youth football. recommendations included having athletic trainers on side lines of games, offering nontackle football games as an alternative and zero tolerance for illegal head-first hits. >> too many head-to-head hits. leading with the head. known as spearing. been against the r res since 1976. >> we thank you. >> reporter: to andre smith's teammates his brother had this to say. >> just be aware, you know. protect yourself. be cautious. because, something just as simple as a football injury can -- can, can end a whole life. >> reporter: now the chicago public school system says it follows all of the rules governing high school football. andre smith is the first high schooler to die in illinois, playing the game. since 2012. and that is the overnight
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news for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us little bit later for the "the morning news" and cbs this morning. from thehe broadcastenter here in new york city, i'm michelle miller. a new warning from the world health organization about some of most popular foods and their link to cancer. also tonight the fbi director on the rise in violent crime since ferguson. >> what's going on? it is likely a chill wind that has blown through law enforcement over the last year. >> the story behind the vice president's big decision. >> look at it this way -- >> absenen of mallards, seniors fight the gogornment for the return of theieibeloved juanita. >> it doesn't seem right. i want that duck bacac >> announcer: this is the "cbs
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an international panel of experts says that eating processed meats such as cold cuts and bacon increases the risk of colon cancer. and eating red meat likely does the same. after monday's report by the world health organization, everyone seemed to be asking -- how great is the risk? so we asked dr. jon lapook. >> reporter: the w.h.o. committeteplaced processed meaea hot dogs and ham in the same cancer risk category as tobacco. but the amountntf increased risk is nowhere near ththsame. lifetime risk of getting colon cancer is 5%. eating the equivalent of one hot dog a day raises that to 6%. by comparison, one study found the lifetime risk of lung cancer is 1.3% in male nonsmokers and 17% in smokers. the evidence was strongest for a cancer link with processed meat. the international panel of
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experts said the cancer link for red meat like steak and pork is weaker. but that red meat probably also causesesancer mainly colon b b possibly calls prostate. the committee described the number of possible mechanisms. dr. marianna stern of usc served on the panel. >> processed meat are treated with chemicals to preserve the meat. some are nitrates, and nitrates can react in the body and form carcinogens. >> shalene mcneill is a registered dietitian. >> what we see with reports. they often confuse us. easy to build a healthy diet with foods like these and nothing in the report should change that. >> jon, we are talking about red meat. what falls in the category? >> red meat is mammalian muscle comes fromomhere. beef, veal, lamb, yes, poror >> pork is red meat? >> yes. why is if it placed in the same category as tobacco?
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>> this led to confusion. being in the highest risk, you have a substance and good evidence it can cause cancer and says nothing abut the degree to which it increases the risk. we know smoking tobacco increases the risk dramatically. processed meat increases risk of colon cancer less. still, 20% increase if you have equivalent of a hot dog every day. now we have the number, the new thing the study is giving us. it can give an idea to estimate the risk and make the decisions for ourselves. >> the take away in a word is moderation. >> everything in moderation including excess. >> thank you, jon. dr. lapookoknswering your estions on facebookokom/cbseveningnews. the head of the fbi has a theory about what is behind a rise in gun violence in big cities. he talked about it today in chicago. and here justice correspondent jeff pegues.
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28 were wounded in gun violence over the weekend in chicago. >> homicides in chicago are up 19% this year. in other major cities there have been sharper increases. up 44% in washington, d.c. 62% in milwaukee. 73% in nashville. fbi director james comey discussed the spike with a group of police chiefs today. >> some part of what is s ing on is likely a chill wind that haha blown through law enforcement over the last year. that wind is made up of a series of viral videos and the public outcry that followed them. >> reporter: the skrult knee of police began after the shooting of michael brown in ferguson, missouri, comey believes cell phone video of deadly encounters posted on line from freddie gray's arrest in baltimore, to eric garner's in new york has put police officers to the test. and could be changing how they work.
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officers are reluctant to get out of their cars and do the workrkhat controls violent crime. >> reporter: comey's remarksksut him at odds s th president obama. white hohoe spokesman josh ernest. >> available evidencncat this int does not support the notion that law enforcement officers are shying away from fulfilling their responsibilities. >> reporter: comey says he has no data on the youtube effect but his hunch was strong enough to start talking about it publicly. scott others say the rise in crime is due to drug related violence and gang activity. >> jeff, thank you. we saw it again late today. social media circulating a new video of alleged abuse by an officer. it is a little bit difficult to watch. today a sheriff avenue deputy in columbia, south carolina, forcibly removed a student from a classroom at spring valley high school. late today the school district
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said it is deeply concerned by this. sheriff's department is investigating. today we learned that the woman accused of driving her car into a crowd at the oklahoma state university homecoming parade may have been suicidal. adacia chambers is held on $1 million bail and faces for counts of murder. one of the victims was a toddler. today her father spoke and adriana diaz has more on that. >> i'm very sorry for the victims and the people who lost their lives. >> reporter: floyd chambers spoke out about his daughter minutes before she was due in court. he said she spent two weeks at a mental hostal four years ago
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district attorney laura says officers asked chambers if she was suicidal? >> her answer was i was suicidal at the team of the accident but not now at book in. >> reporter: prosecutors say chambers ran a red light and drove into the crowd. >> they didn't know what hit them. they didn't have time. anthony wyatt tried to stop her. >> i see this car hit this barricade. i jumped out and go, no you are going the wrong way. stop. stop. and she floored it. i could see the wall of people the i knew what was going to happen. she hit that motorcycle and people went everywhere. >> reporter: among those killed, 23-year-old nikita prabhakar, a business student, marvin and bonnie stone were 65 retired from osu, 2-year-o-o nash lucas was s only child. chambers is held on four counts of second degree murder. the da said a fifth victim is an extremely fragile state. chambers' blood is being test ford drugs and alcohol. her attorney said the results could take ten days. he also said there was no indication she had been drinking. scott, she will undergo psychological evaluation from jail. thank you.
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will be right back. almost sixtytyillion americans are affected by mentalalllness. together we cacahelp them with three simple wordrd my name is chris noth and i will listen. from maine to maui, thousands of high school students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities. chris young: action teams of high school students are joining volunteers of america and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next generation of volunteers. carlos pea: it's easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the action. get in on the action at actionteam.org.
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yes, you'll be in my heart from thth day on now a a forevermore... narrator: if animals are our best friends, shouldn't we be theirs? visit your local shelter, adopt a pet. you'll be in my heart no matter what... cbs cares. if you were a hippie in e '60s, you need to know.
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it's the dawning of the age of aquarius. yeah, and something else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventable. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bones, protect them. all: cbs cares! moving on to the presidential race. republican donald trump is feeling the heat from his closest rival. major garrett has that. confronted with three polls showing him trailing ben carson in iowa, donald trump went o o the attack. >> by the way, carn is lower
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i don't get it. i sahim being interviewed. he is lower energy than bush. >> reporter: that was today in new hampshire. this was friday in florida. second place behind ben carson. sleeping. neurosurgeon offered a less cutting response. somebody. >> reporter: trump's reaction to >> i don't believe the polls. people from iowa. >> reporter: trump offered a hardships of his early real estate career. >> it ha not been easy for me. i started off in brooklyn the my fathth gave me a small loan of $1 million. i came into mamaattan. i had to p p him back and pay him back with intetest. >> reportete trump entered the real estate markrk in 1971, $1 million adjujued for inflation would equal $5.8 m mlion today. trump tried to take credit f a ford motor company decision to
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plant in mexico. >> mexico took aford plant. i have been very tough on the ford. you heard me talking about ford. i heard last night. ford is moving back to the united states. >> ford is moving about 1,000 jobs from mexico to ohio. a decision the company approved in 2011. and one a gop rival of trump's, ohio governor john kasich helped to engineer. kasich said this entire controversy was another example of trump's "empty, false rhetoric." >> major garrett, thank you. vice president biden is letting us is on how he decided not to challenge hillary clinton for the democratic nomination. in an interview for 60 minutes. he told nora o'd'dnell it all came done to the c cendar. leleme put it this way. i gave my word as a biden. i think that the first caucus was april 1st. we probably would be running. because there is time. >> how often did the two of you talk about this desion?
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every night? >> well, some mornings we would say, like i remember a month ago on the porch at home. i said. maybe we should just. i don't know if we will get there in time. maybe we should say we are not going. joe said what about the supreme court. >> what about education, what about community colleges. everything we had worked so hard for in this administration, could all -- could just all change. >> did you make a list of pros and cons? >> no. >> no, no. >> uh-uh. >> we knew why we wanted to run. we knew that two years ago. two and a half years ago. i have known that since i joined the administrationon but the e her side was, it wasn't just since may 30th, when beau passed away, it was for the last year. we have been dealing with this -- with, being up and down, and beau would go through a protocol with few people in it. there would be hope.
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initial signs. okay. beau would say, come on dad, we are going to be all right here, you know? so it was -- it was a roller coaster ride. but look, i can die a happy man, we can be a happy family, mine never having been president as long as we continue to stay true to what we believed in and keep pushing on the thing that have animated our life. >> vice president joe biden on "60 minutes." today in the canadian pacific. the search continued for a sixth victim after a tourist boat capsized yesterday, five body were recovered from the whwhe tching tour off vancver island. 21 were rescued. no word on the cause. tonight we are getting a look inside last weak's mission to rescue prisoners that were held by isis in iraq. kurdish troops backed by u.s. special operations forces freed dozens of them. and american master sergeant joshua wheeler was killed in the fire fight. elizabeth palmer is in northern iraq.
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the video captured on a helmet camera shows dazed prisoners emerging one by one from their cells to be patted done by kurdish special forces. although you can clearly hear the american backup. the kurds released this individually to show their close partnership with american might. on the well fortified front line near the key oil city of kirkuk, a morale booster for the peshmerga fighters who make do with outdated weapons and get their salariesesate or not at all. general kamal kirkuki its the area commander. >> it was great thing for america and us to liberate these civilian people's lives. >> reporter: to isis fighters hiding and watching less than a mile away the pictures will come as a blow.
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but freedom has a price. in this case, a compulsory camera call for the prisoners to embrace their kurdish liberators and say thank you. saad khelef ali feraj, a policeman, he was overcome as isis told him he had only an hour left to live. with this video the kurds want to underscore how with american help they are winning against isis. in contrast to the i iqi army, which gets four times asasuch money from the u.s., but i i strugglingngo take back the country from extremists. the fact is though, scott, the kurds have pretty well consolidated most of their territory in northern tie rack whereas the iraqi army has thousands of square miles to take back from isis. they are making progress, at last, but it is painfully slow. >> liz palmer in northern iraq for us tonight. liz, thank you. we were struck today by pictures from a drone that captured the scope of the refugee crisis in europe.
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walked through a field in slovenia after escaping the wars in syria and afghanistan. their march to freedom in western europe was detoured by border closures, yet they marched on. more. doctors want to change the way high school football is played after another tragedy. and -- what happened after part off? it's the final countdown! the final countdown! if you're the band europe, you love a final countdown. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico.
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today a medical panel urged high school football leagues to ban certain types of tackling to save lives. another player died last week in chicago and dean reynolds was there. >> reporter: friend, neighbors and coaches of andre smith gathered over the weekend to mourn the 1717ear-old senior whose life was cut short playing a game he loved.
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for andre's teammates. >> protect yourself. be cautious.s. because, something just as simple as a football injury can -- can, can end a whole life. >> terrell alexander is a coach. >> there is no practice for something like this. you know, it is not something you can write down and come up with a script for these young men. >> reporter: smith played for chicago's bogan high school and injured in a collision on the last play of the last game of the season. player in the country to die in injury. in his case, blunt force trauma to the head. now, the american academy of the game must change. be emphasized and there must be first hits. policy statement. maneuvers, associated with brain and the neck.
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>> reporter: landry said athletic trainers should be available to assess injuries. nationwide, 37% of high schools have full time athletic trainers like brian robinson. >> why aren't you on the sidedenes at every game? >> the most commononxkus i hear is budget. i think in today's society, schools who use that excuse are making a m mtake. >> reporter: nevertheless, 30% of the high schools in the country, scott, have no athletic trainers. >> dean reynolds. thank you very much. a university has removed a
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back. the deep south in deep water tonight. the gulf of mexico washed up on highways in dauphin, island, alabama. streets turned into rivers in hancock county, mississippi. and these are the remnants of hurricane patricia, the most powerful cyclone ever in the western hemisphere. it hit mexico friday night. but the damage wasn't nearly as bad as feared. all that moisture now is headed north. a sign of changing times at the university of mississippi. the school removed for the last time, the state flag because it includes the confederate battle emblem. the student and faculty senates urged ole miss to take it down. it is the last state flag to incorporate the emblem in 2001, voters decided to keep it. today a british airways 737 crash landed in johannesburg, , south africa, after part of the landing gear came off in flight. sparks flew as the left wing scraped d e runway.
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but no injuries. the folklkat a home for seniors are fighting to get a belovevepet back. and their story is next. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained naea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealthhov/heartattack. bipolar disorder is a brain condition that causes unusual or dramatic mood swings. it affects millions of americans and compromises their ability to function. when diagnosed, bipolar disorder can be effectively treated by mood stabilizers. but most people with bipolar disorder suffer for years without help
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because the symptoms are missed or confused with other illnesses, like depression. learn how easily you can help keep this from happening to a loved one.
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each spring in california, the swallows return to the san juan capistrano mission. did you know, 400 miles to the north there is a mission this fall to have a duck returned to san anselmo. john blackstone is there. >> reportete in a locked pen at a wildlife hospital near san francisco, a duck named juanita is tied up in n d tape. meanwhile at bello gararns assisted living center residents are campaigning to w w freedom
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for juanita. >> it doesn't seem right. i want that duck back. >> reporter: norma manning misses having juanita in the backyard. >> she was just a nice pet. everybody loved her. >> reporter: juanita arrived two years ago an orphan duckling. the cook, walter paredes fed her back to health and she quickly became part of life here. neysa hinton. >> the staff built this area for her put the pond in and the water fall. >> reporter: one day in september, juanita wandered away. someone found her and took her to wild care a local animal hospital. that's where the red tape started. she gets checked into wild care. all of a sudden she belongs to the state of california. not to wild care. in this situation, unfortunately, not to bello gardens. >> wild care insists giving the duck back would be a federal
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>> we would lose our license. >> reporter: the federal government would close you down if you gave back one duck to a see year center? >> yes. >> wild care is helping bello gardens to apply for a permit to keep a wild duck as a pet. >> you're looking fine. the residents can visit juanita trying to make the best of a situation that is all fowled up. john blackstone, cbs news, san anselmo, california. >> that's the "cbs overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later r r ththmorning news and cbsbshis
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york citit i'm scott pelley. in. >> it's tuesday, october 27th, 2015, this is the "cbs morning news." caught on camera, an ugly crash inside a high school kassroom, a student is seen being thrown from her deck by a school resource officer. heightened tensions on the high sea, the united states issues a bold challenge to china's growing influence in the south china sea. and black friday blackout the
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its doors shut during one of the biggest shopping days of the year and why it's doing it. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at "cbs news" headquarters h he in new yoyo, thanks foror joining us. i'm anne-mamae green. welllla high schooll resource officer in south carolina has been put on administrative duties followingng confrontation th a student at a a columbia area school t. incident was captured on cell phone video. the officer was called in afterer the student refused to leave the room t. officer grabbed her. the desk tips over and he tracks her to the front of the room. she was arrested for disturbing the peace and released to her parents. don champion is here in new york with more on that, good morning, don. >> good morning, anne-marie. this morning, the head of the aclu of south carolina calls the officer's actions an egregious use of force.
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