tv CBS Overnight News CBS January 1, 2016 1:37am-4:30am CST
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2015 saw americans triumph on the soccer field, and pope francis make his first visit to the states. there was the start of the 2016 presidential campaign, and a pair of deadly terror attacks in paris. [ explosion ] >> multiple attacks in the city of paris. many are dead. many are wounded. >> the bataclan is where the greatest massacre happened. a whole night of violence. >> france is today a country at war. >> u.s. offifials are calling the attacks a game changer. >> this is an attack on all of humanity. >> they hit six sites, and in the span of just 32 minutes, darkness fell on the city of light. [ gunfire ] >> this was an attack on our very way of life. thisisas an attack on the way the west lives.
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they're going to publish as normal. >> could an attack like paris happen here in the u.s.? >> on a couple of levels. >> this was supposed to be a happy occasion, but it turned into an active shooter scene. >> the two gunmen were killed in a shootout with police just hours after the rampage. >> i can't get my head around the fact that a 27-year-old mother of a 16-month-old is firing off as many rounds as she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense to be honest with you. >> i'm calling this guy to find out if he's okay, and he's the shooter. you know, how do you -- it's difficult. >> these events, they shocked me and you realize life is precious. >> somehow this has become routine. the reporting is routine. my response ends up being routine.
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>> m mtiple shots were firir. wrong. >> the gunman's motive is unclear. what is unclear is the devastating impact actions have had on this tight nit community. >> we must stop the senseless violence. >> as we approach that moment, we want to pause and reflect and share with you once again what made these two so special. >> how do you begin to process what happenene today? >> total shock and disbelief. i've been crying my eyes out all day long. >> she said we were the cutest, prettiest couple ever. amazing grace >> i can see nine white ribbons. one for each of the nine people who were killed. how sweet the sound that saved -- >> at this moment in time,
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acceptable on any level. >> this was the intersection that was the scene of the largest clashes with policece >> the stata police are now in charge. >> they're calling you hero mom. do you feel like a hero mom the >> my intention was just to get my son and have him be safe. >> it is an absolute, disastrous mess. never seen anything like this in my life. >> this train met a violent end just over there. >> the busiest amtrak corridor in t t country, shut down, no trains, because that's the derailed cars right down there. >> russian security services confirmed that the russian metrojet crash in the sinai was caused by a bomb. >> i think putin's reaction is going to be to go after isis in a very big way. >> we are now in a very dangerous situation with the u.s. and russia conducting air strikes in syria.
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that this is a new effort for russia to take a leadership role in the middle east. is it? >> nyet. >> emergency crews are flying to and from the crash site. >> an unthinkable act of suicide and mass murder. >> the boat is overcrowded and the greek coastline is still around five miles in that direction. >> migrants have been pouring into this area. the troops are pushing us back, and they've closed the border on both sides. >> explosions had the power of 21 tons of tnt. the police here are trying to stop us from shooting. this is what it's like covering a story here in china. >> you can't come. you've been too rude. >> cbs news has lost one of its
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>> our colleague bob simon was killed this evening. >> i'm bo biden, and joe biden is my dad. >> success is when you look at your son and daughter and realize they turned out better than you. when i see you again, when i see you again >> we die. it does not mean that you lose to cancer. you beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live. it's been a long day >> from the arctic circle and everywhere in between, what an amazing life. >> this is a story that could have ended another way. bubuit's had a happy ending. for i'll tell you all about it when i see you again
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town of 200. the front of this house has been completely ripped off. >> when it hit, definitely we knew it hit. >> this fire is just burning through homes. one of the only things you can still recognize hereres the front dodo. >> the heat from these flames is just intense, but the wind is perfect. it's pushing the flames up the hillside and away from the highway. >> the problem is on this side of the highway are homes. >> it's a disaster here. the residents have been told to evacuate. >> we haven't seen this level of rain in a thousand years. that's how big this is. >> the arctic is warming sooner, faster, and more than anywhere else. >> do you believe that climate change is the number one threat to the world today? >> we only have one planet. so we've got to get this right. >> yes! >> you've got to be kidding me. >> when it happens, it just absolutely jacks me up.
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we got it, baby! >> welcome to snow mountain. >> snow piles as high as 5 to 7 feet. >> i feel like i'm in a snow globe. >> could be anywhere from minus 10 to minus 20 degrees. >> the cold weather has created some winter fashion statements. kind of a cross between nanuk of the north and yosemite sam. what do you think, charlie? >> i think it works for you. >> american pharoah has won the triple crown! >> one of the epic performances of t t annals o o the sport. >> intercepted at the goal line by malcolm butler. unreal! >> what happened about deflated balls?
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and vibrant. i don't think there's any relevance to that comment. >> i have no more campaigns to run. know, because i ion both of them. >> why do yoyo want to be president? you've been in the white house. >> there it is, right. i'm not doing it to move back in. >> my campaign is about a political revolution. >> give us three words that is the real hillary clinton. >> i am a real person. >> the american people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn e-mails. >> are you sick and tired of donald trump? >> ladies and gentlemen, the president of the united states, donald j. trump! >> i admire the fact that he's politically incorrect. what else do i admire about him? let me think. >> donald trump's campaign is like a summer blockbuster movie. >> you don't have to run for president to be the world's biggest jack ass.
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>> there's no reason for me to forgive you. >> you can vote for a republican other than yourself, who would that be? >> i would vote for myself again. >> the land lark ruling this nation has been waiting for. same-sex marriage is the law of the land. >> that legal fight is far from over. >> these people have rallied and you are a strong people. >> i'm kind of nervous. i hope i'm not showing it. >> tens of thousands of people on what is essentially the president's front lawn. you can almost feel the excitement here. >> the pope's visit to the capitol is being called the hottest ticket in washington. >> how do you protect the one that believes he has the ultimate guardian angel in >> here he's going to have an additional 6,000 angels.
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when heartburn hits fight back fast tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue and neutralizes stomach acid at the source tum, tum, tum, tum smoothies! only from tums the presidential candidates squeezed in some campaign stops before taking a break for new year's celebrations. the headline, donald trump continues to attack bill clinton and others in the gop field continue to attack each other. >> reporter: so what we've got here is basically@every republican candidate who is not
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to become the trump alternative. and as for trump, he sounds like he's already in a general election battle with hillary clinton and her husband, the former president. >> the husband's one of the great abusers of the world? give me a break. >> reporter: in south carolina, donald trump brags about his latest dust-up with hillaly clinton. >> she said, he's got a -- he's demonstrated a penchant for sexism. can you believe it, me? nobody respects women more than donald trump. thatky tell you. [ applause ] >> reporter: trump fired back that the real sexist is clinton's husband, bill. >>he gets up and makes a speech and doesn't say anything about sexism and me. i wonder why. >> reporter: before his presidential run, trump, over the years, generally defended bill clinton. in 2008, he called the impeachment hearings in the wake
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house intern monica lewinsky, nonsense. though at the time he questioned the president's judgment. it was his choice. it wasmonica, he told "the new york times." i mean, a terrible choice. other republican candidates stuck to more traditional attacks against one another, continuing his bus tour in iowa, marco rubio pushed back against chris christie's accusations he shirked senate responsibilities. >> chris christie is a funny guy, but he's never in new jersey. he's gone after the time. >> it would have been nice if he took the time to show up. take a day off fund-raising and show up. that's all. >> and the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and d 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.
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chip reid reports. [ knock on window ] >> you ready? >> i got some stuff to do. >> reporter: if you were expecting a conversation percolating with domestic and foreign policy, well, that's just not jerry seinfeld's brand. >> are these washed? [ laughter ] >> come on, let's go get some coffee. >> reporter: not that there's anything wrong with that. >> i do really well with the zero to 8 demographic. >> really? >> they love me. partly because they think my ears are big, so i look a little like a cartoon character. >> right. >> and then little kids solve saying my name. >> right. >> but it's all one big name. it's barack obama. this is called the beast. >> reporter: seinfeld wasn't the only one with an american muscle car. >> i could call a nuclear submarine right here from this. i bet you don't have that.
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>> it's a cool feature. >> reporter: a leader of the come by world strolled the white house grounds with the leader of the free world. and, like the coffee, the conversation flowed. >> how far can you wonder around up there in your underwear, how far can you get before there's like people and it's not cool? >> it's not cool generally wandering around in my underwear. the first night, and you're sleeping in the white house. >> right. >> what the hell is this, right? >> right, night as the museum. >> that's how it feels probably the first week. >> reporter: the 61-year-old comedian pulled back the curtain the 44th commander in chief wiwi a surprisingly candid conversation. >> how many world leaders do you think are just completely out of their mind? >> a pretty sizable percentage. you know, you made like a
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>> so much more than you. and yet how do i seem to you. do i seem spoiled, out of touch? >> i don't know. >> you have a pretty good instinct for people. >> right now you seem like a completely normal guy. >> but i'm putting on an act, like everyone else does for you. >> that's my point. >> watch out, people. >> reporter: and when you're at the president's house, it's only polite to let him drive. >> i like the hanging over the wheel. >> you've got to do it that way. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this new year's day. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little lit baiter for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center here in new york city, i'm michelle miller. new year's fears, fire in a high-rise hotel, thehefireworks and plenty of firearms in the tightest security ever.
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cresting at record levels in missouri. homes are being swept away. the slopes are stranded. profits are melting after the warmest december on record. >> i'm sad looking at the mountains without snow. >> and troubled kids getting a fresh start through hard work. >> you did it! come on! this is the "cbs overnight news." >> happy new year and welcome to the "overnight news." i'm elaine quijano. 2016 c ce in with a bang, with parties and fireworks from sydney, australia to anchorage, alaska. of course, the biggest celebration of all was at the crossroads of the world, new york city's times square. upwards of a million people jammed into the square for an evening of fun and music and the
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there is celebration but also deep concern in cities around the world as we usher in 2016. a massive fire broke out in a high rise hotel in dubai, hours before the midnight fireworkrk which went on as scheduled. police in munich, germany evacuated two train stations after receiving what they called a serious imminent threat of a terror attack. brussels canceled its party as arrests were made in a terror plot. security is tighter than ever in new york's times square, which is jammed with a million people. we have a team of correspondents covering this. first, holly williams who has been following the fire in dubai. >> reporte the government says the fire broke out on the 20th
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building. the fire apparently began at around 9:30 p.m. local time. you can see the entire skyscraper lit up. now, the dubai authorities say that they now have the fire under control, and they also say that only one person was killed by a heart attack during the evacuation. another 15 people were injured. the cause of the fire is still not known. and eyewitnesses say the fire spread very rapidly through the tower, which is almost 1,000 feet tall. >> the heat was so intense outside it was unbelievable. and just people started to panic, crushing each other trying to get down the stairs and jumping over railings. i couldn't beieve how fast it actually happened. >> there were people running in the corridors, and i ended up having to put somebody on my back. he was in a wheelchair, carried him down to the ground floor. >> but, holly, this didn't affect the new year's celebrations. >> reporter: surprisingly, elaine, no, it did not.
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broke out, the dubai authorities tweeted that the city's new year's eve celebrations would go ahead as planned and centered on the world's tallest building, the burj khalifa, which stands just a few hundred yards from that hotel fire. >> holly williams reporting tonight. holly, thank you. munich, germany was just about to celebrate the new year when police got word of a terror threat. they cleared two train stations and told people to avoid crowds. elizabeth palmer has more on new year's in europe. >> reporter: not even terrorist threats could keep europeans from ringing in the new, from moscow to berlin. although everywhere, security was heavy. especially paris, where terrorists struck twice this year. there, the defense minister himself appeared with some of the 11,000 soldiers on duty. it was a photo-op designed to
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visitors. >> we're not really scared about it. we want to enjoy it. we've never been here e new year's eve, and it's magical. >> reporter: but the magic was scaled back a little. there were no fireworks this year, and the traditional party on the champs elysee will wrap up earlier than usual. in brussels, the official party was canceled. soldiers fanned out across the city and workers dismantled the stage where the new year's show was to go on. after the arrest of f o men suspected of planning holiday attacks. some think it was an overreaction. >> i think it's backing down to the threat of terrorism. i think we should stand up and just make everything happen. >> reporter: but belgians are edgy. this week, police arrested yet another suspect with links to the paris attacks in molenbeek, a brussels s surb that was home to two of the other attackers s and one of them, saleh abdeslam,
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still, new year's eve is for celebration, says brussels club owner pablo saccomano. >> i really believe that the people from brussels need to go out and party and need to gather as well and to bond together. >> reporter: and it wasn't only the belgian policeceelaine, who discovered evidence of a new year's terrorist attack. the turks, too, have arrested two men they say were planning to bomb crowded areas in ankara tonight. >> elizabeth palmer, thank you. new york city and at celebrations across the country and around the world. don dahler reports. >> reporter: the nypd says they're going to make good on the mayor's promise by raising the security here to the highest level since 9/11. it's a new york ritual. beginning at dawn, more than a million people are searched before being herded into 65 massive viewing pens. but this year, there are more
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undercover officers roam among the revelers, snipers watch from rooftops, and helicopters hover overhead. among the crowds, a radiation detector and bomb-sniffing dogs. commissioner bill bratton. >> we are aware that the threat picture has changed because of isis. it's changed significantly from a year ago or two years ago. >> reporter: while insisting there is no specific threat, officials are concerned about individuals like 25-year-old emanuel lutchman. he was charged in rochester wednesday morning with a plot to commit an armed attack against civilians on new year's eve on behalf of isis. in his possession were ski masks, ammonia, duct tape, and a machete. los angeles has also increased the number of cameras and officers along the rose bowl parade root. the game too is under elevated security. mark selby heads homeland security in southern california. >> there's never been a time that there have been more law enforcement personnel, seen and unseen, and there's never been a time thathere's been more
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make it a more secure set of events. >> reporter: in las vegas, 1,000 uniformed and undercover officers are patrolling the strip. and in pittsburgh, extra canine, s.w.a.t., and explosive teams have been added to protect the 40,000 to 50,000 spectators. janis wilson runs the event. >> we've always had a great deal of security for first night, but with all of the things happening in the world, we're taking even greater precaution. >> reporter: more than one billion people will be watching this on television all over the world, but about 40 blocks south of where i'm standing, there are a few more viewers watching things more intently. elaine, these are specially trained police officers, keeping an eye on hundreds of closed circuit cameras. >>&don dahler reporting from times square tonight. don,,thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.y mental illness. together we can help them with three simple words. my name is chris noth
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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 t on the action.
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if you w we a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. 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! historic winter floods have killed at least 22 people this
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nearly a foot of@rain caused the mississippi river to rise towards record levels, along with the meramec river, and nearly a half dozen others in the region. david begnaud is in valley park, missouri. david. >> reporter: elaine, good evening. where we are standing, this is usually one of the busiest intersections in st. louis county where there would usually be semis passing through, tonight it is water from the meramec river, which crested earlier today. but tonight, not far behind where i am standing, it is nearly 20 feet deep, where it should be dry. over the next 12 hours, the mississippi river is expected to crest inint. louis at 42.5 feet, nearly 12 feet above flood stage. john houser lives just south of st. louis in the city of arnold. >> we're just fighting the water, and it's up to the red line right there, just trying to keep the pumps running and make sure the wall doesn't fail and hope the water goes down in a
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>eporter: overnight, the floodwaters snarled traffic for miles, and todod missouri's busy i-55 became the second major interstate to close this week. gene liston was stuck in the middle of it. >> there's nowhere you can go, you know. i mean, it's water, but, you know, if there's enough of it, you can't do anything. >> reporter: statewide, more than 12 people have been killed due to the extreme flooding. it has washed away homes, highways-- >> that is highway 141. >> reporter: and shut down water treatment plants. steve stenger is the executive of st. louis county. how many miles do you estimate are under water? >> it would be difficult to estimate but very near us right now there are about seven miles under water, right where we're standing. >> reporter: that should be dry. >> that should be dry. >> repororr: back in the city y arnold, police chief robert shockey says the worst may be yet to come. >> we're to the point now where the sandbagging, it's not going to hold it back.
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anywhere from 100 to 150 homes will be affected by this flood, if not more. >> reporter: back here in st. louis county where we are despite massive flooding, the county executive says not one person has been hurt or killed since the flooding started. elaine. >> extraordinary pictures. david begnaud reporting tonigh david, thank you. in the northeast, this was the warmest december on record. the average temperature in concord, new hampshire, 38 degrees, was the warmest since 1868. 51 in new york's central park, the warmest in 147 years. 51 in philadelphia broke the record set in 1874. for businesses that rely on snow, rising temperatures mean plummeting profits. here's demarco morgan. >> reporter: with near-empty lifts and near-barren slopes, this wasn't the ski trip jackeline vasquez was hoping for. >> it's a mess. it's a mess. the snow's wearing down. this is the last time i'm going. i'm going home now.
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temperatures left skiers scrambling. vicki said this one trail at jack frost ski resort in pennsylvania was their only option. >> every single one closed, closed, closed, until we get here and they said we just have one trail open. very disappointing. >> reporter: this barren landscape is a far cry from the winter wonderland of last year. >> it's not best-looking snow, but at least we're open. >> reporter: general managerer mark daubert. >> we've had some tough years where it's been warm, but it's never been this warm continuously. >> reporter: is this a first for you in your experience? >> had tough starts, but this is the worst ever. >> reporter: it's not just here in blakeslee, pennsylvania. webcams at other resorts such as blue mountain, camelback, spring mountain and shawnee show snowless slopes. some are reporting they have lost 20% of their business so far. colder temperatures start arriving tonight as the new year arrives, and daubert is hoping to make up for lost time. >> we'll get this thing started by the latter part of the weekend, and early next week,
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we'll be back on our feet and get rolling again. >> reporter: elaine, we've learned that more than 70 ski resorts across t t northeast are closed, but those numbers are likely to change with the temperatures expected to drop in the new year. >> demarco morgan reporting from pennsylvania tonight. demarco, thank you. in the presidential race, several key aides have quit ben carson's campaign just a month before the iowa caucuses. carson had led several republican polls in iowa but has faded in recent weeks. today, campaign manager barry bennett stepped down, as did doug watts, the communications director. bennett says carson has been ignoring him and relying on his longtime business manager armstrong williams, a radio and tv host. williams denies that and carson had no comment. coming up, police in los angeles explain why crime is on the rise. jerry seinfeld takes a spin with the commander in comedy.
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brush with big ben. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. medications, does your mouth often feel dry? a dry mouth can be a side effect of many medications. but it can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath. that's why there's biotene, avavlable as an oral rinse, toothpaste, spray or gel. biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. remember, while your medication is doing you good, a dry mouth isn't.
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for 18-year-old adjekai stewart since we first met her in july 2014 at sunburst youth challenge academy. >> y, sergeant! >> you better hurry up! let's go. >> reporter: she and 200 other rebellious, unfocused high school dropouts were getting a wake-up call like none they'd ever heard. >> the day is going to be a long day! >> reporter: for five-and-a-half months, we watched as they were transformed physically-- >> keep pushing. >> reporter: and emotionally. stewart spent 10 minutes atop this cfidence-building course. >> i can't! >> reporter: before she was coaxed into taking a leap of faith. >> yeah! >> there you go. there you go. good job. >> you did it, stewart! >> reporter: do you see, though, how far you've come? >> i have, i have because i felt like i was just such a weak
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>> reporter: but if you hadn't gone through that. >> i wouldn't be where i am. i wouldn't. >> reporter: where she is, is a first-semester college student. stewart graduated challenge academy last december. thth she graduated from high school in june. >> i cried the next day because i was like, wow, like, i actually-- i actually finished. i actually graduated. so it was really cool. >> reporter: 17-year-old parker coker is almost finished, too. >> you're doing good, man, you're fine. >> reporter: at sunburst, we found a kid trying to climb out of the hole of his bad choices. back then, he explained it this way: >> you gotta look ahead, and it's not really easy to look ahead when you don't know how to, when nobody's really taught you how to. >> reporter: he' graduate high school next year and plans to join the army. got a girlfriend? >> no. >> reporter: why not? >> it's that or straight "a"s and i chose the straight "a"s. >> reporter: where would you be if not for sunburst?
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yeah. reporter: we heard d e same from nearly all of the sunburst cadets we followed through this program. edward tucker graduated high school this month. christa hopkins and francisco lazo are on track to get their diplomas next year. angel kay lemaster has dived right into her post-sunburst life, and plans to try out for the swim team at rubidox high school. >> hip, hop, loppy pop, let me hear my panthers rock -- >> rock! rock! >> louder now. >> rock! >> reporter: the lengthy 16- year-old with the buzzcut could barely hold it together during the first few days at sunburst. if you listen to her story, you can understand why. >> me and my mom were homeless pretty much sleeping in cars, underneath freeways. yes, first sergeant! i was always on my own, couch hopping my entire teenaged life,
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>> reporter: but now, she's focused on the future because she understands her past. >> i messed my life up, you know, and it's hard to sit there and think that i messed my life up so bad they needed to go to sunburst in the first place. but it was an opportunity to open myself up and have a fresh start, a better chance. >> reporter: a second chance. >> a second chance. >> reporter: more than 120,000 high school dropouts have gone through the national guard youth challenge program since it was created back in 1993. sunburst is one of the most successful, with a 92% success rte. and, elaine, they just graduated 200 more students this month. >> compelling reporting. michelle miller, thank you so
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two others wounded. so far this year, there have been 280 homicides in l.a., up 10% from last year. the number of rapes increased 8.6%, and aggravated assaults jumped more than 27%. >> the spike in crime, i don't understand. >> reporter: iona diggs has lived in south l.a. for more than 60 years. her neighborhood has seen 74 more people shot in 2015, compared to last@year. what kind of crimes have you seen increased? >> the shootings, drive-by shootings. >> reporter: so serious stuff. >> serious stuff. >> reporter: all 21 lapd divisions are reporting crime increases. that's notable because crime had fallen dramatically in los angeles in the past decade due to a crackdown on gang-related crime. police attribute some of this year's crime spike to a resurgence of gang violence this summer. in august, lapd commander phillip tingirides told cbs news about a two-week span in south l.a. where 50 people were shot,
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>> there were internal gang disputes, there were love triangles, there was domestic most everythinininvolved gangs in some way, shape, or form. >> reporter: since then the lapd has stepped up community policing. felony arrests. iona diggs says she's not going to let gangs take back her neighborhood. >> don't say this is your 'hood because it's not. it's ours, you know, and i'm you say. >> reporter: while crime is up, it is worth noting that it is still quite a bit less t tn it used to be. in 1992, this city saw morthan 1,000 homicides. elaine, this year that number is expected to be less than 300. >> ben tracy breaking down the statistics tonight, ben, thank you. jerry seinfeld goes for a ride with the president, next.ke there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold s sats. there's an u usual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness.
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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 womenshealth.gov/heartattack. while i was on a combat patrol in baqubah, iraq, a rocket-propelled grenade took my arm off at the shoulder. i was discharged from the army, and i've been working with the wounded warrior project since 2007. warriors, you don't have to be severely wounded to be with the wounded warrior project. we do have a lot of guys that have post-traumatic stress disorder. being able to share your story, i guess it kind of helps you wrap your mind around what did happen over there. my name is norbie, and yes, i do suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder,
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>> last night, president obama appeared on jerry seinfeld's online series "comedians and cars getting coffee." >> you ready? >> i got some stuff to do. >> reporter: if you were expecting a conversationon percolating with domestic and foreign policy, well, that's just not jerry seinfeld's brand. not that there's anything wrong with that. >> i do really well with the zero to eight demographic. >> oh, really? >> they love me. partly because they think my ears are big. and so i look a little like a cartoon character. >> right. and then little kids love saying my name. >> right. >> but it's all one big name. it's barackobama. this is called the beast. >> reporter: seinfeld wasn't the only one with an american muscle car. >> i could call an american nuclear submarine right here. >> i don't have that.
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>> reporter: a leader of the comedy world strolled the white house grounds with the leader of the free world. and, like the coffee, the conversation flowed. >> how far can you wander around up there in your underwear, how far can you get before there's people and it's not cool? >> it's not cool generally wandering around in my underwear. the first night, you're sleeping in the white house. >> right. >> what the hell is this, right? >> yeah, a night at the museum. >> that's how it feels for probably the first week. >> reporter: the 61-year-old comedian pulled back the curtain on the 44th commander in chief with a surprisingly candid conversation. >> how many world leaders do you think are just completely out of their mind? >> a pretty sizable percentage. you know, you've made like a ridiculous amount of money.
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yet how do i seem to you? do i seem spoiled, out of touch? >> i don't know. >> you have a pretty good instinct for people. >> right now you seem like a completely normal guy. >> but i'm putting on an act, just like everybody es does for you. >> that's my point. >> watch out, people. >> reporter: and when you're at the president's house, it's only polite to let them drive. >> i like the hand hanging over the wheel. >> i mean, that's -- you've got to do it that way. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this new year's day. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano. this is the "cbs overnight news." happy new year and welcome to the "overnight news." i'm michelle miller.
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with parties and fireworks from sydney, australia to anchorage, alaska. the biggest celebration of all was at the crossroads of the world, new york city's times square. upwards of a million people jajaed into the square f f an evening of fun and music. of course, the dropping of the crystal ball, bringing out with the old and in with the new. overseas, a massive fire broke out in a high rise hotel in dubai just hours before the midnight fireworks, which went on as scheduled. the show in brussels was canceled as arrests were made in a new year's eve terror plot and
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celebrations around the world. elizabeth palmer reports now from london. >> reporter: not even terrorist threats could keep europeans from ringing in the new. from moscow to berlin. although everywhere, security was heavy. especially paris, where terrorists struck twice this year. there the defense minister himself appeared with some of the 11,000 soldiers on duty. it was a photo-op designed to reassure residents and visitors. >> we're not really scared about it. we want to enjoy it. we've never been here new year's eve, and it's magical. >> reporter: but the magic was scaled back a little. there were no fireworks this year, and the traditional party will wrap up earlier than usual. in brussels, the official party was canceled. soldiers fanned out across the city and workers dismantled the
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was to go on. after the arrest of two men suspected of planning holiday attacks. some think it was an overreaction. >> i think it's backing down to the threat of terrorism. i think we should stand up and just make everything happen. >> reporter: but belgians are edgy. this week, police arrested yet another suspect with links to the paris attacks in molenbeek, a brussels suburb that was home to two of the other attackers. and one of them, salah abdeslam, is still on the loose. still, new year's eve is for celebration, says this brussels club owner. >> i believe the people of brussels need to party and gather and to bond together. >> reporter: and it wasn't only the belgian police who discovered evidence of a new year's terrorist attack. the turks too have arrested two men they say were planning to bomb crowded areas in ankara
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bill cosby is free on a million dollars bail after his arraignment on a sex abuse charge dating back nearly a dozen years. he was charged about a month before the statute of limitations would have run out. cosby's lawyer calls the arrest a political stunt by the local prosecutor. jericka duncan is outside the courthouse just outside of philadelphia. >> reporter: two attorneys at his side, bill cosby carefully stepped out of a black suv wednesday to face criminal charges of sexual assault. >> mr. c cby, do you want to say anything? >> reporter: gripping a cane, the 78-year-old stumbled on the curb as he was led into the courthouse in elkins park, pennsylvania. the accusations that landed him here date back to 2004, when former temple university employee andrea constand says cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her in his pennsylvania homom
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gave her three brew pills he claimed we are herbal. within half hour she says she experienced blurred vision and difficulty speaking. >> mr. cosby urged her to take the pills that he provided to her and to drink wine. the effect of which rendered her unable to move or respond to his advances. >> reporter: constand says she awoke the next morning partially undressed. cosby gave her a muffin, walked to the front door, opened it and said "all right." at the time, the district attorney said there was not enough evidence to charge cosby. in 2005, constand filed a civil suit which was later settled privately. but this past july, investigators decided to reopen the case after a judge unsealed portions of depositions which cosby admitted to giving drugs to at least one woman. constand's attorney asked cosby, when you got the quaaludes, was it in your mind that you were going to use these quaaludes for
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sex with? cosby replied yes. he later said he misunderstood the question. >> it's sad for his legal team, for his family, that he would be dragged through this. we're 12 years in, 12 years after an alleged assault that was fully investigated. >> reporter: cosby is due back in court next month for a preliminary hearing. if convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison and a $25,000 fine. tonya cocoh, thehe mother of fugitive affluenza teen ethan couch, has been chargfd with hindering the apprehension of a felon. the charges were lodged in texas. couch remains in the l.a. county jail after being flown from mexico. the son, ethan couch, remains in police custody in mexico. seth doane reports on the legal maneuvers delaying his return. >> reporter: handcuffed and flankekeby u.s. marshals, tonya
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angeles international airport early this morning. her son, ethan, left behind in mexico. video from cbs dallas station ktvt shows the 18-year-old in a dark baseball hat and coat, being moved to a larger immigration facility in mexico city. on monday, mexican immigration officialaldetained the pair, calling for their deportation. according to u.s. marshals, the mother and son obtained local representation, who filed a protection order or an appeal. >> it's a request that the court issue an order to stop the proceedings. >> reporter: mexican officials deported tonya couch for being in the country illegally, while ethan is going through a more complicated deportation process that could keep hihithere for several weeks.s. >> the couches have legal counsel, and it seems to me that if they wanted to, they could pay as much money as they want to, to drag this out as much as they wanted to.
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video captured the pair before they were taken into custody. couch killed four people in a drunk driving accident in 2013. his defense argued that he suffered from the contntversial condition, affluenza, claiming his lack of responsibility was the result of his privileged upbringing. a judge sentenced him to ten years' juvenile probation. he's expected to serve time in a juvenile correctional facility until april, when he turns 19. >> welcome to juvenile law in texas. it doesn't make sense. >> reporter: now, tonya couch will likely face third degree felony charges for allegedly helping her son evade authorities. if convicted, she could face ten years in prison.
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the soccer field, and pope francis make his first visit to the states. there was the start of the 2016 presidential campaign, and a pair of deadly terror attacks in paris. [ explosion ] >> multiple attacks in the city of paris. many are dead. many are wounded. >> the bataclan is where the greatest massacre happened. >> france is today a cououry at war. >> u.s. officials are calling the attacks a game changer. >> this is an attack on all of humanity. >> they hit six sites, and in the span of just 32 minutes, darkness fell on the city of light. [ gunfire ] >> this was s attack on our very way of life. this was an attack on the way the west lives.
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they're going to publish as normal in an act of defiance. >> could an attack like paris happen here in the u.s.? >> on a couple of levels. >> i'll take a bullet before you do, that's for damn sure. >> this was supposed to be a happy occasion, but it turned into an active shooter scene. >> the two gunmen were killed in a shootout with police just hours after the rampage. >> i can't get my head around the fact that a 27-year-old mother of a 6-month-old is firing off as many rounds as she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense to be honest with you. >> i'm calling this guy to find out if he's okay, and he's the shooter. you know, how do you -- it's difficult. >> these events, they shocked me and you realize life is precious. >> somehow this has become routine. the reporting is routine. my response ends up being routine. we've become numb to this. >> multiple shots were fired.
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wrong. >> the gunman's motive is unclear. what is unclear is the devastating impact actions have had on this tight knit community. >> we must stop the senseless violence. >> as we approach that moment, we want to pause and reflect and share with you once again what made these two so special. >> how do you begin to process what happened today? >> total shock and disislief. i'veveeen crying my eyes out all day long. >> she said we were the cutest, prettiest couple ever. amazing grace >> i can see nine white ribbons. one for each of the nine people who were killed. how sweet the sound that saved -- >> at this moment in time,
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acceptable on any level. >> this was the intersection that was the scene of the largest clashes with police. >> the state police are now in charge. >> they're calling you hero mom. do you feel like a hero mom? >> my intention was just to get my son and have him be safe. >> it is an absolute, disastrous mess. never seen anything like this in y life. >> this train met a violent end just over there. >> the busiest amtrak corridor in the country, shut down, no trains, because that's the derailed cars right down there. >> russian security services confirmed that t t russian metrojet crash in the sinai was causededy a bomb. >> i think putin's reaction is going to be to go after isis in a very big way. >> we are now in a very dangerous situation with the u.s. and russia conducting air strikes in syria. >> much is being read into this,
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in the middle east. is it? >> nyet. >> emergency crews are flying to and from the crash site. >> investigators are looking what triggered an unthinkable act of suicide and mass murder. the greek coastline is still around five miles in that direction. >> migrants have been pouring into this area. the troops are pushing us back, and they've closed the border on both sides. >> explosions had the power of 21 tons of tnt. the police here are trying to stop us from shooting. this is what it's like covering a story here in china. >> last trip. >> you can't come. you've been too rude. >> cbs news has lost one of its brightest lights. >> our "60 minutes "colleague bob simon was killed this
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>> i'm bo biden, and joe biden is my dad. >> success is when you look at your son and daughter and realize they turned out better than you. when i see you again, when i see you again >> when we die, it does not mean that you lose to cancer. you beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live. it's been a long day >> from the arctic circle and everywhere in between, what an amazing life. >> this is a story that could have ended another way. but it's had a happy ending. for i'll tell you all about it when i see you again >> the tornado tore through this
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the front of this house has been completely ripped off. >> when it hit, definitely we knew it hit. >> this fire is just burning through homes. one of the only things you can still recognize here is the front door. >> the heat from these flames is just intense, but the wind is perfect. it's pushing the flames up the hillside and away from the ghway. >> the problem is on t ts side of the highway are homes. >> it's a disaster here. the residents have been told to evacuate. >> we haven't seen this level of rain in a thousand years. that's how big this is. >> the arctic is warming sooner, faster, and more than anywhere else. >> do you believe that climate change is the number one threat to the world today? >> we only have one planet. so we've got to get this right. >> yes! >> jim, the video is hilarious. >> when it happens, it just absolutely jacks me up.
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we got it, baby! >> welcome to snow mountain. >> snow piles as high as 5 to 7 >> i feel like i'm in a snow globe. >> could be anywhere from minus 10 to minus 20 degrees. >> the cold weather has created some winter fashshn statements. kind of a cross between nanuk of the north and yosemite sam. what do you think, charlie? >> i think it works for you. >> american pharoah has won the triple crown! >> one of the epic performances of the annals of the sport. >> intercepted at the goal line by malcolm butler. unreal! >> what happened about deflated balls? >> i think tom brady is healthy and vibrant.
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relevance to that comment. >> i have no more campaigns to run. i know, because i won both of them. >> why do you want to be president? you've been in the white house. there sit over there. >> there it is, right. i'm not doing it to move back in. >> my campaign is about a political revolution. >> give us three words that is the real hillary clinton. >> i am a real person. >> the american people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn e-mails. >> are you sick and tired of donald trump? >> ladies and gentlemen, the president of the united states, donald j. trump! politically incorrect. what else do i admire about him? let me think. >> donald trump's campaign is like a summer blockbuster movie. >> you don't have to run for president and be the world's biggest jack ass. campaign in modern times. candidate?
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forgive you. >> the you could vote for a republican other than yourself, who would that be? >> i would vote for myself again. >> the landmark ruling this nation hasaseen waiting for. same-sex marriage is the law of the land. >> that legal fight is far from over. >> these people have rallied and you are a strong people. >> i'm kind of nervous. i hope i'm not showing it. >> tens of thousands of people on what is essentially the presesent's front lawn. you can almost feel the excitement here. >> the pope's visit to the capitol is being called the hottest ticket in washington. >> how do you protect the one that believes he has the ultimate guardian angel? >> here he's going to have an additional 6,000 angels. >> thank you very much.
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when cold cuts give your belly thunder, pink relief is the first responder, so you can be a business boy wonder! fix stomach trouble fast with pepto. so how ya doing? enough pressure in here for ya? ugh. my sinuses are killing me. yeah...just wait 'til we hit ten thousand feet. i'm gonna take mucinex sinus-max. too late, we're about to take off. these dissolve fast. they're new liquid gels. and you're coming with me... wait, what?! you realize i have gold status? do i still get the miles? new mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. start the relief. let's end this. many people clean their dentures with toothpaste or plain water. and even though their dentures look clean, in reality they're not. if a denture were to be put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists on the denture, and that bacteria multiplies very rapidly. that's why dentists recommend cleaning with polident everyday. polident's unique micro clean formula
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killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture every day. phil! oh no... (under his breath) hey man! hey peter. (unenthusiastic) oh... ha ha ha! joanne? is that you? it's me... you don't look a day over 70. am i right? jingle jingle. if you're peter pan, you stay young forever. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. you make me feel so young... it's what you do. you make me feel
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the presidential candidates squeezed in some campaign stops before taking a break for new year's celebrations. the headline, donald trump continues to attack bill clinton and others in the gop field continue to attack each other. here's jan crawford. >> reporr: so what we've got here is basically every republican candidate who is not named donald trump is scrambling
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and as for trump, he sounds like he's already in a general election battle with hillary clinton and her husband, the former president. >> the husband's one of the great abusers of the world? ve me a break. >> reporter: in south carolina, donald trump brags about his latest dust-up with hillary clinton. >> she said, he's got a -- he's demonstrated a penchant for sexism. can you believe it, me? nobody respects women more than donald trump. that i can tell you. [ applause ] >> reporter: trump fired back that the real sexist is clclton's husband, bill. a point he says has the democratic front-runner changing her tune. >> she gets up and makes a speech and doesn't say anything about sexism and me. i wonder why. i wonder why. >> reporter: before his presidential run, trump, over the years, generally defended bill clinton. in 2008, he called the impeachment hearings in the wake of clinton's affair with white house intern monica lewinsky,
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though at t e time he questioned the president's judgment. it was monica, he told "the new york times." i mean, a terrible choice. other republican candidates stuck to more traditional attacks against one another, continuing his bus tour in iowa, marco rubio pushed back against chris christie's accusations he shirked senate responsibilities. guy, but he's never in new jersey. he's gone half the time. >> reporter: christie stood by his attack. >> it would have been nice if he took the time to show up. take a day off fund-raising and show up.
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will be right back. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying,g, 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. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you cacaget well. (franklin d. roosevelt) the inherent right to work is one of the elemental privileges of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources... ...and inspired as it should be to make those resources
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seinfeld's new comedy show, "comedians and cars getting coffee." chip reid reports. [ knock on window ] >> you ready? >> i got some stuff to do. >> reporter: if you were expecting a conversation percolating with domestic and foreign policy, well, that's st not jerry seinfeld's brand. >> are these washed? [ laughter ] >> come on, let's go get some coffee. >> reporter: not that there's anything wrong with that. >> i do really well with the zero to 8 demographic. >> really? >> they love me. partly because they think my ears are big, so i look a little like a cartoon character. >> right. >> then little kids love saying my name. >> right. >> but it's all one big name. it's barackobama. this is called the beast. >> reporter: seinfeld wasn't the only one with an american muscle car. >> i could call a nuclear submarine right here from this. i bet you don't have that. >> i don't have that.
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>> reporter: a leader of the house grounds with the leader of and, like the coffee, the conversation flowed. >> how far can you wonder around up there in your underwear, how far can you get before there's like people and it's not cool? wandering around in my underwear. the first night, and you're sleeping in the white house. >> r rht. >> what the hell is this, right? >> yeah, night at the museum. >> that's how it feels probably the first week. >> reporter: the 61-year-old comedian pulled back the curtain on the 44th commander in chief with a surprisingly candid conversation. >> how many world leaders do you think are just completely out of their mind? >> a pretty sizable percentage. you know, you made like a ridiculous amount of money.
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and yet how do i seem to you. do i seem spoiled, out of touch? >> i don't know. >> you have a pretty good instinct for people. >> right now you seem like a completely normal guy. >> but i'm putting on an act, like everyone else does for you. >> that's my point. >> watch out, people. >> reporter: and when you're at the president's house, it's only polite to let him drive. >> i like the hanging over the wheel. >> you've got to do it that way. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this new year's day. new year fears. fire in a high rise hotel.
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and plenty of firearms in the tightest security evev. also tonighthtrivers are cresting atecord levels in missssri. homes are being swept away. the slopes are stranded, profits are melting after the warmest december on record. >> i'm sad looking at the mountain without snow. >> and troubled kids getting a fresh start through hard work. >> this is the cbs overnight news. >> happy new year and welcome to the overnight news. 2016 came in with a bang from sidney, australia, to anchorage, alaska. and, of course, the biggest celebration of all is new york city's times square. upwards of a million people for an evening of fun and music and,
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crystal ball. >> there's celebration, but also deep concern in cities around the world as we usher in 2016. a massive firee broke out in a high rise in dubai hours before the midnight fireworks which went on as scheduled. brussels canceled its party as arrests were made in a terror plot. security is tighter than ever in new york c cy's times square, which is jammed with a million people. we have a team of corresponnts covering this. first holly williams, who's been following the fire in dubai. holly? >> elaine, the dubai government says that the fire broke out on
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hotel, quickly engulfing the 63-story luxury hotel and apartment building. the fire apparently began around 9:30 p.m. local time. you can see the entire sky scraper lit up against the night sky. the dubai authorities say they now zr the fire under control and they also say that only one person was killed by a heart attack during the evacuation. another 15 people were injured. the cause of the fire is still not known, and eyewitnesses say that the fire spread very rapidly through the tower, which is almost 1,000 feet tall. >> the heat was so intense outside, it was unbelievable. and people started to panic, crushing each other, trying to get down the stairs and jumping over railings. i couldn't believe how fast it actually happened. >> i had someone on my back, he was in a wheelchair and took him down to the bottom floor. >> how did it affect new year's eve celebrations??
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did not. about an hour after the fire broke out, norths tweeted that the city's new year's eve celebration would go ahead as planned. >> hally williams, thank you. >> munich, germany, was just about to celebrate the new year when police got word of a terror threat. they cleared two train stations and told people to avo crowds. elizabeth palmer has more on new year's in europe. >> not even terrorist threats could keep europeans from ringing in the new from moscow to berlin. although everywhere security was heavy heavy, especially paris where terrorist s terrorists struck twice this
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it was a photo-op designed to reassure both residents and visitors. >> we're not really scared about it. we want to enjoy it. we've never been here new year's eve. and it's magical. but the magic was scaled back a little. there were no fireworks this year. and the tra igs dal party will ramp up earlier than usual. in brussels, the official party was cancelled. soldiers spanned out across the city and workers dismantled the stage where the show was to go on. after the arrest of two men suspected of planning holiday attacks. some think it was an overreaction. >> i think it's backing down to the threat of terrorism. i think we should stand up and just make everything happen. >> reporter: but belgians are edgy. this week, police arrested yet another suspect with links to the paris attacks in molenbebe, a brussels suburb thatatas home totowo of the other attackers
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is still on the loose. still, new year's eve is for celebration, says brussels club owner pablo saccomano. >> i really believe that the people from brussels need to go out and party and need to gather as well and to bond together. >> reporter: and it wasn't only the belgian police, elaine, who discovered evidence of a new year's terrorist attack. the turks, too, have arrested two men they say were planning to bomb crowded areas in ankara tonight. >> elizabeth palmer, thank you. security was tight in new york city and around the world. don dahler reports. >> reporter: the nypd says they're going to make good on the mayor's promise by raising the security here to the highest level since 9/11.. it's a new york ririal. beginning at d dn, more than a million people are searched before being herded into 65 massive viewing pens. but this year, there are more police than ever. undercover officers roam among
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rooftops, and helicopters hover overhead. among the crowds, a radiation detector and bomb-sniffing dogs. commissioner bill bratton. >> we are aware that thehehreat pipiure has changed becacae of isis. it's changed significantly from a year ago or two years ago. >> reporter: while insisting there is no specific threat, officials are concerned about individuals like 25-year-old emanuel lutchman. he was charged in rochester wednesday morning with a plot to commit an armed attack against civilians on new year's eve on behalf of isis. in his possession were ski masks, ammonia, duct tape, and a machete. los angeles has also increased the number of cameras and officers along the rose bowl parade route. mark selby heads homeland security in southern california. >> there's never been a time that there have been more law enforcement personnel, seen and unseen, and there's never been a time that there's been more technology deployed in order to
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events. >> reporter: in las vegas, 1,000 uniformed and undercover officers are patrolling the strip. and in pittsburgh, extra canine, s.w.a.t., and explosive teams have been added to protect the 40,000 to 50,000 spectators. janis wilson runs the event. >> we've always had a great deal of security for first night, but with all of the things happening in the world, we're taking even greater precaution. >> reporter: more than one billion people will be watching this on television all over the world, but about 40 blocks south of where i'm standing, there are a few more viewers watching things more intently. elaine, these are specially trained police officers, keeping an eye on hundreds of closed circuit cameras. >> don dahler reporting from times square tonight. don, thank you. [ vocalizing ] [ buzzing ] [ tree crashes ]
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mississippi river to rise towards record levels, alonk with the meramec river, and nearly a half dozen others in the region. david begnaud is in valley park, missouri. david. >> reporter: elaine, good evening. whe we are standing, ts is usually one of the busiest intersections in st. louis county where there would usually be semis passing through, tonight it is water from the meramec river, which crested earlier today. but tonight, not far behind where i am standing, it is nearly 20 feet deep, where it should be dry. over the next 12 hours, the mississisii river is expected to crest in st. louis a a42.5 feet, nearly 12 feet above flood stage. john houser lives just south of st. louis in the city of arnold. >> we're just fighting the water, and it's up to the red line right there, just trying to keep the pumps running and make sure the wall doesn't fail and hope the water goes down in a hurry.
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floodwaters snarled traffic c r miles, and today missosoi's busy i-55 became the second major interstate to close this week. gene liston was stuck in the middle oit. >> there's nowhere you can go, you know. i mean, it's water, but, you know, if there's enough of it, you can't do anything. >> reporter: statewide, more than 12 people have been killed due to the extreme flooding. it has washed away homes, highways-- >> that is highway 141. >> reporter: and shut down water treatment plants. steve stenger is the executive of st. louis county. how many miles do you estimate are under water? >> it would be difficult to estimate but very near us right now there are about seven miles under water, right where we're standing. >> reporter: that should be dry. >> that should be dry. >> reporter: back in the city of arnold, robert smoke says the worst may be yet to come. >> we're to the point now where the sandbagging, it's not going to hold it back. we're going to lose probably
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will be affected by this flood, if not more. >> reporter: back here in st. louis county where we are despite massive flooding, the county executive says not one person has been hurt or killed since the flooding started. elaine. >> extraordinary pictures. david begnaud reporting tonight. david,d,hank you. in the northeast, this was the warmest december on record. the average temperature in concord, new hampshire, 38 degrees, was the warmest since 1868. 51 in new york's central park, the warmest in 147 years. 51 in philadelphia broke the record set in 1874. snow, rising temperatures mean plummeting profits. here's demarco morgan. >> reporter: with near-empty lifts and near-barren slopes, this wasn't the ski trip ackeline vasquez was hoping for. >> it's a mess. it's a mess. the snow's wearing down. this is the last time i'm going. i'm going home now. >> reporter: unseasonably warm
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scrambling. vicki said this one trail at jack frost ski resort in pennsylvania was their only option. >> every single one closed, closed, closed, until we get here and they said we just have one trail open. very disappointing. >> reporter: this barren landscape is a far cry from the winter wonderland of last year. >> it's not best-looking snow, but at least we're open. >> reporter: general manager mark daubert. >> we've had some tough years where it's been warm, but it's never been this warm continuously. >> reporter: is this a first for you in your experience? >> had tough starts, but this is the worst ever. >> repter: it's not just here in blakeslee, pennsylvania. webcams at other resorts such as blue mountain, camelback, spring mountain and shawnee show snowless slopes. some are reporting they have lost 20% of their business so far. colder temperatures start arriving tonight as the new year arrives, and daubert is hoping to make up for lost time. >> we'll gethis thing started by the latter part of the weekend, and early next week, with the cold air coming in,
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get rolling again. >> reporter: elaine, we've learned that more than 70 ski resorts across the northeast are closed, but those numbers are likely to change with the temperatures expected to drop in the new year. >> demarco morgan reporting g om pennsylvania tonight. demarco, thank you. the presidential race, several key aides have quit ben carson's campaign just a month before the iowa caucuses. carson had led several republican polls in iowa but has faded in recent weeks. today, campaign manager barry bennett stepped down, as did doug watts, the communications director. bennett says carson has been ignoring him and relelng on his longtime business manager armstrong williams, a radio and tv host. williams denies that and carson had no comment. coming up, police in los angeles explain why crime is on the rise. jerry seinfeld takes a spin with
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later. >> reporter: a lot has changed for 18-year-old adjekai stewart since we first met her in july 2014 at sunburst youth challenge academy. >> yes, sergeant! >> you better hurry up! let's go. >> reporter: she and 200 other rebellious, unfocused high school dropouts were getting a wake-up call like none they'd ever heard. >> the day is going to be a long day! >> reporter: for five-and-a-half months, we watched as they were transformed physically-- >> keep pushing. >> reporter: and emotionally. stewart spent 10 minutes atop this confidence-building course. >> i can't! >> reporter: before she was coaxed into taking a leap of faith. >> yeah! >> there you go. there you go. good job. >> you did it, stewart! >> reporter: do you see, though, how far you've come? >> i have, i have because i felt like i was just such a weak person back then.
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gone through that. >> i wouldn't be where i am. i wouldn't. >> reporter: where she is, is a first-semester college student. stewart graduated challenge academy last december. thenhe graduated from high school in june. >> i cried the next day because i was like, wow, like, i actually-- i actually finished. i actually graduated. so it was really cool. >> reporter: 17-year-old parker coker is almost finished, too. >> you're doing good, man, you're fine. >> reporter: at sunburst, we found a kid trying to climb out of the hole of his bad choices. back then, he explained it this way: >> you gotta look ahead, and it's not really easy to look ahead when you don't know how to, when nobody's really taught you how to. >> reporter: he'll graduate high school next year and plans to join the army. got a girlfriend? >> no. >> reporter: why not? >> it's that or straight "a"s and i chose the straight "a"s. >> reporter: where would you b b if not for sununrst? >> probably in juvenile hall.
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>> reporter: we heard the same from nearly all of the sunburst cadets we followed through this program. edward tucker graduated high school this month. christa hopkins and francisco lazo are on track to get their diplomas next year. angel kay lemaster has dived right into her post-sunburst life, and plans to try out for the swim team at rubidox high school. >> rock! rock! >> louder now. >> rock! >> reporter: the lengthy 16- year-old with the buzzcut could barely hold it together during the first few days at sunburst. if you listen to her story, you can understand why. >> me ananmy mom were homeless pretty m mh sleeping in cars, , underneath freeways. yes, first sergeant! i was always on my own, couch hopping my entire teenaged life, which caused me to drop out. >> reporter: but now, she's
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she understands her past. >> i messed my life up, you know, and it's hard to sit there and think that i messed my life up so bad they needed to go to sunburst in the first place. but it was an opportunity to open myself up and have a fresh start, a better chance. >> reporter: a second chance. >> a second chance. >> reporter: more than 120,000 high school dropouts have gone through the national guard youth challenge program since it was created back in 1993. sunburst is one of the most successful, with a 92% success rate. and, elaine, they just graduated 200 more students this monthth >> compelling reporting. michelle miller, thank you so
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will be right back. crime rose in 2015 in los angeles, the first increase in 12 years. violent crime spiked about 20% in the n nion's second-largest city. property crime was up 10%. ben tracy is there. >> multiple shootings in the area. >> reporter: two drive-by shootings last night in los angeles left one man dead and
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so far this year, there have been 280 homicides in l.a., up 10% from last year. the number of rapes increased 8.6%, and aggravated assaults jumped more than 27%. >> the spike in crime, i don't understand. >> reporter: iona diggs has lived in south l.a. for more than 60 years. her neighborhood has seen 74 more people shot in 2015, compared to last year. what kind of crimes have you seen increased? >> the shootings, drive-by shootings. >> reporter: so seriououstuff. >> serious stuff. >> reporter: all 21 lapd divisions are reporting crime increases. that's notable because crime had fallen dramatically in los angeles in the past decade due to a crackdown on gang-related crime. police attribute some of this year's crime spike to a resurgence of gang violence this summer. in august, lapd commander phillip tingirides told cbs news about a two-week span in south l.a. whehe 50 people were shotot
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>> there were internal gang disputes, there were love triangles, there was domestic violence. most everything involved gangs in some way, shape, or form. >> reporter: since then the lapd has stepped up community policing. iona diggs says she's not going to let gangs take back her neighborhood. >> don't s s this is your 'hood becacae it's not. it's ours, you know, and i i going to protect my 'hood, as you say. >> reporter: while crime is up, it is worth noting that it is still quite a bit less than it used to be. in 1992, this city saw more than 1,000 homicides. elaine, this year that number is expected to be less than 300. >> ben tracy breaking down the statistics tonight, ben, thank
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jerry seinfeld goes for a ride every day it's getting closer going faster than a roller coaster a love like yours will surely come my way hey, hey, hey babies aren't fully developed until at least 39 weeks. if your pregnancy is healthy, wait for labor to begin on its own. a healthy baby is worth the wait. o0 c1 travel is part of the american way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings.
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>> last night, president obama appeared on jerry seinfeld's online series "comedians and cars getting coffee." >> you ready? >> i got some stuff to do. >> if you were expecting a conversation percolating with domestic and foreign policy, well, that's just not jerry seinfeld's brand. not that there's anything wrong with that. >> i do really well with the zero to eight demographic. >> oh, really? >> they love me. partly because they think my ears are big. little kids love saying my name, but it's all one big name, barack obama. >> reporter: seinfeld wasn't the only one with an american muscle car. >> i could call an american nucleaeasubmarine right here.
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>t's a cool feature. >> reporter: a leader of the comedy world strolled the white house grounds with the leader of the free world. and, like the coffee, the conversation flowed. >> how far can you wander around up there in your underwear, how far can you get before there's people and it's not cool? >> it's notool general wandering around in my underwear. the first night, you're sleeping in the white house. >> right. >> what the hell is this, right? >> yeah, a night at the museum. >> that's how it feels for probably the first week. >> the 61-year-old comedian pulled back the commander on the 44th commander in chief with a surprisingly candid conversation. >> how many world leaders do you think are just completely out of their mind? >> a pretty sizable percentage. you know, you've made like a
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>> so much more than you, and yet how do i seem to you? do i seem spoiled, out of touch? >> i don't know. >> you have a pretty good in instinct for people. >> right now you seem like a normal guy. >> but i'm putting on a guy, like everybody else does for you. >> reporter: and when you're at the president's house, it's only polite to let them drive. >> i like the hand hanging over the wheel. >> i mean, that's -- you've got to do it that way. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this new year's day. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano. this is the "cbs overnight news." happy new year and welcome totohe "overnight news."
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2016 came in with a bang, with parties and fireworks from sydney, australia to anchorage, alaska. the biggest celebration of all was at the crossroads of them all, new york city's times square. upwards of a million people jammed into the square for an evening of fun and music. of course, the dropping of the crystal ball, bringing out with the old and in with the new. overseas, a massive fire broke out in a high rise hotel in dubai just hours before the midnight fireworks, which went on as scheduled. the show in brussels was
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a new year's eve terror plot and security was tight at celebrations around the world. elizabeth palmer reports now from ronald. >> reporter: not even terrorist threats could keep europeans from ringing in the new. from moscow to berlin. although everywhere, security was heavy. especially paris, where terrorists truck twice this year. there, the president himself appeared with some of the 11,000 soldiers on duty. it was a photo-op designed to reassurere residents and visitors. >> we're not really scared about it. we want to enjoy it. we've never been here new year's eve, and it's magical. >> reporter: but the magic was scaled back a little. there were no fireworks this year, and the traditional party will wrap up earlier than usual. in brussels, the official party was canceled. soldiers fanned out across the
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stage where the new year's show was to go on. after the arrest of two men suspected of planning holiday attacks. some think it was an overreaction. >> i think it's backing down to the threat of terrorism. i think we should stand up and just make everything happen. >> reporter: but belgians are edgy. this week, police arrested yet another suspect with links to the paris attacks in molenbeek, a brussels suburb that was home to two of the other attackers. and one of them, salah abdeslam, is still on the loose. still, new year's eve is for celebration, says this brussels club owner. >> i believe the people of brussels need to party and gather and to bond together. >> reporter: and it wasn't only the belgian police who discovered evidence of a new year's terrorist attack. the turks too have arrested two men they say were planning to
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tonight. bill cosby is free on a million dollars bail after his arraignment on a sex abuse charge dating back nearly a dozen years. he was charged about a month before the statute of limitations would have run out. cosby's lawyer calls the arrest a political stunt by the local prosecutor. jericka duncan is outside the courthouse just outside of philadelphia. >> reporter: two attorneys at his side, bill cosby carefully stepped out of a black suv wednesday to face criminal charges of sexual assault. >> mr. cosby, do you want to say anything? >> reporter: gripping a crane, the 78-year-old stumbled on the curb as he was led into the courthouse. the accusations that led him here date back to 2004, when former temple university employee andrea constand says cosby drugged and sexually
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according to thecomplaint, he gave her three blue bills and within half hour she says she experienced blurred vision and difficulty speaking. >> mr. cosby urged her to take the pills that he provided to her and to drink wine. the effect of which rendered her unable to move or respond to his advances. >> reporter: constand say she woke the morning partially undressed. at the time, the district attorney said there was not enough evidence to charge cosby. in 2005, constand filed a civil suit which was later settled privately. but this past july, investigators decided too reopen the case after a judge unseseed portions of depositions which cosby admitted to giving drugs to at least one woman. constand's attorney asked cosby, when you got the quaaludes, was
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going to use these quaaludes for young women you wanted to have sex with? cosby replied yes. he later said he misunderstood the question. >> it's sad for his legal team, for his family, that he would be dragged through this. we're 12 years in, 12 years after an alleged assault that was fully investigated. >> reporter: cosby is due back in court next month for a preliminary hearing. if convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison and a $25,000 fine. the mother of ethan couch has been charged with hindering the apprehension of a felon. the charges were lodged in texas. couch remains in the l.a. county jail after being flown from mexico. the son, ethan couch, remains in police custody in mexico. seth doane reports on the legal maneuvers delaying his return. >> reporter: handcuffed and
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couch was escorted out of los angeles international airport early this morning. her son, ethan, left behind in mexico. video from cbs dallas station ktvt shows the 18-year-old in a dark baseball hat and coat, moved to a larger immigration facility in mexico city. on monday, mexican immigration officials detained the pair, calling for theirir deportation. according toto.s. marshals, the mother and son obtained local representation, who filed a protection order or an appeal. >> it's a request that the court issue an order to stop the proceedings. >> reporter: mexican officials deported tonya couch for being in the country illegally, while ethan is going through a more complicated deportation process that could keep him there foror several weeks. >> the couches have legal counsel, and it seems to me that if they wanted to, they could pay as much money as they want to, to drag this out as much as
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>> reporter: earlier this week, video captured the pair before they were taken into custody. couch killed four people in a drunk driving accident in 2013. his defense argued that he suffered from the controversial condition, affluenza, claiming his lack of responsibility was the result of his privileged upbringing. a judge sentenced him to ten years' juvenile probation. >> welcome to juvenile law in texas. it doesn't make sense. >> reporter: nono tonya couch will likely facac third degree felonynyharges foror allegedly authorities. if convicted, she could face ten years in parents help their children discover the world animals, seen those before but sometimes they do it on their own mmm foot wow food for giants
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2015 saw americans triumph onn the soccer field, and pope francis make his first visit to the states. there was the start of the 2016 pair of deadly terror attacks in [ explosion ] >> multiple attacks in the city of paris. many are dead. many are wounded. >> the bataclan is where the greateststassacre happened. a whole night of violence. >> france is today a country at war. >> u.s. officials are calling the attacks a game changer. >> this is an attack on all of humanity. >> they hit six sites, and in darkness fell on the city of light. [ gunfire ] >> this was an attack on our this was an attack on the way the west lives.
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they're going to publish as normal. >> could an attack like paris happen here in the u.s.? >> on a couple of levels. >> this was supposed to be a happy occasion, but it turned into an active shooter scene. >> the two gunmen were killed in a shootout with police just hours after the rampage. >> i can't get my head around the fact that a 27-year-old mother of a 16-month-old is firing off as many rounds as she is. >> i think the entire event doesn't make a whole lot of sense to be honest with you. >> i'm calling this guy to find out if he's okay, and he's the shooter. you know, how do you -- it's difficult. >> these events, they shocked me and you realize life is precious. >> somehow this has become routine. the reporting is routine. my response ends up being routine.
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>> multiple shshs were fired. that's when i knew something was wrong. >> the gunman's motive is unclear. what is unclear is the devastating impact actions have had on this tight nit community. >> we must stop the senseless violence. >> as we approach that moment, we want to pause and reflect and share with you once again what made these two so special. >> how do you begin to process what happened today? >> total shock and disbelief. i've been crying my eyes out all day long. >> she said we were the cutest, prettiest couple ever. amazing grace >> i can see nine white ribbons. one for each of the nine people who were killed. how sweet the sound that saved -- >> at this moment in time,
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acceable on any level. >> this was the intersection that was the scene of the largest clashes with police. >> the state police are now in charge. >> they're calling you heromom. do you f fl like a hero mom the >> my intention was just to get my son and have him be safe. >> it is an absolute, disastrous mess. never seen anything like this in my life. >> this train met a violent end just over there. >> the busiest amtrak corridor in the country, shut down, no trains, because that's the derailed cars right down there. >> russian security services confirmed that the russian metrojet crash in the sinai was caused by a bomb. going to be to go after isis in a very big way. >> we are now in a very dangerous situation with the u.s. and russia conducting air strikes in syria. >> much is being read into this,
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russia to take a leadership roro in the middle east. is it? >> nyet. >> emergency crews are flying to and from the crash site. >> an unthinkable act of suicide and mass murder. >> the boat is overcrowded and the greek coastline is still around five miles in that direction. >> migrants have been pouring into this areaea the troops are pushing us back, and they've closed the border on both sides. >> explosions had the power of 21 tons of tnt. the police here are trying to stop us from shooting. this is what it's like covering a story here in china. >> you can't't come. you've been too rude. >> cbs news has lost one of its
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>> our colleague bob simon was killed this evening. >> i'm bo biden, and joe biden is my dad. >> success is when you look at your son and daughter and realize they turned out better than y y. when i see you again, when i see you again >> w die. it does not mean that you lose to cancer. you beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live. it's been a long day >> from the arctic circle and everywhere in between, what an amazing life. >> this is a story that could have ended another way. but it's had a happy ending. for i'll tell you all about it when i see you again
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the front of this house has been completely ripped off. >> when it hit, definitely we knew it hit. through homes. still recognize here is the front door. >> the heat from these flames is just intense, but the wind is perfect. it's pushing the flames up the hillside and away from the highway. >> the problem is on this side of the highway are homes. >> it's a disaster here. evacuate. >> we haven't seen this level of rain in a thousand years. that's how big this is. >> the arctic is warming sooner, faster, and more than anywhere else. >> do you believe that climate change is the number one threat to the world today? >> we only have one planet. so we've got to get this right. >> yes! >> you've got to kidding me. >> when it happens, it just absolutely jacks me up.
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we got it, baby! >> welcome to snow mountain. >> snow piles as high as 5 to 7 feet. >> i feel like i'm in a snow globe. >> could be anywhere from minus 10 toinus 20 degrees. >> the cold weather has created some winr fashion statements. kind of a cross between nanuk of what do you think, charlie? >> i think it works for you. >> american pharoah has won the triple crown! >> one of the epic performances of the annals of the sport. >> intercepted at the goal line by malcolm butler. unreal! >> what happened about deflated balls?
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and vibrant. i don't think there's any relevance to that comment. run. i know, because i won both of them. >> why do you want to be president? you've been in the white house. >> there it is, right. i'm not doing it to move back in. >> my campaign is about a political revolution. >> give us three words that is the real hillary clinton. >> i am a real person. >> the american people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn e-mails. donald trump? >> ladies and gentlemen, the president of the united states, donald j. trump! >> i admire the fact that he's politically incorrect. what else do i admire about him? let me think. >> donald trump's campaign is like a summer blockbuster movie. >> you don't have to run for president to be the world's biggest jack ass.
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>> there's no reason for me to forgive you. >> you can vote for a republican other than yourself, who would that be? >> i would vote for myself again. >> the land lark ruling this nation has been waiting for. same-sex marriage is t t law of the land. >> that legal fight is far from over. >> these people have rallied and you are a strong people. >> i'm kind of nervous. i hope i'm not showing it. >> tens of thousands of people on what is essentially the president's front lawn. you can almost feel the excitement here.e. >> the pope's visit to the capitol is being called the hottest ticket in washington. >> how do you protect the one that believes he has the ultimateteuardian angel in >> here he's going to have an so how ya doing? enough pressure in here for ya?
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when heartburn hits fight back fast tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue and neutralizes stomach acid at the source tum, tum, tum, tum smoothies! only from tums the presidential candidates squeezed in some campaign stops before taking a break for new year's celebrations. the headline, donald trump continues to attack bill clinton and others in the gop field continue to attack each other. here's jan crawfwfd. >> reporter: so what we've got here is basically every republican candidate who is not
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to become the trump alternative. and as for trump, he sounds like he's already in a general election battle with hillary clinton and her husband, the former president. >> the husband's one of the great abusers of the world? give me a break. >> reporter: in sosoh carolina, donald trump brags about his latest dust-up with hillary clinton. >> she said, he's got a -- he's demonstrated a penchant for sexism. can you believe it, me? nobody respects women more than donald trump. thatky tell you. [ applause ] >> reporter: trump fired back that the real sexist is clinton's husband, bill. >> she gets up and makes a speech and doesn't say anything about sexism and me. i wonder why. >> reporter: before his presidential run, trump, over the years, generally defended bill clinton. in 2008, he called the impeachment hearings in the wake
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house intern monica lewinsky, nonsense. though at the time he questioiod the president's judgment. it was his choice. it was monica, he told "the new york times." i mean, a terrible choice. other republican candidates stuck to more traditional attacks against one another, continuing his bus tour in iowa, marco rubio pushed back against chris christie's accusations he shirked senate responsibilities. >> chris christie is a funny y, but he's never inin new jersey. he's gone after the time. >> it would have been nice if he took the time to show up. take a day off fund-raising and that's all. >> and the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. 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.
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chip reid reports. [ knock on window ] >> you ready? >> i got some stuff to do. >> reporter: if you were expecting a conversation percolating with domestic and foreign policy, well, that't' just not jerry seinfeld's brand. are these washed? [ laughter ] >> come on, let's go get some coffee. >> reporter: not that there's anything wrong with that. >> i do really well with the zero to 8 demographic. >> really? >> they love me. partly because they think my ears are big, so i look a little like a cartoon character. >> right. saying my name. >> right. it's barack obama. this is called the beast. >> reporter: seinfeld wasn't the only one with an american muscle car. >> i could call a nuclear submarine right here from this. i bet you don't have that.
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>> it's a cool feature. >> reporter: a leader of the come by world strolled the white house grounds with the leader of the free world. and, like the coffee, the conversation flowed. >> how far can you wonder around up there in your underwear, how far can you get before there's like people and it's not cool? >> it's not cool generally wandering around in my underwear. the first night, and you're sleeping in the white house. >> right. >> what the hell is this, right? >> right, night a the museum. >> that's how it feels probably the first week. >> reporter: the 61-year-old comedian pulled back the curtain on the 44th commander in chief with a surprisingly candid conversation. >> how many world leaders do you think are just completely out of their mind? >> a pretty sisible percentage. you know, you made like a
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>> so much more than you. and yet how do i seem to you. do i seem spoiled, out of touch? >> i don't know. >> you have a pretty good instinct for people. >> right now you seem like a completely normal guy. >> but i'm putting on an act, like everyone else does for you. >> that's my point. >> watch out, people. >> reporter: and when you're at the president's house, it's only polite to let him drive. >> i like the hanging over the wheel. >> you've got to do it that way. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this new year's day. for some of you, the news cocoinues. for others, check back with us a little lit baiter for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center here in new york city, i'm michelle miller. new year's fears, fire in a high-rise hotel, then fireworks and plenty of firearms in the tightest security ever.
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cresting at record levels in missouri. homes are being swept away. the slopes are stranded. profofs are melting after r e warmest december on record. >> i'm sad looking at the mountains without snow. >> and troubled kids getting a fresh start through hard work. >> you did it! come on! this is the "cbs overnight news." >> happy new year and welcome to the "overnight news." i'm elaine quijano. 2016 came in with a bang, with parties and fireworks from sydney, australia to anchorage, alaska. of course, the biggest celebration of all was at the crossroads of the world, new york city's times square. upwards of a million people jammed into thehequare for an evening of fun and music and the
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there is celebration but also deep concern in cities around the wowod as we usher in 2016. a massive fire broke out in a high rise hotel in dubai, hours before the midnight fireworks, which went on as scheduled. police in munich, germany evacuated two train stations after receiving what they called a serious imminent threat of a terror attack. brussels canceled its party as arrests were made in a terror plot. security is tighter than ever in new york's times square, which is jammed with a million people. we have a team of correspondents covering this. first, holly williams who has been following the fire in dubai. >> reporter: the government says the fire broke out on the 20th
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story luxury hotel and apartment building. the fire apparently began at around 9:30 p.m. local time. you can see the entire skyscraper lit up. now, the dubai authorities say under control, and they also say that only one person was killed by a heart attack during the evacuation. another 15 people were injured. the cause of the fire is still not known. and eyewitnesses say the fire tower, which is almost 1,000 et tall. >> the heat was so intense outside it was unbelievable. and just people started to panic, crushineach other trng to get down the stairs and jumping over railings. i couldn't beieve how fast it actually happened. >> there were people running in the corridors, and i ended up having to put somebody on my back. he was in a wheelchair, carried him down to the ground floor. >> but, holly, this didn't affect the new year's celebrations. >> repepter: surprisingly, elaine, no, it did not.
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broke out, the dubai authorities tweeted that the city's new year's eve celebrations would go ahead as planned and centered on the world's tallest building, the burj khalifa, which stands just a few hundred yards from that hotel fire. >> holly williams reporting tonight. holly, thank you. munich, germany was just about to celebrate the new year when police got word of a terror threat. they cleared two train stations and told people to avoid crowds. elizabeth palmer has more on new year's in europe. >> reporter: not even terrorist threats could keep europeans from ringing in the new, from moscowowo berlin. although everywhere, security was heavy. especially paris, where terrorists struck twice this year. there, the defense minister himself appeared with some of the 11,000 soldiers on duty. it was a photo-op designed to
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visitors. >> we're not really scared about it. we want to enjoy it. we've never been here on new year's eve, and it's magical. >> reporter: but the magic was scaled back a little. there were no fireworks this year, and the traditional party on the champs elysee will wrap up earlier than usual. in brussels, the official party was canceled. soldiers fanned out across the city a a workers dismantled the age where the new year's show was to go on. after the arrest of two men suspected of planning holiday attacks. some think it was an overreaction. >> i think it's backing down to the threat of terrorism. i think we should stand up and just make everything happen. >> reporter: but belgians are edgy. this week, police arrested yet another suspect with links to the paris attacks in molenbeek, a brussels suburb that was home to two of the other attackers and one of them, saleh abdeslam,
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still, new year's eve is for celebration, says brussels club owner pablo saccomano. >> i really believe that the people from brussels need to go out and party and need to gather as well and to bond together. >> reporter: and it wasn't only the belgian police, elaine, who discovered evidence of a new year's terrorist attk. the turks, too, have arrested two men they say were planning to bomb crowded areas in ankara tonight. >> elizabeth palmer, thank you. security was tight, both in new york city and at celebrations across the country and around the world. don dahler reports. >> reporter: the nypd says they're going to make good on the mayor's promise by raising the security here to the highest level since 9/11. it's a new york ritual. beginning at dawn, more than a million people are searched before being herded into 65 massive viewing pens. but this year, there are more police than ever.
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the revelers, snipers watch from rooftops, and helicopters hover overhead. amonthe crowds, a radiation detector and bomb-sniffing dogs. commissioner bill bratton. >> we are aware that the threat picture has changed because of isis. it's changed significantly from a year ago or two years ago. >> reporter: while insisting there is no specific threat, officials are concerned about individuals like 25-year-old emanuel lutchman. he was charged in rochester wednesday morning with a plot to commit an armed attack against civilians on new year's eve on behalf of isis. in his possession were ski masks, ammonia, duct tape, and a machete. los angeles has also increased the number of cameras and officers along the rose bowl parade root. the game too is under elevated security. rk selby heads homeland security in soututrn california. >> there's never been a time that there have been more law enforcement personnel, seen and unseen, and there's never been a time tt there's been more
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make it a more secure set of events. >> reporter: in las vegas, 1,000 uniformed and undercover officers are patrolling the strip. and in pittsburgh, extra canine, s.w.a.t., and explosive teams have been added to protect the ,000 to 50,000 spectctors. janis wilson runs the event. >> we've always had a great deal of security for first night, but with all of the things happening in the world, we're taking even greater precaution. >> reporter: more than one billion people will be watching this on television all over the world, but about 40 blocks south of where i'm standing, there are a few more viewersrsatching things more intently. elaine, these are specially trained police officers, keeping an eye on hundreds of closed circuit cameras. >> don dahler reporting from times square tonight. don, thank you. almost sixty million americans are affected by mental illness. together we can help them with three simple words. my name is chris noth
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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 sosoou, too, can get in on the action.
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you were a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. 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! historic winter floods have killed at least 22 people this
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nearly a foot of rain caused the mississippi river to rise towards record levels, along with the meramec river, and nearly a half dozen others in the region. david begnaud is in valley park, missouri. david. >> reporter: elaine, good evening. where we are standing, this is usually one of the busiest intersections in st.t.ouis county where there would usually be semis passing through, tonight it is water from the meramec river, which crested earlier today. but tonight, not far behind where i am standing, it is nearly 20 feet deep, where it should be dry. over the next 12 hours, the mississippi river is expected to nenely 12 feet above flood stage. john houser lives just south of st. louis in the city of arnold. >> we're just fighting the water, and it's up to the red line right there, just trying to keep the pumps running and make sure the wall doesn't fail and hope the water goes down in a
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>> reporter: overnight, the floodwaters snarled traffic for miles, and today missouri's busy i-55 became the second major interstate to close this week. gene liston was stuck in the midd of it. >> there's nowhere you can go, you know. i mean, it's water, but, you know, if there's enough of it, you can't do anything. >> reporter: statewide, more than 12 people have been killed due to the extreme flooding. it has washed away homes, highways-- >> repororr: and shut down water trtrtment plants. steve stenger is the executive of st. louis county. how many miles do you timate are under water? >> it would be difficult to estimate but very near us right now there are about seven miles under water, right where we're standing. >> reporter: that should be dry. >> that should be dry. >> reporter: back in the city of arnold, police chief robert shockey says the worst may be yet to come. >> we're to the point now where the sandbagging, it's not going to hold it back.
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anywhere from 100 to 150 homes will be affected by this flood, if not more. >> reporter: back here in st. louis county where we are despite massive flooding, the county executive says not one person has been hurt or killed since the flooding started. elaine. >> extraordinary pictures. david begnaud reporting toninit. david, thank you. in the northeast, this was the warmest december on record. the average temperature in concord, new hampshire, 38 degrees, was the warmest since 1868. 51 in new york's central park, the warmest in 147 years. 51 in philadelphia broke the record set in 1874. for businesses that rely on snow, rising tememratures mean plummeting profits. here's demarco morgan. >> reporter: with near-empty lifts and near-barren slopes, this wasn't the ski trip jackeline vasquez was hoping for. >> it's a mess. it's a mess. the snow's wearing down. this is the last time i'm going. i'm going home now.
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temperatures left skiers scrambling. vicki said this one trail at jack frost ski resort in pennsylvania was their only option. >> every single one closed, closed, closed, until we get here and they said we just have one trail open. very disappointing. >> reporter: this barren landscape is a far cry from the winter wonderland of last year. >> it's not best-looking snow, but at least we're open. >> reporter: general manager mark daubert. >> we've had some tough years where it's been warm, but it's never been this warm continuously. >> reporter: is this a first for you in your experience? >> had tough starts, but this is the worst ever. >> reporter: it's not just here in blakeslee, pennsylvania. webcams at other resorts such as blue mountain, camelback, spring mountain and shawnee show some are reporting they have lost 20% of their business so far. colder temperatures start arriving tonight as the new year arrives, and daubert is hoping to make up for lost time. >> we'll get this thing started by the latter part of the weekend, and early next week,
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get rolling again. >> reporter: elaine, we've learned that more than 70 ski resorts across the northeast are closed, but those numbers are likely to change with the temperatures expected to drop in the new year. >> demarco morgan reporting from pennsylvania tonight. demarco, thank you. in the presidential race, several key aides have quit ben carson's campaign just a month before the iowa caucuses. carson had led several republican polls in iowa but has faded in recent weeks. today, campaign manager barry bennett stepped down, as did doug watts, the communications director. bennett says carson has been ignoring him and relyi on his longtime business manager armstrong williams, a radio and tv host. williams denies that and carson had no comment. coming up, police in los angeles explain why crime is on the rise. jerry seinfeld takes a spin with the commander in comedy.
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brush with big ben. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. if you're taking multiple medications, does your mouth often feel dry? a dry mouth can a side effect of many medications. but it can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath. that's why there's biotene, available as an oral rinse, toothpaste, spray or gel. biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. remember, while your medication is doing you good, a dry mouth isn't.
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i absolutely love my new york apartment, but the rent is outrageous. good thing geico offers affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... protect your belongings. let geico help you with renters insurance. the leading cough liquid only provides relief for four hours, but did you know there's a product that lasts for twelve hours? try delsym twelve hour cough liquid. its advanced formula works by immediately releasing powerful medicine that acts fast while its extended release medicine lasts for 12 hours. in fact, delsym lasts three times longer than the leading cough liquid. for all day or all night relief, try delsym -the #1 doctor recommended 12 hour cough liquid.
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for 18-year-old adjekai stewart since we first met her in july 2014 at sunburst youth challenge academy. >> yes, sergeant! >> you better hurry up! let's go. >> reporter: she and 200 other rebellious, unfocused high school dropouts were getting a wake-up call like none they'd ever heard. >> the day is going to be a long day! >> reporter: for five-and-a-half months, we watched as theyeyere transformed physically-- >> keep pushing. >> reporter: and emotionally. stewart spent 10 minutes atop this confidence-building course. >> i can't! >> reporter: before she was coaxed into taking a leap of faith. >> yeah! >> there you go. there you go. good job. >> you did it, stewart! >> reporter: do you see, though, how far you've come? >> i have, i have because i felt like i was just such a weak
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>> reporter: but if you hadn't gone through that. >> i wouldn't be where i am. i wouldn't. >> reporter: where she is, is a first-semester college student. stewart graduated challenge academy last december. then she graduated from high school in june. >> i cried the next day because i was like, wow, like, i actually-- i actually finished. i actually graduated. so it was really cool. >> reporter: 17-year-old parker coker is almost finished, too. >> you're doing good, man, you're fine. >> reporter: at sunburst, we found a kid trying to climb out of the hole of his bad choices. back then, he explained it this way: >> you gotta look ahead, and it's not really easy to look ahead when you don't know how to, when nobody's really taught you how to. >> reporter: he'll graduate high school next year and plans to join the army. got a girlfriend? >> no. >> reporter: why not? >> it's that or straight "a"s and i chose the straight "a"s. >> reporter: where would you be if not for sunburst? >> probably inuvenile hall.
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>> reporter: we heard the same from nearly all of the sunburst cadets we followed through this program. edward tucker graduated high school this month. christa hopkins and francisco lazo are on track to get their diplomas next year. angel kay lemaster has dived right into her post-sunburst life, and plans to try out for the swim team at rubidox high school. >> hip, hop, loppy pop, let me hear my panthers rock -- >> rock! rock! >> louder now. >> rock! >> reporter: the lengthy 16- year-old with the buzzcut could barely hold it together during the first few days at sunburst. if you listen to her story, you can understand why. >> me and my mom were homeless pretty much sleeping in cars, underneath freeways. yes, first sergeant! i was always on my own, couch hopping my entire teenaged life,
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>> reporter: but now, she's focused on the futururbecause she understands her past. >> i messed my life up, you know, and it's hard to sit there and think that i messed my life up so bad they needed to go to sunburst in the first place. but it was an opportunity to open myself up and have a fresh start, a better chance. >> reporter: a second chance. >> a second chance. >> reporter: more than 120,000 high school dropouts have gone through the national guard youth challenge program since it was created back in 1993. sunburst is one of the most successful, with a 92% success rte. and, elaine, they just graduated 200 more students this month. >> compelling reporting. michelle miller, thank you so much.
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will be right back. crime rose in 2015 in los angeles, the first increase in 12 years. violent crime spiked about 20% in the nation's second-largest city. property crime was up 10%. ben tracy is there. >> multiple shootings in the area. >> reporter: two drive-by shootings last night in lolo angeles s ft one man dead and
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so far this year, there have been 280 homicides in l.a., up 10% from last year. the number of rapes increased 8.6%, and aggravated assaults jumped more than 27%. >> the spike in crime, i don't understand. >> reporter: iona diggs has lived in south l.a. for more than 60 years. her neighbororod has seen 74 more people shot in 2015, compared to last year. what kind of crimes have you seen increased? >> the shootings, drive-by shootings. >> reporter: so serious stuff. >> serious stuff. >> reporter: all 21 lapd divisions are reporting crime increases. that's notable because crime had fallen dramatically in los angeles in the past decade due to a crackdown on gang-related crime. police attribute some of this year's crime spike to a resurgence of gang violence this summer. in augus lapd commander phillip tingirides told cbs news about a two-week span in south l.a. where 50 people were shot,
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>> there were internal gang disputes, there were love triangles, there was domestic violence. most everything involved gangs in some way, shape, or form. >> reporter: since then the lapd has stepped up community policing. and made three times as many felony arrests. iona diggs says she's not going to let gangs take back her neighborhood. >> don't say this is your 'hood because it's not. it's ours, you know, and i'm going to protect my 'hood, as you say. >> reporter: while criri is up, it is worth noting that it is still quite a bit less than it used to be. in 1992, this city saw more than 1,000 homicides. elaine, this year that number is expected to be less than 300. >> ben tracy breaking down the statistics tonight, ben, thank you. jerry sein 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.
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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 womenshealth.gov/heartattack. while i was on a combat patrol in baqubah, iraq, a rocket-propelled grenade took my arm off at the shoulder. i was discharged from the army, and i've been working with the wounded warrior project since 2007. warriors, you don't have to be severely wounded to be with the wounded warrior project. we do have a lot of guys that have post-traumatic stress disorder. being able to share your story, i guess it kind of helps you wrap your mind around what did happen over there. my name is norbie, and yes, i do suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder,
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>> last night, president obama appeared on jerry seinfeld's online series "comedians and cars getting coffee." >> you ready? >> i got some stuff to do. >> reporter: if you were expecting a conversation percolating with domestic and foreign policy, well, that's just not jerry seinfeld's brand. not that there's'snything wrong th that. >> i do rerely well with the zero to eight demographic. >> oh, really? >> they love me. partly because they think my ears are big. and so i look a little like a cartoon character. >> right. and then little kids love saying my name. >> right. >> but it's all one big name. it's barackobama. this is cacaed the beast. >> repororr: seinfeld wasn't the only one with an american muscle car. >> i could call an american nuclear submarine right here. >> i don't have that. >> it's a cool feature.
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comedy world strolled the white house grounds with the leader of the free world. and, like the coffee, the conversation flowed. >> how far can you wander around up there in your underwear, how r can you get beforerehere's people and it's not cool? >> it's not cool generally wandering around in my underwear. the first night, you're sleeping in the white house. >> right. >> what the hell is this, right? >> yeah, a night at the museum. >> that's how it feels for prprably the first week. >> reporter: the 61-year-old comedian pulled back the curtain on the 44th commander in chief with a surprisingly candid conversation. >> how many world leaders do you think are just completely out of their mind? >> a pretty sizable percentage. you know, you've made like a ridiculous amount of money.
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yet how do i seem to you? do i seem spoiled, out of touch? >> i don't know. >> you have a pretty good instinct for people. >> right now you seem like a completely normal guy. >> but i'm putting on an act, just like everybody es does for you. >> that's my point. >> watch out, people. >> reporter: and when you're at the president's s use, it's only polite to let them drive. >> i like the hand hanging over the wheel. >> i mean, that's -- you've got to do it that way. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this new year's day. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning."
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