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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  September 22, 2016 2:42am-4:00am MST

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strategies for investing in real estate passively and earning high rates of return. in fact, one of those strategies you're gonna be introduced to, you can earn up to 16% to 18% interest on your money, supported by united states state law and backed by real estate. this is a little-known, passive real-estate-investment vehicle that's been around for over 100 years. we're also gonna show you how to strategies to flip properties 100% tax-free. these are killer ways to invest in real estate and possibly build a retirement account for you and your family, because your money's gonna be growing so much faster in a tax-free or a tax-deferred environment. you see, working a job and just saving money alone may not get you to your long-term financial and retirement goals, and that's
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different. regardless of your financial situation or your background, you can do this successfully. real estate has changed my life, and i know it can change yours. i hope today is a day that you mark on your calendar, one where you can put a mark of an event where you and your financial future and your life took a giant leap forward. thanks for watching. i look forward to having you at
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today you can do everything in just one click, even keep your toilet clean and fresh. introducing lysol click gel. click it in to enjoy clean freshness with every flush. lysol. start healthing. ? yeah, click ? with the state of this year's presidential election, a lot of people are looking back fondly to the good old days of ronald reagan, well, if you miss those days, christies's holding an auction, paintings and cowboy boots. it is already under way.
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valuables and putting them on display? >> no, it's far more sophisticated than that. here we had objects that sat on the president's desk. >> 1986. >> reporter: the items from the private collection of reagan and mrs. reagan are the narrative. >> here we have the thanksgiving platter and turkey salt and peppers. >>o turkey in the family? >> i don't know. >> of their friends. >> with love, margaret and dennis thatcher. >> reporter: and of the man and woman most remember from their time in washington. >> a lot of these things were in the white house when the president was at the peak of his powers. so that is very, very alluring. >> reporter: everything up for bid was part of the reagans' everyday life.
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cocktail nap kins. >> i would point out that it's reagans', which means it's either his or her bar but not both. >> that is right. >> the news and grammar are back in the morning. >> here is one of the presidential doodlers, with the football here i guess he is sort of thinking back to his time. >> do you like to play football? >> not much. >> this looks >> a little bit before his time. >> this is probably nancy reagan. >> honestly, it looks more like jane wyman to me, it does, i'm serious. there are a pair of leather ottomans, a jelly bean jar that sat on the desk of reagan's private office. and a bronze sculpture of the president as a cowboy. >> what is interesting to me here is he became so firmly identified with california and
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>> that is right, he didn't learn to ride a horse until he went to hollywood. this is a piece of the berlin wall, with the president standing at the gate. and next to the famous speech. >> mr. gorbachev, tear down this wall. >> what is the asking price for this? >> this is ten to $20,000 into mr. auctioneer, bring down these prices. >> here we have a football signed by the president, with political slogan. >> going to be in there with all they got, win just one for the gipper. >> of course he could not have known when he made that movie how important it would be to his entire political career. and apparently he and tom brady had the same ball boy. >> are you ready? >> no, i have to catch it --
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berlin wall. >> this was not only about the president, this necklace worn by the first lady. >> she was sort of controversial at the beginning about -- concerning all the glitziness. >> reporter: in an interview, mike wallace asked nancy reagan about her emphasis on style and elegance, during a type of economic hardship. >> and were you unprepared for the scrutiny you were going to >> would you like to take a seat? >> reporter: now you can own the furniture used during that conversation and much, much more. >> prince charles, princess diana had sat here. >> so i'm sitting where a lot of famous back sides had sat? >> absolutely, this photograph was taken at the statue of liberty, a birthday gift to
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>> it seems like a marriage made in heaven, but in the end it was just another hollywood romance, brad pitt and angelina jolie are getting divorced. between them they have about half a billion but jolie wants custody of the kids. >> reporter: they were the definition of the power couple, the a-listers, their relationship blossomed like the big bang, which seems like the split seemed like the splitting of the app, they were together a decade before they got married. something pitt told me that was in part at the urging of their children. they have six in all. >> yeah, it means something to
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their friends' parents are married and why is that. >> so what do you tell them? >> we will some day, that's a great idea, get mommy a ring, okay, i will. >> but in the end it lasted just over two years, the reasons are varied but oddly it seems the microscope was not one of them. although the frenzy that accompanied them jolie said she did her best to ignore it. >> they're not who i am, i spend my day not caring about them, i find them quite shallow. >> when it first hit, it was very discombobulating and i would rappel from it. >> the brangelina power glass had enormous power to do good.
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rebuild the ninth ward. >> we have a duty to help refugees. >> reporter: jolie became a good will ambassador, and later a special envoy to the high commission of the refugees. >> this is my fourth visit to jordan since the conflict began. >> reporter: she even made headlines by writing one herself, pinning an op-ed about her choice to have a double mastectomy. but it was t raised together that seemed to fuel much of the work they did apart. as jolie told them in 2011. >> i don't want to be more successful. i don't want more money. i want my kids to be healthy. i want to have a great family and i want them to be great people. that is my ambition. >> reporter: both are now asking for privacy. something the couple rarely enenjoyed when the news was happy and even less when it was not. lee cowan, hollywood.
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for this thursday, for some of you the news continues, forkkkk us later and for the morning news. >> pelley: racial tensions explode. a night of violence in charlotte after police fatally shoot a black man. there are conflicting accounts of what happened. >> mr. scott exited his vehicle armed with a handgun. >> he had no gun! >> pelley: also tonight, the f.b.i. is asking your help locating these two men, wanted as witnesses in the new york and new jersey bombings. congress grills a drug company c.e.o. over the skyrocketing costs of life-saving epipens. and: cops and kids change places to promote understanding and peace.
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we begin tonight with two police shootings in two cities, charlotte and tulsa, and two black men dead. the shooting of keith lamont scott in charlotte yesterday sparked a night of violence. police say it all started when officers went to arrest another man and encountered scott instead. what happened next is in dispute, but the african american plainclothes police officer who shco paid administrative leave while an investigation is under way. david begnaud is in charlotte. >> breaking news where tear gas has been deployed. one person has been shot. a s.w.a.t. team has b in as protesters march for night in a row following the
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death of a local man. this video shot by a resident >> reporter: this video shot by a resident shows 43-year-old keith lamont scott on the ground after being shot by a police officer. it is the only visible evidence the public has seen. the shooting led to anger and overnight clashes between residents and law enforcement with rocks, bottles and tear gas flying. >> a life was taken! >> reporter: 24 hours after the shooting, and there are dueling narratives over what happened. an officer claims he saw scott inside of his vehicle with a gun. as the officer approached, police say scott got out of his car with the gun and refused to drop it when ordered. police chief kerr putney. threat to the officers, and officer brentley vinson subsequently fired his weapon, striking the subject. >> reporter: vinson, who has been on the force for two years, was not wearing a body camera, and while there is body and dash cam video from other officers... >> oh, my god. >> reporter:...the police department has not released it. >> i don't know what's going on. >> reporter: witnesses like tanicia williams saw it differently. she says scott, a married father
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did every day: reading a book in his car, waiting for his son to get off the school bus. did he have a gun? >> no, he did not. he had his hands up. his book fell off his lap. he walked to the back of the car and they shot him four times. >> a weapon was seized, a handgun. i can also tell you we did not find a book. >> reporter: tensions in this community were already high after an unarmed black teen was shot this august by a white neighbor, as well as lingering anger over the mistrial of a white police officer in the death of an unarmed black man three years ago. tonight, the mayor of charlotte is asking people to stay calm. she says she wants that video, the dash cam footage, the body camera video, all of it to be released publicly as soon as possible. scott, you may be able to hear the helicopter above me right now. they're tracking protesters.
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another long night. >> pelley: david begnaud in charlotte for us. david, thank you. well, the justice department tonight is assessing the charlotte shooting, but it has not opened a formal investigation. it is investigating the friday night police shooting of terence crutcher in tulsa, oklahoma. manuel bojorquez is there. >> we know he was unarmed. >> yes. >> we know he was moving slow. we knew he didn't commit a crime, like the new york bomber did, who is still alive. >> yeah. >> reporter: in new york today, terence crutcher's twin sister tiffany repeated a call for charges against the officer who shot and killed her brother friday. >> reporter: police say crutcher did not obey commands after they responded to a call of an abandoned s.u.v. >> he has his hands up there for her now. >> reporter: at one point footage from a police helicopter and dash cam shows crutcher walking away from officers with his hands up. when he reached the driver's side door, one officer tased him. then, officer betty shelby fired her gun. >> shots fired! >> reporter: police confirmed
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a source tells cbs news officers found a vial of the hallucinogenic drug p.c.p. in the s.u.v. crutcher's family calls that a distraction. >> this is a non-violent protest. >> reporter: protests have happened here almost daily, but unlike charlotte, they have been peaceful. the mayor believes releasing the videos made a difference. >> we saw what had happened in ferguson, and in other places, where people ried to gloss it over, put a good spin on it. we didn't do that. we won't do that. >> reporter: officer shelby is on paid leave during the investigation. scott, tulsa police explained today that although they received funding for body cameras in july, rolling them out takes time. they'll start testing them on 40 officers next month. >> pelley: manuel bojorquez, thanks. at the u.n. today, secretary of state john kerry tried to
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asking the war planes to keep their deliveries away from 20 civilians were killed and the u.s. blames russia. elizabeth palmer reports tonight from syria. >> reporter: as the pentagon continued to insist only the russians had a warplane directly over the bombed aid convoy, the syrian army carried on shelling the rebel-held side of aleppo. on that side decided they just couldn't take it anymore. "when our group reached the crossing point," amir told us, "we came under fire and had to scatter." amir is too afraid to show his face, but he was one of the ones who three nights ago made a run for it. there are ways out of rebel-held aleppo for people who want to come to the government side. one of them is right through this gap, but every journey like
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we climbed up to the second story in a nearby building to see the lay of the land. are there sniper positions in those buildings we can see? "out there is no-man's-land in this divided city." "i managed to cross it," said amir, "but my family didn't make it." when the shooting started, he told us they turned back, but he pressed on and now finds himself alone on the government side of aleppo, facing an uncertain future in a borrowed room right on the front line. true, there is no bombing here, but there's scant opportunity either, and very little hope. there was some hope, scott, when the cease-fire was in effect that violence would fall and aid would begin to flow more freely, not only in aleppo but across syria. even that hope has now been crushed. >> pelley: elizabeth palmer continuing her reporting from
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liz, thank you.
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well, it's video that's leading the f.b.i. tonight to ask for help identifying these two men. they are wanted for questioning as possible witnesses in the weekend bomb blasts in new york and new jersey. the man charged in those attacks is recovering from gunshot wounds. homeland security correspondent >> reporter: at 8:30 saturday night, a pressure cooker bomb exploded on west 23rd street in manhattan. the f.b.i. is appealing for help in finding these two men who were four blocks away on west 27th street at the same time. police say the two men removed a bomb from a piece of luggage, putting it on the sidewalk, and then walked away, leaving the
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n.y.p.d. counter-terrorism chief james waters. >> they are witnesses. there are no criminal charges. they're not in any jeopardy of being arrested. so if you can help us find them or anybody else can tell us who they are, we would be very interested to speak to them. >> reporter: investigators are still unsure if ahmad khan rahami was part of a cell or acting on his own, or if there are still other bombs still unaccounted for. according to federal charging documents, rahami bought the ingredients for the bombs on ebay, including chemicals, ball bearings and electric igniters. the f.b.i. is still trying the figure out where he built the bombs, but two days before the bombings, the documents say a family member filmed rahami burying a small black cylindrical object in his backyard. a fuse was lit, there was a loud noise and flames followed by billowing smoke and laughter. today at a counter-terrorism
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michael mccaul held up a copy of rahami's hand-written journal. >> he talks about god willing the sound of bombs will be heard in the streets, gunshots to your police, death to your oppression. >> reporter: blood stained with a bullet hole through it, rahami wrote about martyrdom, and his praise of militants suggests he took inspiration from al qaeda as well as isis. investigators are still t to figure out radicalized. >> pelley: jeff pegues, thanks very much. the f.b.i. investigated rahami two years ago, but he was not considered a threat at the time. it's not the first time someone investigated by investigators has later been accused of terrorism. we asked anna werner to look into this. >> reporter: as ahmad khan rahami's case moves forward, federal agencies are working to
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agent manny gomez calls a tsunami of potential threats. do you think there are people who are being missed? >> absolutely. the f.b.i. does not have the resources, both legally and in terms of manpower and funding. these people are being radicalized quicker than we could identify them. >> reporter: in rahami's case, despite his father calling him a terrorist in 2014, and his year- long stay in pakistan, an f.b.i. source says at the time it found as links to other known terrorists or radicalized behavior, to point to rahami being a terror threat. since 9/11, the homeland security committee says there have been at least 166 home- grown jihadist plots in the u.s., including attempts to join terrorist groups overseas and execute attacks at home, an average of 11 per year. just this year alone, 26 people in the u.s. have been arrested in 13 states for isis-related
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weapons charges. sometimes there are clues, but to make a case, authorities need evidence that they often do not find. the orlando pulse nightclub shooter, omar mateen, had been on the f.b.i.'s terrorist watch list for ten months and was investigated but later removed from the list. in june he killed 49 people. cbs news consultant fran townsend says the system needs improvement. >> you we list to be overinclusive, so if there is somebody you think may be but you don't have enough, you want it to alert other agencies to put more information in that might push you over the edge. >> reporter: since 2014, authorities have arrested 105 people in the u.s. scott, they say those people were plotting attacks, attempted to join isis, or provided money, equipment or weapons to that terror group. >> pelley: anna werner, thanks. today, leaders of congress
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a hammer to pound in the first nail on the platform for the inauguration of the next president on january 20th. today donald trump drove home his point with african american voters, and here's major garrett. >> reporter: donald trump met with a handful of sympathetic black pastors in cleveland today. >> god, i ask that you would touch this man, donald j. trump. >> reporter: trump was introduced and partly overshadowed by former boxing promoter don king, who used a discrimination against african americans. >> if you are dancing and sliding and gliding ( -- i mean negro, you are a dancing and sliding and gliding negro, so dare not alienate because you cannot assimilate. so, you know, you going to be a negro until you die. >> reporter: the effect was unsettling and symptomatic of trump's pitch to african americans, one he's made largely
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trump has also turned down speaking invitations from the n.a.a.c.p. and other civil rights groups. yesterday in north carolina, trump said this about the state of black life in america. >> our african american communities are absolutely in the worst shape that they've ever been in before, ever, ever, ever. >> reporter: we asked toledo pastor kay david johnson how trump can better reach out. is trump a credible republican nominee s >> he has not sewn seeds and nurtured those seeds in the african american community. there is no closeness, there is no trust that has been developed. >> reporter: trump today called for nationwide use of stop-and- frisk tactics to reduce crime. scott, those policies were discontinued in new york city after they were ruled unconstitutional because the vast majority of those stopped and frisked by police were minorities. >> pelley: major garrett on the campaign for us tonight. major, thank you.
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union workers to "stage an intervention for friends considering voting for trump." she pledged to build an economy that welcomes handicapped workers and promised to end the subminimum wage for the disabled. she's campaigning in florida, a must-win for trump, where the candidates are now tied. be sure to tune in here on monday evening for the first presidential debate, clinton versus trump, 9:00 eastern on cbs. coming up next, congress
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this is awkward. new mucinex fast-max clear & cool. feel the menthol burst. and clear your worst cold symptoms. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. >> pelley: the c.e.o. of the company that makes the epipen was needled in the house today. congress demanded to know why the cost of the life-saving treatment for allergic reactions is up about 500%. here's vinita nair. >> you put it out of reach of the average consumer. >> reporter: mylan c.e.o. heather bresch faced bipartisan backlash for her company's pricing and revenue strategy. >> i wish we had better anticipated the magnitude and acceleration of the rising financial issues for a growing minority of patients. >> you never anticipated it? you raised the price.
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price of epipens has slowly increased from about $100 for a two pack to more than $600. the 47-year-old tried defending the spike by saying the company only makes $100 for every two pack after cost. committee chairman republican jason chaffitz. >> when the juice is $1 and you're selling it for $600, there's room for profit. >> reporter: mylan has been the focus of public scrutiny since families complained about skyrocketing costs. in response to the criticism, of coupons to families and has announced a $300 generic version of the drug. for lexi henniger's family, their $1,200 pharmacy bill for two kids was cut in half by the coupon. >>but it wasn't quite what we were looking for from the company. we were hoping they would lower the overall price. >> reporter: lawmakers on both sides of the aisle agreed. democratic congressman elijah cummings. >> i'm concerned that this is a
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they'll fly back to their mansions in their private jets and laugh all the way to the bank. >> reporter: an f.d.a. official also testified during the hearing. committee members want to know why it takes so long for new drugs to be approved, arguing the hurdles are blocking competition. >> pelley: vinita nair, thanks very much. coming up, samsung's replacement phones, exploding batteries not included. what makes a lipton meal? these guys. a place like shhh! no. found it! and definitely lipton ice tea. lots of it. a lipton meal is what you bring to it.
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>> pelley: more than 100,000 school kids had this last day of summer off because of flooding. what's left of tropical storm julia has poured up to 16-inches of rain on virginia since sunday. 500,000 new galaxy note 7 cell phones went on sale today. samsung replaced the batteries that had been catching fire. recalled phones will start receiving alerts urging owners to shut them down. chicago's police department said today it will add nearly 1,000 new officers over the next two years to try to stop the epidemic of gun violence. no word on where the money's coming from. chicago has had more than 500 homicides so far this year, more than all of last year. up next, cops and kids trading
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we begin tonight with two police shootings in two cities, >> we just need you guys to clear out of the area. >> for what? >> why? >> we got a few noise complaints. >> reporter: the adults in blue shirts are actually police, but on this day, they pretended to be teenagers. >> excuse me. >> what? what's wrong? >> reporter: and these teens acted as police. when back-up arrives, one
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this role-playing exercise was used at a high school assembly run by the chicago chapter of the national organization of black law enforcement executives. the goal is for students and police to learn from each other. >> it was very helpful to actually get that experience and that perspective. >> reporter: seniors rodney jackson, kiara jefferson, latrice williams and ayo taiwo. >> i love the role-playing part of the event. >> reporter: why? their everyday life in little scenes. >> you have your own perception of it, but once you get that other perception, you kind of see how it plays hand in hand and what it's like. to have a phone this close to your face while you're trying to talk to somebody, it's not your ideal way to handle it. >> reporter: south holland police chief gregory baker says he became an officer after his friend was gunned down by police. >> we protect, we serve, but the part that's not mentioned a lot
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99% of the police officers out here got into this job because they care about people. that's what it's all about. >> reporter: chicago police officer caeana sanders. >> everyone is not against the police. in fact, the police are not all against the community. people really do still want that partnership. they want to feel safe. >> reporter: overall, did this need to happen? >> yeah. >> uh-huh. >> change has to start somewhere, and i think this is a good place to start.>> to avoid confrontation. jericka duncan, cbs news, chicago. >> pelley: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for some of you the news continues, for others, check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and of course from cbs this morning.
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this is the cbs overnight the suspect, ahmed ramami, is a suspect. his wife is reportedly working with investigators, meanwhile, the search is on for two others who may have started the second pressure bomb without even know it. jeff pegues has the story. >> reporter: at 8:30 saturday night, a pressure cooker bomb exploded in manhattan.
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two men who were on 27th street at the same time. police say the two men removed a bomb from a piece of luggage, putting it on the sidewalk and then walked away leaving the device then taking the suitcase. the bomb never nypd so if you can help us find them or anybody else can tell us who they are, we would be very interested to speak to them. >> reporter: investigators are still unsure if ahmad khan rahami was part of a cell or acting on his own, or if there are still other bombs still unaccounted for. according to federal charging documents, rahami bought the ingredients for the bombs on ebay, including chemicals, ball bearings and electric igniters. the f.b.i. is still trying the figure out where he built the bombs, but two days before the bombings, the documents say a family member filmed rahami burying a small black
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a fuse was lit, there was a loud noise and flames followed by billowing smoke and laughter. today at a counter-terrorism hearing in washington, homeland security committee chairman michael mccaul held up a copy of rahami's hand-written journal. >> he talks about god willing the sound of bombs will be heard in the streets, gunshots to your police, death to your oppression. >> reporter: blood stained with a bullet hole through it, rahami wrote about martyrdom, and his praise of militants suggests he took inspiration from al qaeda as well as isis. >> donald trump's private foundation is coming under more scrutiny, already under investigation by the new york state attorney general over questions about political donations. now there are charges that trump used donations to pay his legal
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trump's foundation has had lawsuits regarding his campaign. last night, donald trump bragged about using other people's money in business deals, sort of the way the charity is operated. and without irony, he said he would bring at least one aspect of that to foreign policy. >> we can't have these people come to the don't know who they are. we know nohing about them. >> donald trump offered two remedies to terror threats, tougher screening of immigrants, and safe zones for refugees. >> it's called opm, i do it in business all the time. other people's money. there is nothing like do things with other people's money. >> that is an apt description of his business practices.
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portraits of his own face. >> his charity has been investigated for months. >> i talked to tax experts who say they never saw anybody do anything like this in the last few years, which is basically use his legal funds to pay off his business practices. >> trump has not given to his foundation since 2008, nearly all the money coming from donors. trump's foundation showed that he wrote a check to charity to settle a local zoning lawsuit over an over-sized flag pole at his mar-a-lago club. the money was due after that man scored a hole in one at a trump golf course, in 2010, they paid for this portrait of trump.
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washington story was riddled with inaccuracies. but when pence was asked to talk about the inaccuracies, he couldn't come up with a single item. and last year more than 2 million bags were mishandled. now, delta is using a new tracking system to help keep tabs on luggage. if that is not good enough, there are tracking kris van cleave reports. >> we have been trying out these devices that aim to tell you if your luggage is coming to that baggage claim carousel near you, or if it's not. the rate of bags lost or damaged is on the declined, but about one in three passengers will have it happen to them. on this day, that passenger was ron mullinex.
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stops and you're still a bag sho short. >> yeah, you're disappointed but we know it happens. >> delta airlines is spending 50 million to make sure less. they are placing the rfid, instead of a bar code which should allow the realtime tracking of a suit as as it is loaded onto or off of an airplane. american alerts fliers when their bags are taken off or put on a flight. alaska air is trying to determine if these are better than the air bar codes that can smudge and wrinkle. >> every time they lose a suitcase and can't get it delivered, it costs about $100
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is an expense they want to avoid. >> we tested these three luggage tracking devices in this suitcase. it can track your phone, weigh itself and remotely lock. but it is small and we found the location feature to be hit and miss. this provided a list of places where our bag had with a map, working with a smartphone connection. both that consistently located our luggage on a map. it beats the hours alayna connelly spent waiting for her bag. >> definitely frustrating and annoying. >> the devices cost 40 to $80 plus the subscription fees. delta's new plan will happen in the coming months, the airline believes they will reduce lost luggage by 18 to 20%, which is
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the terror attacks in manhattan and new jersey have put the fbi on alert. jeff pegues got to spend time with john report. >> john brennan's motorcade got to spend time there before the jet was scheduled to take off. this is how the cia director travels. the plane is equipped with secure systems to make sure he can coordinate with the president during crisis. the cia did not allow us to record video during the flight
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audio. the director on board said he worried about isis success and inspiring attacks worldwide. >> there were attacks over the past several years, and right now i think they're trying to repeat the harvest of the investments. >> reporter: while the cia focuses on external in nnan is also trying to look at problems within the organization. diversity issues make up about 20% of senior intelligence issues. on the day we followed him, brenna this was visiting this college in birmingham. >> if everybody thought like me, and felt like me i think we would not be open to new ideas. >> did u.s. intelligence to some of those reasons miss what was
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the arab spring. >> no matter how much we had insight into the government, we didn't have the pulse of the street as best as we should have. >> reporter: isis groups part of out of discontent in the world, the terror group inspired the attacks in san bernardino and europe. and carried out attacks in brussels. >> do you think people in america ande >> i think isis' capability to carry out the attacks outside the iraq theater will continue and could increase. >> could increase. >> could increase in the short term. >> reporter: brennan, whose career in national security spans 36 years says he can't remember a time when the country faced so many complex and dangerous threats. as we rode in his motorcade, we
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on the democratic national committee and election data bases in at least two states. experts say the hacks trace back to russia. >> going forward, do you expect that there will be india intrusions from russia leading up to the november election? >> well, i believe as we come to the election there will be additional attempts to exploit and possibly explode the information somehow related to the campaign. >> reporter: he was reluctant to speak of the campaign, insisting h he was not a democrat or republican, but he is adamant that he will not waterboard suspects, even though donald trump has discussed such events. >> i will just say no. >> even to a president? >> absolutely, even to a president. >> this seems like an odd place
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birmingham is also about understanding evil. in 1963, in the middle of the civil rights movement, three members of the ku klux klan planted over a dozen sticks of dynamite outside a baptist church. the explosion killed four young black girls. >> so this makes real what we do every day to try to keep this country strong and keep its citizens secure. >> history will be made tomorrow in washington with the opening of the smithsonian's national museum of african-american history and culture. the day will kick off with episodes of living color. the event is nearly a hundred years in the making and includes family treasures. they were donated to the exhibit. teresa duncan reports. >> it is thanks to the careful preservation of heirlooms that
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and how it connects to where we are today. >> you can pick this up and touch it and know that it was in his hands. now, doesn't that send a chill down your back? >> it does. >> yeah. >> this freedom paper belonged to joseph trammel of loudoun county, virginia, he was the great-great-great grandfather of elaine thompson, he protected his freedom using this knowing that the paper held the only proof that he was no longer someone's property. >> as long as he had this, they could not enslave him. not easily, anyway. >> his freedom paper, thompson says, offers an image of who joseph trammel was during a time when photos were rare. he was 5'7" in, with several marks on his body.
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mentioned. probably he was beaten at some point. >> reporter: the tin box was the only one like it here. during our interview, the founding director came by to personally show his appreciation. >> really means a lot. >> reporter: nearly 40,000 items were donated. that is more than any other smithsonian museum. pictures, clothing, furniture, jewelry. >> they fill vast silences in the record. >> reporter: curator paul gardulo calls each one of these heirlooms treasures. >> these are things that are irreplaceable and priceless. >> reporter: but many of them stir up old wounds. >> my dad flew 149 missions during the war, 50 missions were the norm. now white guys were going home after 50.
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to the member of the tuskegee airmen, part of the group that flew in world war ii. >> they came off the liberty ship and there was a sign saying white this way, colored that way. and they get back to the same -- you would have to bleep that out. situation that they left. information to future generations gives back from a story that should never be forgotten. >> for people who look back at the artifacts, and even these painful times, slavery is over, we should not keep talking about it. it. what do you say to that sick, huh? i'm good. i just took new mucinex clear and cool. what is this sudden cooooling thing happening?
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ool. feel the menthol burst. and clear your worst cold symptoms. let's end this. today you can do everything in just one click, even keep your toilet clean and fresh. introducing lysol click gel. click it in to enjoy clean freshness with every flush. lysol.
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oh, dishwasher, why don't you dry my dishes? oh, he doesn't know any better. you just need to
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it dries much better than detergent alone. sorry dishwasher. finish? jet-dry?. for drier, shinier dishes. with the state of this year's presidential election a lot of people are looking back fondly to the good old days of ronald reagan. well, if you miss those days, christies is holding an auction, paintings, even cowboy boots. the auction is under way, and you can bid on line.
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on display? >> no, it's far more sophisticated than that. >> reporter: according to christie's andrew mcvinish? >> there were some objects that sat on the president's desk. the items from the private collection from president and mrs. ronald reagan are part of a narrative. >> here we have the reagan family's thanksgiving platter and salt and peppers. >> do we turkey in the family? >> i don't know. >> reporter: of their friends. >> with love, margaret dennis thatcher. >> reporter: and from their time in the white house. >> a lot of these things were here when the president was at the peak of his power. so that was very
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>> you had this fantastic cocktail nap kins. >> i will point out that it is either his or her bar, but not both. >> not both. >> the news and grammar are back in the morning. >> here is one of the presidential doodlers, with football here i guess he is thinking about to the time of his playing. >> this looks like hugh jackma >> this is probably nancy reagan. >> honestly, it looks more like jane wyman to me. >> i don't know. >> i'm serious. >> these are a pair of leather ottomans. >> these are cute. >> a jelly bean jar that sat on his desk in the oval office. and a sculpture here. >> he became so firmly
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the west, but of course he was raised in illinois. >> that is right, and didn't learn to ride a horse until he went to california. >> this is the president standing at the gate, and next to the famous speech. >> mr. gorbachev, tear down this wall. >> what is the asking price for this? >> this is ten to $20,000. >> mr. auctioneer, bring down these prices. >> here we have a football most iconic film and political slogan. >> win just one for the gipper. >> of course he could not have known when he made that movie how important it would be to his entire political career. >> exactly. >> and apparently he and tom brady had the same ball boy. >> you ready? >> now i have to catch it. >> wow, great. >> oh -- god, i almost hit the
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about the president. at $50,000, this necklace first worn by the first lady is the auction's most valued item. >> in a 1981 interview for 60 minutes, mike wallace asked nancy reagan about negative press receilating to her emphas on style. were you unprepared for the scrutiny you would get? >> great. >> now you can own the furniture used during that conversation and much, much more. >> prince charles, princess diana have sat here, mother teresa. >> i'm sitting where a lot of famous back sides have set? >> absolutely. >> is this was based upon a photograph that was taken at the statue of liberty. as a birthday gift to nancy
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it seems like a marriage made in heaven, but in the end it was just another hollywood romance. brad pitt and angelina jolie are getting divorced. angelina wants custody of the six kids. lee cowan >> reporter: they were the definition of power couple. the a-pluses of the a-listers. their relationship blossomed like the big bang, which explains why their split hit like the they got married, some they say in part was because of their children. they have six.
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they have questions when their friends' parents are married. >> so what will you tell them? >> we will some day, that is a great idea, get mommy a ring, i will. >> but in the end it lasted just over two years, the rumored reasons varied. but obviously it seems the media mike scope was not one of them. but the frenzy that followed them everywhere, jolie said she especially the stories in the tabloids. >> they're not what i care about, i find them often very wrong when i do hear about what they are. >> pitt ignored it too. >> when it first hit, it was very discombobulating, and i would rappel from it. >> there was a power to do enormous good.
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banked on his celebrity help to rebuild the ninth ward. >> we have a duty to help the refugees. >> jolie was a good will ambassador, and later a special envoy for refugees. >> this is my fourth visit to jordan since the conflict began. >> she even penned an op-ed, talking about her choice to have a but it was the children that they worked together with. >> i don't want to be more successful. i don't want more money. i want my kids to be healthy. and i want to have a great family and i want them to be great people. that is my ambition. >> reporter: both are now asking for privacy. something the couple rarely enjoyed when the news was happy. and even less when it wasn't. lee cowan, hollywood. >> that is the overnight news
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others, you can check back with others, you can check back with us a little captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, september 22nd, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." >> a second night of violence in charlotte. protesters confront police and break windows and block roads. the governor declares a state of emergency and calls in the national guard. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters in new york. good to be with you. i'm meg oliver in for anne-marie green.

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