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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 30, 2016 7:00am-9:00am MST

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it is friday, september 30th, 2016. welcome to cbs "this morning". what causeck commuter train to slam into a station during rush hour? we are getting new details on the investigation in new jersey. and witnesses describe how they pulled injured passengers from the wreckage. >> one of the country's most read newspapers urges anyone to vote for anyone but donald trump. the nominee launches an early morning attack against hillary clinton and a former miss universe. >> we are on top of the world's highest and longest glass bridge. china hopes the breath taking view will do more than shatter world record. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener."
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i thought we were going to die and didn't think we were getting out. >> i heard screams coming and terror. >> the conductor came off and he was completely bloody. >> the investigation into the deadly new jersey train crash. >> what we know the train came in at a high rate of speed and crashed through all of the barriers. >> the destruction is really significant. >> his efforts to do business in cuba appeared to violate u.s. law. will say anything, do anything, lie about anything to keep their grip on power. >> he soared to incredible heights. >> world leaders paid their respect for shimon peres. >> shimon accomplished a lot of things. >> when are you going to resign?
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>> who is paying for it? who is taking responsibility for it? don't come tell me you're sorry! >> hurricane matthew in the caribbean threatening the island. >> 80-mile-per-hour winds and makes a big, hard turn to the north. >> little monsters rejoice. >> lady gaga takes the stage for the super bowl halftime show. >> all that. >> he goes the distance. caught it! >> it's a cincinnati win. 22-7. >> we should talk about the debate. did you watch it? >> and all that matters. >> gary jo name any world leader when asked who his favorite head of state was. >> even dennis rodman could name his favorite foreign leader. >> forget running for president. i'm not sure gary johnson should be allowed to vote. >> on "cbs this morning." >> a heckler at the ryder cup pulled off an incredible move. >> the europeans dared him to putt up or shut up. >> one of the greatest putts in
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ? welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is on assignment. so anthony mason is here. >> good morning. >> good to have you here. investigators at the scene of the deadly train accident outside of new york are looking to the engineer for answers. a new jersey transit train full of commuters craed hoboken terminal yesterday and one woman in the station, fabiola bittar de kroon, was killed. more than 100 others were hurt. >> the train was making its final stop at hoboken across the hudson river. officials say it was going very fast and jumped the barriers and landing on the platform. jim axelrod has more. >> reporter: investigators won't be able to fully inspect the
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portion of the damaged roof that still sits on the train in the terminal behind me. trains are supposed to approach the station no faster than 10 miles an hour. the officials don't know how fast this train was going yesterday when it pushed onto the platform during rush hour. the force of new jersey transit train 1614 tore apart the concourse inside hoboken terminal. i didn't think we were going to get out. >> reporter: passengers climbed out of the wreckage after the thursday morning crash amid wires, glass, and toppled beams. >> we tried to clear the way for the people that were bleeding more to get out first. >> the train just didn't stop. >> reporter: surveillance video shows the train approximately 40 minutes before the crash. new jersey transit officials say
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entered hoboken terminal on track five moving at a high rate of speed and it jumped over several barriers at the end of the track. >> it went over the bumper block, basically through the air. >> reporter: fabiola bittar de kroon died in the accident. the 34-year-old was hit by debris in the station. more than a hundred others were hurt, including 48-year-old thomas gallagher, the train's engineer. officials say gallagher is cooperating. the ntsb will interview him and piece together a time line of his actions in the 72 hours before the crash. locomotive event recorders or black boxes from the wreck app. >> from the event recorder we hope to get information such as speed and breaking. >> they will examine two cameras on the front and back of the train. more than 15,000 new jersey transit riders pass through the hoboken terminal every day and some of those commuters, along with first responders, helped prevent further tragedy.
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concerns over the building's structural integrity stemming from a water leak. investigators expect to be on the ground here in hoboken for the next seven to ten days. anthony? >> jim, thanks. the head of a trauma center that saw dozens of patients says quick action from bystanders and emergency personnel was crucial. all of the passengers on the train survived. the woman who was killed was a lawyer and a mom who had just dropped her daughter off at day care. demarco morgan is in hoboken also with the details on the devastating crash. >> reporter: ordinary people performed unselfish acts at this train station behind me. despite the unsteady ceiling above them and live wires below them, many sprung into action at the height of rush hour. as soon as the commuter train crashed the work to get people out began. 250 passengers were packed inside the new jersey transit train.
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>> i think everybody took probably about a good five seconds after that happened and was just like, okay, what just happened? >> reporter: michael larson entered the first car. >> they were crawling on their hands and knees. and we were trying to get, you know, as many people out. i assisted in maybe three or four. >> reporter: you say america's man, i'm not lying. >> everybody color ran to try to help. >> reporter: 34-year-old fabiola bittar de kroon, the married mother of a toddler was on the platform and killed by falling debris. she was a native of brazil and recently moved to hoboken. she had a husband and a child. >> we are in great sadness over that loss. >> reporter: people left through downed ceilings and live wires and asbestos coated debris. incredible many of the dozens who were hurt were only considered walking wounded. >> for trauma, it's about the golden hour. getting them to your trauma center within the first hour and that is what saves lives. >> reporter: governor chris
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york and new jersey were tested by the event. >> regular commuters left the safety of where they were standing to rush to the train to help first responders evacuate injured people off the train. this region has developed a resilience that is admired by the rest of the world. >> reporter: there are 21 people that remain in hospitals right now. governor christie says there is a coordinated approach of investigators, and the new jersey transit system's first priority is always public safety. >> demarco, thank you. we spoke to bella dinh-zarr who is vice chair of the national transportation safety board early this morning when she arrived on the scene. what have you learned so far? >> so it's still pretty early on. but what we are doing is we are finding out how to make the scene as safe as possible so that our investigators can
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the canopy is actually collapsed on to the train and it's a push/pull configuration where there are three passenger cars with a locomotive at the end. and with that, we're -- we were able to get the recorder out of the locomotive, but we are going to have to wait to get parts of the canopy removed, and so that we can safely access the rest of the cars. >> when do you hope to have some answers? >> we get answers all along the way. what we are doing today is we are having our organizational meetings with all of the people who will -- all of the groups that will give us factual information. so we get technical information from various different organizations, and with that factual collection of data, then we take all of that back. we will be on scene for about seven to ten days, and then --
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once the on-scene part is done, we go back and we keep using that information to do our own independent analysis. >> bella dinh-zarr, thank you for your time. >> thank you. in our next half hour, kris van cleave looks at why the train in hoboken didn't have the appropriate train technology that could prevent accidents. >> one of the most-read newspapers is breaking tradition and endorsing anyone but donald trump. a presidential election. the editorial board is telling voters not to vote for trump. the paper does not endorse any candidate and has critical words for clinton. but the board says trump is, quote, by unanimous consensus, unfit for the presidency. the election is 39 days away. people in 11 early voting states are already casting ballots. nancy cordes is in ft. pierce, florida, where both candidates are battling for votes.
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theater several hours from now but a crowd has already began to gather. florida is a handful of battleground states where the clinton camp is hoping to use its organizational edge to get supporters like these to the polls well before election day. >> it's a great honor to have her sporting me. she is going to go vote early today. >> reporter: ruly stein decked out her walker and cast voting on the first day of voting in iowa. >> i'm 103. that is the reason i vote early. i'm not taking any chances. >> reporter: she and other clinton supporters were escorted from a rally in des moines to a polling place and a highly orchestrated effort to run up clinton's vote totals in battleground states, six weeks before election day. >> are you ready to go to the polls. >> reporter: later on her campaign plane, clinton was
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>> oh, let me think. oh, no. >> reporter: she was expecting the question one day after it stumped her libertarian opponent gary johnson. >> who is your favorite foreign leader? >> i'm having a brain -- >> reporter: name anybody! >> clinton named angel merkel. >> she has been an extraordinary, strong leader. >> reporter: in new hampshire, trump fielded the same question. >> well, i think merkel is a really great world leader, but i was very disappointed that when she -- this move with the whole thing on immigration. >> reporter: trump has been highly critical of merkel saying at one point she is ruining germany. >> hillary clinton wants to be america's angela merkel. >> reporter: his inconsistencies prompted "usa today" to announce not that they are endorsing clinton, but, quote, disendorsing trump. in an eight-point take-down, the editorial board called trump a dangerous demagogue who is ill equipped to be commander in
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and who traffics in prejudice. on clinton, the board split are some expressing reservations about her sense of entitlement and lack of candor and extreme carelessness. "usa today" did allow trump's running mate mike pence to issue a rebuttal to that disendorsement in the paper. he called donald trump a bold leader, comparing him to ronald reagan who, pence said, also made some republicans uncomfortable initially with his unique style. >> nancy, thank you so much. donald trump is not letting go of the controversy over his comments about a former miss universe. he lashed out on twitter overnight to attack alicia machado and her support of hillary clinton. trump has been outspoken about the beauty queen's weight. major garrett is here with the trump's latest attacks. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. early this morning, about 5:15 a.m. precisely, donald trump fired off a trio of tweets personally attacking former miss universe alicia machado.
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writes that hillary clinton using her as, quote, a paragon of virtue shows bad judgment and trump urges his some 12 million twitter followers to look into a sex tape and ask, did crooked hillary help disgusting alicia m become a u.s. citizen so she could use her in the debate? this, of course, all began when hillary clinton brought up trump's own words about machado at the first presidential debate and reminding he referred to machado as, quote, miss piggy. as owner of the miss universe competition, trump sought a weight loss campaign for machado. she was implicated in a 1997 murder case in venezuela and accused of threatening a judge, but never charged on either county. this episode, once again, underscores there is only really one person running the trump campaign, donald trump. but those around him are trying to rein him in and bringing in new jersey governor chris
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giving him attack lines because trump respects the way christie took down marco rubio before the new hampshire primary and his advisers hope trump can do the same thing in preparation for round two. >> what kind of a difference will it make? everybody says chris christie is a very good debater. >> he is but it's all about the focus that donald trump brings to the task and he didn't bring a requisite focus the first time around' those who wish he would. it's entirely up to him and whether he believes the lost the first debate, which i'm still not convinced he does and if he does, does he need to change his methods? until trump changes himself, those around him only struggle with the topic. >> we did learn today he likes to get up early and likes to tweet. >> early morning tweeting, no doubt about that. >> at 5:15 precisely, you say. got it. world leaders said good-bye to israeli former president and prime minister shimon peres.
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tribute. he also said peres' dream of peace in the middle east is not over. holly williams is in jerusalem at the funeral. >> reporter: good morning. shimon peres was a giant of israeli politics. a man who made israel stronger by building up its military, but also a tireless peace maker. they came to jerusalem from all over the world. presidents and prime ministers to pay their final respects to a man who tried to bring peace to his people and to the middle east. >> shimon accomplished enough things in his life for a thousand men. he understood it is better to live to the very end of his time on earth with a longing not for the past, but for the dreams that have not yet come true. >> reporter: palestinian leader mahmoud abbas was also here today shaking hands with israeli's prime minister benjamin netanyahu. as israeli's foreign minister, shimon peres opened secret negotiations with the
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eventually to the oslo accords signed in 1993 on the white house lawn. the first agreement between israel and the palestinians aimed at ending their conflict. it won peres the nobel peace prize but didn't deliver lasting peace in the middle east. >> now he is gone. leaving only a blessed memory and a powerful example. that's more than enough. >> reporter: bill clinton called him our complicated brilliant friend. >> shimon was being interviewed by charlie rose and he looked at him sort of saying, i'm going to serve a softball up to you. and watch you hit a home run. what do you want your legacy to be? and he said, i'm more concerned about tomorrow than yesterday.
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ago here atop mt. herzi and along with other israeli leaders. >> holly williams in israeli, thank you. a teenager accused of shooting three people at a south carolina elementary school is due in court this morning. the officials have not named the 14-year-old because of his age. a judge will decide if he can be freed on bail. he is also accused of killing his father at home before shooting two students and a teacher on wednesday at jacob hall is still in critical condition and authorities are trying to determine a motive. >> hurricane matthew strengthened to a category 2 storm overnight and could be stronger today. it hammered puerto rico yesterday with heavy wind and rain and triggered floods and landslide. a teenager was killed in the nation of st. vincent. matthew is heading west across the caribbean and could turn north. the national weather service says it's too soon to determine
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>> a third night of protests over the shooting of a black man in san diego turned violent. the protesters say they want justice in tuesday's deadly police shooting of alfred alongo. an investigation finds databases. how some officers run searches on everyone from romantic
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by listerine. bring out the bold! >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by listerine. bring out the bold! . the world's highest and longest glass bridge is reopened after safety repairs. >> adriana diaz is in china taking in the view. >> it mixes jaw dropping views with fear inducing heights and tourists here can't help but look down.
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the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. my brother and i have always been rivals. we would dream about racing each other, in monaco. ? we were born brothers. wish bold in the 2017 camry. toyota. let's go places. oh, look... ...another anti-wrinkle cream in no hurry to make anything happen. neutrogena? rapid wrinkle repair works... ...in one week. with the... fastest retinol formula. ...to visibly reduce wrinkles.
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it's 7:26, i'm preston phillips. it was a wild scene at the union hills estates apartment complex early this morning as it was evacuated and swat teams swarmed it... police were trying to find a suspect tied to a deadly shooting. . the shooting happened at a q-t gas station... near union hills drive and 43rd avenue last night.police say a man illegal drugs were found inside his car. and police are looking for this man, who jumped into a backyard and exposed himself to five and seven year old girls.police say he even hugged one of them before taking off on a bike.this happened near 11th avenue and dunlap.if you recognize him... call phoenix police.time now for a check on your traffic with kylee cruz. 3 3
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thanks for watching cbs 5... i'm preston phillips.have a great rest of the day! we'll see you back here in 25
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? libertarian candidate gary johnson was giving a television interview and he was unable to name a single foreign leader. >> gary's excuse is that he was having an aleppo moment. if you don't know, a few weeks ago, in another interview, he was famously stumped when he didn't know aleppo was aap you know you have to have a lot of gaps when you're gary johnson and you go, oh, man i just pulled a gary johnson! >> things might be looking up for gary johnson because it was just announced that former nickelodeon star melissa joan hart has been named chair of his connecticut campaign. that's right. clarissa. it's perfect because he could really use someone to explain it all to him. >> it's an interesting moment because a lot of people are
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the anti-hillary or anti-trump vote? many people were going to the libertarian candidates and if they don't -- >> interesting to see how they respond to that. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? could yesterday's train crash in new jersey have been prevented? the railroad is trying to install life saving technology on tracks nationwide. kris van cleave looks into why there is a delay. the investigation reveals a misuse of confidential police databases. hundreds of law enforcement officers and employees have been punished. ahead, how one victim says she was relentlessly harassed by a former sergeant. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on shares of deutsche bank plunging in european trading today. the stock fell as much as 8% to a record low. some investors believe the german bank may need a government bailout to settle fines by the u.s. justice department.
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funds were moving their business out of the bank. deutsche bank may have to pay $14 billion over its sale of mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis. "the washington post" reports on the ceo of wells fargo facing new calls to resign over the bank's aggressive sales practices. lawmakers hammered john stumpf on capitol hill yesterday and one even suggested he should be in jail and compared him to a suspected bank robber. >> did wells fargo employees steal from a million to 2 million other customers? yes or no. >> in some cases, they did. >> do you know this guy? apparently, he robbed your bank. he's in jail as we speak. they get all of the money back. only simple question -- what the heck is the difference between you and mr. holmes? >> interesting analogy. stumpf is forfeiting $41 million in stock awards and working
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"the new york times" says a space probe has just plunged into the comet it has studied the last two years. scientists celebrated the successful outcome this morning at the european space agency in germany. the rosetta probe was the first spacecraft to orbit a comet. the rosetta wasn't designed to land so its mission ended with the crash. it was sent into space to discover new insights about the early solar system. the je is reigniting concerns about positive train control. it has not been implemented in any of new jersey transit trains or on tracks. in august, federal regulators said the system was in place in five railroads. kris van cleave explains why installing the technology has been such a struggle. >> reporter: good morning. positive train control is not new. it's been around for decades. the government mandated all railroads have it installed by the end of last year. but after an intense lobbying
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the cost and technical difficulties with installing it, the deadline was pushed back. investigators will try to determine if positive train control could have prevented the speeding new jersey transit train from smashing into the hoboken station. >> that is absolutely one area that we always look into for every rail accident. as you know, the ntsb has been recommending positive train control for 40 years. >> reporter: they remagp ground sensors. if it detects a train is going too fast or operating unsafely, on-board computers will kick in to slow it or stop it. in january, amtrak showed us how the technology works using this simulator. when it's beeping, you take over. >> if you don't brake action it will take over control of the train. >> reporter: nationwide it is
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locomotives and 22% of passenger track miles. as of last may, commuter railroads have spent nearly a billion dollars installing the pricey technology. new jersey senator cory booker is frustrated by the slow progress. >> we don't need any more warnings and we don't need any more accidents. it's a matter of getting it done. >> reporter: back in 2011, also in hoboken also, at least 30 people were injured in an accident involving a p. train. two years later one derailed in the bronx killing four people and in may, 2015, eight died and more than 200 were hurt when this amtrak train derailed in philadelphia. investigators say p.t.c. would likely have prevented them all. the american public transportation association says commuter railroads are 100% dedicated to ptc but estimate it
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that's more than what congress has set aside to implement ptc. it's not expected to be in use at least 2018. gayle? >> maybe they will rethink that one. thank you, kris. the associated press investigates find confidential police databases have been used by some police officers to obtain information that has nothing to do with daily police work. the findings show some police run searches on romantic partners and business associates and journalists and family members. don dahler is here with the details. >> reporter: good morning. the databases give police instant access to a wide range of information, including a addresses, phonenumbers, criminal histories. and driving records, which is all critical information when used appropriately. but as the investigation uncovered, there are sometimes illegitimate searches that remain unchecked. after being harassed for nearly a year, 30-year-old alexus decany said she was violently attacked by her ex-boyfriend, a former sergeant with the akron,
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and strangled me until i was unconscious. he made known in writing, via text message and social media that he was coming to kill me. >> reporter: using confidential police databases, she says paul had access to private information that made the stalking even more relentless. >> i tried changing my number several times. and he would just get this other app on his phone where he could call me from his phone, but it would come up different numbers. i would try to go hide and stay at friends' houses or my mom's and he win >> reporter: paul is now serving four-year probationary sentence after pleading guilty to charges that was the unlawful use of a law enforcement database. a crime that can be difficult to track. >> it is often difficult to distinguish a questionable search from the millions of legitimate searches that law enforcement officers do every day. >> reporter: an investigation by the associated press found that between 2013 and 2015, law enforcement officers and
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for the misuse of police databases. they received lesser punishments over 250 times. chuck gallop is a former police officer who was disciplined for database misuse. he says officers were encouraged to practice searching on innocent subjects. >> i have spoken to officers who went through that training at the time and they were told pull out your high school yearbook and start running people and get used to the system. it's new in this and use it. >> reporter: no single agency monitors the use of databases but in the case of alexus decany, it's often when a crime has been committed that such incidents are revealed. >> there needs to be some sort of checks and balances, some sort of way to hold these officers that have complete discretion accountable for this information they have at their fingertips. >> reporter: because eric paul accepted a plea deal, he could be released before his four-year sentence is up. as for alexus, she started a go fund me page to pay for relocation should her former
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thank you, don. too many tourists forced the world's highest glass bridge to close. ahead, we are high above a chinese gorge for the reopening of the landmark after safety upgrades. if you're heading out the door, watch us live through the cbs all-access app on your digital device. you don't want to miss gayle's interview with pioneer hollywood director ava duvernay.
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a popular and for some of us, terrifying tourist spot in china reopened this morning. this glass bridge was closed earlier this month for safety upgrades after tourists flooded its span. it's nearly a thousand feet above a gorge and is considered the world's highest and longest glass bridge. adriana diaz spoke with tourists who dared to take the view below.
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terrifying. both at the same time! for the 8,000 people who paid to come each day, it's a view they will likely never forget. it's got everyone acting like they are kids again. china's newest tourist attraction is a selfie dream come true. that is if you can handle it. it's okay, it's . central china is now the world's highest and longest, stretching more than 1,400 feet. turning stomachs. i'm trying to rationalize with this and tell my brain it's safe. just doesn't feel right. and leaving visitors amazed. are you scared? no, i think it's great, said this man. >> i feel a little scared that,
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i'm superman! >> reporter: this scenery inspired the floating mountains in the blockbuster "avatar." the bridge could have been an inspiration for hitchcock's vertigo. for protect the glass booties are required and high heels are banned and tickets are limited. after opening in august, the bridge closed for a month because of overcapacity. last year, a different glass walkway in china shut after a panel shattered. >> once you get used to it, it's not that >> reporter: here, vice general manager joe chen says they are not taking any chances. >> there are three layers of the glass panels and each layer can actually withstand more than 40 tons. >> reporter: to prove it, this summer, officials had visitors try to smash the glass with a sledge hammer and ride a car over it just to "drive" home the point. but chen says the bridge is more than just a tourists attraction.
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>> yes. this bridge will represent the creativities and infave power to china. >> the bungee jump is not opened yet benefit the world's longest fashion runway. watch out new york fashion week, there is a new catwalk in town. for "cbs this morning," adriana >> are you comfort now? >> not even kind of. i don't want to do anything where they say it's breath taking and tiriving at the same time. >> 20 layers of glass, i might walk across it but three layers? >> we can bungee jump off of it. >> i will cheer you on. no thanks. a new poll says nearly half of americans are scared to death of going blind. but too many of us are not trying to keep our eyes healthy.
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is ahead. a panda pile up. look at this, gayle! >> ah! >> why 23 young cubs are lined up on a tanble and you'll announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ? my brother and i have always been rivals. we would dream about racing each other,
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? good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, september 30th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead, including the hard hitting presidential race. donald trump launches a new attack thior former miss universe. first, here is today's eye opener at 8:00. >> investigators task. >> shimon peres was laid to rest here in jerusalem. >> instant access to a wide range of information, but as the investigation uncovered, there are sometimes illegitimate searches that remain unchecked. >> breathtaking and terrifying at the same time.
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that is breathtaking and terrifying at the same time. >> america online founder steve case endorsed hillary clinton for president today. though the last thing hillary wants to hear is -- >> you've got mail. >> oh, no. oh, no. get rid of it. get rid of it. i'm gayle king with norah o'donnell and anthony mason. charlie is on assignment. investigators are looking
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that killed one and injured more than 100 people. it derailed in hoboken, across the river from lower manhattan. >> fabiola bittar de kroon was struck and killed by debris on the platform. she had just left her young daughter at day care. jim axelrod is at the scene with the latest on the investigation. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we have a vantage point w we're about eight stories up, just across from the hoboken terminal. you see the two trains, obviously not moving. imagine train 1614 just inside of that, barreling into the final 100, 130 yards of the hoboken terminal, all the way down until you can see where that sort of reddish brownish building is. that actually is where the track ends and the train jumped the barrier and into the platform
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some roof damage right there. and just underneath that, that's where the train engines are. that's where the investigators will be focusing. couple of concerns they have, one is the structural integrity of the building, there was some water damage after the crash yesterday. have to be very careful moving in and around there. that's why the terminal is still empty right now. investigators also need that roof damage, they need to actually have that roof removed before they can get to parts of the train that they need to look at. there ho miles per hour, maybe even more as it moved in here. trains of course not to be -- shouldn't be going any faster than 10 miles an hour. next seven to ten days investigators will be here trying to figure it all out. anthony? >> jim. jim axelrod, thanks. donald trump walaunched a twitter attack against alicia machado. in one tweet, he urged his followers to look into a sex tape and wrote, quote, did
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alicia m. become a u.s. citizen so she could use her in the debate. >> he called this woman miss piggy. then he called her miss housekeeping because she was latina. donald, she has a name. >> where did you find her? >> her name is alicia machado and she has become a u.s. citizen and you can bet she's going to vote this november. >> okay, good. >> to work out in front of an army of cameras after she gained weight after winning trump's beauty pautte "usa today's" editorial board has taken a stand for the first time in its history. they said they could not support donald trump and don't want voters to either. it urged readers to resist the
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saying, trump is in a league of his own when it comes to the quality and quantity of his misstatements. the paper did not endorse hillary clinton but said some board members have serious reservations about her entitlement, her lack of candor. peggy noonan is a columnist for "the wall street journal" and a cbs news contributor. good morning. i don't know how much newspaper, you know, editorials have an impact, but this is pretty strong in terms of this editorial. >> i think it was. i think it was -- i think you have to take seriously when a great newspaper breaks a roughly four decade tradition to take a stand on a presidential race. i don't know what kind of impact these things have. it was interesting that their
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strong, and yet their reservations about mrs. clinton were so stated. >> what do you make of this early morning twitter barrage from donald trump, that started before 5:00 a.m. >> the first one was at 3:00 a.m. >> 3:00 a.m., right. against the character of alicia machado. does he have anything to gain from continuing this conversation? >> don't we all wake up in the morning and send enraged tweets? >> at 3:00 in the morning, 5:00 in the >> i think in general this is the kind of story, look, if you just look at political strategy, you don't want to emphasize a story like this. you don't want to call people fat in america. it's not the best way to win votes. if he did that, keep walking. he shouldn't be relitigating this in a sort of enraged way at 3:00 or 5:00 a.m. i don't know why he is.
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phone back. i said this two months ago, just get the phone out of his hands, bury it. let him not know where it is. give it to him at 7:03 a.m. >> he's not giving up his phone. where do you think the race is now, peggy, and what shouldtal >> monday night, the debate, in my view hillary clinton won. she was happy. she's got the whoosh. she's out there on the campaign -- >> define the whoosh. >> the feeling of pleasure, work and i just crushed it. and you go into your next big event knowing you've got the whoosh and you're good. and the crowd sees it and they really react and then you know i've got the whoosh, it is really with me. it lasts for a while. she's taken the wood to trump right now, she's kind of beating him up as a rapacious businessman, doing what was done to mitt romney, the rich guys don't care about you. >> he says he won the debate too. but -- >> there you are.
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a bad mood, he knows he didn't help himself, he's going into junkyard dog mode. and he's having these arguments and sending sex tape stuff out. >> isn't it playing exactly into hillary clinton's hand? she set a giant trap, it was so obvious, and he stepped in it and now he keeps stepping in it. >> she knows what his weak spot is. he doesn't like it if you bring up things that he feels he can defend himself on, but ladies weeks before the election. it is an epic election. this is a great nation with many troubles. they, both of them, should be talking about entitlement spending. they should be talking about war. >> thank you. >> they should be talking about where america should be strategically in the world and what they want for the next eight years, which is that they're asking us for. eight years of leadership. instead, she's doing rapacious
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it is not worthy -- it is not worthy of a great nation, i would say. sober up. we're voting very soon. >> you're blaming them both. >> i guess i am. >> you've also written and blamed in part the media for the discussion. >> yes. i have. i think things have gotten pretty shallow and pretty low. >> peggy, thank you. new developments in the investigation of the mysterious death of two two sisters were found unresponsive last week in their hotel room. we told you yesterday how 37-year-old annie and her 42-year-old sister robin were found dead last thursday in their villa. they showed no obvious signs of trauma. >> they were staying at a luxury resort on the island off africa's east coast. the sisters allegedly needed help to their room the previous night after drinking. police said a preliminary examination of their body shows
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aggression. >> very mysterious. half the world's population could be nearsighted in just a few decades. we'll talk to a top eye doctor
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48 hours shows us a 4 "48 hours" shows us >> my name is bernie. they did a movie about me called bernie. >> jack black was going to play you. >> four bullets in her back. >> who will jurors believe. hollywood's version or the prosecution. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." good gouy. >> or the prosecution?
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? ? ? jon batiste has mastered new ways
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to deposit checks too. easy to use chase technology for whatever you're trying to master. ? yes, good music there. morning rounds we look at rise of ? >> everybody get up! yes, good music there. morning rounds we look at rise of myopia. when distant subjects appear blurry. symptoms of myopia can include headaches and eye strain and squinting. dr. christopher starr is an ophthalmologist. what is behind this deep rise in myopia?
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it's a real thing, as you said, by 2050, maybe half of the world will be myopic or nearsighted which is dramatic. it's rapidly rising in kids. and the theories have been several. one, genetics. if both of your parents are near-sighted a chance you will be too. a lot of concern kids spending too much time indoors and reading and iphones and that might be part of it. what is supported the most in the study they are not spending enough times outdoors getting enough sunlight and running around outside. >> what is the time recommended? >> likely anywhere from one to three hours outdoor activity per day is reasonable. >> beyond what they are getting? >> right. >> what is the physiology? >> a great question and interesting. a neurotransmitter called
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the sun. the dopamine controls the elongation of the eyes. if you have dopamine, it doesn't grow as much but if you sit inside the longer the longer the eye the more nearsighted. >> they say if you spend so much time inside with the library you need glasses? >> if i got really great eyesight and at what point >> great question. >> what is it like coming here? >> amazing. >> go for it. >> you have a great answer, doctor. >> i will try my best. the one fallacy people say i see well and i don't have an eye problem. that is unfortunate. there can be things going on inside the eye that are asymptomatic. glaucoma is one of them. if you're a young adult and you can't remember your last eye exam, it's probably time to see
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over age 65 every one to two years for an eye exam and kids should be screened regularly at school. >> starting at what age? >> kids have a screening test early in school age and screened regularly at school and at the pediatric office and eye doctor as well. >> squinting is not good? myopic. >> i was in middle school and we were waiting in line to get the tests and i sat down to read and all of my friends were laughing and giggling because i got all of them wrong. that's when i knew i needed glasses. >> you were probably squinting. >> thank you, doctor. >> thank you. a new way to hear this broadcast every single day. we are excited to announce the cbs podcast launches today and you will get the news of the day
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listen on itunes or stitcher also. we are releasing a special episode this morning with charlie, norah and me in studio 57. visit cbsthismorning.com/podcast for more. >> very exciting. a heckler showed up some of the world's best golfers by making a shot they couldn't make. you're watching "cbs this morning." couldn't make. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs "morning rounds" sponsored by visionworks. find a better you. find more than a pair of glasses. visionworks. find a better you. find more than a pair of glass. more "sit" per roll. bounty is two times more absorbent. so one roll of bounty
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? the ryder cup officially began this morning in minnesota. the competition between the u.s. and europe best golfers have some of the noisest galleries you'll ever see but yesterday was a haeckler who heard the ror of the crowd. david johnson didn't know what he got into when he called out by rory mcilroy and henrik stenson. >> he said i can make that shot. okay, big guy, come on out and see what you got. >> reporter: before pulling their heckler out of the crowd, the europeans had been missing the same practice putt over and over.
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the pressure, but the 30-year-old insurance salesman from north dakota, in front of a packed gallery of fans, made it look easy. >> i will admit it wasn'tthe greatest putt but happened to go into the hole. i didn't think any way the putt was going in. >> johnson and leash of luck unleashed a roar for the ryder cup faithful reserved. >> i closed my eyes and it went in. >> definitely made the ryder cup for me. it was a great moment. >> you'll never live this one down. >> not a chance. >> it's like the greatest moment of all time. >> i love how they put the 100 dollar bill next to the ball! no pressure! >> puke is a good thing. thank you very much for that visual! director ava duvernay is her name.
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? ? ? welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, 48 hours looks at a crime so bizarre, it inspired a movie. jack black plays the mortician convicted of murdering his wealthy compan hollywood and the whole judicial system were conned. groundbreaking movie director ava duvernay, she opens up about race, her rise in hollywood and her first tv series. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the washington post says donald trump's charitable foundation lacks certification to solicit money from the public. david says the new york attorney
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foundation never obtained a special kind of required registration. the article says trump's charity could be forced to return donations. trump did not respond to a request for comment. usa today reports on the recovery of two van goghs that were stolen. italian police found them during a raid on a crime clan suspected of trafficking cocaine. the works by the dutch master date to the l 1 described as priceless. a story so bizarre, that it ended up on the big screen. a texas widow worth millions is found dead in a freezer. her companion, a funeral home mortician, is charged with her murder. peter van zandt shows us how real life developments brought this case back into the spotlight after the movie. >> 8:15 to 10:00, rock history. >> hollywood a-lister jack black
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"school of rock," the voice of po in "kung fu panda" and the dark comedy "bernie." >> the thing about playing bernie is that he's loveable, and it is really important to bernie that he be loved. >> my name is bernie. you may have heard about me. they did a movie about me. >> the real bernie story made headlines in 1997, when bernie, a beloved funeral home mortician, did the unthinkable, to his close friend, marjorie nugent. >> picked up a gun, shot her four times in the back, and then buried her in her own deep freeze. >> texas monthly writer skip hollingsworth, whose story inspired the movie, says the relationship had an unusual beginning. >> in 1990, the town's leading
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>> i embalmed the body and got hid ready him ready for the funeral. >> he became her companion, reaping the benefits of her fortune. >> they traveled the world. >> he stole her money. >> alexandria says he saw her randmother as a mark. >> he shot her and killed her. >> he was sentenced to life in pron the story fascinated oscar nominated director rick linklater. >> i think the film is asking the question, can the nicest person in the world be capable of the worst act? >> after seeing the movie, the lawyer took on his appeal, interviewed bernie and uncovered a bombshell. bernie told her he was molested as a child, and she had had her own opinion about marjorie. >> this woman had been abusing him for a very long time.
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to snap. and he killed marjorie. >> i don't know what happened that morning. >> with these revelations, cole was able to get bernie a new sentencing trial. prosecutor jane starnes. >> i think he's conned hollywood and conned the whole judicial system. >> bernie is a good guy. >> wow. peter van zandt is here. good morning. >> good morning. >> so hollywood was brought in to this for -- to helh >> richard linklater found out about the story. actually met with bernie face to face as did the actor jack black. >> bernie lived in his house for a while, didn't he? >> lived in his apartment when he got released in preparation for this resentencing trial. but those two men are convinced this was not a premeditated murder, but rather an act of passion. in texas, you can get 2 to 20 years for that. they think he served enough
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like to see him freed. >> people didn't care too much for marjorie either. >> this little town, carthage, bible belt town, she was the most despised person in town, and they had to move the trial two counties away because they couldn't get a jury that would fairly listen to t tit. the prosecutor was urged not to take it to court even though he shot her four times in the back. >> watch peter's report, the mortician, the murder, the movie, in a new episode of "48 it is part of a "48 hours" double feature that starts at 9:00, 8:00 central. ava duvernay on a mission to open dmoooors in hollywood. >> you've set the tone of a commitment to helping others along. >> i don't think of it as paying it forward. i don't want to be alone. what good is a party by yourself? i want more women there, more people of color there. i just want more people doing this. i don't find any pleasure in being the only one. >> ahead, gayle's revealing
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trying to gain access to trying to gain access to the registration office, which is our legal right. >> too many of you. you have to wait at the rear.
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we're going to wait right here. segregation is now illegal in this country, sir. >> that is the scene from the academy award winning movie "selma." it made ava duvernay nominated for a best picture oscar. tonight, had her new documentary will open the new york film festival. we spoke with ava about an exceptional career with an untraditional start. this is the thing. ve publicist, didn't go to film school and now when they say ava duvernay, i see visionary director, a film by ava duvernay. how did you think that was possible or did you think that was possible? >> i didn't dream of it. i just wanted to make my own small films, you know. i saw a way to be able to take a small amount of money i saved for a house to buy a house and made a film with it instead. my mother wasn't very happy about it at the time. it worked out.
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i had to come see you before i let -- >> with a modest budget, ava duvernay released her feature film "i will follow" in 2010. >> i was going to distribute it myself, take the money i made from that and put it into another film and said maybe i'llmaki'll make a film for a million dollars. that would be cool. >> there has been so much talk about diversity in yw think now sometimes people hear the word diversity and your eyes glaze over, there they go talking about diversity again. >> right, right. >> you said the word inclusion and i went, whoa, i never thought of it that way. what does that mean, exactly, to you. >> it is all personal preference. nothing is wrong. for diversity for me sounds medicinal, like a prescription, and i just don't know what that is. inclusion is an emotional word.
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excluded. and included. if you expand that in a larger cultural context and think of whole groups of people that have been excluded, the idea of diversity, which is a look of belonging, everybody belongs here, everybody is valuable, it makes more sense to me. inclusion is a word i embrace. >> there have been thousands of racially motivated murders in the south. >> following the success of the academy award winning film selma, duvernay maintains the focus of racial inequality in her next film. 13 is a documentary that chronicles the inequities of mass incarceration. >> an enormous burden on the black community and also violated a sense of core fairness. >> the film is set to open the new york film festival. you chose to do a documentary on the 13th amendment. >> yes, the amendment in our constitution the founders framed that says slavery is abolished, except if you committed a crime. so that clause, that criminality clause has been exploited over
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at this point, to favor one group of people in our society over another. folks have made money off punishment, profit off punishment. this film deconstructs that loophole in the constitution and shows how it got us to where we are, which is a society that is very fractured in terms of our race relations, very disconnected. >> people are very uncomfortable talking about race. a lot of people -- i don't want to hear it. >> yeah. >> you just sort of in this open. >> well, you know, it is -- it examines the time we're in, the moment we're in, where folks are declaring that black lives matter and i believe they do and i'm a proponent of that and a part of that movement as well as i can be. but really you examine where that came from, in tracks. how do you have it that people in 2016 have to declare this their own lives matter? why do they feel like they
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zblou not just for this current generation but those people's parents and those peoples parents and those peoples parents. >> duvernay is not limiting her story telling to the big screen. she teamed up with oprah and the o network to create her first television series, queen sugar. >> none of us knows a thing about running a farm. >> important to you that women be involved in the directing. >> it was fantastic. my iffirst episode of television was in an episode of ""scandal." i had known a number of women trying to get into tv. when i got the opportunity to hire, hire those women, and now all of those women have a stamp approval and they're booking -- they're all booked. women, people of color, folks need an opportunity to show how
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>> goes back to inclusion. >> goes back to inclusion. >> give me a chance. >> yeah, yeah. >> after a decade long journey from independent film-making to barrier breaking success, ava duvernay has become a brand. her influence is now reaching another generation. >> there is an ava duvernay barbie doll. when you got the call about that, i do think -- in terms of fame, i do think that's pretty cool. >> pretty cool. >> right? >> that was -- at that point i what? what's going on here? we used to play with barbies as little girls and now there is a barbie with our name on duvernay along the side. >> bravo. >> one review says "13th" is a titanic statement by a major american voice. queen sugar is the number one cable series for women. she's really on a roll right
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she really is just getting started. >> yeah. >> just getting going. >> next, we'll look at all that matters this week. you're watching "cbs this
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we end the day by congratulating two veteran cbs she has been with cbs news for 34 years and there is matt who has been with us 34 years. we wish them both the best. different studio without pat. >> great career for them. >> that does it for us. be sure to tune in tonight. as we leave you let's take a look back at all that mattered this week. have a great weekend. we have breaking news from new jersey.
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>> investigators still don't know how that fast that train was going when it pushed onto the platform. >> she has experience but it's bad experience. >> this is a man who calls women slobs and dogs and pigs. >> she doesn't have the stamina. >> we have never seen where it broke down. >> my microphone was terrible. i wonder was on purpose? >> anybody who complains it on the microphone is not having a good night. >> the world is honoring shimon peres as a visionary and fighter for peace. >> what brought you the greatest sense of satisfaction? >> olongo did not listen to officers' commands. >> you killed my brother! >> wells fargo fired more than
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>> i accept total responsibility. >> a cat five is a monster. >> he's got it. >> there is no game like it. you choose a golf ball and there you go. >> the marlins returned to the ballpark the first game since the denial of jose fernandez. >> i won the debate easily. i won cbs post did not conduct in a post-debate poll. that close! >> stand by. >> i'm a comedian, character, actor, trapped in a leading man's body. >> there you go! >> oh, wow! ? bad bad bad boy ? >> sean combs sounds different these days, doesn't he? >> i felt like i had enough of
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>> morgan freeman who undoubtedly is off playing a black muslim again. >> talking about the voice. why you? what is it about your voice? where does it come from? >> it goes bits itself, you know? your voice, everybody knows charlie rose's voice. >> welcome to our first broadcast. i'm charlie rose. >> where do you want to be at 50? >> i want b >> that is awesome! >> i'm totally surprised. that table and i have gone a long way. >> all that. >> what do the people 3450 they say tall, dark, handsome? >> that is a google icious shot. >> on "cbs this morning."
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good morning- it's 8:54, i'm preston phillips. new this morning: the union hills estates apartment complex had to be evacuated early this morning , and swat teams were called in... as suspect tied to a deadly shooting. .the shooting happened just blocks away at a q-t gas station, near union hills drive and 43rd avenue last night.police say a man was shot and killed... and illegal drugs were found inside his car.cops are still looking for the suspect this morning. right now... police are stepping up patrols, after a woman was attacked in a west valley neighborhood. it happened near jomax and lake pleasant parkway.police say the woman was hurt after a man tried to sexually assault her.right now cops don't have a good description, but
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area to give them a call. and police are looking for this man, who jumped into a backyard and exposed himself to five and seven year old girls.police say he even hugged one of them before taking off on a bike.this happened near 11th avenue and dunlap.if you recognize him... call phoenix police. for the second time in a week... body parts were found in the same south phoenix area... and police say they could be from the same person. skeletal remains were found near 24th avenue and broadway. nearby scrap yard found a severed human arm with the hand attached.none of the remains have been identified. look out drivers!more photo enforcement cameras are getting switched on in chandler. on saturday... cameras will start flashing at the intersections of alma school and queen creek roads... along with ray and rural roads. drivers caught speeding or running a red light will get a warning in the mail, but only through october 30th.after that, tickets will be issued. the new cameras bring the total to nine chandler intersections being monitored
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kylee with a look at the roads. 3 3
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thanks for watching cbs5, i'm preston phillips.have a great
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theme playing ) ( "the price is right" theme playing ) >> george: here it comes from the bob barker studio at cbs in hollywood, it's "the price is right!" alan thym, come on down! catherine marini, come on down! tranice rainey, come on down! catherine marini, come on down! tranice rainey, come on down! and arzie dennis, come on down! you are the first four contestants on "the price is right."

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