tv CBS Weekend News CBS October 1, 2016 5:30pm-6:00pm MST
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captioning sponsored by cbs >> ninan: donald trump goes there. threatening "nastier" attacks on hillary clinton targeting bill clinton's infidelity. also tonight, protests in the suburbs of los angeles diego, following of death of two black men at the hands of police. the u.s. government gives up control of the so-called internet address book. what does it mean for you? and we remember norma bauerschmidt. she deified cancer with an inspirational road trip across america. >> reporter: did you think you'd be having some much fun at 90? >> no, no. ( laughter )
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>> ninan: good evening. i'm reena ninan with the the western edition of the broadcast. with the election nearly five weeks away, donald trump is opening a new line of attack on hillary clinton, targeting president bill clinton's past infidelity. trump tells the "new york times" clinton is "nasty" but that he can be even nastier. here's errol barnett. >> reporter: following a slew of bad postdebate press, donald trump has been on the attack. in an interview with the "new york times," trump "hillary clinton was married to the single greatest abuser of women in the history of politics," and is "an enabler." >> we're all here together. we're going to take our country back. >> reporter: he also blamed the media. >> the news anchors and the corners and the lobbyists who are used to getting their way are trying to do everything they can to help crooked hillary clinton. >> reporter: during the first presidential debate, trump struggled to respond to clinton
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to describe former miss universe alicia machado. >> he called this woman "miss piggy." then he called her "miss housekeeping "because she was latina. >> reporter: early friday morning trump responded with a series of tweets, encouraging his 12 million followers to check out machado's sex tape. ( cheers ) late that day, buzzfeed released an article claiming that in 2000, trump appeared in a >> we'll see what happens. >> reporter: the clinton camp responded with this: >> reporter: now, trump holds a rally tonight in the battleground state of pennsylvania. clinton heads to north carolina tomorrow. the vice presidential candidates, senator tim kaine and governor mike pence, are preparing for tuesday's debate.
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university in farmville, virginia. and it will be moderateed by our own elaine quijano. reena. >> ninan: and we will be watching. errol barnett in washington, thanks. well, there are protests in the suburbs of los angeles and san diego this weekend following the deaths of two black men at the hands of police. carter evans has the story. >> we are going to fight like one people! >> reporter: the family of alfred olango held a rally with civil rights leaders in el cajon one day after police released deadly confrontation with officers. cell phone video shows olango pulling an object from his pocket and assuming what investigators call "a shooting stance." one officer fired his gun, the other fired a taser. it turns out, olango was holding an electronic cigarette device like this one. >> you killed my brother! >> reporter: that's his sister in the video. she says she called 911 to get help for her brother who was
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protesters were also out in pasadena friday night after the death of another african american man while in police custody hours earlier. reginald thomas died after a strug wepolice where officers tasered him but no guns were fired. investigators later released this surveillance video, along with a 911 call. >> does he have a knife on him? >> yes. >> is he on drugs or anything? >> yes. >> what kind of drugs? i don't know. he's high though, i can tel that. >> reporter: both in pasadena and in el cajon, there are concerns about mental illness and police training. >> i wanted help and you guys killed him. i told you guys. >> reporter: authorities in both cities say the decision to release video and audio evidence was in answer to the public outcry. el cajon police chief jeff davis: >> we hope any demonstration will remain peaceful. that was the intention of releasing this video. >> reporter: neither the can el cajon police nor pasadena
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to officers. but, reena, both departments plan to. >> ninan: carter evans in los angeles. tragic news from sowk south carolina, where a six-year-old boy died from injuries he suffered in a school shooting. jacob hall had been fighting for his life sinced with. another student and a teacher were wounded when police say a 14-year-old employ opened fire on a playground. that 14-year-old is accused of killing his father before driving to the school. investigatorsav determined a motive. the investigation continues into thursday's deadly train accident in hoboken, new jersey, across the hudson river from new york city. a woman on the platform was killed when the commuter train smashed through a concrete wall. more than 100 were injured. transportation correspondent kris van cleave has the latest. >> reporter: a source familiar with the investigation tells cbs news after months of concern about a leadership vacuum at new jersey transit, federal regulators launched a deep audit of the agency's operations in june.
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violations. regulators were preparing to implement additional scrutiny and enforcement measures prior to thursday's accident. new jersey transit did not sphond our request for comment. late saturday, the train's engineer, can thomas gallagher, ducked into the garage at his new jersey home after meeting with investigators. the n.t.s.b. did not release details from that interview. mark rosenker is the former chair of the n.t.s.b. >> he'll tell us if he was attempting to work the throttle, if he was attempting to brake. he will tell us tried to put the emergency brake on. he'll tell us if he saw signals. he will tell us exactly what happened in that cab. >> reporter: work to remove debris and possible asbestos contamination at the hoboken station crash site continued, keeping investigators from the crucial data recorder and front-facing camera in the first car. n.t.s.b. vice chair bella dinh-zarr: >> as soon as the site is safe, the n.t.s.b. will retrieve the other event recorder from the
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investigators will use that information to validate speed and get that information about the the train. >> reporter: the second data recorder removed from the rear of the train could not be accessed from the field and has been sent to the manufacturer. investigators found no signs of signal or track issues, and continue to collect video from the scene, including from other trains at the station during the crash. it's not only the n.t.s.b. waiting for full access to the train station. there are thousands of commuters that use it to get t are left wondering what the monday morning commute will look like. reena. >> ninan: thanks so much, kris. well, forecasters are tracking hurricane matthew as it roars across the caribbean. it hit the northern tip of south america saturday, killing at least one person in colombia. matthew has been downgraded to a category 4 hurricane, but it's still a devastating storm with winds around 145 miles per hour. jamaica, haiti, and cuba are in the path.
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this weekend, the u.s. government gave up control of the so-called internet address book. tony dokoupil explains what that is and how it might impact the internet. >> reporter: no one owns the internet, but for nearly 20 years, the u.s. government has controlled the official list of every web site address. as of today, the government's control is no more. the job now belongs solely to icann, a nonprofit based in los angeles and advised by a global committee that includes russia, and iran. when you look up a web site, your computer looks for the information on another machine, like one of these. and it uses a unique identifying number, a bit like a home address, for the internet. if icann delete an address, it could, in effect, delete a web site, a threat that caught the eye of texas senator ted cruz. >> russia, china, and iran don't have a first amendment. they don't protect free speech,
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internet. icann could do the same thing, putting foreign countries in charge of what you can say online. >> reporter: cruz launched the countdown to the day america "gives away the internet." the donald trump campaign joined in, hoping to "save the internet." but in a statement, icann's board care, stephen crocker, praised his group's inclusion of all voices and said the fear is misplaced. tech writer ingrid burrington is an expert on the infrastructure of the internet, and she agrees. >> ted cruz is under the internet to begin with, and we never really did. >> reporter: so bottom line, average internet user should have no worries about this transition. >> tomorrow morning, your internet's going to keep working the same way it has. >> reporter: tony dokoupil, cbs news, new york. >> ninan: syrian and russian warplanes are continuing their brutal assault on syria's largest city, aleppo. earlier today, bombs hit a hospital in a neighborhood held by rebels.
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largest hospital, came under fire for the second time in days. shellings and barrel bombs have pounded the city for nearly to weeks. the russian-backed syrian army claims they're targeting isis militants that control much of the area, but international observers call it a campaign of terror to force civilians to flee. small businesses, like this bakery, were leveled, just as fresh bread was homes were blasted with families inside. yesterday, rescue workers pulled this unconscious baby from the rubble of nearby idlib, a sign of life was overwhelming. but without working hospitals, doctors say the fate of those rescued is unclear. at least four children died this week because hospital beds were full. the humanitarian aid group
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and its russian allies halt the indiscriminate bombing. reena, the u.n. security council is accusing russia of war crimes. >> ninan: jonathan vigliotti in london. well, tonight, we are remembering a woman from michigan named power. norma made headlines around the world last week, when she set out on an inspirational road trip. she passed away friday at the age of 91. marlie hall has her remarkable story. >> want to pop a wheelie f them, mom? >> sure, why not. ( laughter ) >> reporter: norma jean bauerschmidt taught us it's never too late to live life to the fullest. at 90 years old, her husband of 67 years died, and she was diagnosed with uterine cancer. so she decided to hit the road and leave surgery, chemo, and grief behind. along with her son, tim, and his wife, ramie, norma toured the can country's most famous sites in a motor home for more than a
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news' david begnaud last spring. >> they've given me a new lease on life, i should say. >> reporter: do you think you'll live the rest of your life on the road? >> yes, i probably will. >> reporter: and she did. >> did you think you'd be having some much fun at 19? >> no, no. >> reporter: her final stop was san juan island off the coast of washington. norma's passing was announced last night with a post to the popular facebook page that shared her adventures with t this quote, from a 13th century poet said it best, "life is a balance between holding on and letting go." and her family writes, "today, we are letting." during that year on the road, mis norma, as her family calls her traveled near 13,000 miles through 32 states. >> ninan: how many people followed her journey. >> the family documented her journey on her facebook paej
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>> ninan: it was another tough week for top executives at wells fargo. the bank c.e.o. was grilled again on capitolil allegations wells fargo opened millions of accounts without customers' permissions in order to reach aggressive sales targets. as omar villafranca reports, this may be a signave larger problem in the banking industry. >> i accept full responsibility for all unethical sales practices in our retail banking business. >> reporter: john stumpf was contrite last week as lawmakers quizzed him on wells fargo's hyperaggressive sales tactics. oscar garza was a personal banker for a chase bank outside
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aren't aren't just a problem at wells fargo. >> deceptive sales trade practices is across the industry. it's systemic. it is not specific to any branch. >> reporter: garza says he made under $12 an hour, and that the only way to make extra cash was to meet certain sales goals set by managers, even if that meant signing up customers for financial tools they didn't want. were they sales goals or were they quotas? did they have to be met? >> they were quotas. they had to be met.an >> reporter: what were the consequences? >> terminations. >> reporter: he claimed a manager at his bank was aware employees used question i.d.s to open accounts. >> never a direct order, but there was definitely "i'm going to turn a blind eye. you do what you need to do to meet that quota." >> reporter: a spokeswoman for chase bank disputed some of garza's claims telling cbs news, "we don't have form at quotas
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termination. any manager who would encourage illegal activity and create a negative culture would be terminated." >> they have to sell as much as they can at all costs. >> judy conti works at the national employment law project, which compiled a report on aggressive bank sales tactics. it cited bankers from a variety of institution wgz similar stories saelg managers pushed workers to meet almost impossible goals and to ignore it when consumers say no. omar villafranca, cbs dallas. >> ninan: the cbs weekend news will be back in a moment with important information about your
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>> ninan: well, if you're planning to travel out of the country in the near future we have important information about your passport. here's danielle nottingham. >> reporter: clark and jill soderlund spent a year planning a european vacation, including a stop in france to see the monaco grand prix. >> it's sort of a bucket list thing. >> reporter: on the day of the
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outside the airport, but at check-in, everything changed. >> get up to the gate agent, and she just looks at our passport, starts shaking hear head. >> reporter: the problem-- the they were traveling in late may and returning the first week of june. their passports weren't expiring until late august, but many countries in europe require passports to be valid up to six months beyond your returned date, a shock to them. >> it wa the gut. >> let's say you get in an accident and all of a sudden you're in a hospital for a few months. you know, they tonight want to deal with someone who doesn't have a valid passport. >> reporter: getting a passport renewed can take eight days. the solderlunds got lucky. they went to their local passport agency and were able to get a new one in just a few hours. the airline got them on a plane to france the next morning, in
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>> ninan: police in italy say a baffling mystery surrounding two masterpieces by the artist vincent van gogh has now been solved. the discovery is cause for celebration in the arthur world. here again marlie hall. >> reporter: tw vincent van gogh masterpieces were proudly unveiled friday in naples. they vanished from a museum in amsterdam more than a decade ago. >> two people broke into our museum via the roof and through the windows and it happened very, very quickly. >> reporter: italian police cracking the case 14 years later taised theft to the mafia and a farmhouse hiding plaes outside naples. >> the condition of the paintings is overall rather
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scape" damage has suffered a part of the paint layer has been broken off. >> reporter: van gogh painted "seascape at scheveningen," and "congregation leaving the reformed church" in the 1880s. the art work is estimated to be worth $100 million. museum officials say van gogh's paintings will soon be back on the walls where they belong. marlie hall, cbs news. >> ninan: when we return, a california building billionaire lays out his vision for l
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. >> ninan: we close tonight with one man's vision of life on mars. elon musk, the california billionaire behind tesla and spacex, has unveiled plans to turn the planet next door into a tourist attraction. here again, carter evans. >> reporter: this is what the first manned mission to mars could look like in the universe
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>> what we're trying to achieve here is make mars seem possible. >> reporter: the founder of tesla and spacex says it could happen in about a decade. ambitious for a space company that has yet to launch a manned mission at all. the spaceships would carry at least 100 passengers, each paying around $200,000. >> i think the first journey to mars is going to be really very dangerous. risk of fatality will be high. >> reporter: this month's explosion of a spacex rocket is a reminder of the significant consequences of failure. >> he's lost two falcon 9 rockets in the lt 15 months, and there's a sense that the aerospace community would like to see him master that before talking about sending people to mars. a lot of the cost estimates that he made today are based on reusable launch technology. but they haven't been able to refly those rockets. >> reporter: it could cost
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get the first ship off the ground. >> even if the ultimate goal of this doesn't pan out, the products that come out of this trying to attempt this will push us along in a direction that will benefit everybody. >> reporter: musk is hoping for a public-private partnership to pay for the project. in the meantime, he's prepared to put his own money where his mouth is. >> i really don't have any other motivation except to be able to make the biggest contribution i can to making life multiplanetary. >> reporter: carter evans, los angeles. >> pelley: he makes it seem like it's not mission impossible there. that's the "cbs weekend news" for this saturday. later on cbs, "48 hours." the news continues now on our 24-hour digital network cbsn at cbsnews.com. i'm reena ninan in new york. we leave you with a look at fireworks over hong kong's victoria harbor in celebration of china's national day. good night
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captio o'halleran: i had some really tough cases as a police detective. but the problem in washington is as clear as day -- we can't trust our politicians to work for us. tom o'halleran has a plan to hold the politicians accountable -- no pay for congress if they don't pass a budget, reduce the influence of big money and special interests, and no more first-class travel paid for by taxpayers. i'm tom o'halleran, and i approve this message
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. this is cbs 5 news. right now at 6:00, a brazen gunman on the loose in the valley. his latest violent act caught on-camera. >> and a third choice comes to the valley. why gary johnson told arizonans he should be in but first tonight dozens of homes evacuated after a gas leak and the cause still under investigation right now. >> cbs 4 vescaw port angeles has jessica parson following this story. >> reporter: they are out of her homes tonight and they could be out of their homes for another two hours. take a look at the scene behind me and i have to tell you, you can really start smelling the gas out here.
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