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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 27, 2016 3:12am-4:01am PDT

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1,370 migrants have died making that crossing in the mediterranean. >> seth doane in rome, thank you, seth. such desperation and tragedy. two navy f-18 fighter jets
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crashed off the north carolina coast. all four crew members bailed out and escaped with minor injuries. the coast guard reported the planes collided in midair during a training run but the navy said only that it was an in-flight mishap. in japan president obama and the other g7 leaders agreed to stand firm against china's military expansion in the south china sea. beijing told them to mind their own business. tomorrow, mr. obama visits hiroshima, a city devastated by the bomb. margaret brennan has the story of some americans unlucky enough to be there that day. >> reporter: the images are haunting. but for susan archinsky and husband tony, they're also personal. a stark reminder of the american prisoners trapped in hiroshima when america detonated the first atomic bomb. one of them was susan's uncle. >> how close were they? >> very close. >> to the center of the bomb? >> right underneath it.
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like 900 meters from the epicenter. >> reporter: the explosion ripped through the city, killing 80,000 people instantly. 12 p.o.w.s were held captive inside a police station that stood here. archinsky's uncle norman was a 19-year-old gunner whose plane had been shot down over the sea of japan nine days earlier. >> they were hit by anti-aircraft artillery and they landed in the water, smoking. >> the last anybody knew they were floating in the ocean. >> reporter: having defied the odds once, he survived the initial bomb blast along with army sergeant ralph neil. >> it is believed they were probably in a different part of the building when the bomb went off because ten of them perished instantly. >> reporter: to save themselves the two men dove into a cesspool. when they emerged the city was in ruins. whole neighborhoods gone. people lay dying in the streets. those still walking poisoned by radiation. a short time later, they were picked up by the japanese
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military where he met another american serviceman heading home. >> no one would have known they were there had the truck not come through town and they put them on the truck and they were able to tell the other p.o.w.s what happened to them. >> reporter: they died soon after from radiation sickness. >> they're victims and they should be known as victims just like everybody else. >> reporter: today the 12 p.o.w.s are remembered at the hiroshima memorial alongside the japanese victims. >> you can't go to the peace memorial park without knowing that everybody's main goal is for this to never happen again. >> reporter: the shadow of the bomb still lingers over the city. margaret brennan, cbs news, toba, japan. >> incredible story. still ahead, the sex abuse scandal at baylor university leads to a big shakeup. hogan's hero. the mystery man who helped a wrestling star win the match of his life.
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baylor university fired its head football coach today and demoted its president kenneth starr. the shakeup follows a legal review that found the baptist university mishandled several cases of sexual assault involving football players. here's anna westerner. >> reporter: the report faulted baylor for a wholly inadequate response, saying the university failed to take appropriate action to respond to reports of sexual assault reportedly committed by football players. it said two university administrators directly discouraged complainants from reporting, and in one case retaliated against someone who reported a sexual assault. the university responded today by stripping the title of president from kenneth starr, who was the one-time special prosecutor who led president
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clinton's impeachment trial involving white house intern monica lewinski. and they fired football coach art briles. briles is credited with turning around the football program. but today some are questioning, at what cost? baylor board chairman richard willis apologized during a teleconference. >> we're deeply sorrowful about these events. we were just horrified by the extent of the acts of sexual violence on our campus. >> reporter: at least six women have accused eight baylor football players of violence. >> it is not enough. >> reporter: jasmine hernandez sued baylor in march claiming after she was raped the school ignored her pleas for counseling and justice. the player who assaulted her is now serving a 20-year sentence. >> hiding these very egregious acts of crime only allows them to continue further and to continue repeatedly. >> reporter: kenneth starr remains baylor's chancellor and a tenured law professor, but charlie, baylor told reporters on that teleconference call that
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he will no longer have any operational responsibilities. coming up, a deadly shooting at a concert.
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late today, police in new york city released surveillance video of a man firing a gun inside a packed concert hall last night. the hip-hop artist t.i. had been sent to perform. four were shot, one was killed. the police say they've rafted man scene with the gun. he was among those wounded. as you may remember, hulk hogan recently won a lawsuit against a website that posted a secretly recorded second video of the pro wrestler. turns out hogan had a
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heavyweight in his corner for the courtroom match. one who was rich and motivated. here's john blackstone. >> reporter: behind the high-profile court case of hulk hogan versus the gossip website gawker was a secret. hogan, whose real name is terar balea, got nearly $10 million to pay for his legal team from silicon billionaire peter thiel. in a statement he said, "i am proud to have supported terry bollea against a bully's gross violation of privacy. gawker built its business on humiliating people for sport." thiel, founder of paypal and an early facebook investor, was targeted by gawker in a 2007 posting that outed him as gay. nick denton, gawker's founder, is unapologetic about his brand of news. >> gossip is the version of news that the authorities or the celebrities or the officials don't want people to know. it's the unauthorized version.
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>> reporter: thiel's support helped hogan win the $140 million award that could now put gawker out of business. it is also raising concern that money from thiel and others like him could silence free speech. >> it really isn't a question can someone else fund your litigation? of course they can. >> reporter: miriam smith is an expert in media and internet law at san francisco state university. >> does it make a difference that peter thiel kept his participation secret in this? >> it would be best to know who's funding the litigation. be best to know who's paying for what. >> reporter: late today both are trading jabs. gawker posted a letter saying thiel is on a decade-long scheme for revenge. thiel says he's not looking for revenge, just for a deterrent. up next, a place that sure looks like it's in a galaxy far, far away.
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the force is not all that was awakened in the most recent "star wars" movie. mark phillips is on an island that just woke up from history. >> reporter: in the movie, rae and chewbacca flew "the millennium falcon" that looked like something only a hollywood set designer could dream up. in real life, you need a boat to get here. seven lumpy miles off the southwestern tip of ireland. the island has a history that goes back to the dawn of civilization. but it's never had to cope with anything like this. rae found luke skywalker. we found bob.
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bob normally guides tourists up the more than 600 steps that climb to the top of this unesco world heritage site. >> only one way up, i guess. >> that's right. >> reporter: steps that take you past breathtaking views. along heart-stopping ledges and past the puffins to the peak where about 1,500 years ago industrious monks built a monastery that was occupied the next six centuries. >> the magical thing to me is the fact that you can look in these dark doorways today and look in at exactly what sixth century men looked at. >> reporter: sixth century men never looked at anything like this. yet that's exactly what 21st century tourists have come to do. janet moore beamed up from tampa. >> we were planning to come to ireland before even the "star wars" movie came out. and then that clinched it. >> reporter: it clinched brian and ellie summerfield from michigan. >> we thought it would be fun to come out here and pretend i was
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skywalker and she was -- what's her name? >> rae. >> yeah. >> reporter: the force, the old force, has always been strong here. but a new kind of force, some fear, may be the undoing of this place. one brief sequence in a movie may have undone 1,500 years of real history. paddy bush is a local poet. >> if you get crowds of people who simply want to visit a movie set, then skellig is no longer skellig, it's something else. >> reporter: 180 tourists all allowed each day. more may be too much for this place. sometimes the place seems too much for them. yet the draw of the real past and the imagined future keeps them coming. >> so the force is still here. >> i think the force has been here for a very long time. >> reporter: and the irish tourist board hopes the force stays with them. mark phillips, cbs news, skellig. >> that is the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues.
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for others check back with us a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm charlie rose. this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news." it's getaway day for the long memorial day weekend. aaa estimates that 38 million americans will go at least 50 miles from home over the next few days. the vast majority will travel by car. but more than 2.5 million people will be taking to the skies. and the trouble is expected to begin at the airport security gates. tens of thousands have already missed their flights this year because of the long security lines. and although the tsa is trying to address some of those problems, few of their solutions will be in place today. chris van cleave reports from reagan national. >> reporter: there is still a whole lot of concern about the lines this weekend and throughout the summer. now the tsa says there are
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making progress at reducing wait times at major airports. but to really solve this problem is going to take time, money, and more people. >> that's completely unjustifiable. we're in our own crisis right now. i stopped that. >> reporter: damage control following fury over historically long lines at airports nationwide. tens of thousands have missed flights. some were left sleeping on cots at chicago's o'hare. >> administrator, the american people are angry and frustrated -- >> reporter: the house homeland security committee grilled tsa administrator peter 97 fin jer. >> people are paying $85 to go through precheck, showing up at the airport and the precheck lane is closed. >> my goal is to open those lanes -- >> things like that shouldn't take an act of congress. >> it took an act of me saying this is the way things have to happen. >> reporter: tsa is testing this automated screening lane at atlanta airport to see if it will improve efficiency and speed up lines. >> we hope it's going to cut
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into wait times over the long run but this is not the quick fix for summer wait times. >> reporter: in the first five months of this year tsa screened 449 million travellers, up 57 million from the same period in 2015, with 5,800 fewer screeners than 2011. as the agency rushes to hire nearly 800 additional screeners by mid-june, k-9 units are being redeployed to busy airports and $34 million has been authorized for overtime ahead of the holiday weekend. >> have you done enough to address the wait times? do people need to get to airports three hours early? >> we put a lot of resources in. we're still focused on security. i think we've already seen a dramatic improvement. i would tell people to be aware there's going to be a lot of people in airports. i don't know what the right time is to get there but i think you're seeing dramatic improvement. >> reporter: the airlines are spending millions of dollars to hire private contractors to help with nonscreening activities around checkpoints, that includes pointing people to the proper lines, returning bins to the front, that sort of thing.
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later this morning executives from the airlines and the airports are going to be testifying before congress about how all of this is impacting their business. it's now a done deal. cbs news estimates that donald trump has the support of enough delegates to win the republican presidential nomination. there are still several states left to vote and he won't be the official nominee until the numbers are counted in fleefld. t cleveland. the freshman politician still has to win over the big names. house speaker paul ryan, for instance. trump is starting to make headway with big-money donors and he's vowing to win california in november. >> republicans have not won california in a presidential election since 1988. they've lost the last two by 23.5 points. but donald trump imagined running competitively in california. but his greeting in anaheim, once a republican stronghold, suggested otherwise. >> i'm going to make a heavy play for california.
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>> reporter: donald trump told jimmy kimmel california might be in play in the general election. >> no other republican candidate for years would even waste time in california in terms of trying to get -- to win the state. i think i can win it. >> reporter: earlier outside trump's rally in anaheim, protesters threw punches, burned "make america great again" hats, and smashed a trump pinata. >> the safest place in this country to be is at a trump rally. i mean it. >> reporter: inside the convention center, trump promised quick growth that would address deep-seated voter frustration. >> we're bringing jobs into our country. jobs, jobs, jobs. >> reporter: fending off protesters from the podium. >> out, out, out, out! >> reporter: protesters have been a mainstay at trump rallies going back to the fall. >> reporter: cbs news journalest debb attended nearly all trump's rallies and says the atmosphere now is noticeably different. >> the protesters are growing in number. and there has been a little bit
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more vitriol on both sides. >> reporter: paul manafort said a campaign against hillary clinton is "not a hard race" and trump will beat clinton branding her as a third term of president obama with worse ethics. trump was asked about his comments in 2008 and 2012 when he said clinton would make a great president. claiming back then he was just a businessman. >> so when they ask me about hillary, she's wonderful, everybody's wonderful. and that's the way it is. including contributions. they ask me for contributions, i give contributions. >> so you were full of [ bleep ] when you said that? >> trump was asked on kimmel if he would debate bernie sanders in california since clinton has refused. trump said he would do it, for charity. sanders tweeting in response, game on. hillary clinton's campaign remains in damage control after the state department's scathing report on her use of a personal e-mail server while she was secretary of state. the office of inspector general
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says there is no evidence she ever requested or obtained guidance or approval to use an e-mail server in her home. >> reporter: clinton says she has actually been incredibly open, handing over about 30,000 e-mails. but the report said she should have turned them over when she left the state kept in 2013, not after she was asked for them a year and a half later. and it added she shouldn't have had to turn them over at all if she had only used the department e-mail system. >> it's not an issue that is going to affect either the campaign or my presidency. >> reporter: clinton's first public comments about the critical report came in an interview with univision in los angeles. >> nothing has changed. it's the same story. just like previous secretaries of state, i used a personal e-mail. many people did. it was not at all unprecedented. >> reporter: but the state department's inspector general examining the records of secretaries of state date back
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to madeline all bright said it could only identify three cases where officials used nondepartmental e-mail systems on an exclusive basis for day-to-day operations. clinton, colin powell, and a former ambassador to kenya. the department's guidelines were that personal accounts should only be used in exceptional circumstances and the report said clinton's use of private e-mail is not an appropriate method of preserving a federal record. >> everything i did was permitted. there was no law. there was no regulation. >> reporter: the report contradicted that assertion saying that diplomatic security officials did not and would not approve her exclusive reliance on a personal e-mail account because of the security risks in doing so. state department staffers who did raise concerns about instructed never to speak of the secretary's personal e-mail system again. >> she had a little bad news today. >> reporter: in anaheim, donald trump was quick to capitalize.
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insider trading is one of the hardest crimes to detect. it happens in whispers and phone calls. behind closed doors. one trader who did get caught turned into a government witness. she helped bring down one of the biggest hedge funds in the world. the story for "60 minutes." >> you are pushed and pushed to get this information. you know, you get the high-fives after the trade. i was sent flowers after one of the trades. a big thank you, a huge bouquet, thank you. >> sounds like you guys are in a bubble trading all this information while we sit and look at it and say, that's breaking the law. >> absolutely, we were breaking the law. >> reporter: breaking the law by
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obtaining confidential information from friends in silicon valley connected to google and other tech companies. in two years, rumi kahn made $1.5 million from illegal trades alone. her friends and associates made an additional $25 million off her tips, investigators found. it was easy money. >> just like, if you are taking an exam tomorrow and somebody hands you what's going to be on the test, it's easy to get an a-plus. >> reporter: rumi kahn shared her tips with self-made billionaire raj who built one of the biggest hedge funds in the world, the $7 billion galleon group. federal authorities say he made more than $72 million from illegal tips from rumi kahn and other sources. the two met back in the 1990s when she was working at intel as a product marketer and had access to proprietary company information. raj tapped her for the inside
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information so he could trade on it. >> then he started asking me about, how is business? and i used to have access to intel's top customer micro processor bookings. i started giving him this information. >> so you started feeding him inside information from intel? >> absolutely, absolutely. >> reporter: rumi kahn was so brazen she used intel's fax machine to send him confidential data about product demand. she says raj referred to inside information as "the edge." she was such a good inside source, she said he offered her money to stay at intel. >> i'll give you 100k just to stay there. i don't remember the number he offered but he did offer me money to just stay there and keep giving him information. and i said, there's no way. >> reporter: rumi khan came to the united states from delhi, india, on a scholarship at age 23. she earned three graduate
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degrees before joining intel. but she longed for the action of wall street and set out to build her own fortune. at the height of her success, she says she was worth $50 million. kahn moved into this $10 million gated estate in the heart of silicon valley. she was living the life she wanted where money was no object. >> jewelry, paintings, anything that you can think of. >> you had it all? >> we had it all, yes. >> the high life? >> absolutely. >> the sort of life we see in the movies with the hedge fund investors. >> probably. probably. >> reporter: one purchase from that time still makes her light up. >> the 17 carat famous diamond ring. >> the famous diamond ring cost how much? >> i think $1.7 million. >> reporter: she explained to us just how the biggest money could be made. when the predictions of wall street were at odds with the inside information.
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>> so the most money you make is when your analysis is totally and opposite to what your edge is telling you. >> the inside information? >> if you have a really great source. >> reporter: rumi kahn had a really good source who knew what was going on inside google. a friend who worked for a firm that prepared google's press releases and who told her the company' quarterly income would be lower than expected. >> she told me they were going to miss the quarter. >> you made money off it? >> i did, i made $500,000. >> reporter: she shared the information with galleon chief raj who made $8 million betting against google just before the price dropped. >> and you're making good money but he's making far more. what's your motivation? >> well, i had access to raj. so i had that access to the
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billionaire biggest hedge fund on wall street. and that was worth a lot to me. >> reporter: her relationship with the hedge fund titan would be worth a lot to the government too. rumi kahn didn't know the securities and exchange commission, the s.e.c., had launched an investigation into raj. former s.e.c. attorney andrew michaelson was tracking his texts and trades. >> we did see mr. raj's instant messages. communications where he would say, amd's revenues are going to be "x." before amd itself announced them. and they were accurate. mr. raj's predictions were accurate. >> reporter: michaelson joined the s.e.c. in 2006 and this was one of his first cases. he remembers combing through stacks and stacks of galleon's trading and phone records, instant messages, and e-mails. >> how many documents are we talking about? >> hundreds of thousands. >> hundreds of thousands?
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>> sometimes you'd have to sit there with a ruler to make sure you're getting exactly who is talking, what phone number's calling which phone number at what time. >> so you're connecting the dots? >> we're connecting the dots. then the next dot to connect is where's raj getting this information? >> reporter: finally, after six months of searching, they found the needle in the haystack in a single careless instant message from rumi kahn. >> i texted him and i said, don't buy polycom. in a text message. and then it says, till i took the guidance. >> you're saying, don't do anything until -- >> until i get my information. >> until i call my inside guy and get this inside information? >> right. >> reporter: it was the piece of evidence fbi special agent b.j.kang thought he could use to turn rumi kahn into an informant
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against raj. >> she was an insider, she knew all the players, she worked for galleon, she knew raj. >> reporter: he paid a visit in november 2007. >> two people knocked on my door and flashed their badge. and my heart sank because i just was like, oh my god. >> she knew we were dead serious. she knew why we were there. she knew this wasn't going to go away. >> reporter: kang showed her the polycom message she had sent to raj. >> when they showed me this message, i knew this was over. it was very easy for them to connect me to the executive at polycom. >> reporter: she knew she had to cooperate. starting in late 2007, she began to educate the feds on the hidden world of some of wall street's biggest players. >> we didn't have a very good understanding of what the hedge funds were doing. >> you didn't understand completely what you had? >> no, absolutely not. she kind of drew out the roadmap for us to say, this is what they're doing. this is how they're doing it.
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mark philips did too. when rae and chewbacca flew "the millennium falcon" to this rock in the waters, they weren't flying to a fictional place. skellig michael is the real thing. if you don't have a spaceship you need a boat to cross the miles of lumpy ocean off the southwest tip of ireland. also you get hugh and joe instead of rae and the wookiee. when you land you get bob. >> nice to see you. >> welcome to skellig. >> reporter: the tourist guy. >> like nowhere i've ever been. >> reporter: bob knows all about a place so special it's been declared a unesco world heritage site. not just for its spectacular beauty. and its enchanting wildlife.
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but because somewhere around the sixth century a.d., a small group of adventurous devout christian monks established a monastery here. and generations of monks stayed for at least 600 years. the monks' beehive huts and chapel and graveyard have remained essentially as they were. four, five, six, seven, eight. does the 600 count these? >> reporter: to visit these wonders you have to climb. >> yep, here we go. i'm not even going to count. >> reporter: more than 600 steps that the monks carved into the cliff face. by step 400 you can hear your heartbeat. when rae came here she wasn't interested in the sights. she came on a mission. we came because rae came. and to see what "star wars" has done to the place. by the magic of the movies, there's no "millennium falcon" now. rae came to find luke skywalker.
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it was a make-believe encounter that has had real consequences. luke skywalker may have thought skellig michael was a good place to come and hide, but he brought the new force with him and others think that might not be good for the place. where skywalker has come, others have followed. no spaceship but lots of little ships have brought an ever-increasing stream of tourists to the island. a bargain at 60 euros, about $67 a pop. they've been drawn certainly by its enduring charms. but also by its new hollywood notoriety. janet moore came all the way from tampa. >> we were planning to come to ireland before even the "star wars" movie came out. then that clinched it. >> reporter: and that also clinched it for brian and ellie summerfield from michigan. >> we thought it would be fun to come out here and pretend that i was luke sky walker and she was -- what's her name again this. >> rae. >> yeah. >> reporter: even if the visit
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can be a challenge for some, two people, both americans, have fallen off these steps and died here. but it's not just the numbers that are worrying. it's the fear that skellig michael, a special place for its history, is being confused with something else. >> you think there's been some compromise now, that people are coming to say, oh, that's not where a dozen monks lived 1,000 years ago, that's where luke skywalker landed "the millennium falcon"? >> the monks were here 1,300 years ago and people still know about them. i don't know how long people will know about "star wars" but they may know about it for a very long time. >> reporter: especially since scenes they've already filmed on the island feature in the next "star wars" movie too. those who brave the trip here, like fran politi from san francisco, hope all this fame doesn't change the place. >> you know, not too many railings. nowhere to buy ice cream. no bathrooms. that's good.
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>> if it's good enough for luke, it's good enough for you? ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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the summer olympics in brazil begin august 5th. some of america's top athletes are still not sure they're going to attend. ben tracy reports from the u.s. olympic training center in colorado springs. >> there are growing concerns. you have everything from crime to polluted water where some of these competitions will take place. then of course there is the zika virus. some olympic hopefuls are still fighting for a spot on team usa. but at the u.s. olympic training center, there is no shortage of excitement or confidence. >> it's amazing feeling that we're going together to the olympics. ready to kill it. >> reporter: this marathon runner is training in a room that simulates the low-altitude and high-temperature environment
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of reek i don't. >> very focused. >> reporter: alan ashley is chief of sport performance for the u.s. olympic committee. he knows the weather in rio is not the biggest problem. >> the water in rio where some of the athletes will be has been called the equivalent of raw sewage. how concerned are you? >> while it is something that's always on our mind and we're making sure we do everything we can to keep our team safe and healthy, i have to say the athletes are fired bun competing down there. >> reporter: nobody here wants to say a bad word about rio. even when it comes to the zika virus. which we now know can cause severe birth defect personally, are you at all concerned? >> i'm not. >> not? >> no. >> reporter: but other athletes aren't so sure. members of the u.s. women's soccer team express concern about the virus. irish golfer rory mcilroy told the bbc this week there is a chance he may skip the games. there are also concerns in brazil which is in the midst of its worst recession since the
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1930s. a former brazilian soccer star says violence in rio has gotten so bad, tourists should just stay home. rio's secretary of security is calling on the military to help patrol the streets. meanwhile, brazil's president is facing an impeachment trial. the olympic venues are mostly finished and ticket sales are picking up. but brazilian officials are now investigating allegations of corruption. and then there's this. a section of the new waterfront bike path, built to showcase the lasting legacy of the games, recently collapsed, killing two people. can you look at an athlete and say they have nothing to worry about? >> no one can ever say you can protect against everything. instead, what you want to do is make sure they have all the information so that they as individuals can make decisions. >> that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a
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little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york welcome to the "cbs morning news." president obama becomes the first u.s. president to visit history in hiroshima. president obama is the first president to visit since 1945. donald trump is looking to his legacy. >> i want a statue in washington, d.c. maybe we share it with jefferson

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