tv CBS Overnight News CBS July 13, 2016 3:12am-4:01am PDT
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>> billy: you got to be kidding me. was i not clear with myself here? and, you, what part of "get out of my house" do you not understand? >> cane: uh, you mean jill's house. >> billy: no, jill signed this house over to me. >> cane: with the addendum. >> billy: screw the addendum. >> cane: all right, billy, you need to relax, okay? she's paid this gentleman in full. >> billy: i'll pay him twice as much to leave. >> cane: just let him do this job, billy. >> billy: there's no job to be done, cane, okay? because the house is fine. jill's got it in her head that she needs to try and control me down to the paint on the walls, all right? she needs to back off because she's screwed with me enough already. >> cane: al, al, could you please take the rest of the day off? i appreciate it. thanks. okay, now, you and i both know this has nothing to do with the paint, so what is going on here?
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>> billy: i can't stay away from you! do you understand that? >> phyllis: why do you think i came back here? i don't want you to stay away. >> jack: phyllis? >> phyllis: oh, i didn't expect you to be back so soon. >> jack: my meeting got canceled. not entirely a waste. it was a reminder to keep my own priorities straight. there are people for whom their wedding vows are just words. >> phyllis: where does this come from? >> jack: it doesn't matter. what matters is, i'm through with my work and i get to spend time with my lovely wife, and i don't want to wait till dinner. let's have lunch. we can make a whole afternoon of it. what do you say? >> phyllis: no. what do you say? >> phyllis: no. i can't. looktry align probiotic.our digestive system? what do you say? >> phyllis: no. i can't.
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>> dr. neville: what happened? >> devon: she came down from her room and said she wasn't feeling well, and then she collapsed in my arms. >> neil: yeah, she said something about, uh, jack not believing her. >> ashley: well, the reason that hilary doesn't "feel well" is because jack confronted her about her latest test results, which are showing she's improving dramatically. >> dr. neville: the revamped drug is working. she's getting better. >> devon: so this is all an act? let me guess. she's fine.
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>> there must have been a mistake at the lab. mrs. hamilton's suffering a serious and dramatic decline. >> summer: this cannot be happening. "according to an oil worker at the site of newman's operation in newfoundland, 'all the newmans give us are empty promises and lies. they care about profits, not worker safety.'" >> luca: that is not good. >> summer: i-i thought that your reporter friend was gonna give us a chance to get in front of this. >> luca: no, we lost that opportunity when victoria decided to cover and try to buy time. >> summer: [ sighs ] you were right. we should have owned the problem and addressed their concerns. >> luca: i'm sorry, summer, but it's playing out exactly as i was afraid it would. >> victoria: i don't want to go back. >> travis: don't. >> victoria: yeah. i can't just hide out here. >> travis: i'm not talking about hiding out. i'm talking about a different kind of life. one where you're not forced to give us pieces of your soul on a daily basis, where you used to
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be happy and alive. not begin every day with stress and lies. >> victoria: you make it sound so easy. >> travis: it is. i turned my back on that life, and i've never regretted it. you can, too. >> victoria: it's a beautiful dream. >> travis: i mean it. let's go away together. >> victoria: [ chuckles ] >> billy: everything's fine, all right? this is mom driving me crazy. >> cane: all right, look, maybe you're right, okay? maybe it's just jill grieving katherine. and she thinks if she can take the place back the way it used to be, then everything's gonna be okay. >> billy: a shrine of love built on cat fights? she needs to move on. she needs to live in the present. >> cane: mate, she is worried about you. >> billy: oh, she's worried about me? >> cane: yeah. >> billy: right, she's worried about me now. where was she when i actually wanted her to give a damn? >> cane: okay, she loves you, and she's worried you're gonna go off the rails again. that's all this is. >> billy: and she cares what color the walls are when i do that? did she send you, cane? is this some kind of mini
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intervention? >> cane: uh, no, maybe she's worried you're gonna punch the painter or something, huh? >> billy: right, and she's not worried that i'm gonna punch you? >> cane: uh, i'm on your side, okay? your mom thinks she's starting to see signs that you're going back to the old billy, okay, and she knows when you do that, you hurt yourself and you start to hurt everybody else around you, and she just -- she doesn't want to see that happen. >> billy: well, she doesn't have to worry about that now. >> phyllis: i'm not sure i can do dinner, either. >> jack: why not? are you really that busy? >> phyllis: no, it's not work. >> jack: what is it? are you not feeling well? >> phyllis: no, i'm fine. >> jack: you're not fine. you're not fine. what's going on? >> phyllis: there's something i need to tell you. >> next on "the young and the restless"... >> victor: my son, i got bad news for you. you've run out of options.
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folks who share pass words for netflix can relax. hastings said, we love people sharing netflix. today, the fbi says it is no longer hunting the mysterious hijacker named d.b. cooper, with the leads all drying up. back in 1971 he hijacked a northwest orient airline, then over washington state he jumped out wearing a business suit, a parachu parachute, and a bag with $200,000. some of the money was found but he never was. and there was a development in a long-running mystery. who killed the person. for the first time, they are replacing one of the suspects. mrs. white is out, dr. orchid is in. she is a biologist with a phd in
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wait for labor to begin on its own. a healthy baby is worth the wait. ♪ travel is part of the american way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings. [ cheering ] everyone plays a role in keeping our community safe. whether you're traveling for business or pleasure, be aware of your surroundings. if you see something suspicious, say something to local authorities.
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we end tonight with one of the more moving moments in the president's remarks at the memorial service this dallas. he told the story of a woman would had taken her sons to the demonstration on thursday and was wounded by the gunman. >> the police helped shetamia taylor as she was shot trying to shield her four sons. she said she wanted her boys to join her to protest the incidents of black men being killed. she also said to the dallas pd, thank you for being heroes. and today, her 12-year-old son wants to be a cop when he grows up. that is the america i know. >> and that is the overnight
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this is the "cbs overnight news". and welcome to the overnight news, i'm don dahler. president obama traveled to dallas for a scene that is becoming all too familiar during his presidency. conso consoler-in-chief to the families of the five slain officers. praising the officers but honoring the two men who were shot recently. we must reject despair, the president said, we are not as divided as we seem. >> we wonder if an african-american community that
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feels unfairly targeted by police and police departments who feel unfairly maligned for doing their jobs, it's hard to think that the center will hold, and things may not get worse. and anyone, who paints all police as biassed or bigots, we undermine those officers we depend on for our safety when study after study shows that whites and people of color experience the criminal justice differently. so that if you're black, you're more likely to be pulled over or searched or arrested. we cannot simply turn away and dismiss those in peaceful protests as troublemakers or paranoid. but even those who dislike the phrase "black lives matter," surely we should be able to hear
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the pain of alton sterling's family. just as we should hear the students and co-workers describe their affection for philando castile as a gentle soul. as a society we choose to under-invest in decent schools. we allow poverty to fester so that entire neighborhoods offer no prospect for gainful employment. we refuse to fund drug treatment and mental health programs. we flood communities with so many guns that it is easier for a teenager to buy a glock than get his hands on a computer or even a book. and then we tell the police, you're a social worker. you're the parent.
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you're the teacher. you're the drug counsellor. we tell them to keep those neighborhoods in check at all costs. and do so without causing any political blow back or inconvenience. don't make a mistake that might disturb our own peace of mind. and then we seem surprised when the tensions boil over. >> manuel bojorquez is for dallas. >> oh, say can you see ♪ ♪ by the dawn's early light ♪ ♪ >> reporter: there were five empty seats at the memorial, each holding an american flag representing the officers who were killed. dallas mayor, mike rawlings. >> we realize that our pain is your pain. you want to do what we want to do. honor the lives of these five
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officers. lorne ahrens, michael smith, brent thompson, patrick zamarippa. >> he praised chief brown in the wake of the tragedy. >> he represents not only dallas but police officers, police chiefs, this higher calling across the united states of america. >> chief brown, known for never being at a loss for words today decided to use lyrics from a stevie wonder song to honor the officers. >> we all know sometimes life's hate and troubles can make you wish you were born in another time and place. but you can bet your life times and twice as double that god knew exactly where he wanted you
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to be placed. >> the theme of the service was unity, president george w. bush, who lives in dallas, only a mile from where the attack happened directly addressed the families of the fallen. >> your loss is unfair, we cannot explain it. we can stand beside you and share your grief. and we can pray that god will comfort you with a hope deeper than sorrow and stronger than death. >> he also acknowledged their sacrifice. >> but they went where duty called. they defended us. even to the end. they finished well. we will not forget what they did for us. >> president obama met privately with families of the fallen police officers after the service. those families will now begin the process of burying their loved ones. the first two funerals are on wednesday. manuel bojorquez, cbs news, dallas. the dallas police were not
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the only victims of the deadly ambush. two civilians were also wounded in the attack. mia taylor was shot in the leg then rushed to shield her young son from the gunfire. gayle king spoke to taylor and four of her sons about that horrible moment. >> what does it feel like, being shot? away does it feel like? >> i want to say like someone just jabbed you with a needle. like a real sharp sting. >> you knew it was a bullet wound? >> oh, yeah, because it was hot. >> caused you to fall? >> i didn't fall, but kind of buckled. i was like oh, my gosh, i got hit. andrew turned around then and starts to grab at me. i'm already shot so i grab him. >> so at that point you're worried now about protecting andrew. >> absolutely. >> so i looked for my mom. and when i looked for my mom,
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she simultaneously grabs me and lays right on top of me. all that was exposed was my head. >> you said you were scared and just did what? >> i basically sat there and held my breath. i didn't know what was going on. i was shocked. never would have thought something like that would have ever happened to me, my mom or my brothers. >> it felt like a couple of minutes. it could have been less, just a barrage of police officers came up. one of them asked if anybody was hit. i was saying yes, in a real low tone and shaking my head -- >> because you didn't want andrew -- >> i did not want my son to know i got shot. >> and was that the officer you saw get shot? >> the one i saw was actually against the wall. i saw him get shot. >> and when you saw that, what did you think? >> i started prying, i did not stop praying. >> the officers put themselves in harm's way, didn't they?
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one month after the primaries ended and less than two weeks after the national convention in philadelphia, the democratic party is finally united. hillary clinton and bernie sanders took to the stage together at a high school gym in portsmouth, new hampshire. over the past season sanders won 13 states and collected over a million votes. he also spent 13 months attacking hillary clinton as unfit for the white house. but with the campaign on the horizon, sanders was singing a different tune. >> secretary clinton goes into the convention with 389 more pledged delegates than we have.
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i have come here today not to talk about the past. but to focus on the future. that future will be shaped more by what happens on november 8th in voting booths across our nation than by any other event in the world. i have come here to make it as clear as possible. as to why i am endorsing hillary clinton. and why she must become our next president. it is no secret that hillary clinton and i disagree on a number of issues. that is what this campaign has
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been about. that is what democracy is about. but i am happy to tell you that at the democratic platform committee which ended sunday night in orlando there was a significant coming together between the two campaigns. and we produced. we produced, by far, the most progressive platform in the history of the democratic party. our job now is to see that platform implemented by a democratically controlled
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senate. a democratically controlled house. and a hillary clinton presidency. >> i have to say it is such a great privilege to be here with senator sanders. being here with him in new hampshire, i can't help but reflect how much more enjoyable this election is going to be now that we are on the same side. i am confident and optimistic about our future, particularly when it comes to young people. i think america's best years are still ahead of us. so join with us. let's make this happen together and win the election! thank you very much!
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i'd wash them and it'd be back before i even got to class. then, i found tide odor defense. it gets out and keeps out... ...the yoga aroma, wash after wash. eliminate odors, with new tide odor defense. if it's got to be clean, it's got to be tide. it's been nearly two years now since superstar actor and comedian robin williams took his own life. for his fans he lives on in his
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movies. now, his life is chronicled in movies. >> reporter: the images of his performance on stage are almost like those of a humming bird captured in flight. mania and mayhem, frozen in time. in 1986, robin williams was a man who it seemed could do everything but stop. arthur grace was a photographer assigned to cover him for "newsweek" magazine, and not long after grace's cover hit the news stands robin williams asked him to stick around and basically help document his life. >> we just hit it off, got along well together and respected each other. >> if you could boil it down, what do you think it was that made the two of you click? >> we're both children. >> he never once said to me, don't shoot this, or you can't photograph that. or you have done enough.
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>> never once? go away -- >> never one time, as long as i knew him did that ever happen. >> so for close to 30 years, grace shot everything. in every waking and non-waking hour. in places far from public view. he captured the calm before the storm. grace says that in the moments before a stand-up performance, robin williams would drift into what seemed like another world. >> before he went on stage he got very quiet, almost sleepy? >> they call it a zen-like state. he just almost fell asleep. he was just looking down, arms down really quiet looking down arms closed. and i'm going should i wake him up? should i poke him or something? and all of a sudden you would hear the announcer say, robin williams, ladies and gentlemen, and as soon as he said that, his eyes opened like a shot.
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>> ladies and gentlemen, from the metropolitan in new york city, mr. robin williams. >> he went from zero to 60, zero to 100, as soon as they mentioned his name. >> i would like to thank imelda marcos for being here -- >> and after 90 minutes of super human performance, williams' assistant would meet him back stage with a plastic bag to collect his sweat-drenched shirt. robin williams was not arthur grace's first celebrity assignment. as a press photographer, he covered journalists and politicians. he caught journalists like leslie stahl in 1980, there was john wayne in a tank, jacqueline
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onassis in a pensive mood. but there was mrs. doubtfire, or a gay nightclub owner. in 1996 as "the bird cage". >> you do fussy, fussy, or martha graham. >> or matt damon's therapist in good will hunting. >> and you don't regret meeting your wife? because the pain i feel now? i don't regret a single day i spent with her. >> i never seen robin so focused on a movie? >> in 1997, he was shooting still photos to promote the movie. >> he had to use a boston accent, that was part of it. he was totally into it. he was studying with a dialect coach this his hotel room all weekend. and he delivered one of the great monologues, two pages of script on film that is still
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remembered. >> you never looked at a woman, been totally vulnerable, known someone who could level you with her eyes. feeling like god put an angel on earth just for you. >> for this role, robin williams got his first oscar nomination and his first win. on oscar night, arthur grace was nearby, snapping everything with a pocket camera. >> what was robin williams like on oscar night? >> otherworldly, i was watching in realtime somebody living out a dream. >> the party ended the next morning at williams' hotel suite. >> and i noticed the oscar was still on the table next to a junior's deli bag that was half open. so that was the last picture i shot, that was oscar night. >> how many pictures do you think you took in total of robin williams? >> honestly, i have no idea, but it has to be in the thousands.
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>> grace, who now lives on his boat in los angeles, thought he and robin would grow together as old men, but it was not to be. >> when was the last time you saw him? >> i saw him six months before he died. he seemed to be quieter. seemed to be -- didn't have the same energy i remembered. >> but you didn't get the sense there was anything wrong? >> no, no, no, not at all. >> we begin tonight with breaking news in the west. the sudden death of robin williams. >> in the days after williams' suicide at 63, arthur grace was swamped with photo requests, but he ignored them all. >> could you look at the photos? >> no, i didn't do anything. not then and there, no. >> why not? >> it's too hard. it's too hard. still. >> still? >> sure. >> now, as a tribute, he has put together his favorites into a
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book. >> so you talked about oscar night. but when do you think robin williams was happiest? >> he was happiest around his kids, really, family life. >> arthur grace captured the robin williams that the rest of the world rarely saw. intimate moments with his children while they were young. like bath time in 1995. a bedtime story with daughter, zelda, and a quiet cuddle with his sleepy son, cody, at the end of the day. >> how will you remember him? >> oh, the most interesting guy i ever met in my life, by far. we shared some incredible times together. and they're not going to be repeated with anybody else. >> of all the photos he took, this one, he says, is his favorite. robin williams at the end of a show in 1986. exhausted, exuberant, and ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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a second push to legalize the recreational use of marijuana is under way in california. a similar ballot failed in 2010. but a recent poll shows that 60% of voters support this measure. >> the owners here at the higher path say the legalization could boost their business and also generate the much-needed tax base for the state of california. if this passes other states could follow and it would force the federal government to confront this issue. for both sides of this story the stakes are high. >> reporter: the golden state has been a leader in cannabis culture and policy. california was the first state to legalize 20 years ago, now it could be the first and largest
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state to approve recreational use. >> this measure is about getting drug dealers off the street who are targeting our kids. >> reporter: unlike 2010 when a similar measure failed this measure has drawn big backers including gavin newsome, proponents say whthat the cannas market could generate $7 billion a year. but groups that don't want to enforce it say it comes with a cost. >> in colorado, we have seen the increase in poisonings and increase in car accidents. i think over time as we count those costs they become tremendous and they overwhelm any tax revenue you would get from legalizing the drug. >> if the measure passes in california, the number of americans living in states where pot is legal will more than triple. >> that really helps put pressure on congress to deal with some of the major issues that have come out of the state
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and federal conflict on cannabis laws. >> reporter: the california cannabis industry is also pwatching. keith mccarthy runs ease, the app that lets users order medical marijuana on line and have it delivered to their home within a half hour. he sees plenty of growth potential for his business. >> with more demands everything gets better and easier. >> reporter: ease is part of a growing trend. 150 new california businesses have joined the national cannabis industry association. and at a cannabis job fair earlier this spring thousands lined up for a chance to be a part of this budding industry. >> it is certainly being driven by the idea that the california market has the potential to grow substantially in the next few years. >> and that is the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues, for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news, and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm don dahler.
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> >> it's wednesday, july 13th it's wednesday, july 13th, this is the cbs morning news. when the bullets started flying the men and women of the dallas police, they did not flinch and they did not react recklessly. >> president obama paid tribute to five fallen heros in dallas and he'll continue efforts to raise raw racial tensions across the u.s. as three men arrested in baton rouge an alleged plot against police the
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