tv CBS Overnight News CBS July 22, 2016 3:12am-4:01am PDT
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>> i would have nothing to say to donald trump. but hillary clinton, let's rebuild the middle class, let's give some of that tax money back to america so we can rebuild this country. >> that businesses are going to come're going to bring more jobs to our state, to our city. that people are go having to hope again. >> reporter: there are democrats in cleveland to aotoo. >> reporter: you could call it a shadow convention, three blocks from the arena, a series of top democrats have spent the week whaling against the gop's tone. new jersey senator and potential clinton running mate, corey booker. >> what really got me here was the level and intensity of the hate and cruelty that i've seen on the floor and coming out of
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speakers. >> reporter: democrats argue trump's tag line "make america great again" has taken a backseat to this rallying cry. >> lock her up. i love that. >> lock her up. that's right. >> reporter: in a fund raising email, the clinton campaign likened all the prison talk to a witch trial, one scream away from screaming burn her at the stake. >> and no one's condemning this at the republican party, no one's saying this is not who america is? >> reporter: her campaign released a compilation of all his past praise for clinton. >> hillary clinton i think is a terrific woman. she really works hard and does a good job. >> vote your conscience. >> reporter: one she promptly tweeted out and is likely to repeat on the trail. but two can and do play at that
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game. trump has been calling clinton unqualified and knocking her for bad judgment for months, ever since bernie sanders started using those terms. scott. >> nancy, thanks. the man who created conservative leaning fox news two decades ago was forced out over allegations of sexual harassment. vinita nair. >> reporter: and it made no comment of the golden parachute ailes will walk away with. instead, he said he made issues more accessible to a broader audience. murdock will now serve as acting ceo and chairman of fox news. the stunning fall of the 76-year-old began more than two weeks ago, when former fox
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anchor, gretchen carlson, filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against him. she claims she was fired when she refused his sexual advances. today gretchen carlson's lawyer said in a statement we hope that all businesses understand that women will no longer tolerate sexual harassment. ailes built fox news channel into a top cable network that held influence over the republican party. hisruttenberg. >> that's the fox news roger ailes created. i think our political dialogue changes somewhat. >> reporter: late today, ailes
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sent murdock a note, in part, i'm proud we built fox business channel into a powerful and lucrative organization. i take pride in the careers of the many women i have promoted. >> thank you. well, extreme heat, broiling the central u.s. is moving east for the weekend. from the great lakes to the atlantic, temperatures are expected well in the 90s with high humidity. heat advisories have been poestd in 23 states. >> reporter: it gets hot from time to time on the floor of the republican convention but it's nothing compared to the 93 degrees protesters outside quicken loans arena are facing. >> people have been passing out from water recently. >> reporter: across the country this week, a blanket of hot air has landed with a suffocating,
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often triple digit thud. it scorched construction workers in california. singed softball players in kansas and stressed out trout in montana where some of the most popular streams were closed as a consequence. in chicago, 92 degrees with humidity felt like 105. a 9 mile-per-hour breeze barely cut through the haze. chicago is more famous for its cold weather but it's not about to take the heat likely. back in 1995, another summer heat wave killed more than 700 people here. >> and it's plenty hot in cleaverla cleveland, thank you. coming up. hi
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him is autistic and escaped from a nearby facility. kensy is his care taker there. police say they were responding to a 911 call of a man with a gun. threatening to commit suicide. an object can clearly be seen in the young man's hand. the object was a toy truck. at some point during the incident, one officer reportedly fires three shots not seen on video, hitting kensy once in the upper leg, another video shows police handcuffing both men. ken kensy is recovering in the hospital. >> i'm like, sir, why did you shoot me? in his words, he said i don't
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know. >> police chief gary eugene has been on the job less than two months. >> i want to make it clear there was no gun recovered. >> the officer, hispanic male has been placed on desk duty. >> this is a case where a police officer was trying to save mr. kinsly's life and unfortunately his shot went astray. >> once i got my hands up, they're not going to shoot me. this is what i'm thinking. wow, was i wrong. >> reporter: today u.s. attorney general, loretta lynch says she's aware of the incident and they're monitoring the investigation. the state attorney's office says any charges would only be determined after a thorough investigation. >> thank you. the nba is pulling next year's all-star game out of charlotte, north carolina. because of the new state law
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that limits discrimination protection for gays, les bians, bisexual and transgender people. southwest airlines is recovering from a widespread computer failure that caused more than 1100 flights to be canceled the last two days. southwest hopes to be back to normal tomorrow. the first lady got taken for a ride by the late, late show's james corden. hard to say if she was more excited about car pool karaoke or just sitting up front after eight years of limousines. >> this is the white house and we're passing the rose garden. my husband is in there somewhere. >> is he in there? >> he better be. that's where he said he was. >> an easy choice, stevie wonder. ♪ oh baby here i am signed
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two of the nations top political reporters are here. face the nation. congratulations on your emmy award nomination today. john, what have you been seeing? >> scott, this week started out. there were nervous republicans. but they felt good about the mike pence pick. they felt donald trump had picked somebody sensible and that meant he had an eye towards the fall. well, now that unpredictability has come back. he's in a fight with a popular governor of the very important
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state of ohio and ted cruz went off script. so, they'll feel that will hurt them in the fall. so, they're looking for him to begin the process of i'm going to calm things down or show them something that makes them feel, well, it may be chaotic but he's got talents that make it worth while. >> you've covered every convention since 1968. >> this was supposed to be a coming together, what we saw instead is a party that seems to be coming apart. the old style, old guard of the republican party didn't even show up. the bush-romney wing, they didn't come out here. and last night you saw ted cruz who considers himself the leader of the right wing. he came out, did not endorse donald trump. the trump people knew that was going to happen. they could have stopped it, instead they made a calculated decision to let him come out and walk directly into what turned out to be an ambush. and i must say it delighted no
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one more and no group more than some of his colleagues up in the senate where he's not very well liked. one of them told me today i haven't laughed so hard -- i can't remember ever laughing allowed when someone committed political suicide. they got some coming together still to do. >> thank you very much. john will have a special guest sunday on "face the nation." president barack obama. that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues, for others, check back a little bit later for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning." from the site of the republican national convention in cleaverlacleave cleaverland, i'm scott pelley.
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this is the cbs overnight news. >> welcome to the overnight news. there's been another controversial police shooting of an unarmed black man with the images caught on cell phone camera. this time it was north miami. the mental health worker is seen on his back, hands in the air, next to an autistic patient that had wandered away from a group home. congresswoman who rcepresents te city says she's shocked. >> so, we're propolice, we love the police. we know when the police break down, the country is dissolved. but today, i'm in shock.
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i am in total shock of what i saw. >> reporter: this was the scene captured on cell phone video monday. 47-year-old charles kensy unarmed, laying on his back, hands raised in the air. >> shut up. >> reporter: the younger man sitting next to him is autistic and escaped from a nearby facility. kensy is his care taker there. police say they were responding to a 911 call of a man with a gun threatening to commit suicide. an object can clearly be seen in the young man's hand. the object was a toy truck. at some point during the incident, one officer reportedly fires three shots, not seen on
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video. hitting kensy once in the upper leg. a second video shows police handcuffing both men. kend kensy is recovering. >> i said i just got shot. and i'm like, sir, why did you shoot me and in his words "i don't know." >> reporter: police chief, gary eugene has been on the job less than two months. >> i want to make it clear, there was no gun recovered. >> reporter: the officer has been placed on desk duty. >> this is a case where a police officer was trying to save mr. kensly's life and unfortunately his shot went astray. >> once i got my hachbnds up, they're not going to shoot me, this is what i'm thinking. wow, was i wrong. the republican national convention is over, but count
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>> well, thank you, ma'am and thank you for speaking and speaking from your heart. i will tell you when i stood on that debate stage and they asked every candidate there, if you don't win, will you support the nominee and i raised my hand enthusiastically. i am not in the habit of supporting people who attack my wife and my father. it was not a blanket commitment that if you slander and attack heidi that i'm going to nonetheless come like survile puppy dog and say thank you very much for maligning my wife and my father. anyone here thinks that i was eager to come to this convention -- thank you, sir. >> major garret has more on the
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battle. >> reporter: when this campaign began oh, so long ago, ted cruz thought high would be the better organized darling. cruz stayed close to trump, never criticizing him, even as other republicans did. that kept cruz close, but ultima ultimately fell to the trump phenomena, complete with a stinging neck name. >> stand and speak and vote your conscience. >> reporter: the boos that carried ted cruz off the stage, echoed one of the most bruising primary fights in history. ted cruz's relationship with donden stado donald trump started out court and jury -- >> i'm not confident which pedal i pushed.
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>> reporter: but trump hit the accelerator. >> it's l-y-i-n apostrophe. lying ted. the bible held high. he puts it high and then he lies. >> this man is a pathological liar. he lies practically every word out of his month. donald, please, i know it's hard not to interrupt. breathe, breathe. >> this guy will say anything. nasty guy. now i know why he doesn't have one endorsement from any of his colleagues. >> i think most people know exactly what new york values are. not a lot of conservatives come out of manhattan. i'm just saying. >> reporter: trump even raised questions about cruz's canadian birth place. >> who the hell knows if you can even serve in office. >> reporter: and he breathed life into a national inquirer
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report that his father was linked to john f kennedy's assassination. even spouses were drawn into the mudslinging with trump retweeting an unflattering picture of heidi cruz side by side with milania trump. >> you melss with my wife, you mess with my kids, that will do it every time. you're a sniffling coward. >> reporter: the question being asked over and over is why did he let ted cruz go on stage and why did ted cruz think his nonendorsement would work? >> but the argument they're making is it unifies the party. >> who's making that argument? cruz? >> no, trump people. >> it shows the joyful verosity of the delegates for trump and that is an illustration that this room is his, this party is
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now his and cruz, you better now his and cruz, you better reconcile yourself to that fact. jill and kate use the same dishwasher. same detergent. but only jill ends up with wet, spotty glasses. kate adds finish jet-dry with five power actions that dry dishes and prevent spots and film, so all that's left is the shine. for better results, use finish jet-dry. introducing new k-y for massage and intimacy. every touch, gently intensified. a little touch is all it takes. k-y touch. ♪ su♪ a cold, a bug, a flu ♪ when school was back in session ♪ ♪ those germs were shared with you ♪ back to school means back to germs.
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♪ it's now official, the russian track and field team has been barred from the summer olympics in rio over the government run doping scheme. yesterday, that appeal was denied. right now the ban only applies to the track and field team. but international organizations that govern the other 28 olympic sports may take action as well. the fastest man in the world, bolt, says he agrees with the ruling. >> if you cheat, i feel it's a good message to show if you cheat or go against the rules, then we're going to take this action. this will scare a lot of people and send a strong message. they seriously want to clean the
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sport up. >> and reporting on the russian doping scandal and how it was uncovered. >> reporter: steph nauf now live in this sparse one bedroom apartment somewhere in the united states which we will not reveal for their protection. it's far from the cries of traitor and judas back home. the price of believing in the purity of sport. >> for me, when you have this 100% belief that you're doing something great, you just follow this belief and let's see what happens. >> reporter: his maiden name was rusenova. for more than five years, she willingly took steroids for strength and the bud boosting substance, for endurance. all of it directed by her rug russian coaches and medical
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staff. let me read some to you. testosterone. >> uh-huh. >> reporter: turna bowlen and parabowlen? >> yeah. >> reporter: those are powerful drug drugs. >> translator: yes, these are all steroids. >> reporter: did you think anything you were doing is wrong? >> it's hard to believe you're doing something wrong when everybody around you is saying it's right. i was an untouchable, a sacred athlete. >> reporter: meaning she could take drugs without fear of being caught. they put her on track for the summer olympics in london. she met vitali in of all places,
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doctors. >> if somebody wins, i want him or her to be real hero, not a fake one. >> reporter: 15 minutes into their first date, he got a dose of reality. >> she says i'm doping. all my teammates are doping as well. >> reporter: and what do you think? >> i had suspicion. but i was hoping that i'm here to fix something. she says that's not what he does. he helps russian athletes to win medals. he does testing, but fake testing. >> reporter: yet somehow two very different lives equals a marriage. he now lived with doping at home and corruption at work. >> i was offered a bribe by the vice president of the federation, just like that person comes to me and says this athlete cannot be tested. how much money do you need? and my answer is this is what i get paid for and i don't need
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any extra money. so, she was selected. she must be tested. >> reporter: he says he repeatedly informed histherup c. over the next years he sent 50 letters detailing what he had witnessed. but he says she told him it did not have the power to investigate inside russia. his crusade would eventually cost him his job and drive ulia to file for divorce. >> translator: sometimes i thought he was my enemy. that he wants to interfere. it was not easy. >> i think i have this opportunity to become a taxi driver in moscow. i'll be a divorced taxi driver. >> reporter: that's where you were at at that point in time.
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>> the fight was over. i lost. >> reporter: the turning point came right before the london games when ulia was injured. no longer a medal contender, she lost the protection and tested positive for eto. facing a two year ban, she called him just days before their divorce was to be final. >> translator: he said let's tell the truth. the whole truth, how things happen in russia. to destroy the system, one has to talk about it. >> after i finished talking to her, i think am i going to be able to get another person on my side after three years of trying and maybe i can get my wife on my side. trying to clean up sports? >> reporter: not only did he bring her to his side, he convinced her to taken a
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extraordinary risk and use her phone to secretly record her coach giving her steroids and her teammates detailing their drug use and the person who told her how to get back on the drug program. >> translator: i put the jackets over here and that's how i held the phone, this way. >> reporter: in this recorder, 800 meter runner admitted she took performance enhancing drugs. she won gold in london. she said my coach helps to cover up the tests. there is no other way to do it. everyone in russia is on pharma. they steered them to a reporter that german television network. their tapes became the center piece of this documentary which aired in december 2014 and sent shock waves through the world of sports. >> we don't pick who our heroes
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are but at the end of the day, they stood up and did the right thing to insure that clean athletes' rights are protected around the globe. >> reporter: he's been advising the stepanofs since they left russia. he's a record of taking down some of the most notorious dopers, such as lance armstrong. >> the evidence confirmed what a lot of people have believed over the years. this is not just a few athletes obtaining performance enhancing drugs. this was a system orchestrated by the sport leaders to insure that they won at all costs. >> we're essentially limited to athletics and russia. >> reporter: the outrage finally forced them to launch an investigation. its 300 plus page report details what wana called a deeply rooted
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cheating that reached the highest levels. so bribes. >> bribes, covering up tests. >> reporter: you name it. >> you name it, they worked to get away with it. >> reporter: sports ministry in russia? >> look, they're responsible. the cabinet over sees all sports. so, they're ultimately responsible. >> reporter: nobody was more powerful than this man. he had the ability to make positive drug tests disappear. the water are eporeport called heart of russian doping. he was fired booy the kremlin a since taken refuge in the u.s. for fear of his own safety because of how much he knows. over the last few years he has been sharing what he knows with
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vitali. what he doesn't know is stepnov recorded the conversations. >> he told me what i knew that we could only see this much. but what was happening with cover ups, it's like this. >> you can see the full report on our ♪ susie got all germy ♪ a cold, a bug, a flu ♪ when school was back in session ♪ ♪ those germs were shared with you ♪ each year kids miss 22 million school days due to illness. but lysol kills 99.9% of cold and flu viruses.
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a new study shows a staggering amount of food in this country that goes to waist. up to 40%. they're coming up with creative solutions to recycle what doesn't get eaten. >> reporter: this all you can eat buffet is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. it's a place you can get almost anything you want. but the land of excess may be the exception when it comes to wasting food. the buffet is an endless array of mouth watering del cases piled high. >> reporte >> people think this is a land of waste, but we're very conscious of our environment. >> reporter: they didn't throw
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it away. i see crab legs, all this wonderful food. where's it end up? >> at the hog farm. in your tummy or at the hog farm. >> reporter: that's right. pig slop made from sushi and roast beef. most importantly none of it goes to a land fill where it decomposes into the greenhouse gas, mathane. food waste is the biggest component of land fill. and the biggest wasters are families. >> for every four bags of groceries, one of them gets tossed in the trash. sgler >> reporter: senior editor says best buy, sell buy are confusing, causing people to throw away food that's still edible. >> there's a lot more wiggle room than people realize. it's often the best guess from
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the manufacturers. >> reporter: and that inspired food activist to prove a point. he criss crossed the country dumpster diving behind grocery stores to raise awareness of what he call as food fiasco. >> the idea with the food fiasco is to give people a visual of how much good food goes to waste. >> reporter: he informs and inspires. >> i've been in about 2,000 dumpsters across the united states and i'm blown away time after time when i open the lid and it's full of perfectly good food. >> reporter: on the vegas strip, aria and 10 other hotels are so committed to recycling food, they tear open every trash bag looking for scraps they may have missed. another big contributor to food waste, imperfect produce. consumers and retailers just
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the gop convention is a wrap and the delegates are headed home, but they leave behind swag that never got sold. we went shopping on the streets of cleveland. >> reporter: this part of town is positively trickilating with capitalism, bumper stickers, bobble heads, t-shirt we can show you, t-shirts we can't show you. printed in america. you know what you should make? a pent dispenser. >> i'm sure someone will which up with one. >> reporter: well, now they will. the first republican national convention in cleveland was in
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1924. how are you going to keep them down on the farm after they've seen cleveland? this has a real show biz pizaz. i think there's a typo. christie is misspelled. >> you're right. i have the worst key board on the planet. >> reporter: trump in 2016 will make us rich and fat as pigs. who knew? >> well, i love pork. >> reporter: "go trump beat crooked hillary." is this for kids? >> no, for adults. >> trump is honest, successful and strong, but crooked hillary leave as scandals a mile long. >> reporter: the elephant is doing what? >> you tell me. >> reporter: beating up the
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monkey. that elephant is being very aggressive. >> i think you being aggressive asking questions. >> from the south, that's a good seller. >> reporter: why? >> we got little kids peeing on everything. i don't know why. >> reporter: with so many areas fenced off for security, a lot of businesses shut down for the week. and the businesses that are open. and the vendors are here all weekend. so a lot of these pink hats left over. not a big seller. everyone should come to cleveland. the art museum, amazing. symphony orchestra, one of the best in the country. welcome to cleveland. oh, you live here. >> that's the news. for some of you the news
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continues. for others, check back in the for others, check back in the morning. captioning funded by cbs it's friday, july 22nd, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." i am your voice! on the finale of the republican national convention, donald trump soaks up the spotlight and slams hillary clinton. >> this is the legacy of hillary clinton. death, destruction, terrorism, and weakness. doubling down. ted cruz stands by his speech, explaining why he'll never endorse trump. and with the rnc wrapped up, clinton could name her vp pick any day now. a look at her short list and the
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