tv CBS Overnight News CBS October 13, 2017 3:12am-4:01am PDT
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to show you the ins and outs of snap-flipping, so you can put yourself on the road to financial success. >> announcer: there's only seconds left before this tv program is over. so call or go online to claim your two free tickets and free gifts right now. >> the preceding was a sponsored presentation for drew and danny's "snap-flipping your way to real estate success" free lunch and dinner events. long dead
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u.s.-backed forces continue to say that they are just days away from victory in raqqa. but they've already opened up a new front further to the south, where isis is being squeezed into a shrinking area in the desert. so the fighting will continue. anthony? >> holly williams in northern syria. the associated press has obtained what it says is a recording of the acoustic attack on u.s. diplomats in cuba. at least 22 were hurt. some suffered brain injuries. here's a bit of that sound. the cuban government denies it was behind the attacks. new york city police said today they're searching their files for any complaints against hollywood producer harvey weinstein. at least 32 women accused him of sexual harassment or assault. terreeka duncan is following the case. >> reporter: this has been part of our world, women's world, since time immemorial.
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emma nom son sounded off on the sexual assault allegations and hollywood culture. >> i spent my 20s trying to get old men's tongues out of my mouth. because they thought, well, she's up for it. >> reporter: thompson said weinstein never assaulted her, but believed harassment of women in the industry is an epidemic. >> do they all have to be as bad as him? to make it count? you know? does it only count if you really have done it to loads and loads of women? or does it count if you do it to one woman once? i think the latter. >> reporter: the fallout continued today with more actresses coming forward. kate beckensdale explained what happened to her at age 17 when she met weinstein at a hotel. he opened the door in a bathrobe. after announcing i had school in the morning, i left. she goes on to say, let's remember that harvey is an
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emblem of the system that is sick and that we have work to do. one of the most outspoken voices since the allegations broke is actress rose mcgowan, she started a petition against the weinstein company. late this afternoon, she tweeted at jeff bezos, i told the head of your studio that h.w. raped me. over and over i said it. he said it hadn't been proven. i said i was the proof. amazon did not respond to cbs's request for a comment. mcgowan reaped a $100,000 settlement in 1997 according to "the new york times." overnight, twitter temporarily shut down her page, telling cbs news they locked her account because one of her tweets included a private phone number which violates terms of service. the president of the cannes film festival condemned weinstein and a group terminated its publishing agreement with the weinstein company. coming up next, new
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questions about when police i'll have the langoustine lobster ravioli. for you, sir? the original call was for langoustine ravioli. a langoustine is a tiny kind of lobster. a slight shellfish allergy rules that out, plus my wife ordered the langoustine. i will have chicken tenders and tater tots. if you're a ref, you way over-explain things. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. sir, we don't have tater tots. it's what you do. i will have nachos! your toilet is germ-ridden with mineral buildup. clorox toilet bowl cleaner with bleach is no match against limescale. but lysol power toilet bowl cleaner has 10x more cleaning power against limescale. so switch to lysol. what it takes to protect.
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mom i dropped my ball. got it. ewwww oh eat it! lysol kills 99.9% of bacteria on soft and hard surfaces. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. i just want to find a used car start at the new carfax.com show me used trucks with one owner. pretty cool. [laughs] ah... ahem... show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. of the las vegas massacre is being questioned again. this time, by the owners of the mandalay bay hotel. jamie ukis is in las vegas. >> reporter: for the first time mgm is providing specific details about how the shooting went down.
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police have said that six minutes passed between the time stephen paddock shot at a security guard and when he fired into the concert. but in a statement, mgm said it wanted to correct some of the misinformation being reported, and we know shots were being fired at the festival lot as the same time as or within 40 seconds jesus campos first reported shots were fired over the radio. this afternoon a law enforcement source told the associated press the mandalay bay had waited up to six minutes before calling police. after the first shots were fired. anthony, we still don't know when hotel staff called police, but law enforcement officials are expected to hold a formal press conference tomorrow to help clear up that time line. >> more confusion in las vegas. thanks, jamie. up next, an experimental therapy that's getting results for a rare form of blindness.
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that's like really soft. try dove advanced care for softer, smoother underarms. your toilet is germ-ridden with mineral buildup. clorox toilet bowl cleaner with bleach is no match against limescale. but lysol power toilet bowl cleaner has 10x more cleaning power against limescale. so switch to lysol. what it takes to protect. an fda advisory panel approved a treatment for a rare form of blindness. errol barnett tells us it has already helped someone you may recognize. >> it's the most horrifying feeling to see things fade away over time. >> reporter: most of 17-year-old christian guardino's life led a life of blindness. his mother felt hopeless. >> he was my first born.
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so -- sorry. it was devastating. we were alone. we were completely alone in this. >> reporter: until four years ago, when she found dr. gene bennett and her husband dr. albert mcguire. they have been dedicated to reversing hereditary blindness for two decades. they said the new treatment may be the turning point. >> we took a copy of that gene. >> reporter: they tested 41 patients' ability with an obstacle course like this. christian nailed it. >> he could navigate the obstacle course using dimmer light levels than he had ever been able to do it, and he was able to do that both accurately and quickly. >> reporter: patients have reported being able to lead more fulfilling lives. for christian who loved to sing since he was a little boy, that meant performing on "america's got talent." ♪
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thanks to heroes from above. here's don blackstone. >> reporter: they returned to the home he and his family fled. his 7-year-old son jesse, his wife, and her parents, both in their 70s, escaped the flames separately. >> it was close. it was really close. >> reporter: tom daio almost didn't make it. a helicopter pilot was flying rescue missions through heavy stroke, darkness and strong winds. there was room in his helicopter for four. when they found five members of tomaio's family. >> they took my family. >> he was holding jesse up. they didn't want to leave his dad. i could hear him yelling, no, get in, it will be okay. >> i was crying. and my son, he was crying, too. and he was saying, mommy, i want
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to take care of you. >> reporter: the helicopter left him behind and with fire closing in, tomaio called his older daughter. >> i called my daughter, i said, if i don't see you again, remember i love you. >> reporter: the rescuers made two more trips before they found him again. much to the relief of flight officer whitney lowe. >> i grand him right above his left chest and said you're coming with me. >> reporter: there were hugs all around. completing a story of bravery and a father's duty. >> what else can i do. i got to save them first. >> reporter: cbs news, napa. that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues, others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm anthony mason. thanks for watching.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm demarco morgan. thousands of firefighters are working through the night to contain catastrophic wildfires in northern california. as of thursday at least 22 large fires were burning across the state. they've been fighting the flames nonstop since this past weekend. >> we've got to get out of here. >> reporter: new video is emerging of the horror that californians faced as they fled the flames. >> i can't breathe. >> reporter: a reality check came today. >> i'm going to talk about something that's really sensitive now. it will be very hard for the families. >> reporter: sonoma county sheriff rob giordano spoke bluntly.
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>> identification is going to be hard. we have found bodies that were almost completely intact, and we have found bodies that were nothing more than ash and bones. >> reporter: hundreds are still missing, or unaccounted for. the massive scale of the disaster was expressed in a surreal image, a mail truck with nothing but rubble all around. many who fled know they're lucky to be alive, including charity ruiz, who escaped her burning neighborhood by bicycle, her two kids hitched to the back. and all with a third child on the way. she's 8 1/2 months pregnant. >> to know that the baby's going to come into this world, and of course, be loved, and it's going to be wonderful and exciting. but i won't have a place to bring them home to. >> reporter: these ruins were the former home of tom and sue fellbaum who lived here for 28 years. how much did you get to leave with when you left? >> nothing. ornaments. >> reporter: except for a few tiny treasures, everything else, photos, memories, they're gone.
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has what happened sunk in yet? >> no. it will probably take a few more days. >> reporter: this is what the fellbaum family home looked like just four days ago. the fire leveled it. now, they tell me the most painful loss was these old family movies here. there are thousands of stories like theirs. and now tonight questions are being asked about how soon public alerts went out. if at all. president trump is hoping for a legislative victory on tax reform. this week the president called on congress to approve his sweeping tax plan while speaking at an event in pennsylvania. mr. trump said his overhaul would cut the number of tax brackets from eight to four, including income levels for the new brackets have yet to be rebilled. >> reporter: the president praised long haul truckers in pennsylvania and promised that his tax cuts still under construction will give the average american family about $4,000 more per year.
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sounds good. but that's the roughest of estimates. and the lack of detail has led outside analysts to question in the end whether these tax cuts will generate economic growth or boost wages. >> all i can say is, you'd better get it passed. >> reporter: as the president struggles to get votes in the senate for tax reform, his feud with senator bob corker isn't his only problem on capitol hill. the white house fears other republican senators may block mr. trump's plan. >> we're going to fight and we're going to get those republicans and maybe a few of those democrats to raise their hand, and you're going to have so much money to spend in this wonderful country. >> reporter: the president appeared confident, but according to a "vanity fair" story published wednesday, mr. trump told his former head of security and close friend keith schiller, quote, i hate everyone in the white house. there are a few exceptions, but i hate them. the report also claimed that chief of staff john kelly is
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miserable in his job. and remains only out of a sense of duty. white house officials denied the accounts and sources say the president's mood is as unpredictable and volatile as had always has been. kelly is also described as securing his job but fatigued by the president's temper. still, kelly had enough clout to dominate his colleague to his previous post. the president said that vague statement that provoked speculation was about north korea. >> i'm not saying i'm not. we shouldn't be talking about it. >> that was the president's 16th interview with fox since taking office. he's given five to other broadcast outlets. yesterday he said those broadcast news outlets should have their licenses challenged or possibly revoked. that prompted the republican senator from nebraska to
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question on twitter whether the president was recanting his support for the first amendment. that investigation is under way into the hazing death of a freshman at louisiana state university. max well grouper died last month after becoming highly intoxicated at a fraternity pledge event. now, ten current and former lsu students are facing charges, accused of forcing the 18-year-old to drink heavily. here's omar villafranca. >> reporter: the national organization has since terminated their membership. witnesses say grubber was targeted because he was often late to events and they forced him to drink because he had trouble reciting the greek alphabet during pledging. it took less than five hours for all ten current and former lsu students to surrender to campus police on wednesday. the men were arrested and brought to the local prison. all are charged with one misdemeanor count of hazing.
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19-year-old matthew is also charged with a felony count of negligent homicide. according to the affidavit, he was the most aggressive during the alleged hazing incident. his bail was set at $10,000. nine of the suspects were released on bond in less than 24 hours. >> i don't think he'll be pleading guilty at this point. >> reporter: this is an attorney for sean. >> i don't know what happened in that fraternity house. i have my client's version of the story. i'm looking forward to hearing everybody else's version of the story. >> reporter: it shows pledging received a text message on december 13th, ordering them to bible study at 10:00 p.m. at the chapter house. once there, pledges were quizzed about the fraternity's history. if they answered a question incorrectly, they were forced to drink 190 proof alcohol. at midnight they say gruber was highly intoxicated and left on a couch. nine hours later he was found with a weak pulse. fraternity members took him to the hospital where he was
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pronounced dead. an autopsy showed his blood alcohol was 4.95% at the time of his death, six times the legal driving limit and two times over what is considered to be a life-threatening amount of alcohol. >> people who have life lasting relationships, why did his life have to end so early. >> reporter: if convicted of hazing, the suspects could get 30 days in jail and also expelled from lsu. if convicted, knockham could get five years in prison for the negligent homicide charge. the district attorney plans to take over in the investigation and says more charges could be filed. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. my friend susie cracks me up. but one laugh,
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this is the "cbs overnight news." it costs nearly twice as much as regular milk. it's called a2 milk. it was first developed in australia. it only has one kind of protein while regular milk has two. they say it's easier on the stomach. the dairy industry is not so sure. >> reporter: four years ago lisa said her grandson nicholas stopped drinking milk after being hit with severe stomach pain. >> the symptoms went away after he stopped drinking milk. >> reporter: when he saw a commercial for a2 milk, he told his grandmother he wanted to try it. >> i got it for him, and he has absolutely no problems when he
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drinks it. >> it's a natural innovation. >> reporter: blake walters is the chief executive of a2 milk in the u.s. >> there's a1 and a2. we find the cows that produce the a2 proteins. >> reporter: for some people it's the a1 protein that makes it difficult to digest. >> it points to the a1 protein, not to lactose. >> reporter: they think they're lactose intolerant, but they have problems with the a1 protein. >> that's correct. >> reporter: a study funded by the a2 milk company claims that when the a-1 proteins are broken down, they produce bcm-7 that triggers inflammation and symptoms like bloating and abdominal pain. but the national dairy council said at this point, a#'s claims are merely theoretical. >> it's just a theory at this point in time. there's no signs that really says that there's any value in
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this a2 protein relative to conventional milk. two studies done were with a small number of subjects. it doesn't give us the answer we need to be able to tell whether or not this is really true or not. >> reporter: it's produced here at prairieland dairy in nebraska. where the milk from hundreds of cows have produced the a2 protein is collected. interestingly, the cows that produce a2 milk are not genetically modified. a simple dna test is performed on newborn calves using hair follicles. they are separated from the rest of the herd so there's no cross-contamination. the milk lines must be separated and cleaned thoroughly. once bottled, the product must be tested again. the testing isn't cheap. >> no, it isn't cheap, but it's reflected, you know, in bringing this product to market.
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>> reporter: a2 milk is sold at a premium price, roughly $9 per gallon compared to around $5 a gallon for regular milk. these calves have all been bred for the a2 protein. >> that's right. >> reporter: dan rice is the farm's owner. despite skepticism from the dairy's industry, he claims that the a2 milk is the way of the future. >> i think the industry will eventually be all a2. >> reporter: but for now the process is time-consuming and costly. yet despite the higher cost, lisa said she still doesn't -- >> for anybody who says they can't drink milk, i say try it. it's worth it. the "cbs overnight news" it's worth it. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. that cough doesn't sound so good. it's worth it. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. well i think you sound great. move over. easy booger man. take mucinex dm. it'll take care of your cough. fine! i'll text you in 4 hours when your cough returns. one pill lasts 12 hours, so...
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>> the reason i haven't had a burger before from shake shack is because of the lines. instead of simply asking yourself, is the burger so good, that you would choose to wait in line, i think the question is, what else are they getting out of the experience. i think what fast food hijacked was the notion that people actually want to be with people. their whole promise was basically, we're going to get you out of here so quickly you'll never have to see a person. in fact, we'll give you drive-through lines so you won't have to get out of your car. we're doing the opposite of that. >> a shack burger, and a coffee milkshake and fries. the combination of the bun and the burger. >> you think about it, a hamburger is basically two things, the bun and the meat. what's great about this bun is that it doesn't fight you as you're eating it. >> it doesn't bite you? >> it doesn't bite your teeth. i think it's a mistake if the
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bun is too big or too hard. >> reporter: his attention to detail has made him in leader in casual dining. it is the fastest growing sector of the restaurant business. meyer believes many consumers want good food delivered in less time and at less cost than at a full service restaurant. >> i think what fine casual is doing, if you're willing to give up waiters and waitresses and bartenders and reservations and tabletops and flowers, we're going to give you about 80% much the quality that you would have gotten in a fine dining restaurant. we're going to save you about 80% of the money you'd spend in a fine dining restaurant. we're going to save you about 60% of the time. >> reporter: fine dining is how meyer started in the restaurant business more than 30 years ago. he opened his first restaurant, indian square cafe, in 1985, in what was then a seedy neighborhood in lower manhattan. back then, people dined out less
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frequently and expensive restaurants were often formal and intimidating. danny meyer had a different vision. >> i said, let's create a restaurant where you can feel great if you're dining alone. so we created a bar for dining. at a time when you never got three-star food at a bar in new york city. i wanted to go to a restaurant where i can drink great wine by the glass. i was just looking to break as many rules as i possibly can. but ultimately to create a restaurant that at the age of 27, would have been my favorite restaurant if only it existed. >> reporter: meyer has been fascinated with food since he was a child. grew up in st. louis, the son of an entrepreneur and an art gallery owner who loved entertaining and cooking. do you think about food all the time? >> constantly. >> reporter: after you always? >> i think i have, for whatever reason, since i was a little kid. i would go to the st. louis cardinal baseball games, and i would get the whole hot dog like everybody did, but i would go to
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the relish station and put a little ketchup on this bite, a little mustard on this bite, a little onion here or pickle relish here to see with i liked better. >> were you a chubby kid if you were eating all the time? >> i actually was a chubby kid by the time i got to be 12 years old. 12, 13, 14. and that's kind of how i always felt thereafter. and so it gives me great pleasure that today i can kind of eat as much as i want because i know how to exercise and i know how to balance it out. but it also probably put me in a position where i love seeing other people eat. >> reporter: today meyer's company, union square hospitality group, oversees 15 different restaurants. all but one in new york. they operate upscale eateries, casual bistros or cocktail lounge and neighborhood bakery. what they all have in company is danny meyer's philosophy of
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hospitality which he pioneered but has since become a standard for the industry. >> tell me if that's the best cookie you've ever had. hospitality says that the most important business principle at work, way beyond that the food tastes great. by the way, if the food doesn't taste great, you're not coming back here. but that doesn't alone assure you will come back here. what hospitality does is it adds the way we made you feel to how good the food tasted. >> so the experience for dining out for you is the most important thing. >> i think the experience of how you're made to feel is the most important thing. >> reporter: the key, he says, is to hire people who are intuitive and empathetic. he has more than 2,000 employees, and he trains them to pick up on the customers' cues. >> everyone on earth is walking around life wearing an invisible sign that says, make me feel important. and your job is to understand
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the size of the font of this invisible sign and how brightly it's lit. so make me feel important by leaving me alone. make me feel important by letting me tell you everything i know about food. so it's our job to read that sign, and to deliver the experience that that person needs. >> reporter: this is the reservation system? >> yes. are there any folks we should be saying hello to here today? >> reporter: in the restaurant business profit margins are razor thin and repeat customers are critical. meyer has made an art of making his customers feel welcome, tracking their likes and dislikes. i heard you say you always identify the boss at the table. i didn't realize there was a boss at each table. but how do you do that? >> there's no question in my mind that at every single table, there's somebody who's got the biggest agenda. if it's two people doing business, there's someone who's kind of trying to sell something to somebody else. if you can figure that out early
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on in the meal, and understand what is it going to take for the boss to leave happy, it could be make sure that someone else gets to pick the wine. you've just got to pick up on those cues. >> reporter: meyer's most controversial innovation is also his riskiest. he's trying to eliminate tipping to combat paying equities between servers whose tips have gone up as many prices have increased and those who work in the kitchen who under most state laws can't share in gratuities. >> so the cooks, dishwashers, they don't get any of it? >> they don't get any of it. what i noticed after being a restaurateur after 30 years, is the growing disparity between what you can make in the dining room where tipping exists and what you can make in the kitchen had -- the disparity had grown by 300%. >> reporter: meyer has so far eliminated tipping in nine of his restaurants. he's increased the base pay of those servers and kitchen staff,
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and in some restaurants gives waiters a share of the weekly revenue. he's raised many prices significantly. on average, nearly 25%. when the bill comes, there's no line for leaving a tip. you call hospitality included, no tipping. >> i'm saying hospitality included, basically saying, you see that price? the cost to get the chicken? that includes everything. that includes not only the guy that bought the chicken, and the guy that cooked the chicken, but it also includes the person who served it to you and how they made you feel. >> reporter: for the customer, in the end, is the bill the same? >> the bill, by the time you get your bill, whatever shock you did or didn't feel when you saw the menu prices, should completely dissipate, because you should say, that's exactly what it would have been if they hadn't had this new system. >> that's the full report. go to our website and click on "60 minutes." we'll be right back. their new career.
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americans are getting used to paying for things with their smartphones instead of using cards or cash. but in china, mobile payments have already become the standard. what does the cashless society look like? >> reporter: when you pay for something, how do you pay for it? on the streets of beijing, cash is definitely not king. what do you think of people who use cash to pay for things? that's rare and weird, he says. only the elderly and people who don't know how to use a phone pay cash. this woman says, i rarely take my wallet when i go out. just my phone. that's because those phones can buy just about anything. from clothes in the store, to steamed buns on the street. they're used to pay for bike rides and bus rides.
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rent and utility bills. when was the last time you used cash? a month ago? wow, that's a long time. payments on their platforms totaled more than $5.5 trillion last year. a 200% jump from the year before. and nearly 50 times more than the value of mobile payments in the u.s. one of the big reasons mobile payments have caught on so quickly here in china is because of what most people here don't have in their wallet -- credit cards. they basically went from a cash-based society to a cashless one and skipped the step in between. china's leapfrogged the u.s. into going into a cashless society. >> reporter: andy says china's cashless revolution has happened in just three years. largely thanks to these things called qr codes. you simply scan them with your phone to pay. nearly every business and person has one.
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from the farmers market to the musician on the street, playing for a mobile tip. you can give a homeless person money with your phone. you would never see that in the u.s. >> all you have to do is scan the code and transfer the money. it is really ubiquitous in china from the largest cities, the fanciest hotels, to the most humble streetside shacks will all use qr codes. >> reporter: the chinese are comfortable doing everything on their phones, while in the u.s. credit cards and online shopping via personal computers still rule. these kinds of legacy technologies make any adoption of newer generations of technologies much more slower. in this sense i think the u.s. has a little bit of catching up to do. that's the overnight news for this friday. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm demarco morris.
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good morning, wild fires churning through wine country are the deadliest in california's history. it is friday, october 13th. >> our coverage of the wine country wild fires continues. here are the latest headlines. 31 people confirmed dead. that number will likely rise according to so noma county sheriffs, 400 others are unaccounted for. they burned 191,000 acres. northwest to the pocket fire, threatening the town of geyserville, you can see what firefighters are facing there, it's called the pocket fire because it stouterred pocket branch road wednesday. the evacuation orders came in later that night.
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