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tv   CBS Evening News  CBS  November 6, 2017 5:30pm-6:01pm PST

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his leadership role in jeopardy after sexual assault allegations. allen and veronica are back in 30 minutes. capt ored by cb ♪ ♪ ioning sponsored by cbs dy somebody ran in there and started shooting everybody. r glor: a small-town church >>mes under attack. h one of the victims came out running from the side, and he was all bloody from his arms and his face. >> we've had a long night with our children and grandbabies that we have left. gh glor: also tonight, the search for a motive. >> there was a domestic situation going on in this family. >> this isn't a guns situation. mental health is the problem here. >> glor: the heroes who chased down the killer. >> i wish i could have gotten there faster. >> glor: and has america grown camb to mass shootings? >> americans are being slaughtered and congress is refusing to protect them. this is the "cbs evening news."
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good evening. i'm jeff glor in sutherland springs, texas. and this is our western edition. and behind me is the scene of another mass shooting. it didn't happen in a big city like orlando or las vegas. the targets this time were worshipers in their small-town church. this was the scene just after the attack. investigators say the suspect wanted to kill everyone in the church. 26 were killed, ranging in age from 18 months to 77 years. 20 others were wounded, ten in critical condition. police believe the gunman, 26-year-old devin kelley, took his own life after being chased by armed bystanders. he had received a bad conduct discharge from the air force for domestic assault, and cbs news has learned a mistake by the service may have allowed him to buy his weapons. we have a team of correspondents covering this. we begin with the moments after the shooting.
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>> somebody ran in there and started shooting everybody. >> glor: cell phone video shows the victims and the chaos that spilled on to the front lawn of the first baptist church after the suspect, 26-year-old devin kelley, went on his horrific spree. >> a dead body right there. >> glor: yellow tarp covered one of the 26 who died. >> it's unbelievable. >> glor: david cassius took the video. >> it was horrifying. some of the equipment had blood on them, gloves with blood on them, a deceased person right there, right in front. >> glor: around 11:20 sunday morning, kelley, dressed in black tactical gear, was spotted at a gas station across from the church. he drove over, got out, and began firing with a ruger ar-type rifle. he went inside and continued to fire, shooting dozens. as he left, a neighbor, steven wilford, confronted and shot kelley, who dropped his weapon and fled in an s.u.v. a car chase ensued that ended when the suspect ran off the
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road and crashed. he was found dead inside his car, possibly from a self- inflicted gunshot wound. >> i'm no hero. >> glor: steven williford heard the shots from his home, ran out without shoes on, an began shooting at kelley. >> every time i heard a shot, i knew that probably represented a life. i was scared to death. >> glor: freeman martin is with the texas department of public safety. >> we know during that pursuit, the suspect used his cell phone to notify his father that he had been shot and didn't think he was going to make it. >> glor: today, f.b.i. agents scoured church property for evidence. three firearms were recovered, including two handguns and the rifle used at the scene. investigators believe the incidents stem from a domestic dispute.
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>> trooive remaining victims investigators believe the incident stemmed from a domestic dispute. kelley was estranged from his currents wife danielle shields. mother-in-law received threatening texts from him but not present at the shooting. > >> we've had a long night with our children and grandbabies we have left. >> glor: pastor frank pomeroy and his wife sherri, who were not at church, lost their youngest daughter, 14-year-old annabelle. >> the few of us left behind lost tragically yesterday. as senseless as this tragedy was, our sweet belle would not have been able to deal with r:sing so much family yesterday. >> glor: kelley bought at least two guns after passing background checks, but the terms of his discharge should have prevented that. david martin on what went wrong. >> reporter: the air force admitted today its office of epecial investigations apparently failed to report kelley's name to the national criminal information center
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after he plead guilty to two counts of domestic violence in 2013. because his name did not appear in the database, kelley was able to walk into a gun shop in san antonio last year and buy the semi-automatic rifle police have identified as the weapon used to kill 26 people. >> when he was convicted, that should have stopped him from ontting a gun. >> reporter: retired colonel don christenson was formerly the air force's top prosecutor. or he should not have had a gun. because one the maximum punishment was more than a year, and two, it was domestic violence. >> reporter: he kicked and pulled the hair of his then wife. s also pleaded guilty to assaulting his stepson by striking him on the head and body with as for likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm. five other counts of domestic violence including pointing a gaded gun at his wife, were withdrawn as part of his guilty plea. he was sentenced to a year in prison and a bad conduct
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discharge, leaving the air force after he got out in 2014. she air force will conduct an investigation, but it appears the fatal mistake of failing to enter kelley's name into the xitabase occurred at holloman air force base in new mexico where he was stationed at the time of his court-martial. n,ff? >> glor: david martin, thank you inry much. investigators have been digging into the gunman's life also after he left the military. and omar villafranca has more on that. hiseporter: devin kelley earned four medals during his time in the air force, but his colent behavior at home ended his four-year military career. inlley divorced his first wife in 2012 but got remarried to danielle shields in 2014 after his discharge when he moved back to texas. he most recently worked as the overnight security guard at this resort in new braunfels, texas. ui no signs of anything. very quiet, polite young man. >> reporter: the resort manager,
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claudia margiabettian says kelley left a note on saturday saying he had a headache and left work early. te was scheduled for work the day of the shooting. r we thought he just didn't aiow up for work on sunday, and then about 5:30 my maintenance manager said, have you not been watching the news? i turned it on, and that's when we found out about him. >> reporter: deputies now block , e entrance to the last place kelley lived, a house n gistered to his parents, 40 miles north of san antonio. what was your reaction when you found out? >> shock, and horror for the poor people who lost family members. that's probably the hardest part of it. >> reporter: kelley's coworkers at the resort say he was always quiet and just kept to himself. jeff, there are still sheriff's deputies blocking the entrance if his parents', and they are art saying if they have searched that property. >> glor: omar, thanks very much. hours after the attack, dozens held a candlelight vigil outside the first baptist church. osong those killed, lulu white,
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the grandmother of kelley's estranged wife. tharly half the dead were from two families. michelle miller, now, with more on that. >> reporter: three generations of the holcombe family, eight members in all, including an unborn baby. >> father, thank you for letting us come to your house today. >> reporter: bryan holcombe, seen here leading another service, was filling in for the regular pastor, the devoted grandfather who loved entertaining his family, perished along with his high school sweetheart. bryan's son marc also died, reong with one-year-old noah, the youngest victim of the bloodshed. bryan's other son john was worshipping with his wife d,ystal and their five kids. john survived, but his pregnant wife, who posted regularly about her kids' accomplishments, did not. three of their children, emily, megan, and greg, also lost their loves. earl seasongood is a close family friend. >> it's hard to stop and think
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about it, because the magnitude of the loss of some people is >> r unfathomable. >> reporter: the church's pastor, frank pomeroy, lost his 14-year-old daughter annabelle. >> we've had a long night with our children and grandbabies we have left. >> reporter: the ward family also lost some of its youngest. five-year-old brook ward and seven-year-old emily garza along with mother joann. nine-year-old mckinley ward hid under the church pews after the gunman's bullet shot the glasses off her face. her brother rylan was struck four times and is now out of surgery. retired air force serviceman robert corrigan also died alongside his wife shani. they leave behind two sons, jeff, both are on active duty. >> glor: michelle, thank you. earlier today i spoke with terry smith who told me more about her friend, joanna ward.
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a ll me about joanna. >> joanna was a beautiful mom. yoe loved her children. she was a young girl, and she had four children. and she was going to church to start her day, and she never made it out. i'm sorry. this is so heartbreaking. she was like my daughter. >> glor: how long did you know her for? er i've known her for ten years. >> glor: you were here yesterday. what did you hear and see? >> we heard the shots, and the gentleman was standing right underneath that sign. he was shooting at the building, sed he was just shooting. you could see him shooting. and he went around and then we
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couldn't see him, but we could y ill hear the shots. and we saw him come around. he went all the way around and qck to that area. and then it got real quiet roain. and then we heard a lot of rounds, a lot. >> glor: the 26 who died here represent 4% of the population e. this small town. mark strassmann tells us there are no strangers here. >> reporter: roughly 600 people live in sutherland springs, a texas small town with a broken heart. there's a post office but no school, no police department, no neason for outsiders to notice this one-blinking light town, until now. >> it's very close-knit, for loving. our lives are like this. >>ey're interweaved. >> reporter: everyone knows everyone? >> everyone knows everyone. when one hurts, we all hurt. >> reporter: 88-year-old beaulah wilson is the retired postmaster here.
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her family proved from san antonio to sutherland springs in 1954 to feel safe. >> i have friends that are dead that i don't know which ones they are. >> reporter: which sounds crazy to say. mi it does. it's numbing. you're just numb. st reporter: first baptist church often responded to people who found trouble. on sunday, trouble found the church. the on-again-off-again spiritual home for the wilson family over the last 63 years. how important is first baptist to sutherland springs? >> i'd say it's an anchor. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: when you say a nchor," you mean? >> it's a place where you feel odeady. everybody wants to belong somewhere, and you feel like you belong. >> reporter: are you worried that sutherland springs will now become known as the town where this happened? >> i'm sure it will be out there, but i hope people look beyond that to see us get strong frain.
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>> reporter: mrs. wilson was not in the church on sunday, but with so many of her friends and neighbors dead, i asked her when she would start the feel the anguish, and, jeff, she told me, when the funerals begin. >> glor: mark strassmann, thank you very much. the mass shooting in texas has prompted some in congress to once again call for gun control. will this time be different? here's nancy cordes. >> this isn't a guns situation. >> reporter: america's mass shooting problem came up in tokyo today, where president trump blamed kelley's psyche, not his weapons. >> i think that mental health is your problem here. this was a very, based on preliminary reports, a very deranged individual. >> reporter: but there is no evidence yet that the suspect was ever diagnosed with a mental health disorder. which may explain why he was able to obtain a ruger ar-556
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rifle within days of it being .amed the n.r.a.'s gun of the week. (gunshots) and while u.s. levels of mental illness are comparable to those th other western countries, our rate of firearm homicides is 6 to 16 times greater. >> they wanted to be able to pray. cb reporter: texas governor greg abbott told cbs this morning it's up to the almighty to turn things around. >> praying and hugs are very good, but what can we do the keep these weapons out of people that you are saying yourself are evil? >> i'm going to use the words of toe citizens of sutherland springs themselves, and that is they want to work together for love to overcome evil, and you ec that by working with god. >> reporter: here on capitol hill, the debate has become as predictable as mass shootings themselves. >> americans are being slaughtered, and congress is refusing to protect them. >> reporter: democrats pushed for stricter gun laws today as
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republicans pushed for patience. >> i think being rational people, we ought to want to know bactly what the facts are before we decide what the best course of action might be. m reporter: congress does have all the facts about dozens of past mass shootings, of course, but that hasn't led to much action either, whether you're talking about guns or mental health or anything else, jeff. >> glor: nancy cordes, thanks very much. coming up next on the "cbs thening news." ter,ident trump in asia talks tough on north korea. cad later, senator rand paul is attacked by a neighbor in what's being called a terrorist trivial dispute.
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how much money do you think you'll need in retirement? then we found out how many years that money would last them. how long do you think we'll keep -- oooooohhh! you stopped! you're gonna leave me back here at year 9? how did this happen? it turned out, a lot of people fell short, of even the average length of retirement. we have to think about not when we expect to live to, but when we could live to. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. >> glor: tonight, president trump is arriving in south korea, the second leg of his asian trip. today in japan he took aim at jrth korea. arrgaret brennan is traveling rith the president. >> i don't thi ver been closer to japan than we are right now.
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>> reporter: president trump reassured prime minister shinzo abe that the u.s. commitment to ally japan is ironclad. >> some people said my rhetoric is very strong, but look what's happened with very weak rhetoric over the last 25 years. re reporter: mr. trump prodded abe to build up his military in response to north korea's recent launch of two ballistic missiles over japanese territory. >> he will shoot them out of sky when he completes the purchase of lots of additional military equipment from the united states. na reporter: there a show of trce, the u.s. flew b-1 bombers o er the korean peninsula ahead of the president's arrival. ie navy is on track to conduct operations with three aircraft carriers in the sea of japan later this week. >> and they were abducted in all cases by north korea. >> reporter: the president and first lady also met with the families of japanese citizens kidnapped by north korea. mr. trump seemed to extend an offer to dictator kim jong-un.
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d if he would send them back, inat would be the start of something i think would be just something very special. n they would do that. fi reporter: japan was the friendliest stop on this five-nation tour. the president isn't as close with the leader here in south korea, who favors a more restrained approach to dealing with the north. today, the president has asked congress to boost defense spending by $6 billion. jeff? bo glor: margaret, thank you. still ahead, a major university suspends all fraternities and sororities. sororities. if he'd taken tylenol, he'd be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve. all day strong.
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try cool mint zantac. no pill relieves heartburn faster. >> glor: late today president trump tweeted his support for saudi arabia's leadership after the crown prince ordered some of te country's princes put under inuse arrest in what the palace called an anti-corruption idquiry. in his tweet, the president said some of the princes had been , lking the country for years. the president's former campaign chairman, paul manafort, returned to court in washington
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today. he and business associate rick gates asked the judge to ease gheir home confinement. both were accused of hiding profits from foreign consulting work. the judge said she needed more information about their finances, saying they pose significant flight risks. republican senator rand paul is recovering from five broken ribs after being assaulted at his asme in kentucky. he was attacked friday in bowling green by his next door washbor. rene boucher, also a doctor, was arrested and charged with misdemeanor fourth-degree assault. in a statement, boucher's attorney called the incident, "a very regrettable dispute that most people would regard as trivial." today, florida state university indefinitely suspended all campus fraternities and sororities. that follows the death of a freshman pledge at a house party on friday. f.s.u. president john thrasher said the school has a "serious problem." more than 7,000 f.s.u. undergrads belong to a greek organization.
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heen we come back here tonight, three of the five deadliest shootings have taken place in the last year and a half. are we getting numb to the violence? [burke] abstract accident. seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ whenstuff happens. d... shut down cold symptoms fast with maximum strength alka seltzer plus liquid gels. only have a sore throat? get long-lasting relief for up to 6 hours with new alka seltzer plus sore throat relief.
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...at t. rowe price... ...we've helped our investors stay confident for over 75 years. call us or your advisor. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. more than half of all the cars towed in san jose are not picked up, why so many owners simply walk away next. on sunday. and that's not counting the 26 murdered here in sutherland springs. so what happens when the unthinkable seems to happen every day? >>re's jim axelrod. >> just unbelievable. >> reporter: whether it was unbelievable five weeks ago in res vegas. >> it seems totally unreal to te. >> reporter: or unreal five ngars ago in newtown, americans may need to find some new language for mass shootings. sadly, their frequency makes them all too real and believable. just since the pulse nightclub shootings in orlando 17 months
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ago, there have been 555 mass shootings as the f.b.i. defines them-- four or more shot at once. 689 people have been killed, nearly 2,700 wounded. >> we got shots fired. sounded like an automatic firearm. >> reporter: two of the five pladliest shootings taken place iv the last 35 days. they are all competing for space in our collective consciousness and getting crowded out. take the shootings this man, scott osterman is accused of in wal-mart in colorado, three dead five days ago, chances are you reven't heard about it. frank oxburg is a professor of psychiatry at michigan state fiiversity. what happens to a culture with more than 50 dead and more than 500 injured is suddenly yesterday's news? >> i think we lose something hotal.
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emotion often drives thought. and too much exposure to the same kind of violence reduces that emotional response. or it was unreal. >> reporter: so, yes, we can ssrget unreal and unbelievable. maybe the word we're looking for to describe our reaction the all these mass shootings is "numb." jim axelrod, cbs news, new york. >> glor: we look at a bullet hole in a sunday school building. seryone here seemed to know someone affected by this shooting. they try to process what is so difficult for so many of us to understand. we will have the latest details tomorrow on "cbs this morning." for now that is the "cbs evening news." i'm jeff glor in sutherland springs. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
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begins with a top democrat in sacramento losing support. we've learned state lawmakers are taking a serious kpix5 news begins with a top democrat in sacramento losing support. we've learned state lawmakers are taking a serious look at his future after sexual assault allegations. good evening. i'm veronica de la cruz. >> i'm allen martin. new at 6:00 state lawmakers are feeling the heat after one of their own was accused of groping a colleague nearly a decade ago. raul bocanegra is one of the top democrats in the state assembly serving as the majority whip. he represents the 39th district which includes the northeastern san fernando valley in southern california. kpix5 kpix5 political reporter melissa caen. >> just three years before he was elected to the assembly he was a staffer at the capitol and was ordered to stay away after a female staffer claimed he grabbed her breasts.
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he went on to be elected to the assembly. >> he broke the law and he needs to resign. >> reporter: congressmanthis congressman said groping -- this congressmanned groping a person is assault -- congressman said groping a person is assault. the woman said, "i refuse to work with this assemblyman or anyone who takes part in harassment or assault," state senator jerry hill saying bocanegra needs to decide whether he's staying in the state assembly but may find he can't do his job. >> i think it's a decision he has to make. it may be difficult for him to work in the legislature if others won't talk with him. >> reporter: he's also the

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