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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  January 25, 2018 3:12am-4:01am PST

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this was a sponsored presentation of the last stores standing. now one of the 180 that its set to be closing this year. >> in the age of e-commerce, you
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have to give consumers a reason, to come to your mall. to come to your store. one major reason, the amazon effect. with 178 been net sales, the company is revolutionized the way consumers shop on line. a lot of people say, malls are dead. you say -- i don't believe that. i don't want to believe that. on a personal level, of course i also don't believe it. for them to survive, miller says it must become the center of the community. and not just a shopping destination. stow you need to do something that draws the people out. and then, hopefully, their pocketbooks. michelle miller, cbs news, pensdale, pennsylvania. now to some other stories we are following in the news feed. doctors have long believed they have just six hours, to save brain tissue from a lack of
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blood flow. advanced technology suggests doctors have 16 hours to treat stroke patients. >> judge in california today barred david and louise turpin from contact with 13 children. pleading not guilty to torture, child abuse and false imprisonment. we learned they main have been planning a move to oklahoma. a relative told "inside edition" the turpins dressed siblings alike hoping to land a reality tv show. >> tech giant spent more than ever on lobbying. google. facebook, spend $50 billion to influence the government on immigration, tax reform and other issues. google led the pack spending $18 million. a cloning first. this time it is a primate. >> cheating in a camel contest. >> everyone who calls is calling
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there has been a big break through that may bring the world one step closer to cloning humans. here is jim axelrod. >> reporter: these two female monkeys, wawa and xingxing are seven weeks old. 22 years ago, dolly the sheep became the first mammal cloned from an adult followed by two dozen mammals, dogs, cows, pigs. scientists at chinese academy of sciences in shanghai have now cloned a primate for the very first time. dieter eggly researcher at columbia university. >> i am astonished that they were able to make this happen.
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>> what makes it so astonishing? >> more than 20 years we knew you could clone, sheep, horses, cats. but despite several attempts, everybody failed. when cloning monkeys. >> the chinese scientists say the gold is to create genetically identical monkeys to use in medical research in the battle against alzheimers and park in? son and have no intention of one day cloning humans. marci darnovsky runs center for genetics and society in berkeley, california. >> more than 60 countries and 15 states in the u.s. have laws on the books. saying that human reproductive cloning is illegal. >> the people for theette ka cal treatment of animals didn't waste any time. cloning is a horror show said peta's representative, waste of time, lives and money. >> fascinating debait.
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>> still ahead here, cheating at a camel contest.
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news and said the original example of it was when satan disguides as a serpent persuaded eve to eat the forbidden fruit. satan gave the fake news in this case, snake news that eating the fruit would give her the wisdom of god. >> scandal in saudi arabia cheating at a beauty contest for camels. a dozen of them were disqualified this week because they got botox injections to make their lips look better. some also had ear reduction surgery and another no-no. tens of millions of dollars at stake here. so the competition is intense. and the most dominant ballplayers are headed to cooperstown. the class of '18 will be inducted in july. and folks getting a much needed lift.
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we end here with the latest advance in cancer care. it begins at the patient's home. here is mark strassmann. >> that was him out here. >> a stranger gave patricia curry the lift she needed. >> bless you. >> you too, baby. >> in more ways than one. she is 58 on her way to treatment for stage three breast cancer. off awe wh
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you need to think positive. >> one stress you don't need is worrying how you will get to and from. >> exactly. >> i have cried many days thanking god. they was right on time. >> she is talking about chemocars, a service in metro charlotte offering free ride to cancer patients getting treatment. it is zach bolsters brain child and passion. >> cancer can be scary and feel uncontrollable. we want to take this one piece of the process, transportation, make it simple so they can focus on what matters most. getting better. >> his mother, gloria had stage four pancreatic cancer. he quit his job on wall street and moved to charlotte to drive her to doctors and chemosessions. he noticed many patients. older, lower income missed treatments because they had no reliable ride. >> it was heartbreaking and unfair to see that some people didn't hatch the exact same shot at beating cancer as others. >> reporter: in december 2016,
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bolster's mother died. he launched chemo-cars. it coordinates with uber and lyft and donations pay for the ride. >> so once the ride comes, all of the stress is gone. >> yeah, i am good. >> once you are here, you are good. >> yes, i am praying it will help a whole lot of other people. >> since last march. chemo-cars provided more than 2000 ride. >> your mom the inspiration in some senses is she along for every ride. >> everyone who calls chemo-cars is actually calling my mom's old phone number the she kind of lives on with every ride. >> bolster filled a gap in cancer care. with kindness. mark strassmann, cbs news, charlotte, north carolina. that it the "overnight news" for this thursday.
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welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. aplautz as larry nassar was sentenced in the child sex scandal that rocked the sports world. the just did more than just throw the book at nassar former doctor for usa gymnastics she sent him away up to 175 years and told him, i just stiend your death warrant. dr. jon lapook reports. >> your decision to assault was precise, calculated, manipulative.
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>> the judge did not buy nassar's apology reading aloud parts of the let here had writ in to her last week. >> what i did in the state cases was medical, not sexual. the media convinced them that everything i did was wrong and bad. they feel i broke their trust. hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. the judge told nassar his treatments were not medical and reminded him he admitted wrongdoing in his plea deal. >> because you are guilty, aren't you? >> as the procession of victims came to a close, rachel denhollander called for the maximum sentence. >> so i ask how much is a little girl worth?
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i submit to you that these children are worth everything. >> she was the first to publicly accuse nassar of sexual abuse in a 2016 "indianapolis star" article. >> you started the tidal wave. you are the bravest person i have ever had in my courtroom. >> she says she was only 13 years old when nassar first abused her. >> you need to look at me and listen. i've only hope that when you got a chance to speak, you tell us who knew what, and when they knew it. >> nassar's abuse did not occur in a vacuum. a culture was in place where children were afraid to say no to a grownup. there were complaints were not taken seriously. as the judge said today, there need to be a massive investigation to find out how this happened. the probe into russia interference in the 2016 election inching closer to the oval office a toern general jeff sessions has been questioned as
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has fired fbi director james comey and president trump's lawyers are gearing up for his chat with the prosecutors. paula reid has the latest. >> in the days after he fired fbi director james comey last may, sources tell cbs news that president trump asked the acting fbi director andrew mccabe which candidate he voted for in the 2016 presidential election. mccabe told the president he didn't vote. a check of virginia record confirmed today. late this afternoon. president trump told reporters he doesn't remember asking mccabe about his vote. >> i don't remember that -- >> i said that this morning. i don't remember asking him that question. >> the president has also criticized mccabe's wife jill for accepting almost $700,000 from democratic party affiliated institutions in an unsuccessful run for virginia senate. >> i think it is extraordinary. >> a former fbi assistant director says he never had to deal with the situation like that. >> never in my 30 years in the
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fbi was i asked by a superior who i voted for or my political party affiliation? >> the conversation is significant because special counsel robert mueller is investigating possible obstruction of justice in the firing of james comey. the ousted fbi director says the president told him in an oval office meeting, i need loyalty. i expect loyalty. sking mccabe about his volt could suggest the president was also seeking his loyalty. >> the united states is a former federal prosecutor part of the whitewater investigation of president bill clinton. >> when we start politicalizing our branch of the government dealing with prosecuting and investigating crimes. then our democracy starts to crumble. >> while mccain remains number two at the fbi, cbs news has also learned that attorney general jeff sessions has been pressuring current fbi director
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christopher ray to fire mccabe. ray resisted. mccabe is expected to reap tire in march. >> parents. students. teachers, everyone who lives around marshal county high school in kentucky remain in shock this morning. they have no answers as to why a 15-year-old boy would open fire in the school. two students were killed. 18 others hurt. some of them critically. it was the 11th school shooting this year. and it is only january 25th. adriana diaz reports. >> reporter: the shooting has sha shaken this close knit community. police yet to identify the shooter or motive. investigators including the fbi and atf are trying to figure out why the student walked into a school and opened fire. still doesn't feel real, doesn't feel like it happened. >> moments after arriving at school. teenagers were scrambling for cover as their fellow student began shooting. >> sounded like a fight. some one hitting on the window.
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took out my headphones. turned around. everyone was just broken up. >> the school immediately went into lockdown. some students had already fled the grounds. >> one student went inside to rescue her friend. sunny was unharmed. >> my best friend. i can't lose her. we got her and left. five sthots fired. four down at the high school at marshal. >> police arrived to the school just seven minutes after the first 911 call. they quickly found the gunman, and arrested him. >> he was apprehended by the sheriff's department. here on site at the school. thankfully before any more lives could be taken. there is no wait to know. how much further it would have went. >> buses evacuated uninjured students to nearby middle school. frantic parents raced to the chaotic scene hoping to find their children. >> as soon as you hear it, it is
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terrifying. >> five victims were air lifted to vanderbilt university medical center in nashville. preston ryan cope died at the hospital. bailey nicole holt was killed at the scene. they were both 15. kentucky governor, matt bench. >> this is a wound that is going to take a long time to haem. and for some in this community will never fully heal. >> students will have trouble returning to the school, where their friend were killed. there will still be some fear. i can never look at the school the same. i know what happened. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. hey, are you taking the tissue test?
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other than recently passed tax overhaul, president from had few legislative victories in his first year in office. but he is making a very large impact on the federal judiciary. jan crawford reports. >> reporter: when president trump nominated judge neil gorsuch to the supreme court he delivered on a key campaign promise to replace the late justice scalia with solid conservative. >> got to go for trump. supreme court justices. >> reporter: in 2016, 56% of republican voters said the supreme court was the most important factor in support. the white house is making its mark on the lower courts where the president is looking to fill
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145 vacancies nationwide. >> the president is doing with the courts is truly transformative. >> leonard leo outside adviser to the president on judges helps lead the conservative federalist society. >> these are people who believe in self government, most of the big issues need to be decided by the people and their elected representatives. >> there have been missteps as the district court level. >> ever tried a jury trial? >> i have not. >> civil? >> two nominees. >> forced to withdraw over questions over their qualifications. on appeals court, highly credentialed. conservative powerhouse what you expect from a traditional republican president. democrats say it is not qualifications but their philosophy that could lead to a roll back of civil rights. >> an alarming trend of more extreme judicial candidates. >> we have seen president trump nominate people, far outinside it of the judicial mainstream. >> the goal it not just to got a few ultraconservative judges on
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the federal courts. it is to capture the entire judicial branch. >> the judicial battles show elections have consequences. >> the president made it clear the kinds of people he would going to nominate. that's what he is delivering. >> now with republicans in control. the senate filling the vacancies within reach. if democrats take back the senate that could 60% of women are wearing the wrong size pad and
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college campuses have been a place where the battle for ideas played out. but recently, it's more like a war of words that's raging. rita braver explains. >> in the 1960s, college students demanded the right to talk about anything on campus. from civil rights to opposing the vietnam war. all idea seemed up for debate. but, its that still true today. at yale university, a faculty member is yelled at by students. the reason -- his wife also a yale instructor had suggested students should be free to wear any halloween costume they
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choose. even if slightly offensive. a month later, the teacher resigned. at the university of missouri -- >> don't push me. >> students and faculty try to stop a student reporter from covering their protest. >> this is the first amendment that protects your right to stand here protects mine. >> at the university of california at berkeley, when conservative commentator ben shapiro showed up to speak. there were multiple arrests. the school on virtual lockdown, and more than half a million dollars was spent on security. even comedian bill maher faced student calls to cancel his berkeley commencement address in part because he had made jokes about islam. who ever told you you only had to hear what didn't upset you? >> reporter: at campuses around
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the country. some speakers were disinvited. or simply backed out in the face of student opposition. former secretary of state condoleezza rice, head of the international monetary fund, christine laguard, rapper and actor, kommon. it's got a lot of people asking what is going on? >> i don't agree that -- you, when you become students at colleges, have to be coddled and protected from different points of view. >> some of protests are in reaction to deliberately provocative figures, like white nationalist, richard spencer. >> so you don't believe in free speech at all, do you? >> what happens when the speaker says, he is just reporting on his academic research. >> most of my lectures are going after them. as the members of a new elite that are out of touch with mainstream america.
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>> charles murray is a libertarian political scientist with the american enterprise institute. his 2012 book "coming apart" explores the growing divide bet tween rich and poor white americans. >> i think what i am saying is important for college kids to hear. >> when he came to talk about it at middlebury college in vermont last march. >> students and activists shouted down charles murray invited to speak at the school all. up awere you were you aware he had a reputation that was controversial. >> a member of the student wing of american enterprise institute helped bring murray to campus. >> it wasn't a surprise to us that some people may not like the bell curve. we were not at all hoping he would discuss the bell curve. he would give a lecture on coming apart. >> here we are. >> the bell curve is a previous book of murrays and suggested race may play a part in
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determining intelligence. jen itices, iq, race, this is really the chapter. asserted that blacks do less well than whites on iq tests. that set off a fire sform when published in 1994. a firestorm reignited at mid spl bury. awe off the speaker, the college invites play a keefe role in our mission as the a college. >> senior, jeremy alban. >> i dent think murray's scholarship should be part of the academic mission. >> very ironic, students claim to beep most liberal are the ones not willing to engage with controversial ideas. >> sophomore ray aaron was hoping to ask murray tough questions. >> at some point it turned into, not, not an argument we should protest his idea but we should protest his right to share his ideas. >> let's continue. >> murray was set to be interviewed by political science appropriate fessor, allison
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stanger. >> we lost an educational opportunity. >> seconds after they took the stage. students drown them out with a tirade of shouts. >> we didn't actually preef vent him from speaking. heave wrote plenty of articles and after the talk. just saying in this specific time, on this specific stage, we're sending you a message that we do not support your ideals. >> students like liz, and jeremy, insist that just letting some one like murray be heard increases the likelihood of violence against minorities. >> itch you want to engage with a scholar you believe your right to see them and engage with them is so strong that you don't care about the potential trauma or violence this could bring. it is a selfish idea of academic engagement. >> think i have the answer. you will not let us speak. that's terrible. >> mur rain's appearance did result in violence of another
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kind. when he was escorting murray out, they were attacked by a mob, including outside activists. she was left with of a concussion and whiplash. ironically, stan ge r was selected to mod rate the event because she was seen as a respected professor, with liberal credentials. >> i went back, reviewed the bell cover. prepared tough questions. never got to ask. in front of an audience that was listeni listening. of a real group think, mob mentality. where people weren't reading and thinking for themselves, relying on other people to tell them what to think. >> and it isn't just middle bury. murray was shouted down at the universal of michigan this past fall as well. what do you think is different, have students changed? >> well the identity politics is way more intense. you are getting this, you can't talk to me about any of my life
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experiences because you aren't a woman, you aren't black, or you aren't poor, and therefore, it's almost as if they're saying, we have no common humanity. >> some kriltices say too many college cam pulse tuesday aren't places for a civil exchange of idea. but, an intolerant world of plilt cal correction. a recent gallup poll find that 54% of college students say people on campus are afraid to say what they believe. and if you visit a campus these days, you may feel like you need a dictionary for a whole new set of phrases. terms like, safe space, a place where students can go, where their won't be exposed to coppices that make them uncomfortable. trigger warnings, when a professor cautions students that upcoming ma feerl could be dims tressing. but now some signs of a backlash.
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>> discomfort is intrinsic part of an education. >> robert zimmer is president of the university of chicago. last school year, the university sent a letter to income offing freshmen. that said, in part, we dupe not support so-called trigger warnings, we do not cancel invited speakers because their topics might prove controversial, and we do not condone the creation of intellectual safe spaces. why did the university have to put out a letter like that in the first place? >> part of the way we operate its that we are a place where, there is constant open discourse, constant expression, con tant argument.ter was pratz many. some chicago students including junior mary blare are still debating the meaning of much of its language. >> i feel like the letter, remted a fundamental misunderstanding of safe places and value and importance in any
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setting. >> there is a real risk aversion on scam pulses. >> law student. eric wesson. >> once people enter the real world. >> i can assure you all people of color existeden a primarily white space know that the real world is not a safe space. >> and the war of words is continuing at middlebury. where students like, liz dunn and ray aaron say slt impact of the charles murray incident is still being felt. why its this a good thing. in your mind that these appropriate tests, are going forward. >> i think it is always a good thing to realize that we are actually able to challenge thorlt. and tha -- authority. and that we have a voice, place, ability to express that. what we mav to say and what we are experiencing is something important and we can change. up aought in the end i think the conversation turned into whether
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or not we support controversial ideas. and, for
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top u.s. general in raqqa, syria, part of an effort to stable i city for years the self proclaimed capital of the islamic state. among the thousand who were freed when isis gunmen were defeated. a young boy with a curious story that has an american connection. holly williams has the more. >> when the 8-year-old was reunited with his family in november, more than three years after kidnapped by isis. they immediately noticed a
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change. he had somehow learned to speak fluent english. american family. how long did you live with them for? >> that's right. he said he lived with an american woman hand her children for two years in raqqa. then the so-called isis capital. he called the woman, sam. >> like the same color as mine? >> yeah. >> an extraordinary story, confirmed by these isis propaganda videos. shows him with a buy he identified as yusef. >> ten years old. >> sam's son. ahem says sam treated him with kindness. we can't confirm the identity. don't know how she ended up living under isis. but she claims sunny was forced
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to agree to the propaganda video. >> got a gun to the head. said you have to make it. >> held ate gun to her head? >> yes. they dead if you don't make it. we are going to kill you. >> but this 8-year-old's or -- he was inside raqqa as pummeled by u.s. coalition air strikes. >> oh. >> he is now safe wit his extended family. he misses sam and her son, yusef. >> he said to me -- don't forget me. if you forget me high will poop on your head. >> holly williams, cbs news, day hook, iraq. that's the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some the news continues. check back with us later for the morning use. and from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jericka
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new york city, i'm jericka duncan. captioning funded by cbs new york city, i'm jericka duncan. it's thursday, january 25th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." president trump says he's willing and ready to testify in the russia investigation. >> i'm looking forward to it actually. i would love do that, and i'd like do it as soon as possible. michigan state university's president steps down hours after former msu and usa gymnastics doctor larry nassar was sentenced to prison for decades of sexual abuse. and going home.

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