Skip to main content

tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 9, 2018 3:12am-4:01am PDT

3:12 am
with healthcare costs exploding out of control, you can't afford to ignore your body's nutritional needs. omax3's patented delivery system ensures a 4:1 epa to dha ratio that was developed to help support healthy triglyceride levels and heart health while helping your joints feel younger. with omax3 ultra-pure, you get ultra health benefits that you can see and feel with your first free box. and this incredible offer just gets better and better, because you'll also get three free gifts with your order. first, a 30-day supply of vitamin d-3, to help boost immune function and support strong bones and muscles. this $29.95 value is yours free just for trying omax3 today! your second free gift is a pair of omax3 circulation sports socks. perfect for keeping feet cool and energized during your favorite activities. this $19.99 value is also yours to keep just for trying omax3 today, and that's not all! you'll also get dr. maroon's new e-book, omega-3 for optimal life, a $19.99 value, also free! that's over $100 in free gifts and bonuses!
3:13 am
you'll get it all when you call today and receive a free bonus box with your first order. (upbeat music) (twinkling music) the proceeding was a paid advertisement for omax3, brought to you by prevention pharmaceuticals.
3:14 am
for two years. >> fire judge persky. >> searing impact of sexual assault was described in the victim's statement presented in court written by the unnamed woman turner attacked behind a dumpster near a fraternity
3:15 am
party. you took away my worth, my privacy, my confidence. i don't want my body anymore. i was terrified of it. as the statements spread on the internet. stanford law professor, michelle dawber, organized to turn anything near a million dollar recall campaign. more than 90,000 signatures were collected in santa clara county where the vote will take place. >> it is a but this judge. women have had enough of sexual violence not taken seriously in the criminal justice system. >> i think judicial recalls should be reserved for misconduct by a judge or incompetence. >> the judge's call for judicial independence has not been resonating with voters. a recent poll shows the 56% voters favor recalling the judge. while 29% say he should stay on the bench. judge persky are gud today if he is recalled, judges will be reluctant to make difficult
3:16 am
decisions. >> when public opinion influences a juror's decision or a judge's decision, it corrupts the rule of law. >> those opposing judge persky's recall, note he was following the probation department and following state law in sentencing that has since been changed as a result of this case. voters will pass their verdict on judge persky, june 5th. jeff. off awe john blackstone from l.a. bureau. thank you. utah became the first state to allow free range parenting. supporters say it gives parents far more latitude to raise kids as they see fit. jamie yuccas take is a look. >> you guys ready to go? >> when melissa butler send guy and sammy off to school they walk alone. >> ultimately i decided my parenting decisions are not going to be based on, fear. >> butler is no longer concerned because utah's free range parenting law, prevents parents from being prosecuted for alug
3:17 am
kids to roam on their own. >> why would you need to put a law like this into place? >> a good question. >> utah state representative brad daw. >> nobody wants to see a kid abducted. but everybody wants a kid to be a kid. how do we find the balance? >> the idea can be traced become to something former new york columnist, wrote a decade ago. she let her 9-year-old son ride the new york city subway and got labeled world's worst mom. >> if you are neglecting a child that's awful. you've will be prosecuted. if you are trusting your child and you have taught them to cross the street and look both ways, and not go off with strangers, you're an old-fashioned parent, that's not against the law. off awe in 2015, maryland couple was investigated by child welfare authorities. when they allowed their then, 10 and 6-year-old kids to walk home alone from a park. examples like this, prompted the utah law. which butler says, now gives her peace of mind. >> i don't think that's healthy for them to always have mom right there watching them making sure they're doing everything
3:18 am
the way i want them to. i think it is healthy for them to explore, play on their own. >> there is a lot of national interest about how everything plays out here in utah. several states including new jersey, are kidding their own free range parenting law. jeff. >> jamie yuccas with a fascinating debate. thanks. >> coming up next, what led investigators to these wood as they search for girls who went
3:19 am
prepare for your demise, mr. billingsley! do your worst, doctor. i will. but first, a little presentation. hijacking earth's geothermal energy supply.
3:20 am
phase 1. choosing the right drill bit. as long as evil villains reveal their plans, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. stop fearing your alarm clock... with new*! zzzquil pure zzzs. a drug-free blend of botanicals with melatonin ...that supports your natural sleep cycle... ...so you can seize the morning. new! zzzquil pure zzzs.
3:21 am
intense search in michigan for a girl who disappeared nearly four decades ago. demarco morgan reports she may not beat only one hidden in the woods. >> reporter: using excavators, police and officials are combing through the thick wooded area in macomb township, 30 miles north of detroit. looking for the body of 12-year-old kimberly king last seen in september 1979. warren police commissioner bill dwyer spoke to affiliate wwj. >> officials say the site could contain remains of up to half a dozen missing young girls which are part of cold cases that go back 40 years. police say after months of conversations with suspected serial killer, arthur ream, he led them to this site.
3:22 am
ream is in prison for the murder of a 13-year-old who disappeared in 1986. in 2008, ream led authorities to her remains discovered in the same area. >> again police say the search could take up to four days. jeff, arthur ream reportedly drew a map of the site and spent an hour with authorities. currently serving life sentence. >> amazing to think some of the families could get closure four dock a decades later. >> who should get prostate screening who should not? a big change in the guidelines a big change in the guidelines next. i'm so frustrated. a big change in the guidelines next. i just want to find a used car without getting ripped off. you could start your search at the all-new carfax.com that might help. show me the carfax. now the car you want and the history you need are easy to find. show me used trucks with one owner. pretty cool.
3:23 am
[laughs] ah... ahem... show me the carfax. start your used car search and get free carfax reports at the all-new carfax.com. my dbut now, i take used tometamucil every day.sh it traps and removes the waste that weighs me down, so i feel lighter. try metamucil, and begin to feel what lighter feels like.
3:24 am
four alabama high school football players charged in a locker room assault that was captured on camera. 14-year-old rodney kim suffered a broken arm. in what was apparently a hazing ritual. kim's parents now say they plan to sue the school district for $12 million. they want the team to forfeit the season. search for intelligence life in the cosmos expanded in a big way. the breakthrough listen project says technology will let astron merz scan millions of stars across the milky way in two months. mark zuckerberg helped start the
3:25 am
$100 million project in 2015.
3:26 am
3:27 am
a panel of health expert has done an about face on prostate cancer screening for men, 55-69.
3:28 am
six years ago they recommended the men not get screened due to risks and unnecessary treatment outweigh the benefit. based on data this a age group should consider a psa in consultation with their doctor it can slightly reduce the chances of dying of prostate cancer. cancer screenings are not recommended for men 70 or older or under 55. >> we end with an american soldier rushing home to be with his wife for the birth of their daughter. he didn't make it, but he didn't miss it. >> reporter: brooks lindsay wears uniform of army specialist. in this moment he is concentrating on his latest assignment as a proud new dad. baby milly was coming early earl than planned so specialist lindsay was rushing from el paso, texas to hometown of brandon, mississippi. he wanted to be next to his wife, haley to witness the birth of his daughter. >> but his travel plans hit some turbulence when his flight was delayed twice for maintenance problems. his mother was face timing the
3:29 am
delivery of his first child. he was watching the birth on his phone. >> push, push, push. you got it. you got it. here she comes. and then, she popped out. ha-ha. >> a passenger recorded the father's emotional reaction in real time. tracy dover was on the same flight. >> i'm thinking, oh, my gosh, he's watching his baby be born on the phone. it was the most, gut wrenching heartbreaking thing i had ever seen. >> she snapped this picture of the nervous dad. >> when we heard the baby cry, the whole sect, that was heading to mississippi started cheering. >> that video has since been viewed by hundreds of thousands of people. sharing a father's joy, over this very special moment. that is the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning.
3:30 am
from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. hi, well come to the "overnight news." i'm demarco morgan. america's closest allies are scrambling for a way forward after president trump announced he is pulling the united states out of the nuclear agreement with iran. the international treaty designed to to keep iran from attaining a nuclear arsenal while eliminating many sanctions that have crippled tehran's economy. mr. trump called it a horrible, one sided deal that should never have been made. >> the united states no longer makes empty threats.
3:31 am
>> if we do nothing we know exactly what will happen. in just a short period of time, the world's leading state sponsor of terror will be on the cusp of acquiring cusp of acquiring the world's most dangerous weapons. >> reporter: the president declared he had definitive proof that iran violated the 2015 agreement, aimed at freezing the country's nuclear ambitions, but produced no evidence. these were the president's top military advisers last fall. >> iran is not in material breach of the agreement. >> do you believe it is in national security interest at the present time to remain in jpcoa? >> yes, senator, i do. >> reporter: iranian president rhouhani, insisted it is the u.s. not iran that has broken the agreement but said he may soon restart his country's nuclear program.
3:32 am
france, germany and the uk also parties to the deal, issued a joint statement that expressed regret and concern over the u.s. exit. >> because this deal is the all time worst. >> mr. trump is celebrating it as the a campaign promise fulfilled. by pulling out of the agreement, the president reverses one of the obama administration's signature foreign policy legacies. today, the former president called withdrawal a serious mistake. president trump said he was open to renegotiations, but iran is unlikely to come to the table. >> senior global affairs contributor, ian bremmer. >> all america's allies, europeans strongly oppose america pulling out of the deal because they don't believe there is a plan b. they don't know how they could possibly get a better deal with the iranians. the announcement comes as mike
3:33 am
pompeo travels to north korea. chip reid has the latest. >> at this very moment, secretary pompeo is on his way to north korea. in preparation for my upcoming meeting with kim jong-un. president trump juggled two nuclear standoffs in his appearance today unveiling sec stare of state pompeo's second trip to north korea in less than six weeks to set up a summit that mr. trump hopes will lead to denuclearization of north korea. the president seemed confident that the details are already settles. >> we have our meetings set. the location is picked. the time and, and, date, everything is picked. and we look forward to have a very great success. >> but on the flight to north korea, pompeo told reporters we think we have it figured out. but said he still is working on
3:34 am
commitments from north korea on date and location. pompeo and the president spoke about the three amercans being held in north korea. two were teaching in the country. one is in business kim dong chul held, and the other two since last spring. the president hopes they'll be released before the summit. >> we will soon be finding out. it would be a great thing if they are. >> reporter: the white house says that the situations in iran and north korea are connected. by pulling out of the iran deal they're sending a message to north korea. that the u.s. will not accept inadequate deals. bubbling molten rock, continues to light the night sky in hawaii where lava claimed more than three dozen homes and other buildings. carter evans is there. >> wow. >> it's becoming an all too familiar sight. lava spewing into the air and just yard away from homes in the lailani estates neighborhood, ravaged by the kilauea volcano. >> like 30 yard away from it. >> for six days now, residents have fled lavar
3:35 am
degrees, incinerating everything in its path. at least 35 structures have been destroyed. this is one of the newer fissures opened up. very active right now. you can see it is venting steam. every once in a while if you listen in the background, you will hear an explosion. today, scientists say the lava lake feeding the eruptions dropped significantly. and activity is has decreased at all 12 fissures or crack as long a 2 1/2 mile span. the lava is a few hundred yard from michael clemens home. he retired in the community, five years ago. he is not leaving. >> this is all i own. this is my house. i will stay till the last minute. >> many people in this community live in lava zone one. that's the highest risk area. there is no lava insurance chls and homeowners insurance is extremely expensive. so, many people are going to be left to rebuild on their own. jeff. the halls of political power in albany rattling after the
3:36 am
abrupt resignation of daniel snyderman. accused by four women off salting them during otherwise consensual sex. jericka duncan reports. >> reporter: just days after accepting an award for supporting women's rights. 63-year-old eric snyderman resigned as new york's attorney general, after the new yorker posted an article monday night, detailing allegations from four women, who say they were physically abused by him. michelle manning barish told the new yorker she dated snyderman from 2013 to 2015. during that time she recalls when the two had sex he slapped her across the face without her consent. she describes an incident where after a night of drinking snyderman used his body weight to hold me down and begin to choke me. the choking was very hard. author tonya selvaratnam, dated him in 2016. he says, snyderman called her his brown slave and would
3:37 am
sometimes tell her to call him master. ronan farrow co-authored the article with jane mayer. >> these are women who had nothing to gain by coming forward. everything to lose. many hesitated quite some time. their friend and loved ones told them don't do this. either because, they feared, that there would be retaliation or because, they just felt his work for the democratic party was too good and too important to jeopardize. >> snyderman denied the abuse allegations. saying, in a statement, in the privacy of intimate relationships, i have engaged in role playing and other consensual sexual activity. recently he rose to national prominence after launching an investigation into harvey weinstein. >> if any of these allegations against eric snyderman are true, the hypocrisy is beyond belief. >> the manhattan district attorney's office has now opened
3:38 am
melatonin is the body's own sleep ingredient. only remfresh uses ion-powered melatonin to deliver up to 7 hours of sleep support. number one sleep doctor recommended remfresh-your nightly sleep companion. available in the natural sleep section at walmart. ♪ carefully made to be broken. new, from magnum. i'm lucky to get through a shift without a disaster. my bargain detergent couldn't keep up. so, i switched to tide pods. they're super concentrated, so i get a better clean.
3:39 am
number one trusted. number one awarded. it's got to be tide
3:40 am
uber has already revolutionized the ground transportation business. the company is looking to the sky. uber plans to launch a fleet of autonomous taxis within the next two years. and, we got a preview. >> reporter: we have been there. stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic. wishing we could fly over congestion. now uber says the dream can turn into reality with uber air. imagine flying instead of driving to your destination at up to 200 miles an hour. just by using an app on your phone. >> cities are going to go vertical in terms of transportation. we want to make that a reality. >> uber ceo says this model of
3:41 am
an air taxi shows the company's vision for the future of transportation. it is a world where passengers request an uber air on their phone. then head to these rooftop sky ports where the aircraft take off. >> we want to create the network around the vehicles. so that, regular people can take these taxis in the air for longer distances. when they want to avoid traffic. at affordable prices. >> it is going to be really, really community friendly. >> jeff holden is uber's chief product officer. >> using stacked rotors. to create vertical lift. it lifts up like a helicopter. but then when it gets to the right altitude, this rotor kicks on. creates, forward thrust. uses the wings for lift. >> holden says they're still in the design phase. unlook a helicopter. this aircraft will have clusters of small propellers and run on electricity making it quieter, efficient. affordable. although piloted at first, the goal is for the flying taxis to
3:42 am
become autonomous. questions remain about how they will guarantee safety. uber also says, for the program to become profitable it will need to move beyond a niche market. >> one of the key tenants of the technology is for to us have, four riders in each vehicle. so that essentially the cost per ride goes down. the combination of mass market. sharing which is really what uber is about. can bring this to the masses. can make it affordable. for, for normal people. >> and he took over a company in crisis when he replaced the ceo in august. >> an eight-year-old company still not profitable. lost $4.5 billion last year. why be so ambitious now. >> ambition is what has the created this company from the beginning. part of what made this company great is that we fake big, bold, bets. that's part of the norms and culture of the company. this is another big bold, bet that we think ultimately is something that, that, the cities of the future are going to need.
3:43 am
>> he is focused on the to churks the company is navigating a troubled past. including a march accident involving a self driving uber with the safety driver behind the wheel, that killed a pedestrian. the ceo says the software that decide how the vehicle relakts to object on the road, may have played a role in the crash. but the company is waiting on the results of an ntsb investigation. >> what i am doing is, a top to bottom audit. of our procedures, training, soft ware, hardware. what our practices are. >> you can say that you are not shutting down, your autonomous unit. >> yes, i can tell that. not shutting it down. we want to get back on the road. but we want to be safe when geet bageet -- when geet back on the road. a bombshell blog post, detailing corporate culture of sexual harassment was followed by numerous lawsuits in an internal investigation. that led to his resignation.
3:44 am
>> how long do you give yourself as a leader to make sure that change is implemented for the better? >> if not changed right now. then i failed. i will tell you that the company took upon itself, to change. the change didn't start with me. what happened in the past was deeply unpletz sanlt and wrong. but the company from a bottoms up standpoint started changing, and i think it continues apace. >> how important is it for you to have female employees who feel safe and proud to work at the company? >> game over if we don't. we want everyone at uber to feel safe. and if we fail at that, we will fail at a company. but, we don't intend to. >> he says he is concentrating not just on correcting the company's past missteps but on making the necessary stride to ensure the skuchl pane's future growth including launch of uber air. >> you have got to set aggressive goals in order to. push, push, teams and people, to make
3:45 am
3:46 am
3:47 am
spring finally arrived for most of the nation. that means it is time for a little spring cleaning. an american tradition. barry peterson digs into the story. >> take a drive across america, along with mountains and rivers. this is a big part of the passing scenery. self storage facilities. there are more of them, than
3:48 am
dunkin donuts, subways or mcdonald's combined. think about that. and that's just for the stuff we can't fit inside our homes. where there is more stuff. piled in closets. bedrooms. gara garages. basements. some of the pictures were sent in by you. sunday morning viewers, suffocating, under an avalanche of stuff. >> that is the whole meaning of life isn't it. trying to find a place for your stuff. that's all your house is, your louse is just a place for your stuff. >> this is the basement. what i look to call, organized chaos. >> stacy appreciates the late george carlan's humor. though not in a laughing mood. >> i would love to purge about 70% of the basement. >> as she sorts through possessions in suburban new york. at come lags of a single mother with two kids. she is a bit desperate. >> been meaning to have a garage
3:49 am
sale for ten years. just, very, very overwhelming. i'm like, oh, my gosh, it's, it's, so much stuff, i dmoent whe -- i don't know where to begin. keep category. donut category. may even have a throw out category. >> she decided to seek professional help. professional organizer, rachel sager. >> my god. a shoe. i was looking for this. >> were you. >> yes. i don't know where. here its the other one. >> who just so happens to be, a clinical social worker. >> i know your lack of attachment, your lack of trauma base add cumulation. this is not a hoarding situation. >> right. right. >> this is life situation. >> correct. >> exactly how do we end up look this? >> we don't know how to manage money properly. so when something is on sale we feel we might as the get it every single color. we have so much stuff. we don't do enough research before we make a purchase. we have so much stuff because -- because we are insecure.
3:50 am
>> rachel sager is member of the national association of productivity. organizing professionals. part of the $1 billion industry helping the rest of us get the clutter inner lives, out of our lives. ellen delatt is president. >> she sees in our consumer society, the root of too much clulte clutter. i will find things in bagds that have not come out of the bag. thrill of the hunt. thrill of the purchase some times. >> americans are by far the world's largest consumer culture. result, an overstuffed closet, and occasionally, sitcom gold. >> oh, my god. >> no, you weren't supposed to see this. you know i organize everything. right. okay. well this is all of the stuff that doesn't fit into any category. >> it is worth noting, that some people find clutter helps with creativity. albert einstein once joked, if a
3:51 am
cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind, of what then is an empty desk a sign. he was not alone. steve jobs and mark twain had notoriously messy desks. claire reeves who lives in houston wants the clutter out of her life. off awe all right. i want you to tackle the closet. >> yes. >> she turned to ellen delatt for help. >> what would you say your goal for this space would be? >> i, i mean, i like to be able to, walk in. >> out come items she bought. and, will never use. >> i thought i would use these. i haven't opened them. >> anltd dresses she will never again wear. >> ready to release it? >> thing i am ready. >> she learned a lesson afwut too much stuff. from hurricane harvey when she helped her neighbors who were flooded out. >> just the sheer volume of stuff. that had to come out.
3:52 am
and that, just gets trashed. >> it just reinforced that, that if everybody is safe and everybody is healthy. that's what is important in life. >> not all of this. >> not all of this. >> now that you have done this. how do you feel? >> i feel great. it's like. a weight lift offed your shoerlds. >> except for those of us whose stuff end up in a storage unit. >> this is the saddest of all. now, instead of free garbage, you pay rent to visit your garbage. >> the folks on the a & e hit reality tv show, storage wars, might beg to differ. when people stop paying the rent. their storage lockers get put up for auction. >> you know you want what is in here. >> the buyers are hoping to find hidden treasure for this episode -- filmed in van nuys, california. alvin kielty bid.
3:53 am
and wins. he hauls it all to historic grandma's attic where he says everything sells. >> i know this business. never dies ever. whether the people are having a bad time. come here. pockets are full. come here. raining. snowing. they come here. >> adding more clutter is a habit andrew melon hopes to change. >> this is scarves, hats. only thing in here. scarves, hats. >> author of unstuff your life. melon has been called the most organized man in america. >> it will take the same amount of time for you to hang up your coat in the closet it as it will to drop it on the chair. >> listen to his advice about saving old clothes. i feel look i hatch just -- given away, some part of my youth. not going to be young anymore. the clothes are gone. >> yeah, right. not going to be young anymore because you are not going to be young anymore. nothing to do with the garments. >> he used 633 square foot new
3:54 am
york apartment. >> short sleeve. long sleeve. as a classroom for his clients. clulter is nothing more than deferred decisions. >> he doesn't even have the luxury of a garage. according to the department of energy. 25% of people with two car garages have no room for the car. and 32%, only have room for one. we park, cars that are worth tens of thousand doufl lars on the street. because our garages are full of stuff that, in many times, is worthless. explain that. we are not thinking about the choice wreez are making. >> still on the fence about whether to tackle spring cleaning anytime soon, here's a little gentle persuasion. >> there is a statistic that says that we waste a year of our life looking for lost or misplaced items. >> really? >> five minutes here. ten minutes there. >> one sentence to get feel off of the sofa and starting to,
3:55 am
every fire department every police department
3:56 am
is part of a bigger picture. that bigger picture is statewide mutual aid. california years ago realized the need to work together. teamwork is important to protect the community, but we have to do it the right way. we have a working knowledge and we can reduce the impacts of a small disaster, but we need the help of experts. pg&e is an integral part of our emergency response team. they are the industry expert with utilities. whether it is a gas leak or a wire down, just having someone there that deals with this every day is pretty comforting. we each bring something to the table that is unique and that is a specialty. with all of us working together we can keep all these emergencies small. and the fact that we can bring it together and effectively work together is pretty special. they bring their knowledge, their tools and equipment and the proficiency to get the job done. and the whole time i have been in the fire service, pg&e's been there, too. whatever we need whenever we need it. i do count on pg&e to keep our firefighters safe. that's why we ask for their help.
3:57 am
steve hartman with the story of a real life maytag repairman that he found on the road. >> reporter: in the shadow of the colorado rickies, we found a man with a mountainous dilemma. >> doesn't look too intimidating from here. >> what to do with all the antique washing machines he collected. >>off's got a problem. >> i do have a problem. 87-year-old lee maxwell had to build a ware house to store all of the objects of his obsession. >> first automatic, 1937. >> what's more is there is more. >> no. >> way more. >> no. >> behind that one warehouse. >> no. >> there is a second warehouse. again, filled with nothing but washing machines. >> i told you it was insane. >> it is one of the largest personal collections of anything
3:58 am
in america. and lee says it all began innocently enough with this one may tag. he had just retired as an electrical engineering professor on a road trip with wife barbara when he saw this at a farm auction in iowa. >> by the time we got to maine. we had four. that's where the, the first, fur started to fly. >> yeah. thinking bad things about me. >> yeah. >> very bad things. >> i was off my rocker. i thin i did. >> by the time they had got home. lee bought a dozen and trailer to haul them. >> squeezer, scrubber combination. >> do they there are nearly 1500 different machines in his collection. one that you power. ones that, that use power. >> so you put your sheep on here. he has got a model of one that was never mass produced. that ran on child labor. so this, there would be one kid here. just, one here. >> teeter-totter. and isn't that inventive. >> what i found most amazing.
3:59 am
he restored all the machines. >> this is what they look like. >> he find them in this condition. then spend a couple weeks fixing up each one. work up to ten hours a day. seven days a week. >> so what is your dilemma now? >> trying to find a home for it. >> so the thing can be preep served. >> do you think about this often? >> i do. every day. >> and, steve hartman, or bill gates or something. >> he would look to find a ben factor. >> preferably a bill gates. >> someone who could build a proper museum. dedicated to the human ingenuity about the washing machines today. got a question you. can't leave without being struck how much washing machines have changed over the years. >> you know huh to turn this on? >> absolutely not. >> i didn't think so. >> how men are pretty much the same. >> steve hartman, on the road, in eaton, colorado. >> you tell me. >> that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. forsome of you the news continues. and for others you can check back with us a little later for
4:00 am
the morning news. and of course, cbs this morning. from the broadcast cen captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, may 9th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." fierce reaction after president trump pulls the u.s. out of the iran nuclear agreement. in north korea, secretary of state mike pompeo is there, laying the groundwork for denuclearization, and to come home with three american prisoners. and in hi, there are new cracks in the ground as residents flee from another neighborhood.

146 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on