tv CBS Overnight News CBS May 10, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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records and made several inaccurate statements about him. mr. cohen told the judge he believes this is all part of an efforts to prejudice his case. >> paula reid continues her reporting. thank you. >> there was a big explosion today from the erupting volcano in hawaii's big island. warning of more to come. since kilauea started erupting last week, 36 homes destroyed. 115 acres burned. carter evans reports tonight on a new threat, a dangerous fog. >> reporter: this 'tis the newest fissure that opened up. for dates the community has been terrorized by spontaneous eruptions. with lava spewing into the air. and large cracks randomly opening of in the streets. and now, the impact is growing. >> what you are wearing is -- that, that gas just -- just come out of the ground. >> the fumes emanating from the lava flow form a volcanic fog. toxic and can drift far from the
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eruption. we followed the national guard become to the lava zone. >> he is taking readings now checking levels of sulphur dioxide in the air to make sure it is safe for to us be here. >> the warning for residents to stay indoors with their windows closed because high levels of sulfuric acid in the air can cause headaches, irritate the lungs and even induce asthma attacks. >> well have never seen it drop like this before. >> dan kelly has asthma and lives downwind from the lava flow. >> i hit my pump three times this morning. last night i had to leave. i was choking. >> scientists say the lower lava levels in the crater heating the flows has actually raised potential for more eruptions in the coming days. an influx of groundwater could cause steam driven explosioneds michael hale lives in the path of the lava. >> i see the wall of lava the size of a house. >> his home and car were swallowed by lava. what was it look to see that. know it is likely your home? >> pretty surreal. honestly.
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like a nightmare. that you don't wake up from. off awe this is a mixture of steam and toxic gas venting from one of the newest fissures. when you get close the sulphur smells like rotten eggs. we are safe as long as the wind is blowing away from us. jeff. >> still unreal scene there. carter evans in hawaii. >> coming up next here tonight, why eviction notices are going out to tens of thousands of nursing home patients.
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in louisiana, tens of thousand of elderly and disabled could soon lose their medicaid benefits because of a state budget short fall of more than half a billion dollars. eviction notices are going out to thousand in nursing homes and group homes. david begnaud in baton rouge. >> this is what i do with my time. >> betty waller is 89. polio survivor her home is nursing home in baton rouge. her life savings pays for part of her care. medicaid is needed for the rest. to to i mean i am living under a bridge somewhere, but still, it, it's, it's, a scary state. >> sunny was told today she may be evicted by july 1st.
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one of 37,000 people in the state who will lose their medicaid eligibility if the state doesn't balance its budget. >> no one knows where they're going. >> jim tucker oversees, 12 nursing homes. 800 patients could be told to leave. >> this has potential to scare the hell out of a lot of people? >> it has potential to kill people. >> i'm not scaring anybody by design. not a tactic. >> that is the governor john bell edwards. >> cuts are so catastrophic we shouldn't contemplate them. the legislature has failed to act in a fiscal session last year, and in a special session this year. >> republican jay cameron henry head of appropriations committee in the louisiana house. >> i think what the gop wants from the governor a budget sustainable long term. to not have to come back every year with scare tactics. >> henry told us republicans may be willing to pass a tax the governor wants. but it would be a band-aid on the state's long-term financial wound.
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i wonder what you would tell the governor and legislators, who are debating whether or not to make the cuts? >> it was something i never thought wad be ever taken away. i thought it was here -- forever. >> reporter: louisiana has never before sent out warning notices like this. but it is required to do it by law if it is going to cut medicaid. here is the catch, the federal government needs to approve the cuts to medicare at the medicaid at the state level. jeff if the feds say no. then louisiana has got to find another option. >> imagine having your parents or grandparents in that situation. david melatonin is tody's own s. 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.
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the fda said there is a shortage of epi pens. p pfizer says temporary limit on capacity. patients should ask their pharmacy about alternatives. >> a sticky mess cause aid traffic jam in poland today. that is milk chocolate on the highway. a truck caring 12 tons overturned. tougher to clean up than oil. more hazardous than snow. a solution, pressure washer turned the mess into hot chocolate. up next, steve hartman with an update. a very sweet boy demonstrating the super power of love. >> announcer: this portion is sponsored by publishers clearinghouse.
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peerhine and unique seeper power to feed the homeless. >> don't forget to show love. >> uh-huh. >> reporter: why do you do that? >> you know what, mr. steve just the right thing to do. >> reporter: is it? >> yes. >> you want honey? >> reporter: by day, austin is a mild-mannered 4-year-old from birmingham, alabama. but about once a week he turns into this alter ego. >> would you look a sandwich? >> seeper hero set on feeding as many homeless people as possible. >> what is your super hero name. president austin. >> his dad tj said bite gain a few month as go when he taught austin about homelessness. austin's response? >> here you go. >> reporter: to launch the caped crusade. >> thank you, baby. >> reporter: you are welcome. don't forget to show love. >> reporter: he gives everyone a chicken sandwich. >> yes. >> reporter: and that same bit of advice. >> don't forget to show love. >> reporter: don't forget to show love here, tells them. and most do immediately. >> why, thank you.
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>> reporter: to think he puts his entire allowance toward this. at least, he used to. since our story first aired, burger king has offered to give austin pretty much all the chicken sandwiches he needs. and lots of other people have donated money to his cause. enough money to buy a lot more than meals. >> hey, austin. >> hi. >> this week, i checked back in with tj and austin. >> how did you get so famous? >> they like what i'm doing. >> reporter: they told me about their new plan to build a rehab center for the homeless. >> we are going to try to get people jobs and just try to make a difference, one person at a time. >> reporter: sounds like you found a calling too? >> i think so, man. i think so. >> reporter: it is helpful when super heroes come from super parents. >> feeding the homeless is the highlight of my life. >> reporter: steve hartman on the road in birmingham, alabama. >> that is the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some of you the news
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continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. welcome to the "overnight news." i'm meg oliver. three americans held captive in north korea are back in the united states this morning. they were released to secretary of state mike pompeo in north korea working on details of the upcoming summit between president trump and kim jong-un. pompeo says the date and location of the summit has been decided but he didn't release the details. margaret brennan begins our coverage. >> everything can be scuttled. doesn't mean -- a lot of things can happen. a lot of good things can happen. a lot of bad things can happen. but i think we have a really good chance to make a great deal for the world. >> secretary of state pompeo said a positive gesture by kim jong-un trying to set good
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conitions for the upcoming summit with president trump. in many ways this was the easiest part of the di policemen see. because kim's real leverage is how advanced his nuclear and ballistic missile program now is. national security adviser john bolton said yesterday that the white house wants kim to take steps far beyond the halt to weapons testing and ultimately agrae to stop enriching and reprocessing all nuclear fuel. so the trump-kim summit will start those talks. the white house are guz that, breaking the deal with iran shows north korea they have set higher standards for any future deal. but north korea's program is far more advanced than iran's ever was. so this message is muddled. the white house says it now wants a new broader deal with iran. but after breaking u.s. commitments, there is very little sign that tehran will sit down to bargain. >> america's european allies are scrambling to salvage the nuclear treaty with iran after president trump announced the
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united states is pulling out. the deal lifted economic sanctions in exchange for iran freezing its nuclear program. now the sanctions are in doubt and there is a risk to the global oil supply. elizabeth palmer has the view from tehran. >> reporter: the hard-liners didn't waste any time. we are inside the old american baem cease now. any moment we they are going to set fire to the american flag. these students are cheerleaders who don't want iran opening up to the world. they never liked the nuclear agreement or jpcoa that shut down iran's nuclear program. in fact nay would look to see it up and running again. but from a distance, you can see this is a pretty small group, staging what's really a media
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circus. as we spoke to the students, an older man came up to tell us he wasn't part of it. what they do i am not agree with them. >> reporter: right. >> reporter: he told us what millions of ordinary iranians are saying. the nuclear deal hasn't yet as promised improved their lives. now that president trump's pulled out they're facing hardships under renewed sanctions. >> i haven't good job. i am very worried about my future and my family. >> are you prepared for hard times? >> i think is very harder than today. >> yeah. >> reporter: and then, clearly concerned about regime spies, eavesdropping on him, he added. and i've got fear when i am talking with you in this country. >> reporter: the fact is, iranians feel like hostages, not only to their own corrupt, repressive government, but also to an inexplicably hostile white house. >> president trump's nominee to become cia director endured some
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harsh interrogation before the senate intelligence committee. gina haspel grilled about her role in secret black sites where detainees were tortured in the months after 9/11. they also wanted to know why she destroyed tapes of the sessions. >> reporter: even before the opening statements. it was clear gina haspel would face a tough hearing. haspel tried to keep the focus on three decade career at the cia some spent undercover. >> i excelled in finding and acquiring secret information that i obtained in brush passes, dead drops, or in meetings in dusty alleys of third world capitals. but it was her role in the post 9/11 enhanced interrogation program that has her nomination in question. >> the very important thing to know about cia is we follow the law. we followed the law then.
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we follow the law now. >> reporter: haspel served at a black site where top level al qaeda prisoners were subjected to harsh interrogation techniques lieks waterboarding which simulates drowning. the methods are banned. during the president sham campaign, candidate trump advocated for their use. >> torture works. campaign, candidate trump advocate ford their use. >> torture works, okay, folks, i have these guys torture doesn't work. believe me it works okay. >> if this president asked you to do something that you find morally objectionable will you carry that out, that option in that order or not? >> senator, my moral compass is strong. i would not allow cia to undertake activity that i thought was immoral, even if it was technically legally. >> haspel was questioned about a memo she helped author that order destruction of 92 video recordings of the interrogations. she said it was her boss who
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gave the final order. >> no, i never watched the tapes. but i understood that our officers faces were on them. and that that was very dangerous at a time when there were unauthorized disclosures that were exposing the program. >> jeff on capitol hill. >> the treasury department launched an investigation. they show cohen, president trump's personal lawyer received $500,000 from russian so-called oligarch and got money from companies with business before the white house. paula read reports.
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>> reporter: the money paid to essential consult anlts llc, the same company michael cohen used to pay adult film star, stormy daniels not to speak about her allege add fair with president trump. the transactions first revealed in a document posted by daniel's attorney. they show payments of approximately $500,000 from columbus nova, american investment firm tied to russian billionaire, victor vekselberg who has close ties to put spin. in a statement, a lawyer described money as consulting fee and said that vekselberg was not involved in the decision to hire cohen. >> receipt of the payments by the personal attorney to the president, michael cohen is highly suspicious. may in fact show criminal conduct. >> the attorney says the crimes could include bank, wire fraud or money laundering. cohen is under federal investigation, and last month. fbi agents raided his home and offices in new york. att, novartis, korean aerospace confirmed they paid cohen for consulting services. a source at novartis tells cbs news, cohen approached promising he could advise how to get access to the new administration. >> thus far our investigation shows there is substantial evidence, that michael cohen was engaged in soliciting clients and selling access to the highest office in the land. >> mr. cohen asked a federal judge to not allow the attorney to have anything to do with his ongoing case. points to the fact that he has
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democrats in congress are working on a bill that would protect immigrants who are currently in the country under a program called tps. that's temporary protected status. the white house has been phasing out the program, and the latest group told to leave the u.s. people from honduras. manuel bojorquez reports. >> reporter: what have you heard about what is happening with the family right now? >> well there is a possibility that in the future we could be separated. >> reporter: 15-year-old jonathan and brothers are u.s. citizens. their father, jose is one of 57,000 hondurans whose
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permission to live in the u.s. after hurricane mitch devastated their country in 1998, was just ended by the trump administration. their mother's status was revoked last year. she fears what will happen to her boys. >> translator: it is as if you are moving in pieces she says. this one stays here. this one stays there. it is horrible. she received temporary protected status or tps after an earthquake struck el salvador in 2001. currently more than 300,000 immigrants from ten countries which experienced natural disasters or conflict have tps. the administration is now allowing the status to expire for the majority of them. including those from haiti, nicaragua, and nepal are going they outlived their need to stay in the u.s. victoria points out honduras and el salvador have some of highest murder rates in the world. what are you hoping for? >> translator: i'm hoping for
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them to reach into their souls and say okay you can stay. also, hoping they can stay, the florida east coast chapter of the associated builders and contractors. the organization sent a letter to congress saying the immigrants are a vital part of their work force. some people might say there are plenty of people out there willing to do the jobs? >> reporter: you know our experience in construction that's not the case. our experience is, as an industry casting as the broad a not to recruit the work force of tomorrow. a very challenging job. >> reporter: those who have lost the special status, have 12 to 18 months to either return to their home countries or find another type of legal residency. there are concerns however, that there are concerns however, that many may simply decide to stay, ♪ there are concerns however, that many may simply decide to stay, sweat. water break. uh-huh.
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in this age of stop pictures and photo shopped images one of the world's most famous wildlife photographers gets his shots the old-fashioned way. he sits out in the snow for hours. anderson cooper has his story for "60 minutes." >> reporter: on most mornings for nearly 50 years this is what tom mangleson has done. ventured into the wilderness, camera in hand. last september in grand teton national park he waited in an early autumn snowfall for his subject to appear.
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as is often the case, it took quite a while. over the course of your lifetime, the amount of time you spent waiting is incalculable. >> stupid. >> reporter: stupid. have you learned anything with all the waiting? >> you wait long enough it does pay off. >> reporter: it usually does. whether it is a male grizzly bear with battle scars. a cheetah chasing down its prey in tanzania. or butterflies sipping on the tears of awe giant ca dwrchltman in brazil. each photograph tells a story. iffages have documented species, mountain gorillas, black ryneos, jaguars once dominant now in danger. on every continent, in every season, no matter the conditions, mangleson has painstakingly built a reputation not on personality but on patien patience. >> do you have patience with people the same way with animals? >> no. >> reporter: no. >> no, i don't.
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wish i did. >> reporter: do you look animals more than people? >> yes. >> reporter: really? >> well, not you. >> reporter: okay. he especially likes the dangerous kind. in a jungle in india where it would be deadly to be on foot. he climbed on to an elephant's back for shot of a bengal tiger, paws red fresh from a kill. in the arctic where temperatures can be 30 degrees below zeier rehe spent years documenting the behavior of polar bears. he nicknamed this group the bad boys of the arctic. he captured adult male bears play fighting, mama bear slyly keeping watch as cubs roughhouse nearby. and a group of bears, trying to survive as their world melts away. people often mistake mangleson's photographs for paintings. since the 1970s he sold them out of galleries like this one in jackson, wyoming. his photo catch of the day, is often called the most famous wildlife photograph in the
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world. it is such an extraordinary image. in this day and age people would think this is photo shopped. photo of a fish some where. so perfect. >> taken in 1988 before photo shop existed. >> people think it is fake. you don't believe in that as a photographer? >> no. this is the magic, moment. decisive moment. this tiny space is so important. isn't it? quarter inch. >> in its mouth. it hasn't actually made contact yet with its mouth. >> one nanosecond later. >> he shuns the use of digital manipulation. what he sees through his lens is what you get. at a time when many photographers build their for the folios going to game farms to photograph captive animals. mangleson insists on only documenting them in their natural habitat. >> okay, andersen. see what we can find. >> as we saw when we joined him before dawn outside jackson hole. >> you always get up this early?
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>> only one way to do it. do it every day. or be really lucky. >> he is taking us to a bend he knows on the snake river. >> elk. a sharp whistle. that's it. >> that's the sound of the wild here. >> reporter: he has been here hundreds of times trying to get the perfect shot of elk crossing the water. >> now just waiting. >> now weight. >> waiting, yeah. >> what's the longest you ever spent in any spot, not here anywhere? >> 42 days with the cougars. >> reporter: 42 days. >> i went home at night and slept. went back at day break. >> spend all day there. >> yeah. >> 12 hours a day. >> 12 or 14. >> 12 or 14 for 42 days. did you get the shot?
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>> finally. >> this was the shot worth waiting for. the elusive cougar coming out of her den at dusk taken in 1999. among the first photographs to document the life of a wild female cougar. it helped launch a movement to protect the cat against human encroachment. back at the river, after a three-hour wait. >> right between the trees there. >> there she comes. >> well that was cool. >> that was great. >> that was worth the wait? >> yeah. >> just -- >> we headed back to his office in jackson to take a look at an amateur's attempt. >> i think it is beautiful. it is gorgeous. >> me too, actually. >> nothing wrong with that.
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great. >> is she out of focus. >> maybe slightly. >> yeah, not quite sharp. sorry. >> mangleson's shot was of course in perfect focus. and look at what else he captured at that same river, in fall, summer, and winter. mangleson credits his father with his love of the wild. he group on the bank of the platt river in nebraska where he was schooled in hunting and fishing. as a teenager in the 1960s, mangleson earned title world champion goose caller. no small feat considering this is bird country. home to 400 species, as well as one of the great migrations on earth. every spring, half a million, sand hill cranes stop on the platt river, fattening of on grain before migrating north as far as siberia. it is an awesome and ancient ritual, fossils show cranes have
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come here for nearly 10 million years. it is a spectacle of sight, sound, mangleson has shared for 17 years with his friend and ally jane goodall whose life work with chimpanzees has revolutionized our understanding of primates. today goodall and mangleson team up to raise money and awareness for protects of cranes as well as chimpanzees and cougars. >> he taught me so much about the platt river and what goes on here what it was like when he was a boy. and how he started off as a hunter because that's what one did. and then how gradually he realized, he loved these, these creatures much too much. he couldn't go on being a hunter. and so, he hunts with his camera. here they come. lots and lots and lots. >> look at the light there. >> what is amazing is this, this ancient migration still carries on.
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i think it is completely amazi g amazing. >> i agree. >> it gives me hope that nature will manage in spite of us. >> look at this. beautiful, huh? >> do you think you can invest in a silent camera? one of the qualities that i love about tom is his passion. it is when you have that kind o commitment that you are more likely to get other people involved because, because it, we can never win an argument by appealing to people's heads. it's got to be in the heart. and i used the power of story telling, and writing, and tom uses the power of images. >> reporter: if all artists have a muse, tom mangleson's is the 22-year-old. female grizzly bear. doesn't have a proper game but known by research number, 399.
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creature from america's wild past when 50,000 grisly bears roamed the lower 38. less than 2,000 remain today. for more than a decade. he chronicled every facet of 399s life. emerging from a long winter's nap. swatting magpies away from a meal. he watched and worried as she has given birr toout three sets of triplets and set of twins. she nursed protected and taught more than a dozen bear cubs. mangleson's photographs including this one he dubbed an icon of motherhood, have made 399 the most famous grisly in the world. >> what do you think it is about grisly bears that captures people's imagination. off awe wildness, rarely, and see how intelligent they are. 399 will go to the road look both ways. tell the kids to stay on one seed of the road. go across. then talk to them. okay, you can come across now.
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isn't that smart? >> you can see anderson's full report on our website, cbs fire fighting is a very dangerous profession. we have one to two fires a day and when you respond together and you put your lives on the line, you do have to surround yourself with experts. and for us the expert in gas and electric is pg&e. we run about 2,500/2,800 fire calls a year and on almost every one of those calls pg&e is responding to that call as well. and so when we show up to a fire and pg&e shows up with us it makes a tremendous team during a moment of crisis.
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i rely on them, the firefighters in this department rely on them, and so we have to practice safety everyday. utilizing pg&e's talent and expertise in that area trains our firefighters on the gas or electric aspect of a fire and when we have an emergency situation we are going to be much more skilled and prepared to mitigate that emergency for all concerned. the things we do every single day that puts ourselves in harm's way, and to have a partner that is so skilled at what they do is indispensable, and i couldn't ask for a better partner.
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there soon could be new additions to the asian elephant exhibit at national zoo in washington. the zoo borrowed a bull elephant trying to get the local females to breed. chip reid reports. there he is in all his glory. spike, a 7 ton cassanova brought here to the national zoo for a very specific purpose. spike recently moved to washington from florida and we were there as he was released from quarantine so he could meet three females he had been admiring front other side of the fence. there was some trumpeting. and some ear flapping. another sign of happiness. but with one, maharani, ranny
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for short. there was canoodling. >> they're hitting it off. >> reporter: they do aper to be hitting it off. no expert in elephant love. that looks like something going on there. in fact this is not their first meeting. as they say elephants never forege an item at a zoo in canada in 2014. ronnie became pregnant three times. but sadly none of the baby elephants lived past infancy. now the national zoo hopes they will have better luck. how is this going so far? >> going excellent. couldn't be happier. these guys have a great social history with one another. we are hoping that they would pick up where they left all. in fact seems to be what is happening. >> we returned yesterday, the good news got even better. ronnie was ready to mate earlier than expected. >> lech a switch. he was immediately interested, laser focused on her. also returning that interest. more so than she had in the previous days. very, glued to him.
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that's continued throughout the day today. >> it is exactly what they hoped for. >> we brought spike here hoping he and maharani would breed and pre deuce offspring. the first step we can check off now. they have bred. and, will probably continue to throughout the next day or so. have to see what comes of that. test in a few months to see if she is pregnant. begin planning in earnest for a baby if she is. >> now they, will use blood tests and ultrasound to determine she is pregnant. a good indicator whether she is pregnant is that spike will simply lose interest in her. by the way, if she does get pregnant, you might want to exercise some patience. because, a pregnancy for an elephant lasts about 22 months. wow. that its a long time. and, that is the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning
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news and you didn't want to miss cbs this morning. cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, may 10th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." home at last. three americans detained in north korea are back home on u.s. soil greeted by president trump and the first lady melania. plus michael cohen, the president's personal attorney, is accused of cashing in on his connections to the white house. who has the deep pocks. and a new eruption warning in hawaii. flying boulders could shoot through the sky along with lava and toxic smoke.
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