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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 15, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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- you know if you're still watching, it kind of says one or two things about you. you either wanna move away from an uncomfortable situation and that could be a job that's not paying you the money you deserve or causes frustration or it doesn't challenge you. or maybe you're retired and you don't have enough money to last the next 20 years, so you want to move away from that. or the second part is maybe you've done well or you've had lots of success in life but you want that next level, that next level of income, abundance, and joy. your neighbors or friends have gotten it, you want it. and i want to tell you, there is nothing different between super successful, wealthy, happy people than those that aren't, other than the habits that they do on a daily basis. and larry, that's why i wrote this book, to finally give people the unfair advantages, the habits that can allow them to live life on that next level. - my guest has been dean graziosi. if you have a desire for more success in your life and you wanna know a good idea? call and get millionaire success habits and the live event tickets before they're gone. do it now, you'll thank me for bringing him to you.
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(gentle music)
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putting masks on don't fit them properly they will have false
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sense of security. hit by a plaum could be overwhelming. >> that didn't stop this man. >> this is lava chaser. >> who put himself in harm's way just to live stream. >> whoa, incoming. >> as fiery laugh debris and toxic gas spewed. >> fish ours are popping up. standing on hardened lava. a mile and a half one of newest fissures. lava flowing from there toward the ocean. if the steam explosion happens at core of volcano it will send boulders the size of cows in the air, people don't live there. it's the ash cloud that could travel tens of miles that is the real concern. jeff. >> thank you. u.s. supreme court ruling today has opened the door to a dra mat kpik pantion of legal sports betting. jen crawford has more on the decision, jan? >> for the past 25 years if you wanted to bet legally on sports. nevada was the only state you could gamble on individual games. but not everything that happens
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in las vegas stays in vegas. this decision open the door for legal sports betting nationwide. the justices said in 1992 federal law that banned all but a handful of states from having sports betting, violated states' rights. the gaming industry is calling this a ground breaking decision that will revolutionizing the gambling business and victory for states like new jersey which challenged the law and said it will have sports betting of and running in a couple weeks. more than 15 other states are expected to follow. in the year or so ahead. now the ncaa and professional sports leagues had long opposed sports betting saying it could hurt integrity of the game. some like the nba have come to believe it is best to legalize it. because upward of $150 billion is spent every year on illegal sports gambling. and so now states can regulate it, and root out corruption. jeff. >> jan crawford with more on the big ruling. thanks. we will have more from jerusalem, later in this
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there was a disturbing story unfolding, north east of san francisco. the police have removed ten children from their home. their parents face charges including torture and child abuse. jamie yuccas is following this. >> reporter: this is a look inside the home where the 10 children lived. police say it was filthy and conditions were unsafe. the case started when the couple's 12-year-old son was reported missing back on march 31st. the children's mother, ina rogers who was arrested for neglect, says she called 911. and later explaned the mess. >> that fear sets in. like my son might be missing. so i ripped up my house. tore everything out of the closet. lifted up the bed. >> the boy was not in the house but found by police in the neighborhood. but once officers went inside the home, they became concerned. they discovered nine more children. ranging in age from 4 months to
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11 years old. and, placed all 10 in protective custody. the children's father, jonathan allen is charged with seven counts of torture, and nine counts of abuse. >> the children described intentional abuse. resulting in puncture wounds. burns, bruising, and injuries consistent with being shot with a pellet gun or bb gun. >> allegations rogers denies. >> i love my children, my husband loves his children. he does have a lot of tattoos and looks scary. so it is very easy to, to, think that he is a monster. but he is not. >> the mother is out on bail. and says that her children are current leap wily with her sist mother. as for the father. a judge increased his bail to $5.2 million. >> jamie yuccas in los angeles. still ahead. what is behind the largest egg recall in years? ♪
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cincinnati mayor said the city failed a 16-year-old boy who died after being pinned in the minivan.
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kyle plush voice dialed 911. the police didn't find him in time. he suffocated. the police chief said the responding officers never left their cruiser believing they could search a wider area that way. >> mr. people in the united states are getting sick from a salmonella outbreak traced to tainted eggs. 35 cases reported in nine states. more than 200 million eggs recalled by producer, rose acre farms in northern carolina. a federal inspector found unsanitary conditions and rodents at the facility. >> up next, here from jerusalem, the special role of muslims at one of christianity's holiest sites.
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finally tonight we saw severe violence today as palestinians and israelis clashed over the opening of the u.s. embassy in jump up. we saw a place of peace. visited each day by people of all religions. a place of hope. >> the church of the holy
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seplicur is one of the holiest sites in christianity. faithful believe it is where jesus christ was crucified, buried and rose from the dead. each year millions of pilgrims travel to kneel at his tomb. >> brings up a lot of tears. just so profound to actually experience where he was. and what he did. >> wow. >> reporter: while christians of all denominations come to pray, the keep to the church is entrusted to a muslim. >> i am the keys custodian of the church. >> reporter: in a daily ritual, he walks through the narrow alley ways of the old city of jerusalem. he follows in the footsteps of ancestors who pass the key from generation to generation, for more than 850 years. >> my father give me the key when i was 8 years old. i am now, 55. >> reporter: the family became custodians of the ancient key in 1187 when muslims seized control
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of jump up. >> not just for our family. for all the muslims in the world. >> reporter: we met with a group, travelers from las vegas, indiana, pittsburgh and new york. >> i wanted to be here to find out about shared values and how differences amongst us are not big differences. >> reporter: why do we forget that sometimes? >> our pride gets in the way. when our pride gets in the way, we, we revert to the worst within us. >> reporter: in a region often overflowing with tension. >> good night, everybody. >> this custom of muslims, christians working together has become one example of cooperation. >> jerusalem is not just for the christians for the christians for the muslims and for the jewish. we are here to live together. we are praying for peace. >> a message of hope in the holy city. that is the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this
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morning. welcome to the "overnight news." i'm michelle miller. history was made in the holy land where the 70th anniversary of the founding of israel was melt with both celebration and bloodshed. president trump's daughter ivanka presided over the opening of the new u.s. embassy which was relocated from tel aviv to jerusalem. but in nearby ramallah and barely 40 miles away in gaza, there was violence and death. israeli soldiers opened fire on palestinian protesters, killing dozens and wounding more than 2400. holly williams begins our coverage in gaza. >> reporter: they were angry today in gaza about the new u.s.
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embassy. men and women threw rocks. while many were peaceful some started fires along the border fence with israel. they've been demonstrating for six weeks. 40,000 today according to israel. encouraged by hamas, the militant group controlled the gaza strip since 2007. they had dropped leaflets warning palestinians not to get too close to the fence. when they did, the israelis used live ammunition. there are casualties coming back from the fence. some have been shot. it is chaos. >> palestinians want to return to land they fled in 194 bhwhen israel was founded and they're furious over what they say is american bias towards israel. but with their sling shots and
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burning tires, the protesters including six children, who were reportedly killed today, seem to be losing their lives for nothing. but many palestinians, like this man, who wants to study for a masters degree, believe dancing with death is the only way to show their desperation. >> you have a bright future. are you welling to dilling to d? gaz ha has been blockaded nearly half of young people cannot find jobs and most families, depend on aid. there is a lot of grief here in gaza. burying many of their dead tomorrow. in general here in the gaza strip, most people are just trying to get on with their
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lives. despite power cuts and shortages of the goods they need. jeff glor with the story of the new u.s. embassy in jerusalem and violent protests a stone's throw away. >> the new embassy is an old u.s. consular building until a larger site can be found. all 86 foreign missions in israel were invited to the opening ceremonies. 33 went. ♪ hallelujah >> with 800 in attendance, the mood inside the embassy was festive. first daughter ivanka trump, husband, jared kushner led the american delegation. >> we welcome you officially and
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for the first time to the embassy of the united states here in jerusalem, the capital of israel. >> the israeli prime minister praised the move calling it historic. >> what a glorious day. remember this moment. >> christians george and cheryl morrison traveled from chicago. -- from colorado. >> i have never been more proud to be an american than i was today. >> just ten miles away in ramallah on the west bank we met with palestinian whose were angry. believing that today's embassy move destroys their dreams of making jerusalem their capital. >> can jerusalem be for both palestinians and jews? >> no. jerusalem just for palestinian people. >> only palestinians. >> just for palestinian people. this is our rights. and this our history. >> a 64-year-old doctor, and long time member of the palestinian parliament. >> do you think the two state solution is dead? >> the two state solution is, in serious trouble.
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>> serious trouble. >> yeah, it can die. >> march here began as planned. it was one of several across the west bank today. >> they're coming down, all of the streets into the main square. from there they move to one of the refugee camps and from there go to a crossing into israel. that is where you see the flash-points where violence can happen. >> we are at one of the flash-points right now situated. tear gas being fired right now. we are going to put our masks on. >> these girls use their hand and hijabs to try to keep the tear gas off of them. one was rescued by a volunteer team. >> to other news back home, the danger around hawaii's kilauea
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first lady melania trump is being treated for a kidney condition. our correspondent has the the details. >> how is the first lady doing? >> president trump left for walter reed hospital to visit mrs. trump soon after the operation was complete. the first lady had last appeared in public early thursday morning. as she welcomed home three freed americans from north korea. late this afternoon her office issued a statement. saying she underwent an embolization procedure to treat benign kidney condition. the procedure was successful. there were no complications. cbs chief medical correspondent, dr. jon lapook. >> i want to emphasize i am not the first lady's physician i have no inside information. good news we heard the phrase benign kidney condition. now, a benign condition could be, a benign growth, or less likely it could be a benign collection of blood vessels.
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>> dr. lapook said the procedure is used to cut the blood supply to a growth so it shrinks and stops growing. the nature of the beknown growth was not disclosed. there are several kind of growths, most are not life threatening. it typically take is a week in the hospital to recover from the procedure. >> the symptoms of that could be blood in the urine, could be pain if there was some bleeding into the, whatever the growth was. >> just last week the first lady, launched her be best initiative to help children. >> together, let's encourage children to dream big. >> dr. lapook says it is typical for a week of recovery time, needed after an embolization, common for inflammation, fever, and bleeding to develop. president trump tweeted, mrs. trump who is 48 years old is in good spirits. after a successful procedure. jeff.
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pomp and ceremony on tap saturday when prince harry weds his lovely meghan markle. cbs news will carry the festivities as they happen. and our reporters, producers and technicians are already there. working to get the story behind the story. mark phillips took his own camera in search of the real britain. >> reporter: it is easy to think you know what britain is all about. it is about a small, 92-year-old woman with the ready smile and taste for big hats. >> my lords may be seated. >> some really big. >> about two young men.
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one with a growing family. and the other about to marry an american tv star. if you watch much tv, also about the crown. >> long live the queen. >> the show, not the hat. >> and it's about big houses like downton abby with lords and ladies. >> who pays for it. >> oh, good. let's talk about money. >> reporter: and all the little people who fuss below stairs to serve them. and it is all more or less wrong. one of the things that people come here to do is -- >> life at the top of the brittbrit british social food chain isn't what it used to be. ask charles gordon lennox, the 11th duke of richmond, 11th duke of lennox, the sixth duke of gordon. all of the titles in the world
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won't get your bleeding car to start. >> how fast do you need before you pop it. >> it may take the help of the common folk to get the 1934 ac roadster and the show on the road. but a lot has changed around here. >> of when people have an image of life near the top of the social scale in britain, it tends to come from what they have seen on tv. do you see yourself in that tradition? >> i hope a lot more progressive than that. >> can you make a living as a duke these days? >> i know you can. >> but you can try. and boy do they try on the duke's goodwood estate that sprawls 12,000 lush acres of southern england. the place has been in the family for 321 years. if you are counting. what the duke's family counts are the pennies. >> to cut the lawn costs $500,000 a year the how are we going to drive the revenue that will cover that.
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>> how? by turning what used to be a playground for aristocrats into a kind of sporting park with an aristocratic theme. >> they're off. >> at the annual horse race meeting here -- the finish line is really the bottom line. >> drivers and goodwood. off awe the old car racetrack refurbished to its former glory and is driven by the income it provide. >> good fun. >> yeah. >> quite a sweet little car. >> other income comes from the old world war 23 airfield, now private airport. and that's not to mention the golf courses. >> charles i. >> or old mansion and its jaw dropping art collection, that tells more than three centuries of family history. >> part of the motivation for keeping a place like this going? you don't want to be the guy to mess it up? >> don't want to be the one to mess it up. you are right. >> and if britain has changed, at what used to be the top.
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awe off it changed a lot. >> it also changed at what used to be the bottom. >> the only difference between white working class and asian working class is that one of us loves chicken tika marsala the other is asian. >> tez ilias, family emigrated from pakistan, a comedian, who does a nice line in challenging what it means to be brit, today. >> do you think that is a surprise to people who aren't from here that britain isn't the way that they have perhaps think it is. >> i've think a lot of americans understand britain through music, television and film. in this country we haven't been good at representing our wider diversity as america has been. >> why is it, alex grows a beard. he is a sexy lum j yey lumberja. >> stiff upper lip. >> upstairs, downstairs thing. >> too many stairs.
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>> think of, think britain is a lot like america just significantly smaller and with less guns. >> britain is becoming more like america. the numbers tell the story. around 14% of the british population is now foreign born. that's almost the identical percentage as the united states. >> famous bagel bakery here. >> as the historian says, immigration is not new. the east end of london like the lower eastside of new york, has the seen waves of immigration for centuries. the signs are south asian now. but before that, jews, irish, even french, protestants, fleeing prosecution have come through here. in the post world war 23 era, if grants were recruited from the caribbean to fill a labor shortage. lately they have come from eastern europe. migrants from poland, now make up britain's largest immigrant group.
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>> very kind of serious. whether you actually -- think of britain as, sort of permanently self portrayed. as white, middle or upper class. essentially a britain kind of like a, a fly, trapped. in the in the amber. downton amber really, we can call it. not healthy for any society at all. britain has got to have a future. >> understanding the past, dropping the myths and adapting to have a future. lessons the 11th duke of richmond has already learned. cbs news coverage of the royal wedding begins at 4:00 a.m. on saturday morning. more on the wedding in
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your hair is so soft! did you use head and shoulders two in one? i did mom. wanna try it? yes. it intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you flake free. manolo? look at my soft hair. i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one. >> just four days until the royal wedding of the century. may want to ask kate and will. the century is 1 years old. the nuptials will take place in lond london's legendary windsor castle. our own gale king has a look at how the day willing prore. >> the historic castle in the english countryside. 20 miles west of buckingham palace in london. the queen's preferred weekend home. the castle its on a 13 acre compound that was built in the 11th century.
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it has been home to 39 british monarchs. on wedding day, the royal family will stay at the state apartments. from there, they will make their way to saint george's chapel for the ceremony. about 600 guests will attend. it is expected to last about an hour. 15 royal couples, over the past 150 years have said, i do at this chapel. from there, the newlyweds will pass more than 2600 members of the public, invited to watch the wedding from the ground of the castle. the couple will then go on a roughly two mile carriage wide through windsor to greet members of the public before heading back to castle ground for recementir reception. for there they will leave for an intimate reception with 200 friends and family at fogmore house, two miles south of the castle. >> the plum assignment outside, windsor castle where the couple will walk down the aisle. >> in a few days, 100,000 people
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are expected to fill the streets behind me hoping to catch a glimpse of prince harry and meghan markle. when the couple marry here at windsor castle. less than two years when they met on a blind date. here is the story of how harry met megan. ♪ >> you didn't let me finish. and then there was hugs. i had the ring on my finger. can i give you the ring. she was like, yes the ring. when the british prince and american actress announced their engagement, it captured the hearts of the world. >> it was so sweet. and natural. and, very romantic. he got on one knee. >> the couple said they met on a blind date. through a mutual friend whose name they wouldn't reveal. >> when she said she wanted to set us up. i had one question. well is he nice? >> one person believed to be the match maker, pr director. >> i think it was violet that
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initiated the meeting. her father was a great friend of prince charles. still is. >> christa smith, executive editor at vanity fair. >> she is also a great friend of harry 's. she knew megan, in pr at ralph lauren. ralph lauren was collaborating with megan on something. >> she won't say whether she paved wait for the royal romance. >> it may have all started right here. at the members only club, on london's dean street. in the summer of 2016. tennis fan megan was in town for wimbledon. was that when she was set up to go on the blind date? and met her prince charming? >> what appealed to him is that she, she was, her own person. >> harry said it was love at first sight. >> the fact that i fell in love with megan so incredibly quickly. was sort of confirmation to me that everything was just perfect. it was this, this beautiful woman just sort of literally tripped and fell into my life. . >> they landed in africa. on their third date.
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harry took meg gun to the secluded wilderness of botswana. >> we camped out with each other under the stars. >> back in london, the couple tried to keep their budding romance under wraps away from the prying eyes of the world's tabloid media. while visit itting harry here in the neighborhood of kensington, megan tried to keep a low profile. disguising herself with a baseball cap when she slipped out to buy groceries. >> they wanted to have the time with each other away from the public glare to figure out if it was going to go some where. >> royal correspondent has interviewed prince harry three times. >> having those first few months without anyone knowing was probably the making of their relationship. >> last summer, megan confirmed the relationship in a cover story for vanity fair. saying we are two people who are really happy and in love. >> that was the moment you knew it was headed for marriage. >> a big engagement announcement from kensington palace. prince harry. american actress, meghan markle are engaged. yea. >> this is windsor castle.
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inside is saint george's chapel where the world will watch harry and megan wed. but beyond the walls, you can also find one of the couple's secret romantic getaways. fogmore house a private retreat for the queen and her family. the evening of the wedding, harry and megan will sell braet with 200 close friend and family. also the backdrop for the couple's official engagement portraits. >> i said to them not alut location, you guys. >> the photographer remembers capturing the couple's intimacy. >> i said just, you know, wrap her up. she turned around to him. there was this beautiful moment. they were hugging. looking at each other. smiling. just that beautiful, bultful, young love moment. >> he will be the official wedding photographer. after the couple get married here on saturday, they will go home to kensington palace. live on the palace grounds in
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nottingham cottage where kate and william
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>> it wouldn't be a royal wedding without a royal wedding cake. traditionally guests at british royal nuptials are served fruitcake. but this 2018. harry and megan weren't about to order a fruit cake for their big day. instead they hired an american baker with a very different idea. anthony mason of course got that story. >> reporter: when a member of the royal family gets married. every announcement makes news. including, who is baking the wedding cake. after prince harry and los angeles native meghan markle selected claire patack, the news rippled across the pond. with "newsweek" asking who is claire patack.
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>> look a sandbox. >> cinnamon sandbox. >> when we first met her in 2015, the american baker was a rising star in london. 2 and a half years later, she has become baking royalty. kensington palace tweeted the news in march. saying prince harry and meghan markle asked claire to create a lemon elderflower cake that will incorporate bright flavors of spring. >> my first love was baking a a how did that happen? >> my mother is a great baker. and grew up in inverness, north of san francisco. it is rural. weave had black berries, apple trees. there was a lot of emphasis on, baking with, fruit, that was in season. >> patack spent three years as a pastry chef for alice waters in berkeley, california. she then moved to lon done to be with her boyfriend. now husband. >> this was like -- okay.
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i just came from something really great. i have to make this really great otherwise going to be totally depressed. >> reporter: she set up a stall in a weekend market in east london's hackney neighborhood. baking everything in her home kitchen. >> i realized it was kind of taking over our lives. >> what made you take that leap? to own the bakery? >> i think my husband was like get out of the house. this is not okay. >> reporter: she opened her bakeshop, violet in 2010. her unique recipes and fresh ingredients, would catch the eye of london elite. like nigella lawson. jamie oliver, and apparently, a prince from london and future duchess from hollywood. >> got to love that lemon. save me a piece why don't you. that's the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for the rest, well we'll check back with us hopefully for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning" from the broadcast center here in new york city.
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i'm michelle miller. captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's tuesday, may 15th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." worlds apart. more border clashes are expected today between palestinians and israeli forces over the new u.s. embassy in jerusalem. first lady melania trump remains hospitalized after undergoing surgery. and children are removed from a home after they're discovered living in shocking conditions. good morning from the studio 57

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