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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 17, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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- dean, that's it, that's the end of the show. but any last thoughts before we finish? - 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.
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do it now, you'll thank me for bringing him to you. (gentle music)
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balconies overlooking the
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procession. >> this is a hell of a job to secure. >> guy davis the former head of royal protection. >> it has narrow streets, cobbled in part. how do you secure several miles of very small township and parts which are open and green? >> roadblocks and barriers like these will stop vehicles from getting anywhere near the crowds. even with more than 100,000 people expected, the police commander of this wedding assured us today each person will be screened. >> the technology is very different now than in 2011. everybody coming into the processional route will go through airport style security. >> maybe, even so, billingham says the crowd won't just be made of of spectators. >> there will be armed, responsive units. >> special forces. >> special forces, yeah. >> the threat extends beyond street level, jeff. this week, police announced a 48-hour, no-fly zone over windsor. we were told defenses are in
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place, to take down any drone flying overhead. >> so interesting to hear some of the details. charlie, thank you. >> cbs news live coverage of the royal wedding begins saturday at 4:00 clock a.m. eastern. that is 3:00 central. 1:00 a.m. in the west. coming up next, how did he get away with it?
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the new guard playing for the hillcrest high basketball team in dallas this past season turned a lot of heads. some times drop 30 or more points in a game. turns out he really was a man among boys. tony dokoupil has the the score. >> reporter: it was a year to remember for rashoon richardson leading his basketball team to the playoffs this winter earning district offensive player of the year award. there was just one problem. authorities say the supposedly 17-year-old richardson was actually this man, 25-year-old sydney gillstrap portly looking for a second taste of athletic glory. christopher bayer, the principal of hillcrest high school in dallas. >> he fooled us he did. painful to say that. because it hurts in both ways. >> reporter: why painful? >> slap in the face feeling.
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our office staff, counselors, everybody reached out trying to find ways to support the student. rip he allegedly told officials he was a refugee of hurricane harvey and homeless too. dallas school superintendent, says in those situations the district temporarily waives id requirements. >> he didn't look out of place? >> not out of place at all. >> reporter: after nine months in the dallas school system, one of his former coaches tipped off authorities. >> this was a thirst he had. and he put everything at risk for himself and for us, to, to, to live this charade. >> reporter: gillstrap portly last walked out of school, april 25th. since charged with tampering with government record. a charge we tried to reach him for comment on. jeff if he had not been caught it apares pears he would have b nearly 30 years old when he graduated from high school the second time. >> interesting to hear what he has to say about this.
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thank you. >> up next, laurel, yanny, not an old comedy teamment a new national debate. 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. 60% of women wear the wrong size pad and can experience leaks. you don't have to with always my fit try the next size up and get up to 20% better coverage day or night. because better coverage means better protection always
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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. [laughs] ah... ahem... show me the carfax. start your used car search and get free carfax reports at the all-new carfax.com. more than a million students in north carolina had a day off. teachers staged one day walk out. thousands wore red and marched. demanding better pay and increases in school funding. the march follows strikes in arizona, kentucky, oklahoma, west virginia as well.
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now consider the two words, yanny and laurel. they've don't sound anything alike. yet the center of a national debate among folks whose ears may be playing tricks on them. >> what did you hear? >> laurel, laurel. >> even speaker of the house, paul ryan weighed in. >> it is laurel, not yanny. >> we went out to conduct our own investigative reporting. >> yanny. >> indisputably. no controversy. >> no controversy. >> what do you hear? >> she is crazy. it's laurel. >> to figure out the science behind all of thisch we talked to linguist ben zimmer. >> if you emphasize frequencies
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it sounds unambiguously like laurel. if you emphasize frequencies it starts soundi ining yanny. >> people are hearing differently the device, the way their ears worked. >> when we are presented with ambiguous signal like this, where there is noise, distortion, filtering. our brains are good compensating for that. >> on twitter things were stacked evenly. but the debate rages on. >> if you hear something, and your best friend hears something else its the proper response to say it is complicated, it's science. or say your brain doesn't work? >> definitely, it's complicated because of science. >> the entire time, the national debate played out. where did this start? >> as we reported, in wired, somebody recorded laurel, a high school student listened to it. got confused. the rest is history. >> just to be clear it is laurel. >> it is laurel. >> what did you hear? >> laurel. >> depends on the device for
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we end with a musical phenom, two feet tall. too cute for word. here's jericka duncan. >> play time for leonard noble, almost always involves a beat
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and his binky. >> anywhere, mommy, drumsticks. drumsticks. always have to travel with pencils, straws, something in my purse so that he can have it. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: his mother, 34-year-old, shintara noble says musical influences came early. she is a hair stylist and gospel singer. >> oh my gosh. whoo! >> when he was a year and a half, he would come to work with me. and he would take microshay needles and be just drumming on my tv stand. and people would walk past and was like, he is going to be a drummer. ♪ altogether >> reporter: she posted her
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child's rare skills on youtube and started an instagram page, called the life of lennox. videos received hundreds of thousands of views. even professional drummers have started to take note. >> he will use anything. he would use a person as a cymbal if you are not careful. if you are too close, he will -- clearly he is passionate about this. the minute i walk in the door, he's holding these around like. >> right. >> like it's candy, you know. >> right. right. right. >> seemingly unaware he can play, because at his age, it's just that. jericka duncan, cbs news, new york. >> that its the "overnight news" for thursday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and of course, cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor.
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welcome to the "overnight news." i'm anna werner. latest chapter in the saga of the president and the porn star, is written in a tiny footnote to mr. trump's latest financial disclosure form. in it the president disclosed he reimbursed his lawyer, michael cohen, more than $100,000, for quote, expenses. cohen, of course, funneled $130,000 to stormy daniels, to buy her silence about an allege add fair with mr. trump. paula reid has more. >> reporter: on the same page as the president's bold signature is reference to the previously undisclosed payment to mr. cohen. it is the first time president trump has formally admitted reimbursing his personal attorney, michael cohen, for the
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$130,000 he paid adult film star, stormy daniels to keep silent about her allege add fair with the president. mr. trump previously denied knowledge of the payment, including last month aboard air force one. earlier this month. giuliani told fox news the president paid cohen back. >> that money was not campaign money. sorry. i'm giving you a fact now that you don't know. it's not campaign money. no campaign finance violation. >> along with the form, the office of government ethics sent ape letter to deputy attorney general rod rosenstein flagging the update in case it was relevant to any inquiry.
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>> reporter: the justice department could look at false statements or whether it should have been disclosed. but there its no evidence there is currently an active investigation into the president, on this matter. the senate judiciary committee released a mountain of transcripts in its investigation of kremlin interference in the 2016 election, they center on donald trump jr.'s meeting with russians at trump tower in new york where he was supposed to get damaging information on hillary clinton. nancy cordes reports. >> reporter: two committees both led by republicans have now come to very different conclusions. in a bipartisan announcement, the senate intelligence committee said today, that after 14 months reviewing the sources, tradecraft, and analytic work, we see no reason to dispute the
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conclusions of the u.s. intelligence community from 2016. senator mark warner is the committee top democrat. >> russians massively intervened in our elections to the purpose of helping mr. trump and hurting hillary clinton. >> reporter: contrast that with the more partisan report released last month by republicans on the house intelligence committee. they drew praise from president trump, for concluding that russia's sole intent in 2016 was to undermine the u.s. electoral process. a third committee released transcripts that underscored donald trump's jr.'s keen interest in russian dirt on hillary clinton in 2016. in his closed door interview with the senate judiciary committee, last year, he said, i agreed to listen and i was willing to listen. to information about clinton, at his infamous meeting with a russian lawyer at trump tower. his comments contradict his original claim that the meeting
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was about russian adoptions. connecticut democrat richard blumenthal. >> my impression from watching donald trump jr. in the meeting is that he contra diktd himself in many of his answers. >> reporter: the transcripts show another participant in that trump tower meeting says that the president's son-in-law, jared kushner, got infurated when the russian lawyer failed to produce the promised dirt. kushner has testified in the past jeff that he quickly determined the meeting was a waste of his time and left. a. >> red flag warning issued for pilots flying near hawaii's volcano. the mountain is sending out a massive plume of ash miles into the sky. david begnaud is there. >> reporter: it is jarring and spectacular. a towering ash cloud is just the latest kilauea hazard.
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golfers seem oblivious to the 12,000 foot plume from a volcano capable of more. scientists say this is not the big one they were predicting but this was relieving some pressure on kilauea. it has been two weeks since the lava began oozing out. piercing through the ground in a 2 mile trail of fissures flux waiting in intensity. the blue flames in kate the potential for explosive gases. adding to the danger, brought on by the lava. which has turned dozens of homes in the lush subdivision into rubble. emergency officials say, still too risky for owners to return. but we found one resident who never left. >> are you not worried about the toxic gas? >> not worried aanything. >> videotaping destruction, documenting for neighbors who may need to file insurance t >>ms. aris i id hneto when i was here, all of that
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lava was not there. it is just so devastating. >> reporter: there has been a change here at the volcano. winds have died down. the ash is sort of sitting above the crater. weave can't see it as well, the air is smoky. in fact you can almost taste chalk in the air. scientists say the ash out of the volcano is not toxic, but these n-95 masks are really good at protecting you from particles. just two days to the wedding of prince harry and meghan markle. security forces are clamping down across london. charlie d'agata reports. >> reporter: prince harry and meghan markle's wedding in windsor may look like a fairy tale. compared to prince william and kate's wedding a security nightmare. ask mark billingham who spent almost 20 years with british special forces. >> for the security forces it really is a massive headache and
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lot of planning and lot of time effort and cost. to prepare for this. thank god i am not on duty. >> reporter: unlike london where william and kate made their journey to buckingham palace, windsor, a warren of confined streets and tightly packed buildings with rooftops and balconies overlooking the procession. >> this is a hell of a job to secure. >> guy davis the former head of royal protection. >> it has narrow streets, cobbled in part. how do you secure several miles of very small township and parts which are open and green? >> roadblocks and barriers like these will stop vehicles from getting anywhere near the crowds. even with more than 100,000 people expected, the police commander of this wedding assured us today each person will be screened. >> the technology is very different now than in 2011. everybody coming into the processional route will go through airport style security. >> maybe, even so, billingham says the crowd won't just be
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made of of spectators. >> there will be armed, responsive units. >> special forces. >> special forces. >> special forces, yeah. well, here's to first dates! you look amazing. and you look amazingly comfortable. when your v-neck looks more like a u-neck... that's when you know, it's half-washed. add downy to keep your collars from stretching. unlike detergent alone, downy conditions to smooth and strengthen fibers. so, next time don't half-wash it. downy and it's done.
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>> a cbs news investigation has been exposing how some rural hospitals are being turned into insurance mills. churning out big bills for services they don't perform. jim axelrod covering the story and has the latest. >> reporter: insurance companies reimburse rural hospitals at higher rates to keep critical health care in the communities. those higher rates have made rural hospitals attractive targets for schemes, generated nearly half a billion dollars in billing, that is allegedly fraudulent. in 2016, missouri state auditor, nicole galloway began examining the finances of several rural
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hospitals in her state. one was this one, a 15 bed hospital in unionville, missouri. struggling to keep its doors open. >> we were shocked. when we started to look at the financial record. notice tens of millions were coming through. i remember sitting down at the table with my audit staff and, you know, i just said, we got to dig deeper on this. >> her team discovered a management company called hospital partners. swooped in weeks before putnam was to close. promising to turn it around. they made deals with labs around the country to funnel billing for blood tests and drug screen throughs putnam that collects higher rates as a rural hospital. putnam kept 15%. but most of the money was wired back to the labs and the management company. >> essentially the hospital appeared to act as a shell company for the questionable lab billings. >> how much money? >> in six month period the
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hospital funneled through $92 million in revenues to. put that in perspective, $7.5 million. >> it wasn't just happening at putnam according to court filings. insurance companies are attempting to claw back nearly half a billion dollars. they paid rural hospitals across the country. with similar billing arrangements. which they call, fraudulent. they all declined our request for an interview. >> doing health care. the whole time. >> almost exclusively. >> we sat down with jason matta, a foreign ministerer federal prosecutor who special ied in health care fraud. >> the question is going to be -- did the laboratories intend to cheat, intend to trick. mislead the insurance companies? because simply making extra money, isn't a crime in and of itself. it's the question of, was someone tricked, deceived.
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>> insurance companies say one way labs deceive them was paying kickbacks to providers for specimens they could then bill at the higher reimbursement rates. we obtained the voice mail of a lab representative, soliciting samples from a rehab center in california. >> just send me $100,000 then and there. he didn't usually do stuff like that. >> if i heard the message. talking medicare money. i would be very, very concerned. i would be owning an investigation immediately. >> really seems to skirt a line doesn't it? >> in my experience. some of the most sophisticated actors in the space. some of the ones that get the most amount of money from the health care programs are those that know exactly where the line is. and skirt right up to that line. >> what matta told us could cross the line is a key finding of nicole galloway's audit. >> several months after the questionable lab billings had
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started there was no operating lab in the hospital. >> how could they be billing, for, for, lab tests. lab work if there was no lab in the hospital. >> that's what we questions. >> in march. blue cross filed a $60 million lawsuit against hospital partners a ledging their arrangement with labs was a fraudulent scheme. hospital partners is suing galloway, claiming she had no right to audit putnam. >> it is clear, hospital partners did not like our audit. they did not like our shining a light on, the issues that we identified. awe they sued you. >> they did. pushing back on us. i will tell you that will not stop me from doing my job on behalf of taxpayers. >> in a statement, hospital partners said, putnam county memorial hospital is authorized by law to assign and bill for clinical laboratory testing. provided at a reference lab. provided at a reference lab. but just yesterday, the missouri seventh generation gets the ingredients in their provided at a reference lab. but just yesterday, the missouri laundry detergent from plants, not petroleum.
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well the drama surrounding saturday's royal wedding between britain's prince harry and actress meghan markle continues to center on miss markle's dad. thomas markle apparently changed his mind again. and now says he wants to attend the wedding even if he can't walk his daughter on unthe aisle. markle says he had a heart attack and leaving the final decision to his doctors.
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mr. markle has been houned by the press and stained by a paparazzi scandal. our correspondent outside windsor castle brings us up to speed. >> thomas markle sr. told tmz he has scheduled surgery to clear a blockage from his heart. that may mean heartbreak for the bride-to-be, wishing her father were here in windsor saturday. meghan markle's father tells tmz he will not be able to walk his daughter down the aisle, having major surgery after a heart attack left significant damage. he told the celebrity site he wouldn't attend the wedding at all. he felt he embarrassed megan and the royal family by staging the photos, showing him preparing for his daughter's big day. tmz reports. he received $1,400 for the pictures. did tight counter previous unflattering images. >> an extraordinary amount of drama before harry and megan's big day. >> the royal correspondent says,
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odds are, megan's mother, doria will walk her down the aisle instead. >> what's the precedent for a royal bride-to-be walked down the aisle by somebody other than her father. >> well we do have precedent. queen victoria walked one of her daughters down the aisle at her wedding. >> for a monarchy survived around 1,000 years, resilience is crucial. >> they're used to dealing with different kinds of drama. >> royal family used to drama, media drama, something to do with the family. no more family more well equipped to deal with it than that. >> she may not have her farther by her sid. she will have others around her. kensington palace, announced, 10 page boys, brides maids. prince george, princess charlotte. and two god daughters. meghan will not have a maid of honor. she didn't want to have to choose from close friends. >> perhaps not surprisingly, no drama from the groom's family.
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seems, they have all been through this before. norah o'donnell has the a look at the life and times of prince harry. a former paratrooper and sixth in line to the british throne. >> destined for a life in the spotlight. crowd gathered in lon done to celebrate the arrival of his royal highness prince henry of wales. >> prince henry known as harry. >> there was such tremendous excitement when harry was born. amanda foreman is a royal historian. >> you could say prince harry was born under a lucky, happy star. >> for she's a jolly good fellow. >> people were thrilled he arrived. >> according to princess diana. her youngest son set his own path early on. >> whether he copies william. we will wait and see. certainly a different character altogether. >> as the world watched, william and harry grow up. the images were often of the boys enjoying time with their mother.
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>> i brought the picture of you. of course. >> okay. all those years ago. >> harry looked back on his first visit to the united states when he spoke with us in 2016. >> you know, we had, happy, happy memories. it was -- actually fantastic. >> a year after her marriage to prince charles came to and end, diana, known as the most photographed woman in the world, was killed in a car crash after a high-speed chase with paparazzi in paris. >> he and his brother think the media killed their mother. just to be clear. >> a british broadcaster. a friend of william and harry. >> i don't mean metaphorically. i mean literally. >> let's talk about the boys. being told that they had to walk, behind, their mother's funeral. procession. >> the british, have always had a sentimental side to them. and they have, they have, through out history, really loved, long tortuous funeral
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processions. the two boys were forced to take part in this charade. and both have said how terrible, how painful it was to be forced to walk, past, past, thousand, hundred thoufz sand on hundreds people wanting to drink their emotions like vampires. they had to control themselves. >> reporter: with privacy rarely assur assured. cameras kraut prince harry in scandal as he grew older. >> that came to a terrible head, when he was a teenager. went to a party dressed as a nazi officer. and there is no doubt in anyone's mind. that prince harry was not, not a nazi sim pa thierympathizer. he was just being an idiot. you cannot afford to be an idiot when you are next in line to the throne after your elder brother. >> the discipline of a soldier came when harry joined the british army in 2005.
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as an officer, he did two tours in afghanistan. >> pretty feeble throw to be fair. >> and became the first royal to see combat in a quarter century. >> very nice to be out of, sort of out of touch from everything. that is probably the nicest bit about this place. >> after a decade of service. prince harry left the army. but continued to fight for the wounded men and women of the military, by creating, the invictus games. >> you are all winners. >> i have seen the way -- prince harry, interacts with veterans. it's so -- it is so incredibly genuine. he has a real connection. >> wear your pink shirt. >> it is amazing. bah, you can't make up, a sense of connection. i mean, you can say well, his mother also had a connection with, with the wounded. with the vulnerable. with people who don't, have, yet, developed the defenses of this world.
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>> what do you think your mother. princess diana would think about what you have done? here for veterans? >> i, i, i would hope she had been incredibly proud. love it if she was here. i am sure she would be running around causing chaos like i intend to. >> what is ironic about princess diana. she came from the top echelons of society. yet she were heherself was a so rebel. no, sir son to carry on the tradition would no doubt make her, exceptionally proud. >> his marriage to meghan markle may bea sign the rebellious prince is settling down. something harry was not willing to predict two years ago. >> do you want to have kids someday? >> of core, who doesn't. time, time, time will tell. and, and, looking forward to the opportunity. pretty busy at the moment. kids can wait. >> so, if you want to catch the royal festivities live.
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you will have to get up early, cbs coverage of the wedding
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utah is the first state in the nice pass a law protecting parents who let their kids be kids. it's called, free range parenting. jamie yuccas describes what it means and why it is catching on in other states as well. >> melissa butler isn't just a mom. she's master of this three-ring morning circus. helping her seven, nine-year-old get ready and off to school. >> love you guy. >> walking together she expects they will get to class safely. >> honestly most walk home on their own. that freeze up butler to turn attention to her 2-year-old. >> i just thing if i had to physically take my children everywhere. that they went.
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man, i dent know that i would have time for anything. >> butler is part of a push for so-called free range parenting. under the new law. protected. from being charged with neglect for alug her kids to do activiti activities. like go to the park or ride their bikes alone. other states are now considering free range parenting laws including new york and new jersey. a similar measure failed in arkansas, legislature, but lawmakers there say they may try to bring it back. >> utah republican state representative, brad daw sponsored the free range parenting bill. >> arguments on both sides. nobody wants to see a kid abducted. everybody wants a kid to be a kid. >> the idea isn't without controversy. in 2015, a maryland couple was investigated by child protective services when they allowed their 10 and 6-year-old kids to walk home alone from a park. in 2008, she was called world's worst mom for letting her then 9-year-old son, ride the new york city subway alone.
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credited with jump-starting the free range parenting movement. >> as much as i want to push parents to trust themselves when they think their kid is ready. they should be allowed to send them out. they have to know their decisions are not going to be second-guessed by the authorities. >> critics say the new law could have unintended consequences. a columnen last night's atlantic highlighted how, looser child supervision laws could compromise the safety of children from underprivileged families who may be more prone to abuse or neglect. butler says parents should have the freedom to make their own decisions. >> as long as the child is healthy. happy, cared for. you know we need to stop trying to micromanage other parents decisions. >> that's the "overnight news" for thursday. for some the news continues. for others check back with us, a little later for the morning news and of course cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm anna werner.
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captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, may 17th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." for the first time president trump admits he made a large payment to his former attorney, but is there a link to a porn star's hush money right before the election? there were people pushing, shoving, screaming trying to get out. a potential school tragedy averted. a suspected shooter is wounded by a hero cop. and countdown to the royal wedding, but meghan markle is

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