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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 30, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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carter evans is in hawaii. >> the fountains of molten lava are as mesmerizing as they are dangerous. >> you can see it just launching lava up into the air. when you look at this, the raw power here, easy to forget that we're in a residential community. john anistaciatis is helping his brother move. >> what's it like to be packing a home and fountain of lava hundred feet away. >> surreal. whatever is going to happen is going to happen. next in line if it keeps moving. so far, 41 homes destroyed. ten in the last 24 hours. and the lava is showing no signs of slowing down. carter evans, cbs news, hawaii. students rurned to santa fe hig school in texasor the first time since a mass shooting 11 day as the go. it was just the latest school shooting this year. now, teachers are being seen as last line of defense for students. as many schools require them to get special training. it can be shockingly realistic.
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adriana diaz shows us tonight as this evening weave bring back the cbs news series "eye on america." >> reporter: in schools across america, the job description for teachers has changed. this is only a drill. [ screams ] >> he is holding a fake gun. >> no! >> today, thousand of teachers are now required to participate in active shooter drills, like this one. >> i know it is a drill. does it feel real? >> it does. because you can't be, with the mentality, it's just a training. nothing is going to happen. because you are not going to put your effort in. >> i am not teaching you out of a textbook. teaching you something i lived through. >> former deputy sheriff, runs a company that conducts safety trainings for mass shootings. he says he is busier than ever. >> active shooter situation is scary. in this scenario you didn't fight back. he was able to sthoot you that's it. in a scenario where you fight
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back you have a chance to go home end of the day. >> open the door. openen the door. i will shoot this kid. >> every month at yuma, arizona after the students go home, the teachers go through active shooter trainings. >> but this is a preschool. >> get down. get down. >> with kids as young as 1-year-old. since columbincolumbine, 16% of sthootin shootings took place. this is jessica's ten tt active shooter drill since august. she has been a teacher for 12 years. >> years ago when you sthastart this did you think you would lock kids down and take precautions for a potential shooter. >> back in the days when i grew up. i was in school, school, that was the safest place ever. then all of this happening it is like i am i really safe in school? >> reporter: in the next drill, there is a twist. a student gunman. >> no, stop.
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>> there is always that moment where it is just a prak it gets to you. >> reporter: each drill costs the school $1,000. 2016 u.s. government accountability report found 2/3 of school districts across the country conduct active shooter drills. >> outside. >> reporter: the training is required by sabrina seal, the preschool's owner. >> come here. come on. >> i am very protective. very, very, very. we wear so many hats. we are a nurks a teacher. we are a mom. super cool. i look it. >> now you are security. >> that is -- totally put us in a different element that we were not prepared for. >> we came back the next morning. >> there are 4 and 5-year-olds in the classroom. they don't know it yet at any moment there is going to be a lockdown drill where the
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teachers have to apply what they learned to keep the kids safe. but there won't be any guns and the kids are told it's a game. >> are you ready? >> one, two, three. >> over there, over there. let's go. >> over here. >> it's okay. it's okay. we are going to be safe. stay down. stave down. >> okay. guys, it's over. >> why do you have to be so quiet. >> because a stranger might take you. >> stranger might take you. >> we call it a stranger. we are not going to tell them it can be, have a weapon. and go to an extreme. we just put a name on it. so they know. >> nice and quiet, huh. >> you crouched down with the kids what was going through your mind. >> my mind was blank. just to keep them safe. keep them quiet.
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>> are we teaching them at such a young age to be scared? >> it's not quite teaching them. we are just keeping them safe. because i don't want them to be afraid. i'm not going to lie. it can be, you know, to the point that they question, like, why are we doing this? or why do i need to be safe? if, this should be all safe. >> okay. you guys did a fabulous job. good job. >> high five. you guys were very quiet. you won at hide-and-seek. >> so jarring to see this, adrianna, how widespread have the drills become? >> well, jeff, nearly 95% of public schools do some sort of lockdown drills. 2/3 do lockdown drills and drills catered for active shooter situations. >> you look at the kids. their eyes as they look up. as the they engage in these. what is it like being there when they're there? >> you know it was eerie, because one minute they're rambunctio rambunctious, 4, 5 years olds. next diving behind desks they're so quiet you can hear a pin drop. so if somebody didn't know there
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was a drill going on in the room they would walk in not know the kids were there because they become that good at hiding. >> they're growing up real fast. >> they're growing up real fast. thank you. prepare for your demise, mr. billingsley! >> they're growing up real fast. thank you. do your worst, doctor. i will. but first, a little presentation. hijacking earth's geothermal energy supply. 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. my mom washes the dishes... ...before she puts them in the dishwasher.
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make the most of a few minutes with ky natural feeling with aloe vera the meek may inherit the earth, a bold preacher has his eyes on the heavens and asking
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his flock to get him there in style. here is tony dokoupil. >> i really believe if jesus was on the earth today he wouldn't be riding a donkey. think about it for a men out. in the airplane, preaching the gospel. >> he is hoping to take the word of jesus to new height with help from a $54 million private jet. >> i have owned three different jets in my life. and i use them. and burning them up for the lord jesus christ. >> runs a ministry and church outside new orleans. in a individually to his website last week, he asked followers for help funding the aircraft. >> for a falcon 7 x go anywhere in the world one stop. >> father, we thank you. >> heap is not the first minister to preach the gospel of private flight. this past january, another televangelist, kenneth copeland, announced the blessing of a gulf stream. >> prosperity gospel many are preaching is simply not the gospel of jesus christ. >> jim wallace founder of a
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prominent christian community. >> the gospel of prosperity is a biblical heresy neemd to be named as the that. >> reporter: we were unable to reach him for comment. wen't know know how much money he raise sewed far. jeff in the individually he acknowledges some believe preachers should not have private jet. he believes in using every outlet. >> his fourth jet. >> number four. >> $54 million. all right. 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.
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harvard study found puerto rico's government was way off on death toll from hurricane maria last september. the official number its 64. but the study published in the new england journal of medicine estimates more than 4,600 died on the island. more than 70 times the figure. the puerto rican government does not dispute the figure. a study will be coming out in the summer. david begnaud heading back to puerto rico. his reports begin tomorrow. more than 8,000 starbuck's stores locked their doors this afternoon so 175,000 employees could begin anti-bias training. in response to the public outcry last month after two black men were arrested for sitting in a starbuck's in philadelphia without buy anything. the company seas any one is welcome to sit or use the restroom without making a purchase. up next here, a young boy takes a stand to help his baby brother.
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finally, a 9-year-old boy made a small fortune, selling lemonade. he was my motivated by love. andrew always want aid younger brother. he was overjoyed when he got his wish six months ago when his baby brother dillon was born. >> i tell him i love him. he smiles at me. give him a kiss and stuff. >> reporter: less than two weeks ago, dillon was diagnosed with crabe disease, a rare, terminal neurological condition. >> my name is andrew, my baby brother dillon is very, very
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sick. >> reporter: what andrew did next is ask for help. >> please come buy lemonade so i can raise money to help dillon get better. >> the community turned out. handing him stacks of cash. for each cup of lemonade. how much money were people giving you? >> 20s. dollars. hundreds. >> they were giving you hundred dollar bills for a cup of lemonade because they wanted to help your brother, huh? >> yes, sir. >> reporter: he raised $6,000 in two hours. using the hashtag teamdylan. >> going to help pay his doctor bills and buy him a teddy bear. >> probably buy a couple teddy bears, right? >> uh-huh. >> andrew any father, matthew andstepmother, melissa hav been stunned by the one that has now raised $10,000. >> word can't describe how proud i am of andrew. to be 9 years old. and to put his little brother first. it's really hard to describe how proud i am.
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i tell him. i don't really think he understand. >> i think he hears you right now. >> that is the "overnight news" for wednesday. for some of you've the news 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.
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hi, everyone, thank you for joining us. i'm demarco morgan. starbuck's shops took a ]. to train employees about racial bias. after a video made national headlines in april. a manager scald police on two black men who arrested after using to the restroom without buy anything. >> reporter: starbuck's says closing the stores is just the first stretch. it is not necessarily the solution. they have teamed up with several civil rights organizations including, naacp, to help them create today's curriculum.
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starbuck's says the program will set the foundation for a longer term, anti-bias, diversity,ic we fee and inclusion effort. employees will reportedly watch videos, one featuring rapper common and participate in discussions. training part of starbuck's is nesh ti initiative to prove diversity education after the incident in philadelphia which starbuck's ceo howard schultz called represent rehence bum. >> we have an opportunity given the fact that we have stores in every community in america to begin a very important conversation. we have been in business almost 50 years. probably one of the most important transformation moments in the history of our company. we have taken it very seriously. >> a california judge sparked outrage for handling of a sexual assault case is speaking only to cbs news a week before voters decide if he should lose his job. judge aaron perskey sentenced brock turner to a short jail term after he was found guilty off salting a woman unconscious.
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here is john blackstone. >> reporter: judge aaron persky remained largely silent as campaign to remove him from the bench built over nearly two years now. now in his only television interview he defended the send fence that has been widely condemned. >> if a judge is thinking in the back of his or her mind how is this going to look? how will it look on social media? will i be villified on cable news? that's the wrong avenue. we can't do that weechl shouldn't do that. >> reporter: his sentencing of brock turner meant the former swimmer walked free after three months in county jail for sexually assaulting an uncon sthus wom -- uncon sthus woman. >> you did have an idea before you passed sentence it would be a controversial sentence? >> yes, and by my ethical constraints by the rule of law, i had to completely tune that out. >> reporter: in court, turner heard the word of his victim. a powerful statement, widely
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shared on social media. you took away my worth, my privacy, my confidence, she told turn ter. i don't want my body any more, i was terrified of it. >> reporter: if this case were you before today, the meto movement being what it is, might you have been more sensitive to, to, the feelings of the society around you. >> let me say again, on, based on the code of judicial ethics. i can't discuss the details of the case or, or my, decision making. but i can say that generally, the answer is absolutely not. >> judge persky sentencing of turner followed recommendation of the county probation department. the california commission on judicial performance concluded there is not clear, convincing evidence of bias or judicial misconduct. >> when we make a decision in a civil or criminal case we are disappointing one side or the other. if one side or the other disapin theed that is able to generate, outrage, get out there on social media, raise a lot of money,
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based on one decision, it's not right. >> the million people signed an online petition calling for persky's removal. the recall campaign raised $1 million. he raised $400,000 to fight back. >> there are lawn signs now that have my face next to a mug shot of the defendant. >> reporter: certainly for a while you steam to be the most hated man on the internet. >> probably so. >> fire judge persky. >> i accept responsibility for every decision that i have made as a judge. but what i cannot accept, are the downstream consequences. the collateral damage if you will, to, to, the next case. to, to the next judge's decision to. even the next juror's decision. i mean this notion, the power of social media, the power of politics, if it affects jurors, weave complely corrupted our system. >> reporter: for weeks aftere
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sentenced turner, judge persky had to come and go from the courthouse using the back entrance. usually, reserved for inmates. since the recall effort began, he hasn't been hearing cases here. he has been working only as a night court judge. another evacuation effort under way in hawaii after a massive new lava flow destroyed nearly a dozen more homes. the big island has been under siege by lava for almost four weeks now after the mount erupted earlier this month. carter evans has the story. >> we have been escorted by the national guard into the laugh ae zone. see where the flow crossed the road moving slowly now. in other parts of the community moving much faster and leading to new concerns about lava overtaking more homes. lava continues to devastate the community three weeks after the crisis began. newly reactivated fissures are spewing molten rock, toxic gas
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and destroying buildings as the lava moves 90 feet every hour. this is inside. neighbors told us the fissure became active. starting to fountain. in full force, launching lava into the air. the neighborhood under evacuation orders, but ee myrem officials had to go door to door to get holdouts. >> disturbing some people refuse to leave. we had one gentleman that had to be, kind of rescued. his only way out was through his back door and through the forest. >> walked back here. there is a crack in my backyard. >> big one. >> big one. >> tam hunter says active lava is two blocks away from his house. he is packing up and getting out. after a 20 foot deep track opened up on the property and destroyed his neighbor's home. >> split the ground open between two trees in your backyard. >> literally. >> my little garden.
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area. and, it goes right to the corner of their house. >> reporter: energy officials confirm monday lava covered two wells at the thermal ventures power plant. they carried out safety measures to preef vent wells from emitting hydrogen sulfide gas. concerns continue as more wells are threatened by the 2,000 degree molten rock. l the concern not just with the lava. but the gasses you can see the smoke off the flow here. it crosses over the asphalt on this road. so authorities are keeping a close eye on the wind conditions in which directions they're going. they're concerned about vog, volcanic fog that could blow across the island. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back.
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this is the cbs "overnight news." the number of americans killed each year in wrong way crashes increased more than 38% since 2013. wrong way collisions are 50 times more likely to be deadly compared to all other vehicle crashes. that's why arizona is investing in possible high tech solution that instantly alerts police and drivers. kris van cleave shows us how it works. roim there should be no question you are going the wrong way. states are finding good signage and even common sense isn't enough to always stop a wrong way driver from getting on a freeway and the consequences can
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be deadly. second from disaster. this driver swerved to avoid a wrong way driver. cell phone video caught this truck plowing into oncoming traffic on i-25 in colorado. here, tennessee police drove straight into a wrong way driver, to stop her. >> how big of a problem is it? >> for us it is a huge problem. >> arizona ste trooper, will neverorget the night he came face to fa with a wro way driver who fortunately stopped. >> i don't want him to go around him. i don't want to get in a wreck. i don't want to get hurt. but i really don't want that car, getting around me and colliding with unknowing or unsuspecting traffic. >> has to be a terrifying moment? >> yeah. >> reporter: how often do you got a call for a wrong way driver. >> every day. every shift. a call. >> every shift. >> colonel frank milstead oversees height way pra troll. >> 65% that we stop and arrest for going the wrong way are impaired.
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not a highway problem. impairment problem. >> it is hard as a mother to know that your child is gone before you. they haven't been able to fulfill all their dreams. >> mary ann's son, a mesa police sergeant died four years ago when a drunk driver hit him head on. she is suing the state. >> quit talking about doing something about it. because there is still wrong way drivers on the freeways still arizona citizens at risk. who could be killed today. >> the wrong way. alarm went off southbound. >> arizona the first state testing thermal cameras to catch wrong way drivers, posted at freeway off ramps along a 15 mile stretch of interstate 15 to immediately spot a wrong way driver entering the freeway part unfortunate a $4 million pilot project. when triggered, that alarm sound in the department of transportation operation center. it brings up the camera and alerts police to the driver's location. within second, freeway signboard warn, wrong way driver ahead.
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exit freeway. >> the faster we can react, the belt better off well are. >> you know instantly it happened. how does that compare to waiting for a 911 call. >> in one case we, got an alert. saw it on the camera. we waited five minutes before the call. >> arizona took a page from san antonio which saw the rate of wrong way drivers entering a highway drop by a third after enlarging and lowering wrong way signs, and adding ones look this that light up and flash red. >> i have a wrong way, 101. >> research shows there is not an effective way to stop a wrong way driver from getting on the freeway. >> right now we have not found a physical barrier that stops them. we have looked at spikes. looked at other things. they aren't reliable. >> mary ann mendoza, tend to the ballpark the city named after him. a way for her to hold on to his memory. she just hopes no other mother experiences her heartbreak.
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>> i just know what hard work he put into this. and the plans he had for himself in the future. you know, they're gone. >> other state are now coming to tears airs arizona to seep how the program is working. state is planning to expand and adding cameras to a new stretch of freeway set to open next year. for cbs this mornin
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a biotech startup will be made into a movie. elizabeth holmes was 19 when she dropped out of college to start a company that promised to revolutionize blood testing. a few years ago, holmes became the youngest self-made billion irin a t her climb collapsed after "the wall street journal" real i she'd was running a massive fraud. a closer look in a story. our work is making testing accessible. >> elizabeth holmes built the company on the edison. a miniaturized blood analyzer that would disrupt the $60 billion lab testing industry, dominated by labcorp and quest diagnosti diagnostics. she called it the ipod of health care and made her a celebrity. she graced magazine covers, and
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was praised by politicians and the press alike. you founded this company 12 years ago, right. yeah. >> tell them how old you were? >> i was 19. >> the woman who i will be interviewing needs no introduction. >> reporter: she sold her vision with grandiose claims her blood tests would cost a fraction of current prices. >> what we are doing in just pricing, is saving medicare and medicaid hundreds of billions of dollars on an annual basis. >> holmes biotech startup was backed by an illustrious board packed with national security heavy weights. henry kissinger and james mattis, current defense secretary. the board was filled with friend of george p. schultz, the former secretary of state, who helped end the cold war. he introduced his grandson tyler to holmes. dazzled, tyler schultz became a believer. and joined the company soon after getting his degree in
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biology from stanford. >> when you met her and heard about liz beth holmes vision what did you think? >> i was totally sold on it. >> reporter: tyler schultz began working at the company in september 2013. a pivotal moment, as the company announced a partnership with walgreen's. the deal would put an edison machine in every store. elizabeth holmes claimed the edison performed all of the tests big lab machines like these could. from cholesterol to cancer. all from a painless finger rick. but tyler schultz says the edison he saw just didn't work. >> was it a sophisticated piece of machinery? >> no. come components would fall off in testing. you had to fish out. doors that wouldn't close. they would get too hot. get too cold. >> when i was there we could not complete any test accurately on the devices that we were manufacturing. >> reporter: doug mechie joined
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theranos in 2012. his job was to adapt blood tests for the edison. tests which holmes told investors were ready to use on patients. >> but liz beth holmes told walgreen's in 2010 it developed a device capable of running any blood tests from a few drops ricked from a finger in real time and half the cost of traditional labs, was that true? >> no. >> do you think she was lying to walgreen's, i do. >> are you a clinical lab specialist? >> no. >> erika chung out of berkeley with a degree in molecular and cell biology when sunny went to work, she was 22. even the novice lab tech suspected something was very wrong when she saw faulty test results sent to wal green's patients. >> when did you thing i probably shouldn't be doing this? >> pretty, pretty soon in the process. especially when weep started to pick up more patients samples.
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>> when the samples were retested, she says, there were often contradictory results. >> reporter: did you alert the patient? >> no. we didn't let them know, hey, we reran your patient sample, we are not positive about what the diagnose is is. >> this is some one's health information. >> exactly. this isn't an app crashing, this isn't some one's food delivery coming late. it's just a different ball game. >> it is not the only game liz beth holmes was playing. theranos employees told us they were instructed to stage fake demonstrations for investors who visited company headquarters. >> it was a show. all they would see was their blood getting collected. they didn't see behind closed doors how it was pro sesd. >> they would get their finger pricked, then let out of the room. go have a meeting. go have lunch. whatever. and then, at which point, nga would run in the room. grab the cartridge. bring it to the lab.
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>> was the edison doing the testing? >> no, absolutely not. >> who was doing the testing? >> scientists at the bench. >> bay hand. >> yeah. >> a bait-and-switch for investors kept the money rolling in. theranos raise nearedly $900 million from the investors. who now say they were swindled by elizabeth holmes and company presiden president. the pair claimed in investor documents obtained by 60 minutes, that theranos technology was validated by the fda. pharmaceutical companies and deployed on the battlefield by the u.s. military in afghanistan. those claims were fabricated. and in one public appearance after another. holmes' pitch became more fantastic and reckless. >> we have done some work with people at hopkins who have developed and demonstrated that in blood you can see the onset
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of pancreatic cancer 17 years before a tumor forms. >> we called johns hopkins medicine, they told us, they never collaborated with theranos. doug mechie test data he compiled for the food and drug administration was falsified. >> so much pressure from above to get good looking results that are going to be able to pass fda guidelines that people were pressured into make things disappear. >> the bad results. >> the bad results. >> that's deceptive. >> yeah, for sure. >> did you ever go to your boss and say this isn't right? >> absolutely. all the time. but he was under a lot of pressure from the people above him. and, he was trying to do his best to make, to make, everyone happy. >> this invention is going to be way up there. with the discovery of antibiotics. >> day-to-day operations were run by the company president,
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sunny balwani, a millionaire software engineer with no training in the biological sciences. but he did have a powerful connection to elizabeth holmes. sunny balwani was her secret boyfriend. >> some people are here because of the mission, because some people are here for the science. >> balwani was holmes enforcer. firing employees on the spot and berating scientists for failed test. after a year and a half, machie quit. >> i saw there was, you know, potentially fraud taking place. there was, far too much illegitimate things going on. i talked to sunny. decided didn't want to be there anymore. we left. >> tyler schultz was also becoming disillusioned. >> i had a personal relationship with liz beth. she was close to my family. i felt like she was deceiving my family. and the public. >> to watch norah's full report go to our website. cbsnews.com and click on 60
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minutes we'll be right back. when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for
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the race that's been designed for you.
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ever get the feeling that a smart device is listening to private conversations. a portland woman, was shocked to realize her amazon echo recorded a talk with her husband and sent it to a random contact. >> reporter: the woman's name, danielle was shocked to get a phone call urging her to disconnect were alexa devices right away. after her experience she is vowing never to use them again. >> i bet these devices are listening to what we are saying. >> until two weeks ago, her home in portland oregon was wired in every room with amazon echo.
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her family use theed the alexa app to do everything from turn up the heat to turn off the lights. but danielle told us via skype their love for the alexa changed with one alarming phone call. >> the person on the other line said, unplug your alexa devices right now. >> that person was one of her husband's employees. calling from seattle. he proceeded to tell us that he had received audio files recordings from what was going on in our house. danielle says amazon echo device in the home recorded a private conversation and sent a cope to the random contact, employee in seattle, 175 miles away. this is part of that conversation. >> last, we need a construction builder, used to building bigger homes. >> danielle unplugged all the devices and repeatedly called up amazon. she says an alexa engineer
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investigated her story. >> did he tell you why it happened? >> he said, that the device guessed what we were saying. >> in a statement to cbs, amazon says, background conversation was interpreted by alexa as commands to record and send a message. as unlikely as this string of events is, we are evaluating options to make this case even less likely. >> they have absolutely no right to listen and record my conversations. it is unheard of. >> amazon says they take privacy seriously. they called this a rare occurrence. and they're investigating to ensure that it does not happen again. >> that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. and for others, you can check back with us a little later for the morning news and of course, cbs this morning.
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captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, may 30th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." a hollywood bombshell. "roseanne" is canceled after a racist tweet. its star has apologized, but the fallout continues. >> in the end mexico is going to pay for the wall, i'm just telling you. president trump rallying supporters. reaction to his comments, immigration, and ms-13.

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