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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  June 21, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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waiting over an hour. taken into the inspection area. we are not allowed to go an further than the doors coming up. >> what you saw today the way it is supposed to happen. the way it is has been happening for years and years. and, the only thing that has changed is this policy of placing officers on the
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international line. and not allowing them to step over. >> the family that we follow today will be some of the first to reap the benefits from this executive order. so when the families leave, this port of entry, and head to a detention facility. a holding facility, as they process their asylum applications. they will not be separated. that includes that grandmother, and her granddaughter. jeff. >> mireya villarreal in el paso. thank you. a chilling 911 call played in a california courtroom. it was the voice of a girl who had just escaped a horrifying situation. where she and her 12 siblings were allegedly abused and tortured by their parents. jamie yuccas has new details on the case. >> david and louise, accused of beating, strangling and starving their 13 children appeared in a california court today where attorneys played a frantic 20 minute call by their 17-year-old. i have never been out. i live in a family of 15 people
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and my parents are abusive. her mother, reportedly wept in court, as she listened to her daughter, tell the dispatcher in a soft voice, they abuse us, and my two little sisters are chained up. we don't really do school. i haven't finished first so tadt breathe because of how dirty the house is. we never take baths. >> i ask for help. but i am still down. >> the 17-year-old was desperate to help her 12youb se pages her family didn't know about. oh where do i go from here. >> when investigators interviewed her she said she was scared to death. but called after climbing out a window. a plan two years in the making. the children who range in age from 2 to 29 said the abuse lasted more than a decade. three of the kids were found chained up when police arrived. after being treated at a hospital, they're now trying to figure out what a normal life looks like.
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that includes, school, picking out clothes and eating regular meals. the adult children went into an assisted living facility. six juveniles are in foster care. the turpins are in jail on $12 million bail. they face life in prison if convicted. jamie yuccas, thank you. coming up next. pastor shot and killed an armed carjacker talks about what happened.
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get to know geico. and see how easy homeowners and renters insurance can be. a by stander pulled a gun. stopped an active shooter sunday in washington state. carter evans reports that bystander is a pastor. and he told his story today. >> i have in my understanding
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been cleared of any wrongdoing. in the matter with regard to my fatally shooting the man. >> david george fought back tears as he spoke publicly today for the first time. since he shot and killed a gunman who opened fire in a wal-mart in washington. >> the gunman came past me nd p he wa building.e >> this church pastor was legally carrying a gun. so he followed the suspect who then tried to carjack people out in the parking lot. >> the gunman attempted to get a car. when he failed tee shot two times into the driver's side of the vehicle. i fired to stop the shooter. i moved, moved to clear the gunman, yelling to hip, to drop the gun and show me his hand. >> 44-year-old timothy day had a lengthy rap sheet and died at the scene. the pastor who is also a fire fighter, emt, immediately jumped into save the victims. >> this is in accordance with my training as emergency responder and pastor, husband, father. and a grandfather.
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>> and now, many would look to give him another title. >> hero. >> thank you. >> but the pastor of the oakville assembly of god church who wanted none of this attention, says he was just following his calling. >> i carry a firearm for the same reason that i carry a first aid bag. hoping never having to use them, but always being prepared. >> one of the shooting victims had to be air lifted to the hospital. in kri critical conditions. family members say he is paralyzed from the neck down. two victims treat ford minor injuries. jeff. >> thank you. >> coming up the investigation after a police officer, shoots and kills an unarmed teenager.
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went out to ice agents warning them to be alert regarding surroundings. agents' personal information and photos downloaded from the website linkedin, mention police departments in los angeles, new york, oakland and phoenix. a police officer in east pittsburgh, pennsylvania on paid leave after fatally shooting an unarmed teenager. this was call the on camera last night. the police say officers stopped a car they believe had been involved in a shooting. they say 17-year-old antoine rose was trying to run away when the officer now under investigation, shot him. pope francis today ordered cardinal theodore mccarrick retired archbishop of washington removed from public ministry because of a credible allegation he sexually abused a teenager more than 40 years ago. mccarrick denies the allegation. up next here, a super volcano ready to blow beneath a tourist hot spot.
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we end with a sleeping giant. ancient super volcano beneath yellowstone national park. it has been snoring nor thousand of years. exhaling to the park's geysers. as jamie yuccas reports. interruptions have some wondering if the giant is awakening. steamboat geyser, the world's tallest and far more powerful than old faithful is roaring back to life. >> gosh. >> reporter: steamboat erupted nine times in three months.
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prior to that, it erupted just ten times in 27 years. and yes, it can do what kilauea has done on hawaii's big island, only much, much bigger. a super volcano. because the this geyser field at yellowstone national park lies on top of an active volcano. with multiple chambers of from deep beneath the earth. the same energy thatgm caauses geysers to blow could spew an ash cloud as far as chicago and los angeles. >> amazing to think of the scale of the eruptions. >> mike poland is in charge of the observatory. the eruption that created the park was 70,000 years ago. no scenes of that happening any time soon. but, scientists do want to know what's behind the most recent activity? >> we see gas emissions. all kind of thermal activity. that's what yellowstone does. that's what its say pezzed to do. one of the most dynamic places
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on earth. tau awe lea least predictable is steamboat. it could erupt. but no one really wants to turn away. >> that would be chance of a lifetime. i would, i would be amazed. >> timing is everything. only a lucky few get to see this. >> we all want to see this kind of thing. sort of hoping it goes off now. >> poland's team are using thermal imaging equipment to track the temperature of the 50 mile wide field. they also monitor 28 seismographs because super volcano would include major earthquake activity. that its so much is happening now is a boon, not just for scientists but for sarah gilbert. >> is this like your super bowl? >> yes, yes, so much better. >> jamie yuccas, cbs news, yellowstone.
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welcome to the "overnight news." i'm michelle miller. president trump has done an about face over his zero tolerance immigration policy. separates children from their migrant parents along the mexico border. the president signed an executive order to keep the families together, while the adults are processed for, possible crimes. major garrett has the more. >> we don't like to see families separated. this takes care of the problem. >> reporter: the so-called zero tolerance crackdown on immigration will continue, adults who commit a crime will be prosecuted. but the separations will end. we have reports from washington,
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the border and we are in el salvador tonight one of the countries people are fleeing in large numbers, first major garrett its at the white house. >> we are going to keep the families together. i didn't like the sight, or the feeling of families being separated. at the same time, we are keeping a very powerful border and it continues to be a zero tolerance. we have zero tolerance for people that enter our country illegally. >> reporter: under increasing political pressure president trump signed an executive order today that temporarily prevents separation of families prosecuted for illegally crossing the border. the president said, first lady melania and daughter ivanka lobbied for the reversal of his immigration policy. myelstron about it. i feel strongly about it. i think anybody with a heart would feel very strongly about it. >> the president's zero tolerance immigration policy,
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announced in may. mandated universal prosecution of adults who enter the country illegally. under long standing law, children cannot remain with adults being detained on criminal charges. in the face of bipartisan blow back, administration officials said for days, their thands were tied. >> congress and the courts created this problem and congress alone can fix it. >> we passed legislation, closed loopholes, we won't face these terrible choices. >> the democrats have to change atheaw>>teaycu order is not a permanent solution. it allows families to be held together for 20 days. after that, they must either be deported or separated. the trump administration says, that means, congress still has to act. >> we are going to see what
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happens. >> the administration says children who have already been separated from their guardians will not be immediately reunited youngsters are being housed in detention facilities and group homes. thousands of miles from the mexico border. the trump administration has facilities on the lockdown. the press and members of congress have been barred from entering. of greatest concern what is happening to the youngest children. toddlers and consider up to 5 years old held in so-called tender age shelters. david begnaud has that part of the story. this facility can hold 1,100 people. if you cross illegally this is where you come. 2,300 kids have been separated from their parents. they're staying in various places around the u.s.
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major reported they may not be reunited immediately. the question is if they are, how does it happen, where doesn't it happen? and where do the families go after they are reunited? if since the president signed the executive order this afternoon. trying to get answers from the department of homeland security. reached out, nearly a dozen times today. still as the of news time, have no answer from them. people are being released daily. got to tell you. m fheroac it seems like almost every hour. saw one leaving a shrt time ago. we followed it. it went to a bus station in downtown. and 27 undocumented immigrants got out of the bus.th all had c. we talked to one man, who said he crossed the border illegally. f 2-cayear-old with him.mendrom ho while in custody he heard families were being separated. thought it might happen to him.
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if the didn't. here's why. border patrol says there is not enough room to keep everybody. so they have to turn a lot of them loose. on to the streets. stow what they do find a sponsor. give them a bus ticket. they give them a summons to appear in court. here's the catch. border patrol says most of those people don't show up at their immigration hearing. mireya villarreal has the story from the border city of juarez. >> hours before president trump changed the policy, migrants crossed the bridge to america hoping for asylum. men are women and children, who say they're fleeing violence. including the mexican grandmother we met two days ago. >> you're scared they will separate you? that's the reason why you are not crossing, you are scared. >> today she decided to cross the border no longer afraid of being separated from granddaughter. immigration advocate ruben garceria is helping her. >> family of two. a family of four. that's correct. >> yes.
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within the next hour or so. hopefully. >> well are not telling anyone they need how to come back, not telling any one to leave. what we are telling them, is we will process the claim. and they're walking away. >> is the group still with you? >> yeah. >> okay. >> we're it. >> we're on u.s. soil right now. on the bridge heading for the port of entry, behind me are the two families that have been asking for asylum. waiting over an hour. taken into the inspection area. we are not allowed to go an further than the doors coming up. >> what you saw today the way it is supposed to happen. the way it is has been happening for years and years. and, the only thing that has changed is this policy of placing officers on the international line. and not allowing them to step over. >> the family that we follow today will be some of the first to reap the ffitsberom th is so when the families leave, this port of entry, and head to a detention fa tyciap.ications.
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they will not be separated. two days of rain in texas touched off flash flood and turned communities into swamps. courtney zabowski has the story. >> the streets of harllington, texas look like rivers as heavy thunderstorms pounded at 200 mile stretch of southeast texas. >> when i woke up. i heard all the thunder and the rain and lightning and everything. >> too much rain in a short amount of time, left, parts of the city drenched. like this intersection that lead to people's homes. some residents were stuck inside their homes.
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others kept out. >> my vehicle hasn't left. i haven't left from here, so. i haven't left from here, so. >> national weather se i was wondering if an electric toothbrush really cleans better than a manual. and my hygienist says it does but they're not all the same. who knew? i had no idea. so she said, look for one that's shaped like a dental tool with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's rounded brush head surrounds each tooth to gently remove more plaque, and oral-b is the first electric toothbrush brand accepted by the american dental association for its effectiveness and safety. my mouth feels so clean. i'll only use an oral-b. oral-b. brush like a pro. discpump, foam, hydrate care foaming body wash. new dove men + care foaming body wash
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a growing number of companies are employing social media influencers to promote on line. beauty bloggers, fashionistas, gaming addicts.ing they have in millions of followers. what if the influencer you are following is computer generated. a growing trend. tony dokoupil has the details. >> starting to think you can't believe everything you see online. but recent studies predict the influence marketing space will be a $2 billion industry by 2020. the goal of these computer generated influencers to get you to buy products or experiences. critics are worried you could be
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deceived by a false image. >> they say seeing is believing. but actually, what you are seeing defies that logic. little mykala, modeling's it girl is an avatar designed by artists built by computers. so is shudu, dubbed first digital supermodel. >> inspired by a barbie doll popular. >> thrown don photographer and designer, cameron james wilson is the human behind the avatar. >> 3 d msod offer t ahings we w have never, ever seen before. >> how can we explore beauty in a world that is only limited by the physical things around us. >> with close to 125,000 followers, shudu is a virtual influencer. just last week, shudu debuted s notwost fashion editorial witw me paid like a human fashion model
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would be. >> we are blurring the lines between fiction and reality. >> attorney studies ethics of technology and says the ftc need to have guidelines for cgi influencers. >> the impetus is on the legislative branch to say, maybe we need better transparency. there has been a lot of discussion about, technology moving at a much faster pacep than the law able to catch up. >> what do you think could go wrong with cgi models. >> if it is a fictional character. a consumer doesn't know it is real. to a charge excellent that is not a person, that is just a, extended brand. so i think what we would have to worry about, should there be transparency that would be needed about interaction with the brand. >> little mykela is fast growing brand. the model/musician has 1.2 million followers and growing as influen influencer. sporting and promoting designer clothes. creator, robotics ai come of pane, brood maintained an allure
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of anonymity. >> few clicks. sew it together. clicking. >> ryan tang, vice president of cloe, behind the company to digitize the clothes. >> everyone has their own take what reality should look like. 3 d gives the extra step to increase creativity. tau awe while cgi models its a first. tang says fashion has been blurring lines for years with digital garments. >> a lot of 3 d going on no one knows about. >> when a person shops to clothes are the models real people. are the clothes real? >> the person is real. the garment isn't. most web sites you go to. see a guy has the same goofy face. different poses. wearing multiple garments. answers your question. >> what point does this cross over into lying? >> i don't feel like it is dishonest. i feel it dut the supposed to do. not getting a fake garment. part of the supply chain.
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this is the year will start noticing more people. >> udshnd a u something new. >> think so. leaders so far. first ever to do what they're doing. >> not the last. >> and she has proven she is here to stay. in march, she posed for free in new york's fashion magazine, v. wearing luxury brand like versace, fendi and chanel. >> just an interesting subject. i think it really interesting conversation right now is, again, about the authenticity in this digital age. how much of what's out there contentwise is real. >> associate editor devin bare it sees a bright future for virtual models. >> brands want to be involved in a story that gets traction otherwise, product end of the day. >> as for shudu's creator he says his digital model its the start of a wave of cgi influencers. >> of the influencers of off ng. they need actual engaging content so. many different aspect of this.
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i think, engage, captivate people. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. are you taking the tissue test?
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steve martin and martin short in the middle of a nationwide tour. tony dokoupil caught up with them between shows. >> ladies and gentlemen, steve martin. >> what's going on? >> we call it rehearsal. you don't know about that. >> yeah, i don't need it. it's just two hours before their show, in grand rapids, michigan. gets under way. >> can you give me something to remember you by? >> it wasn't enough! >> reporter: though steve martin and martin short are used to getting laughs they're busy working and reworking their material. >> what is your favorite seen in one of the movies? >> let me show you. i have a feeling this is going to be too much. that you should end just with you guys. >> the thing about comedy is that you are always this close to failure.
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so the moment, you become arrogant. you just, all you have to do is wait. >> so the fear of failing or the fear of bombing is as intense and acute today as it was your first time. >> i don't think it is fear. i think like saying to the pilot. why do you always check the buttons every time you fly. flying for 20 years. that's what you do. >> all we ask is you want us. ♪ we'll give you our thanks >> their show an evening you will forget for the rest of your life now touring nationally and streaming on netflix. >> steve and i are donnie and marie without the sexual tension. mockery. >> your comedy was effortless. kept thinking how it would be if you put a little effort night. >> clever nod to their skits. >> your teeth are so white. your smile is like an e-mail from grandma, all caps. >> we can walk on stage, little really. just, just edge into the curtain. we will turn to each other and say, that one joke, should come
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before the other thing. do that. do this. blah, blah blah. revising in the wings. >> you can remember it. >> no one would blame martin short at 68, or steve martin at 72, if they did coast a little built with a shrew of award. ♪ king tut how did you get so funky ♪ >> a perfectly good day ruined. right. wrong. not with ronko's shower in a briefcase. >> nearly 90 movies between them. >> here, boy. marie. marie. >> they're not out to prove anything. this is about two friend having fun. >> through the years you made me grin. >> what is it like getting around together? >> very fun. >> great fun. >> the other day i said to marty. thank god we are not exploiting our friendship. but the truth is -- we are
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friend. but you know we don't talk every day. i don't call him at 8:00 a.m. the what happened. >> steve, i think feels clels to me. and i view him as a cash cow. >> do you think of your insults together or write them individually? >> go ahead. >> do you think of your insults for each other as a team. >> work on them together. >> swap them. belter insult to you. >> theirs is aster that dates back some 30 years. when they first met, while making the movie, "three amigos." >> i am lucky day. >> i dusty. together we are the three amigos. >> i just remember thinking, i like this guy. and i'm walking to the set. and i hear behind me. katharine hepburn. saying, where's my bicycle? >> not bad. >> no here, does it great. and that, made me. >> i wish i brought my bicycle. it's a boughtful day.
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>> from there, they built largely separate careers. aside from the memorable, father of the bride movies. >> i suggest we select a cake first. because the cake, very often determine what kind of wed nagt you end up having. so let's just choose a cake, okay. >> but in 2010 after short's wife of 30 years, nancy dolman died of cancer, steve martin was one of the friend who understood that -- in his mourning, martin short might ben fit from keeping busy. the next summer, they appeared together on stage for the first time. >> i took a time off. then i realized that being busy was normalcy. so, you know, if i was home, it seemed like, where is nan. but if i was in a hotel room in boston getting ready that was the norm. >> how important was he to you? in that time? >> you were relying on your friend and family. and time. and your intellect. but certainly all of my friend,
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were, were valuable and, steve was one of them. >> by the way, martin short, who is also the name id when i check into a hotel and want to be uanonymous. >> now you might call them a regular twosome. >> 35 years later, and you are still the jerk. >> of course, it's a funny time to be funny in america. in this politically correct era, some of the early snl sketches can be steen as bad form. >> our top story tonight. >> our top story tonight. >> it is very tricky. you know, i kind of fall in life with, a lot of the, corrections in language. i think it's good. >> there are bits from your past, your past. that i don't thinning you could do today. man of your colleagues have done bits that i don't think would fly today. >> i think, steve and i slight leap share a difference in this. i don't care i think it is way so ri d ridiculously overreacti.
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you have to be your own barometer and know what is correct or not. ♪ five more minutes to kill ♪ >> reporter: fortunately for the two old pros, what's funny is funny. plus a lot of fun. >> i'm not motivated at least right now to write a play or this or that. i am motivated by this. i really like this. i don't thinning because you are 68, you have to, good-bye. and i don't thinning youing you do that. by the way, beautiful. put that in the show. good-bye. >> i might win an oscar at 78. i can't predict. unless, i was -- either physically unable, or i actually dreaded going to work. i can't imagine stopping. i would hate to think. look to think i was the best vurgs version. >> you love it. >> we actually do. >> my friend, steve martin. >> my friend martin short.
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steve hartman with a story love that defies the ages. he found it on the road. the audience in this preschool was full of parents, grandparents, and one very good friend. dan peterson is best friends with norah wood. >> who is that? >> norah's mom tara says the two are absolutely inseparable. >> how about that? huh? >> she is wholly invested in him. she can't remember her life before him. and i'm not sure that he wants to remember his before her. >> reporter: before he met norah in 2016, dan was severely fet. and h was grocery shopping for
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himself. when norah spotted him. as you can see on the security footage. sunny just randomly reached out to him. to this total stranger. she stood tup. said hi old person. it is my birthday. >> hi, old person. >> says this to this cranky old man. >> yeah. >> had the audacity to demand a hug. >> i said a hug. i said absolutely. >> reporter: norah got her hug and asked her mom to take a picture of her with her new friend. >> she zeroed on him like, a missile. and his little lip quivered. he was teared up. it was just sweet. >> i said you, don't know this is the first time for quite a while that i have been this >> after we first told the story, we thought for sure the love would fade. >> these are all tomatoes. here we are, a year and a half
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later. and they're still seeing each other at least once a week. a lot of people thought it wouldn't continue. but they're pure magic. >> what's the reason you look mr. dan? >> he's sweet. >> he's sweet. >> he's sweet like a peppermint. peppermint? >> makes you want a peppermint doesn't it? >> yes. >> but the surest sign of their connection came just a couple months ago. norah was hugging dan. which she always does. but this time -- was different. >> i couldn't get her to let go. >> because he hadn't answered the door right away. norah was just relieved to find him safe. >> every time i seep you i get happy. >> she was crying. >> what does it feel like to be loved that much? >> i think you can see. >> we can see. >> i love you.
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>> steve hartman. on the road. i love your family. >> in augusta, georgia. >> that's the "overnight news" captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, june 21st, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." we're going to keep families together, but the border is going to be just as tough. >> president trump signs an executive order to stop separating families at the border, but thousands will remain apart for now. the parents in the california house of horrors case listens to this 911 call made by

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