Skip to main content

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

3:12 am
we are offering a 90-day money-back guarantee, so you have nothing to lose. omega xl can help you relieve pain and discomfort because it works. this program has been a paid presentation for omega xl and is brought to you by and is brought to you by great healthworks.
3:13 am
helped launch the investigation. he was just 10 years old when his family priest began sexually abusing him. what's your response to the vatican's response? >> you pulled an old statement out of the archives.
3:14 am
you know. roman catholic play sxwrooibook vatican page, name and number. >> the vatican says the pope is on your side. what do you say to that? >> if he's on my side, it -- he hasn't been on my side ever. >> you've been speaking in the last hour with other survivors at the attorney general's press conference about the statement. what's everyone's reaction? >> rage, anger, disgust. >> reporter: the u.s. conference of catholic bishops today called the church's sex abuse scandal a moral catastrophe. the group's president says he urges church officials in rome to take more concrete steps. and jeff, the pennsylvania attorney general's office is continuing its investigation. knick gooift who's been leading the way on this story.c well-known congressman and minnesota atto
3:15 am
3:16 am
3:17 am
3:18 am
congressman keith ellison, deputy chairman of the democratic national committee and a candidate for minnesota attorney general, has dmooenied allegations that he abused his ex-girlfriend. tonight karen monahan is speaking on camera for the first time about an incident she says happened near dwlooirz ago. she sat down with jerick daunk paine. >> reporter: 44-year-old karen monahan says in september of 2016 she and her then boy flind democratic congressman keith ellison got into a heated argument that scared her. >> i was still in bed and i was laying across the bed on my stomach. i was listening to my podcast. and he walked in. he said, "i need you to take the trash out." and i kept -- because i was on my stomach, i heard him and i just went like that and shook my
3:19 am
head. and he looked at me and he goes, "hey, you [ bleep ] hear me?" and then he looked at me, he goes, "bitch, get the [ bleep ] out of my house." and he started trying to drag me off the bed. that's when i put my camera on to video him. >> did you call anybody after that? >> i called a friend and i said i'm at the lowest of the low. >> reporter: monahan says she saved the video on her computer. this past saturday monahan's 25-year-old son austin posted a message on facebook saying that in the middle of 2017 he found the video, almost two minutes long, showing keith ellis dlooingz mothon dragging his mother off a bed and telling her to get out out stunned that she would say this. >> reporter: ellison spoke to our cbs station wcco in minneapolis about the allegations. >> did you ever drag her off a bed by her feet? >> no.
3:20 am
absolutely not. >> she has said and insists there is a video of this. is there a video? >> there couldn't be. there couldn't be such a thing as that. >> and why couldn't there be? >> because i did not do that. >> why speak out now? >> i followed my gut. the gut i kept trying to push down. >> reporter: mondayahan says sh never reported the incident to police and says being dragged off the bed was the only time ellison got physical with her during their three-year relationship. >> for people who might look at this and say she said it only happened one time and he did apologize right after -- >> he didn't apologize for putting his hands on me. one is enough. >> reporter: monahan says she has the video. she says it's too traumatic for her. she also says she should not have to release the video in
3:21 am
order to be believed. she believes her words should be enough. but again, ellison vehemently denies those allegations. coming up tonight, bode miller and his wife on their crusade to save lives. super emma just about sleeps in her cape. i'm super emma. but when we realized she was battling sensitive skin, we switched to tide pods free & gentle. it's gentle on her skin and takes care of stains better than the other free and clear detergent. so she can focus on saving the world, with a little help from dad. dermatologist recommended. it's got to be tide.
3:22 am
a women's natural lubrication varies throughout her cycle. this can effect how pleasurable sex can be. to supplement your lubrication for even better sex try ky natural feeling. the lubrication you want, nothing you don't. ky natural feeling get what you want no, what?? i just switched to geico and got more. more? got a company i can trust. that's a heck of a lot more. over 75 years of great savings and service. you can't argue with more. why would ya? geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more.
3:23 am
more than 380 papers ran editorials. "the new york times" said calling journalists the enemy of the people is dangerous, period. the "florida times union" which endorsed mr. trump for president said the real loser in this war between him and the media is america. the president tweeted today that he wants true freedom of the press. he said the fact is that the press is free to write anything it wants but much of what it says is fake news. olympic skier bode miller ayer ber, are ror, pro volleyba trng to raise awareness of pool safety. their 19-month oerld daughter died in a neighbor's pool. they spoke to dana jacobson. >> when i opened the door she
3:24 am
was floating face down in the pool. every time i close my eyes and try to go to sleep it replays in my head. and it's forever changed my lievgz. >> the millers will talk more about their campaign to save lives tomorrow on "cbs this morning." it was an exciting day at new york university's school of medicine. students wearing new lab coats to mark the start of their medical degree program just got the news that the school is now tuition-free. the endowment will cover each student's $55,000 per year tuition. up next the story behind aretha franklin's signature song. ♪ r-e-s-p-e-c-t
3:25 am
3:26 am
3:27 am
the word most closely associated with aretha franklin is "respect." she commanded respect as an artist. it is the subject of her biggest hit. and there's a story behind it. told by lee cowan. ♪ all i need ♪ is for a little respect when you get home ♪ >> reporter: call it what you will. "respect" is more than just a scorching anthem. it's been transforming. ♪ r-e-s-p-e-c-t aretha franklin spelled it out. a song that was for the times but one that remained as timeless as ever. >> everybody wanted respect. who doesn't want respect? you know? >> reporter: right. >> children, adults alike. everybody wanted respect. >> reporter: franklin first recorded it on valentine's day in 1967. it went on to become what "rolling stone" called one of the top five greatest songs of all time, something writer alan
3:28 am
light doesn't dispute. >> it jumped out ahead of just being this is about a boy and a girl song and became this is a position and the shifting position of a black woman in america. >> reporter: but here's the thing. "respect" wasn't entirely aretha franklin's. otis redding actually wrote and recorded it first. ♪ what you want or at least his version of it. >> i had heard otis redding sing it. and i rehearsed it. and my sister came by, carolyn, and she helped me put the background to it, and we came up with the cliche "sock it to wo. ♪ a little respect >> reporter: it's hard not to miss the hint of bitterness when redding performed "respect" at the monterey pop festival in 1967. >> this last song is a song that
3:29 am
a girl took away from me. but i'm still going to do it anyway. ♪ what you want >> reporter: in redding's version the woman was sitting at home waiting for her man. franklin turned that on its head. "respect" in her version was a declaration of independence. >> i was talking about the male-female relationship. the respect part of it became a mantra for the civil rights movement and for peoples everywhere. >> reporter: "respect" is at its heart about equality, and even today there's a need to sometimes spell out what respect really means. lee cowan, cbs news, los angeles. that is the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you 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. ♪ r-e-s-p-e-c-t ♪ take care tcb ♪ oh, a little respect
3:30 am
♪ just a little this is the "cbs overnight news." hi, everyone, and welcome to the "overnight news." i'm demarco morgan. the queen is gone but will certainly never be forgotten. aretha franklin, adored by millions as perhaps the greatest american singer of all time, passed away at her home at the age of 76. aretha, as she was known to everyone, was more than a pop star. over a more than 60-year career she sang about hopes and dreams, a symbol of strength, determination, and female empowerment. aretha won 18 grammys and was nominated for 26 others. she was a kennedy center honoree and the first female inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame.agn number one, and some o her most famous recordings are climbing the charts with a bullet. vladimir duthiers has more on the life and remarkable career
3:31 am
of the queen of soul. ♪ all i'm asking ♪ is for a little respect when you get home ♪ ♪ just a little bit >> reporter: a legacy that demands respect. ♪ r-e-s-p-e-c-t ♪ what it means to me aretha franklin's songs about womanhood, strength, and heartbreak have transcended generations. ♪ chain, chain, chain ♪ chain of fools today the rock and roll hall of fame honored their first female inductee, saying "she defined soul music." music's heavyweights reacted in force. diana ross spoke of her "golden spirit." paul mccartney called her "the queen of our souls who inspired us all." and hitmaker carole king, who wrote "natural woman," exclaimed "what a life, what a y ny accounts, franklin learned to play piano by ear. ♪
3:32 am
she grew up singing gospel at a detroit church where her famous father was a minister. she spoke about the experience in an interview with ed bradley for "60 minutes." >> whenever we were having services, if i was going to sing they would have me stand on a little chair and sing. >> how old were you then? >> about 9. ♪ >> reporter: in 1961 franklin made the transition from gospel to pop, and with the release of her first secular album her star quickly began to rise. ♪ ooh, baby baby smokey robinson and franklin became fri wed t detroit, when robinson was just 8 years old. >> the pattern was from her. you know, whitney, mariah, those girls that came along after her, you know, aretha franklin was the queen of soul. >> reporter: in her decades-long career franklin won 18 grammy awards. ♪ yeah, think, think about what you're trying to do to me ♪
3:33 am
she made her mark on the big screen in "the blues brothers." ♪ my country 'tis of thee and she performed at inaugural esidents. but the road to get there was often rocky. born in memphis, franklin was raised in detroit by a single father. her mother moved away when she was just 6 years old. and four years later she died of a heart attack. just shy of her 13th birthday franklin gave birth to her first child. less than two years later she gave birth to her second of four children. life did not get easier for franklin in adulthood. according to her biography, in adulthood franklin struggled with depression, alcoholism, and had a weight problem. she worried the public would forget her. but her fans never did. ♪ in recent years she sang for the pope when he visited the u.s. ♪ you make me feel and in 2015 she brought president obama to tears during
3:34 am
the kennedy center honors. today the obamas remembered the queen of soul saying "america has no royalty, but franklin helped define the american experience." fans have been congregating in hollywood and at the apollo theater. they've also been congregating here as you can see behind me and you can hear the stirring voice of aretha franklin at the church where she first started singing. in a statement her family called this "one of the darkest moments of their lives" and said they have lost the matriarch and the rock of their family. among those paying tribute to aretha franklin today is sam moore, the original soul man. ♪ i'm a soul man moore and franklin were friends for more than 60 years. she played piano for his album "plenty good lovin'." i asked moore what made aretha franklin so great. >> the struggles, the hurt, the
3:35 am
lies. everything that happened to her in the past. it's what made singers like aretha the greatest of the great. and she is now, she was and is still to me the greatest that ever, ever stood before a microphone. >> because she channeled all that grief and that pain into the music. >> she did, jeff. she really did. aretha was hurt. a lot of things happened in her life that i can't -- and i wouldn't even dare to try to get into. the way she sang. you could hear -- well, we could in her closed circle. we could hear the pain. >> what was it about the first time you met her or saw her that just made you know what she could be. >> the first time i heard her she was singing in miami. i went to the service to hear martin luther king. and she got up and she sang -- i believe -- i think it was
3:36 am
"precious lord." and a 15-year-old, and i went oh, my god. >> sam, what did the world lose today? >> a giant among giants. she's the ageless wonder. she's everything. but you know what? she has shared that on this face of the earth. there will never, ever be in my lifetime or maybe yours, there will never be another aretha louise franklin. that's it. i'm going to miss that girl. but i'm celebrating right now. police in colorado have arrested chris watts in the killings of his pregnant wife and their two young children. it's a crime that has shocked the entire nation. omar villafranca reports. >> reporter: chris watts had little to say in a colorado courtroom this afternoon. wednesday night the body of his pregnant wife, shanann, was discovered on the property of one of his work sites.
3:37 am
>> we have been able to recover a body that we're quite certain is shanann watts. >> like a nightmare i just can't wake up from. >> reporter: he allegedly confessed to killing shanann and their two daughters, 3-year-old celeste and 4-year-old bella, after he told reporters he had no idea where they were and begged for their safe return. >> i have no inclination of where she is. if somebody has her, just please bring her back. >> reporter: shanann was last seen by a colleague who dropped her off from a work trip at 2:00 a.m. monday. asked by a reporter if the couple had been fighting, watts responded -- >> it wasn't like an argument. we had an emotional conversation, but -- i'll leave it at that. but it's -- i just want them back. ♪ my daddy is a hero ♪ he helps me grow up strong >> reporter: outside of the house there is a growing memorial for the family. people in this neighborhood are shocked and really horrified at what happened. jeff, chris watts will remain in
3:38 am
jail. he's
3:39 am
3:40 am
this is the "cbs overnight news." thousands of american heroes came home from the wars in iraq and afghanistan badly wounded. many were paralyzed from the waist down, told that most likely they'd never walk again. there's a new device that could help the disabled get on their feet. that's if they can afford it. lee cowan has the story. >> so first arms up overhead. >> rtesical checkup that only took a few minutes, and derek deman was anxious to get on with it. the one-time high school surf champion and big-time snowboarder fell off a roof nearly a decade ago and broke his back, leaving him paralyzed from the chest down. >> not too bad, huh? >> reporter: but he's about to do something that only a few years ago would have been all but impossible. >> all right. let's get you up and walking. >> reporter: you heard right.
3:41 am
walking. a moment later we watched a paraplegic put one foot in front of the other. he's using what's called a robotic exoskeleton. derek activates it by shifting his weight. sensors and small motors move his legs, mimicking a natural gait, while his upper body catches up with the help of crutches. >> it's really heartbreaking to see so many people out there without the ability to better their lives. everybody should be able to live their life the best they should. >> and this device gives people that option anyway. >> definitely does. definitely does. >> reporter: the device, made by a massachusetts company called rewalk, was the first exoskeleton to gain fda approval in 2014. since then a handful of other brands have gotten the government's go-ahead. but that doesn't mean getting one is easy. >> there's been a lot of things with spinal cord injury that
3:42 am
have been hyped. but i don't want to believe that with this one. >> reporter: dr. ann vassili has been working with paralyzed patients like derek in long beach, california for some 25 years. >> there have been moments that have been very hard on him to not have that life that he had before. and his mom said to me, derek can't stop smiling. >> reporter: as you you might imagine, they're not cheap. rewalk's newest model costs around $100,000. >> the onus is on us in the health care field to prove why this will benefit the patient medically and ultimately save money. >> there you go. >> reporter: those who are paralyzed suffer from a host of dangerous side effects that come from being in a wheelchair. one of the most common are pressure sores, where the skin can become infected because of the constant squeeze on the same areas. it's the very condition that contributed to the death of reeve. getting up and moving, dr.
3:43 am
passili says, is the best prescription to fight them. >> if it were my child, i'd rather buy this than buy a car. and if i keep somebody out of the hospital because they haven't developed a urinary tract infection and sepsis or a pressure sore, i bet i save that amount of money pretty quickly. >> reporter: but for some insurers exoskeletons are still largely viewed as experimental. >> it is not walking for me. it's getting my body moving, keeping my heart rate up. >> reporter: ashley barnes was just 35 when doctors told her she would never walk again. the result of a botched medical procedure. unlucky, yes. but she soon realized looking around her rehab facility that there were others worse off. >> some of these people can't talk. some of these people can't use their hands. and to just have my legs taken
3:44 am
away and my bladder function taken away, it's not a big deal. it is a big deal, right? but i have my cognitive skills. i have all of that. and i'm grateful. >> because she still 4 use of her hands and arms she was a clear candidate for a rewalk. but when ashley put in the request to her insurance -- >> i got a denial. and i said, oh, okay, that's only one no. you can't tell me no. and we get another no. no matter how hard we kept going, how hard i fought the fight, it was no, no, no. >> reporter: she even appea to o himsf was palyzed in an acntofficehi letter. ry couldn't help. >> come on, buddy. >> reporter: tyler densford was paralyzed in 2016 after he fell out of a helicopter during a training exercise while on active duty with the tennessee air national guard.
3:45 am
>> i didn't see any way of leaving a bed, and i thought, you know, why not just die, why even be here? >> reporter: the department of veterans affairs offered to cover exoskeletons for eligible veterans, and tyler tried one at the v.a. facility in atlanta. although the experience was brief, he says he's never forgotten the feeling. >> the day of my accident was the last time i ever stood up. and being upright, it's almost like hey, i'm normal again. >> reporter: for now the best way to stretch his entire body is in a pool. an exoskeleton would give him a freedom like nothing else. but they require training, something the v.a. facilities near his home outside memphis didn't offer. >> from my end i feel like i exhausted all resources. i'm not really sure wholesale to go to. >> reporter: without it the side effects of his paralysis continue to worsen. the day we were there tyler had just returned from yet another expensive stay in a hospital. >> i had to have a surgery done.
3:46 am
>> would that have happened if you'd had -- >> if i had a rewalk i wouldn't have had a pressure sore. >> reporter: since our visit the department of veterans affairs has updated its policy, expanding the number of places that provide exoskeleton franing. it's up to veterans like tyler, however, to find a facility that meets those guidelines, and so far he's still looking. >> hello. >> reporter: ashley barnes was so sick of waiting she took out the equivalent of a mortgage and bought one herself. something her friend carrie says has been a financial burden but worth every penny. >> she's not a sit-down kind of person at all. which is i guess sort of ironic that you're in a wheelchair. but she's up and going nonstop. >> reporter: at home places like her kitchen are no longer as unforgiving as they once were. >> being up with you makes me just feel, you know, back in the game. >> you got me?
3:47 am
>> reporter: and back in the game she is. she's even able to play basketball with her son brady. >> and score! >> it prolongs my life because if i'm up and i'm moving and i'm active then that's the longer i'm here for my son. >> you want an apple? >> reporter: as for tyler densford, he's tried all kinds of mobility devices, including this off-road wheelchair. but nothing replaces standing upright and walking. technology to help those with spinal cord injuries has come a long way. the future is here. but for some it still seems a long way off. >> if there's something i can't do, i figure out a way to do it. life has just slowed down for me and i always take it day by day and find another way to do something the way other people do it. >> i somehow think that you're going to figure out a way
3:48 am
harry's meeting clients... ...from far away. but they only see his wrinkles. if only harry used some... ...bounce, to dry. he would be a less wrinkly, winning guy. about the colonial penn program. here to tell you if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's. what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase,
3:49 am
and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54. alex, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80. what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan, available through the colonial penn program. it has an affordable rate starting at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate lock, so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information. and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours just for calling. so call now.
3:50 am
more people are going out of their way to eat fresh food. the trend is known as farm to table, and it's a winning combination for a growing number of restaurants. conor knighton has this story. >> so what all is growing here? >> so we've got an asian grere mix over here. those will be going into stir fries and different salads and whatnot. and we've got radishes here. >> reporter: the farm to table movement is mostly about knowing where your food comes from. >> i mean, this guy's huge.
3:51 am
>> yeah, so this is a great example of what would end up in our kim chi at the restaurant. >> reporter: chef ben bibbenroth has it down to the tenth of a mile. >> from this farm to that table at the restaurant how far is that? >> 20.9 miles. >> it sounds like a drive you've made a few times. >> reporter: it's a journey that began at bibbenroth's spice kitchen, i hip upscale restaurant in cleveland, ohio where colorful pickle boards and dishes like watermelon tureen highlight local ingredients. the halibut is served on a base of couscous compesto. >> compesto is a pesto made from a lot of the vegetable trim lz that would end up in a compost bucket. carrot tops, parsley stems. >> so you're really using everything from the farm. >> as much as we can, yeah. it's a shame to see something you've touched so many times end up in a bucket. >> this one will be a little bit green still. >> reporter: as if running a restaurant wasn't hard enough, this ex-marine with a culinary
3:52 am
school background decided to try growing the food himself. he moved his wife and two young children onto 13 acres. this is their farm. technically, it's our farm. this is all government soil. to bibbenroth, he moved out of the city and into a national park. >> this is just one of the many hundreds of farms that were in cuyahoga valley. >> reporter: pamela barnes is a ranger at cuyahoga valley national park, situated between cleveland and akron. long before this land became a park it was farmed by generations of ohioans. but eventually the small family farms here fell into disrepair. >> the story of farming in this valley, it's part of what we're charged to pctve. and so that was the story that we needed to figure out how are we going to bring that back to life. >> reporter: today these farms are thriving again. the park developed a plan to
3:53 am
lease the property to entrepreneurs who submitted applications. 11 are currently up and running. locals can come and fill up on baskets of produce. ♪ and a weekly farmer's market has become a gathering point for families. >> we're going to go this way. we're going to go to the fig tunnel first. then we'll go up to -- >> reporter: for many visitors this is their first time on a farm. bibbenroth requires every member of his restaurant staff to come out and see the place for themselves. >> first course is the beets. the super wide peeled slice of beet along the base of the plate. >> reporter: farming inside of a national park also comes with its own unique set of challenges. >> we can't take care of rodents and varmints the way we used to in a privately owned garden or farm, so we basically have to plant a little extra because raccoons and hawks, they're coming. you're not going to stop them. >> reporter: for the bibbenroths the biggest benefit of coming to live here in cuyahoga valley has
3:54 am
been the opportunity to raise children on this land. it's both a playground and a classroom. >> come on, come on. no. >> the life lessons that they're gaining from being surrounded in a natural environment, like this is their basis for their decision-making for the rest of their lives. everything will emanate from this experience. >> reporter: cultivating the perfect experience is something bibbenroth talks a lot about. it's possible guests may leave without ever realizing the beet mole underneath their pork loin came from a vegetable painstakingly grown in a national park. >> i don't really want people to appreciate the challenge that was overcome to get that to the plate. i want them to appreciate the experience and the texture and the flavor and the aroma and all the things that matter, right? like no one wants to eat the food from the sad chef. >> reporter: i don't think that's something anyone eating bibbenroth's food needs to worry about. >> some big orange ones over here. >> reporter: right now earning a living off the land --
3:55 am
3:56 am
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 the race that's been designed for you.
3:57 am
there's a school cafeteria worker in san diego who takes her work home with her every day. steve hartman found her story on the road. >> what you want? >> reporter: no matter what you order from school cafeteria worker debra davis -- >> i have a caesar salad. chicken patty. chicken and rice. >> reporter: every meal comes from a sweetie pie. >> all right, sweetie pie. you're welcome. >> reporter: auntie debra as she's known here at hoover high school doles out a heaping helping of hospitality every lunch hour. >> you're welcome, sweetie. >> reporter: and this is just her first course of kindness. >> see you all tomorrow. >> reporter: after serving food reporter: after lunch debra drives her beat-up '76 chevy malibu all over san diego, looking for hungry homeless people. >> hey. how are you? >> i think she's okay. >> no, she's not. >> reporter: debra says she's never met a homeless person who wasn't starving for her home
3:58 am
cooking. >> come on, tell them over here to come on and eat. >> reporter: on this day she served more than 50 multicourse meals. >> you've got a fork? chicken and rice, collard greens with smoked turkey. >> reporter: all at her own expense. >> barbecue ribs. >> are you broke? >> no. >> reporter: i took that as a yes. >> you're spending money you don't have. >> yes. but what you don't understand, the joy that i get from feeding people. >> tomorrow's spaghetti and meatballs. okay? >> reporter: because debra is so selfless. >> thank you for joining us. >> reporter: recently the school district invited her down to the auto shop, surprised her with friends and family and some better wheels. to deliver those meals. [ cheers and applause ] this 2014 mazda 3 was refurbished by an auto body class in the district. but to debra it was like mint. >> i'm not used to a new car, y'all. >> reporter: she was so
3:59 am
flabbergasted -- >> what do i do? >> reporter: -- she didn't even know where to start. literally. >> oh! okay. >> reporter: what does it mean to you the faculty, the staff, the kids all wanted you to have this gift? >> it doesn't make a difference in their life. you know. >> i'm looking for a reward in heaven and you all gave me a little bit here on earth. >> reporter: heaven on earth, for a woman who's always had room in her heart. just now more trunk space. >> three pans this size. >> reporter: steve hartman on the road in san diego. > i got tinted windows. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. 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." from the broadcast center in new york city i'm demarco morgan.
4:00 am
th captioning funded by cbs it's it's friday, august 17th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." ♪ you made me feel like a natural woman ♪ fans around the world are celebrating the life, music, and legacy of the queen of soul, the late aretha franklin. plus, tragedy in colorado, where a man is suspected of killing his pregnant wife and kids as authorities search for a motive. and omarosa manigault newman releases another secret tape,

114 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on