tv CBS Overnight News CBS October 5, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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peacefulness to the stressful situation. that made him a great cop, a great person. >> reporter: i'd like to show you where he parked his vehicle. he stopped there, probably 15 yards away from the house. by the way, the suspect's house is at the end of the street show. was that far back when he was shot. come to the left-hand side. that blue unmarked vehicle is where another officer stopped even farther back and he was shot right there. jeff, that gives you a sense why officials went out of their way today to tell me this guy was an
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accomplished marksman. one of the world's highest paid athletes was benched today by his national team. portuguese soccer star cristiano ronaldo will not play in upcoming international matches after being accused of rape. more on this from jamie yuccas. >> cristiano ronaldo! >> reporter: cristiano ronaldo earn in order than $108 million this year from his skills on the soccer field. but today his billion sponsor nike said it's deeply concerned about allegations of sexual assault against him. >> now played inside. >> reporter: kathryn mayorga claims the soccer star raped her in 2009 in his las vegas hotel room after they met in a nightclub. photos show them partying together that year. lawyer leslie stovall says it's dramatically alteredlife. depre
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ideation, use of alcohol. >> reporter: she took a medical soccer star. she later accepted $375,000 and signed a nondisclosure agreement to keep her claims quiet. she has been empowered by the me too movement and is now suing for an additional $200,000. there. >> are a lot of people who look at this and say his net worth is $400 million. she just want morse money. >> well, what we're asking is that kathryn be compensated for what she's gone through. >> ronaldo denied the allegations and later tweeted a statement saying keen as i may be to clear my name, i refuse to feed the media spectacle created by people seeking to use me at gas.r experience.ccascbs nela > indonea, tth tollfromt earthq
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tsunami passed 1500 today. heavy machinery is pulling back the rubble as workers remove victims. thousands are living in tent cities, cooking their meals on the streets. ben tracy met some of the survivors. >> her name is wuhan, and she is just 1 year old, but her face already tells the story. what happened to your little girl? her mother endam tells me three waves came and hit her. she rolled away with the tsunami. when the tsunami roared into palu nearly 20-foot waves tore through everything in its path. wuhan was swept into the water and disappeared the first 24 hou hours. when i was looking for her, i didn't think she was a live. it turns out wuhan was trapped under rubble. she was surrounded by mud, and
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she says i thank god because she has a new life. but this is what it looks like to be fortunate. survived the disasters are now homeless. many of them children living in makeshift. they have no running water or electricity. trash is overflowing and burning in the streets. they have used this river for drinking water and as a toilet. do you have any idea of how long you'll be here or when you'll be able to go to shelter? >> i don't know where to go. i no longer have a home. thankfully, help is finally arriving. the indonesian military is beginning to distribute food, water and clothing. endam was given instant noodles and water so she can finally feed her daughter. she is worried about the future but grateful she stills that one thing she truly needs. ben tracy, cbs news, palu in indonesia. coming up next, red tide
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the dreaded red tide that has plagued the gulf coast has now drifted to florida's east coast, affecting ocean beaches in miami, ft. lauderdale, and palm beach. this rare atlantic outbreak is killing fish and causing health problems in people. here is manuel bojorquez. >> reporter: miami beach is closed due to red tide. and now north at deerfield beach, along with a warning of rough surf, this was posted. >> my throat tickles so bad that i'm constantly -- >> reporter: the problem is caused by toxic algae, and prolonged exposure can lead to serious health issues be. you han'tten i r. why is that? >> because i don't know if red tide is in the water. >> reporter: the algae is naturally occurring, but massive blooms along florida's west
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coast believed to be filed by pollution have bloomed. now popping up on florida's east coast where red tide is rare. scientists are looking into whether currents carried the algae over, or whether it sprung up here on its own. it's been detected in palm beach and miami-dade counties where certain beaches have closed. testing continues in the greater miami-fort lauderdale area which depends on its beaches for millions in tourist dollars. dr. malcolm mcfarland is with florida atlantic university. >> nutrient pollution, things like agricultural runoff and fertilizer runoff from people's lawns, discharge from septic systems and waste water treatment plants, those are all things that can exacerbate the problem. >> reporter: runoff from lake okeechobee is loaded with pollutants from industrial and agricultural pollutants. >> even with walking my throat is still tickling. >> reporter: this stretch near boynton beach remains closed. there is no telling how long ths
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possible economic impact will be to the east coast of florida, but already governor rick scott has said the state will offer $3 million in grants to affected counties. jeff? >> so many people talking about this down in florida. manny, thank you very much. still ahead here tonight, the first lady is oversea, promoting an agency the administration has targeted for budget cuts. geico has over 75 years of great savings and service. with such a long history, it's easy to trust geico! thank you todd.
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the lubrication you want, nothing you don't. ky natural feeling get what you want first lady melania trump is in kenya tonight, the first stop of an african tour. earlier in malawi she visited second and third graders and handed out soccer balls during recess. they receive aid from the american agency. the administration is targeted for target cuts, usaid. he was at the center of one of the most famous photographs in american history. juan romero, a busboy comforting senator robert kennedy after he was fatally shot in 1968. romero died this week after suffering a heart attack. he was 68 years old.
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sculfor patches, a 9-year-old dachshund who lost his to cancer. here is don daer. >> reporter: every dog owner thinks their pup is special. patches really is. >> you're a good girl. yes. >> reporter: four years ago, when her owner, danielle dymek noticed a small bump on top of her dachshund's head, she took their the vet. >> they didn't really know what it was. we came to the if it doesn't grow, we're not going to really worry about it. >> reporter: the bump continued to grow at an alarming rate. diagnosis, a life-threatening tumor. >> it was big, and it pressing on her brain. >> reporter: dr. michelle oblak is a surgical oncologist turkey, remove it we were going to have to take about 70% of her skull. >> reporter: to dr. oblak and a team from cornell university tried something never before done in the u.s. using a 3-d printer, they created a replacement skull made out of titanium that fit over patch's brain perfectly. >> her titanium, you can feel
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it's hard, is all the way around and it goes down around her nose. >> reporter: except for a few scars, the new skull is unnoticeable. but its implications are huge. not just for dogs, but people too. >> instead of having to take an implant off the shelf, we could take an implant that we've designed perfectly for that patient, and a human surgeon could do the same thing. >> reporter: was there a moment when you said you know what? she's had a good life up to now. maybe we need to just put her down. >> no. because she -- other than having this big bump on her head was a completely healthy dog. >> reporter: a little dog that just opened up a big world of possibilities. don dahler, cbs news, allenwood, pennsylvania. >> that is the "cbs overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, 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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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the "overnight news." i'm michelle miller. the countdown has begun to a final senate vote that could put judge brett kavanaugh on the u.s. supreme court. the fbi delivered a report on its probe into charges of sexual assault by kavanaugh. republicans say it clears him. democrats call it a whitewash, and either way a final vote is expected tomorrow. nancy cordes has that story. hey, ho ho, kavanaugh has >>ter:s demoators filled e f to the supremert filed and out of this secure c that's off limits to cameras. >> good morning.
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>> reporter: and normally reserved for national security briefings. it's the only place they were allowed to view the 46-page fbi report delivered to congress in the middle of the night. >> there's no corroboration of dr. ford's allegations. >> the investigation was a sham. >> reporter: republicans said the fbi did nine interviews and could not back up christine blasey ford's claim that brett kavanaugh pinned her down and groped her at a high school gathering. >> neither the judiciary committee nor the fbi could locate any third parties who can attest to any of these allegations. >> there was nothing new, no further corroboration. >> reporter: democrats disputed that. >> in plain english what i just read, there are hints of misconduct. >> the most notable part of this report is what's not in it. >> reporter: she's referring to the fact that the fbi did not l themselves.
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in a letter to the fbi director, blasey ford's lawyers called the investigation a stain on the process, listing a half dozen people the fbi declined to interview, people who ford told about the assault prior to judge kavanaugh's nomination. >> in fact, it smacks of a whitewash. >> reporter: republicans insisted they did not tie the fbi's hands. >> can you explain to us how you came up with your list who have should be interviewed by the fbi? >> the fbi was requested to conduct an investigation into any and all credible current accusations. the fbi made the decision from there as to who to interview. >> i think we're going get arrested. >> reporter: comedian amy schumer was among the hundreds detained by capitol police today after protesters unfurled giant banners in support of blasey ford. >> kavanaugh's not welcome here! >> reporter: with the balance of
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the supreme court at stake, some protesters got more aggressive today. >> don't you wave your hand at me. i wave my hand at you. >> when you grow up! >> reporter: irritating their gop targets. >> he would say a polygraph, it would all be over, senator. >> why don't we dunk him in the water and see if he floats. >> reporter: everyone looking for clues from the four remaining undecided senator, three republicans and one democrat. susan collins of maine said today "it appears to be a very thorough investigation." arizona's jeff flake said it yielded "no additional corroborating information for ford's claim." those comments left the president, traveling in minneapolis, feeling bullish about kavanaugh's chances. >> i think he is doing very well. the judge is doing well. >> all goes well for republicans. that will hold a final vote to confirm kavanaugh on saturday so he can be seated on the supreme court next week. >> the six-day fbi investigation
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into charges of sexual assault by brett kavanaugh has thrust the bureau back into the political spotlight. republicans say the fbi did not come up with anything new. democrats point out that agents did not even interview kavanaugh nor his primary accuser christine blasey ford. the report itself was delivered in the dead of night. jeff pegues has a look at what's inside. >> reporter: senators received the 46-page report today after it was delivered to the white house at 2:30 this morning. the pages include an interview with kavanaugh's friend mark judge, who according to dr. blasey ford was a key witness. >> during this assault, mark came over and jumped on the bed twice while brett was on top of me. >> reporter: the fbi is said to have interviewed judge for three hours. they also spoke with chris garrett whose nickname was squi and other student, leland keyser, patrick pj smyth and tim gaudette. also interviewed deborah ramirez who alleges kavanaugh
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exposed himself at a yale university in the 1980s. nine people were interviewed in total by the fbi. three others have not been identified. >> i've never sexually assaulted anyone. >> reporter: however, critics charge that the bureau did not conduct a thorough investigation. notably absent from the witness list, judge brett kavanaugh and dr. ford. do you think dr. ford should have been interviewed? >> reporter: chris swecker is a former assistant director of the fbi. >> i think it would have been a good thing to do as a capp stone to the follow-up of the special inquiry to go ahead and interview her and get her statement on the record to the fbi. >> reporter: special inquiries are different from fbi criminal investigations. as such the white house counsel sets the parameters what fbi agents look into. white house counsel dan mcgann has also been shepherding kavanaugh through the nomination process. >> i think it's normal to have the white house set the parameters of a follow-up based on allegations that have been
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made, and to tell them to stick to these allegations, don't go far afield about drinking in college. >> the kavanaugh confirmation has been compared to that of clarence thomas back in 1991. of course anita hill accused clarence thomas of sexual harassment, but back in that investigation in 1991, both hill and thomas were interviewed by the fbi. soccer superstar cristiano ronaldo is denying reports that he raped a woman in las vegas nine years ago. but the allegations alone could cost him his billion deal with nike. jamie yuccas reports. >> cristiano ronaldo! >> reporter: cristiano ronaldo earned more than $108 million this year from his skills on the soccer field, but today his billion sponsor nike said it's deeply concerned about allegations of sexual assault against him. >> now played inside. >> reporter: kathryn mayorga claims the soccer star raped her in 2009 in his las vegas hotel room after they met in a nightclub.
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photos show them partying together that year. lawyer leslie stovall says it's dramatically altered her life. >> depression, suicidal >> reporter: mshe reported the incident to police. she took a medical exam but refused to name the soccer star. she later accepted $375,000 and signed a nondisclosure agreement to keep her claims quiet. she has been empowered by the me too movement and is now suing for an additional $200,000. >> there are a lot of people who would look at this and say his net worth is $400 million. she just wants more money. >> well, what we're asking is that kathryn be compensated for what she's gone through. >> reporter: ronaldo firmly denied the allegations on instagram. fake news. >> reporter: and later tweeted a statement saying keen as i may be to clear my name, i refuse to feed the media spectacle created by people seeking to promote
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> moviegoer mace know the chinese actress fan bingbing as her role of blink in x-men, but in china she is a superstar, so when she went missing a few months ago, all sorts of conspiracy theories popped up. well, fan bingbing still hasn't been seen, but she did make an appearance on social media after the communist government reported she owes more than 1$10 million. that's many figures. adimir h mo is a fixture on the red carpet. the face of many international luxury brands.
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and one of china's most recognizable and highest paid actresses. and three months ago she simply disappeared. but on wednesday, china's official news agency announced that 37-year-old fan bingbing had been charged with tax evasion and has been ordered to pay nearly $130,000 in overdue taxes and fines. in her first social media post in nearly four months, fan apologized to the public, writing i feel shamed and guilty for what i have done, adding she would, quote, try my best to overcome all difficulties and raise funds to pay back taxes and fine. >> it sent a shockwave through china when she disappeared. >> reporter: robert cain is a producer who writes about china's film industry. >> the government is sending a very strong message to everyone that no one is above this. we didn't deal with celebrities before. we've never taken them into custody like this. but now, you know, the rules are different. and so watch out. >> reporter: some chinese actors may have what are called yin yang contracts for
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anotr contra anal eng while fi lowerigure is then reported to tax officials, allowing the actorer to evade taxes. last year forbes reported fan was worth an estimated $43 million. in 2016, she ranked as the fifth highest paid actress in the world, right behind jennifer aniston. this summer, china's government imposed a cap on actors' pay at 70% of the total paid to all the actors in a film. celebrities like jackie chan and film studios are required by the chinese government to promote core socialist values. despite fan's well documented charity work, cain says it's unclear whether the actress will bounce back. >> it may well be that her career is over as an international star. but it's hard to say. sometimes people just disappear for good in china. >> fan is expected to appear in the upcoming bruce willis film "air strike." while her exact whereabouts
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remain unknown, she paid tribute to the state writing without the good policies of the chinese state, without the love of the people, there is no fan bingbing. a year after rock star tom petty passed away, a new tribute collection called american treasury is filling the airwaves. it's got previously unheard recordings and live performances, and it was put together by his daughter adria. she spoke with my cbs saturday morning co-host anthony mason. ♪ ♪ i know you're trying hard, hard to get it right ♪ >> reporter: "keep a little soul" is one of the previously unreleased song on the new petty boxed set. adria petty, a director and filmmaker, produced the video with newly discovered home movies of her father. what was it like going through all that footage? >> it was emotional, but it wasn't sad. it was beautiful. >> reporter: since early this year, petty says she's been working on what would become a
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60-song tribute to her dad. >> i was the one that let's call it an american treasure because he was one. >> reporter: she collaborated on the project with elder that included her stepmother dana petty and tom petty's band mates ben and tom, founding members of the heartbreakers. >> me and ben and mike literally were putting cue cards with song names on the floor and just trying to figure out what the story was. ♪ >> reporter: they dug out unreleased old gems like "lonesome dave." ♪ all the kids would raise their hands, but oh ♪ >> that was one of ben's favorite songs that never was. that's what he called his white whale. ♪ >> reporter: and an intimate version of "you and me" recorded in the band's clubhouse. ♪
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how hard was it for you to listen to all this again? >> it was absolutely awful for all of us. at different stages, different ones of us kind of couldn't participate. for me there was definitely moments where people would find listening to tracks. ♪ that from a window >> reporter: but it's something that you have to do in service to the art and the man. >> reporter: at any point did you think i've taken on too much, too soon? >> absolutely. every day. >> reporter: every day? >> yeah. >> reporter: it's so interesting that you reached for something that big so quickly. >> i don't know. i guess i just felt like putting our energy and our grief into something positive. >> reporter: yeah. >> was a better thing than just twisting in the wind for a year, you know? >> reporter: is that what you felt like you were doing, twisting? >> i felt like it was just such a shock, you know. and i hadn't imagined that he would be dead at 66.
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and yet at some point i've accepted that. ♪ baby, break down, go ahead and give to us ♪ >> reporter: with "an treasu" petty aimed highlight her father's talents as a songwriter, and to show the human side of the rock star. >> he was just so sweet and funny. and i think so hopeful. he is so filled with hope right down to the end. like tenacity and hope were just intermingled in him in such a beautiful way. >> reporter: another rarely seen side of petty, devoted father to his two daughter. >> he was a good dad. he was really involved with us. we could pick up the phone and call him any time. making a video with beyonce, send me the rough cut. she is really pretty. there's not enough close-ups. >> reporter: he was the same with adria's 5-year-old daughter everily. >> i don't want her to think of me like that. i want her to think of me as
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grandpa tommy. one night we left the pacifier up at their house 45 minutes away, and him and his wife drove down with the pacifier. >> reporter: that's not an image i would have had of tom petty. >> absolutely, absolutely. what, you left duckie? i'm come iing. >> reporter: adria petty says the past year has been cathartic, but that they've just begun to go through the many tapes in her father's archives. where was all this stuff kept? >> oh, i can't say that. that's a secret, anthony. >> reporter: is it in a bunker in a mountain somewhere? >> yeah, that's an undisclosed location. >> reporter: the good news is there is more? >> there is so much more.
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a navy veteran of several war zones found a unique way to relieve his ptsd. he took up fly fishing. now he is sharing the healing properties of the water and the woods with kids all over the country. jan crawford reports. >> reporter: it's a bright sunny day on the crooked river in central oregon. just around a bend, kids are angling for trout. but what's happening in this river runs much deeper than catching a fish. >> we're in the wilderness. we're only here for a couple more days and we want to enjoy it. there is no guarantee i'm coming back here with family.
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>> reporter: ianette garcia is a city kid. kind of rough sometimes. >> reporter: that's what chad brown was hoping for when he started soul river. the portland-based nonprofit offers an escape into nature for veterans and for kids who might otherwise not have the opportunity. what does fly fishing meant to you? >> it's a coping mechanism for me. it erases everything around me and allows me to focus on what's exactly in front of me right at that moment, basically. it may not have anything to do with getting the fish, basically, but i think -- oh, i'm hooked! i got a fish! >> reporter: brown is a navy veteran. he served in the gulf and patrolled the dangerous streets of mogadishu, somalia. he returned home broken, desperate to escape the anxiety, blackouts and nightmares brought on by ptsd.
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>> it all came crashing down one place, and it stripped me from everything. i lost completely everything. i became homeless. >> reporter: homeless? >> i was homeless in the streets in portland, oregon. >> reporter: what was the lowest point? >> finding myself in the bloodlines and trying to field a pint of blood so i could get $20. i never thought in my life i was going to find myself in a place like that. and i was embarrassed. >> reporter: he started treatment at the v.a. for ptsd. he got a service dog named ax. but it wasn't until a friend took him fishing that he found his real medicine. >> i was like a walking zombie. with that much medication in your system, i couldn't smile. >> reporter: when you hooked that. >> what did that feel like? >> it's that jolt of energy, of life that brought me into the present where i can actually be able to feel the air, feel the currents that i'm standing in the water.
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it made me alive. >> reporter: brown says his doctors actually prescribed nature and fly fishing, a different kind of healing he is passing along through soul river. there. >> are veterans throughout that are fighting their stuff. they're also young peoplengheir. they're walking around with duct tape over their mouths basically. >> reporter: trapped inside. >> trapped, right. if i can bring the worlds together where that veteran serves that youth and that youth serves that veteran, they're both having the wounded souls here. >> fly fishing is my salvation. i come ooh out here. this is my church, my happy place. >> reporter: after leaving the marine corps, daniel nguyen was looking for another opportunity to serve. >> what soul river provides to me are these short perfect moments, having the opportunity to teach a youth a fly fishing, and then watch them catch a fish. >> reporter: and what's that like? >> it's -- man, it's this ear-to-ear smile feeling.
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>> reporter: because on these trips, kids also learn about the environment, conservation, and leadership. >> one's justice, dependability, initiative, decisiveness. >> i love the vets. they're extremely amazing mentors. >> try to pull some pieces out of what dan is saying and apply to your personal life. >> chad, he went through a lot of rough times, and he is here now and he is a leader. i really admire him for that. >> reporter: when you say inspire me, what's the message from that? that. >> you can do what you want if you dream about it and if you aspire to be that person. you can do that. >> break it up in teams. everybody don the waders, rods. let's go to the water. >> reporter: for brown, he has found his purpose and hopes he's hooked a new generation of leaders. >> we all have our issue, and we find different things in life or whatever we're going up against. the river has a way of listening, giving us that space. >> if it weren't for this, some of these kids might go a
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different direction? >> might go a different direction, you know. and then on top of that, these kids know that these veterans have their 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 fordesior yu
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a 6-year-old boy in texas is finding his voice for the first time after a simple procedure helped him start talking. the boy's parents thought he had a mental disorder, but it turns out he was a little tongue tied. omar villafranca paid a visit to the chatty kid. >> was this kind of communication even possible? >> no, this is mine. >> reporter: mason motz doesn't care the grown-ups are talking. >> that's me. >> that's you. >> reporter: because now he is . hi reith anllenay l yeahe yearl >> the beginning of words, not the end of words. really poor enunciation. >> nice job, mason! >> reporter: the texas family
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chalked up mason's speech problems to a brain aneurysm discovered when he was 10 days old and to a developmental disorder. but early last year, their lives changed when they went to kidstown dental in katy, texas. while working on some cavity, dr. amy lazar noticed that mason was tongue tied. >> you see how close it is to the tip? >> reporter: she saw the band of issue under his tongue was connected much closer to the tip than normal, which makes it harder to talk. she asked the parents if she could do a simple procedure and use a lacer to cut the tissue. negative, cross bites, no crowding. how long did it take for you to do the procedure with the laser under his tongue? >> maybe 30 seconds. >> reporter: that quick? >> yeah. >> reporter: and the results? risks life-changing. >> reporter: studies have found the condition is prevalent for between 4 and 10% of infants. >> may i have another piece of pizza? >> reporter: and for mason, the small fix made a big difference.
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how quick did you start noticing things? >> that evening. >> reporter: what was one thing that you noticed immediately after the procedure? >> instead of pointing to food or pointing to his mouth, he was able to say, "mama, i'm hungry". >> i said get over here! mason, what did you say? trying to get him to say it again. >> what did you do at school today? >> i was doing science. >> reporter: the motzs say mason is catching up verbally, and they are grateful that their miracle worker happened to be their dentist. >> this wasn't on our path. our path was we need to get his teeth better. >> reporter:n you see a case like mason's, what does that do for you professionally? >> it's why i come to work every day. >> reporter: omar villafranca, katy, texas. >> good luck keeping him quiet now. and that's the "overnight news"s continues. for over, check back with us a bit later for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center here in new york city, i'm michelle
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mi captioning funded by cbs it's friday, october 5th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." countdown to a vote. the fate of supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh hangs in the balance as protesters try to tip the scales. the desperate search for survivors in indonesia. climbs, one week after an tsuna verdict as a jury deliberates
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