tv CBS Overnight News CBS December 12, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PST
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yourself. >> reporter: today giant tech companies are coming under increased scrutiny by congress, concerned about silicon valley's growing concentration of power, especially google. with billionsch queries made each day, more than 90% of all internet searches are on google platforms, and they spent more than $18 million lobbying congress in 2017. that's more than any other company. >> nick, it's always interesting to see how much representatives know or don't know some of these subjects in these hearings. did congress land any punches today? >> sundar handled himself and a lot of times the representatives didn't know how to get at hardest questions. in fact, twice they held up iphones made by apple, knots google. >> interesting to see how much they are prepared or not. nick, thanks very much. patients and relatives of those treated at a famous research hospital in new york are looking for answers tonight. they want to know why rockefeller university stayed quiet about a prominent doctor
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who died 11 years ago, but is believed to have abused children for decades. victims could number over a thousand which would potentially make it the largest case of sexual abuse by one person in u.s. hiss try. more on this now from ana werner, and a warning. some of the details you're about to hear are graphic. >> he was revered like a god. >> reporter: matt harris was one of thousands of former patients who saw dr. reginald archibald as children at the prestigious rockefeller institute in new york city. archibald was a highly regarded growth specialist who said he could help children who were not maturing like mayor peers. >> he was like going to be our family's savior. >> reporter: archibald eats research was supposed to help kids grow taller, but these former patients told us he sexually abused them. harris was 14. gail coleman was 11. robert granato was 8 and mitchell scher just 5. >> the entire you're in the room there with him you were naked.
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>> he took his finger an pushed one of my niples. >> and he basically proceeded to mast bait me. >> he would rub me there and ask me does this feel good. >> reporter: in a statement in october officials revealed they investigated a complaint about archibald's inappropriate conduct in 2004 and reported it to authorities, but they also found complaints going back to the 1990s, some deemed credible. attorney jennifer freeman says her firm has had hundreds of calls. so what does that say to you? >> it says that there are tremendous number of victims out there. >> a year after i started seeing him. >> reporter: yet, these former patients say they never heard anything from the hospital until officials there sent out this letter in october to more than a thousand of archibald's former patients asking for information. >> i got the letter, and all of a sudden i felt like i was flashing back 50 years ago. it was burned in my brain what
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he did to me. >> what do you make of the hospital's statements? >> i'm aged,outraged. >> reporter: gail coleman says she's particularly angry because the doctor took pictures. she and the others were told to stand without clothing, like the children in these old studies while he took polaroid photos of their naked bodies. >> those pictures is what have haunted me through the years. >> reporter: in 2003, she contacted the hospital looking for answers. >> and i got my medical records back, and there were no pictures, and that tells me they weren't for medical research. they were for him. >> when something like this happens to you, you're kind of round of hope, robbed of trusting people, trusting institutions, trusting humanity. >> they had to know something was going on. >> reporter: so if the hospital comes out and says, well, nobody inside our hospital knew what he was doing. >> i don't believe them. t hostal has to take some responsibility for this. to me they covered this all
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>> reporter: hospital officials say they deeply regret pain and suffering causedveigating, but . three more people told us archibald recruited them for his studies at the madison square boys club where they say he was the club's dock tomorrow. the boys and girls clubs told us they also are investigating now. jeff. >> very difficult to hear about all of this. thanks. coming up next here tonight, an airline passenger suffered seizures mid-flight. some are asking why the pilot didn't do more.
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know what turns me on? my better half, hors d oeuvres and bubbly. and when i really want to take it up a notch we use k-y yours & mine. tingling for me, warming for him. wow! this holiday season get what you want some who were aboard a united express flight are asking why a plane didn't land right away when a passenger began suffering a series of seizures. the ordeal was captured on video b a fellow traveler. here's kris van cleave. >> reporter: cell known video from on board a united express flight to cincinnati shows a passenger coming to the aid of a woman having a seizure. the flight oak off from houston sunday evening, and the video appears to be shot has the plane was beginning its descent.
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>> if it was not for the hero it would not have happened. >> reporter: amy hammond took the video and talked to us via face time. >> she are two seizures quickly. we were not more than ten minutes away from the airport. we could have gotten right back there, and i'm looking at the flight attendant and saying why are we not turning around. >> reporter: united airlines says flight attendants asked if there was a medical professional on board and several identified themselves. the crew used a service called medlink connecting them with a doctor on the ground. the judgments of all those involved including the woman the decision was made to continue to cincinnati instead of diverting to another airport. medics met the plane after landing and unit hasn't been able to reach the woman since the flight. in a state republic airlines who operated the flight thanked the passengers who added aid had it been the judgment of the medical professionals another course of action was recommended we would have followed that recommendation immediately. >> i think their decision was wrong on many levels. we were scared to death watching
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this woman and wondering what would happen with her. sarah nelson the president of the association of flight attendants said the crew did follow proper procedure and she was more worried about the woman in the video as she was unaware if she was aware she was being recorded >> thanks, and up next, stormy daniels has been ordered to pay the president. like leather, skin is stronger when it's hydrated. but 9 out of 10 men don't get the hydration their skin needs. that's why dove men + care body wash has a unique hydrating formula ... to keep men's skin healthier and stronger.
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so, next time don't half-wash it. y and s done in new york charges were dropped today after video of a woman's arrest went viral. >> you're hurting my side. >> reporter: officers were seen pulling a baby from the arms of 23-year-old jasmine headley when she refused to leave a social services office. they promise an investigation. headley remains locked up in an unrelated case. adult film star stormy daniels was ordered to pay president trump nearly $223,000 for legal fees. this is related to her defamation suit against the president wye was tossed out in october. a separate lawsuit challenging daniels' non-disclosure agreement over her hey alleged afair with mr. trump is still to be heard. up next here, the orchestra had a hass
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for kids in some of america's toughesteighoo muc is unlocking the door to a whole new world. here's vladimir duthiers. >> growing up in baltimore, 16-year-old keith flemmiing hado make a choice. when did you realize lying before you was two path, one that led to trouble and one that led to where you are today in. >> kind of sort of like fifth grade. >> reporter: from there. >> one, two, ready and -- >> reporter: he chose to be here. ♪ a year-round music program called orchkids run by the baltimore symphony orchestra. ♪ >> reporter: he started coming around age 6. fleming was one of just 30 kids when the program started ten years ago. today, it's 1,300 with a year hong waiting list. >> i just stuck to it, because opportunities came. >> reporter: you traveled all
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over the world? >> traveled all over the world, yeah into you've been to london. >> been to london. >> reporter: austria. >> austria, yeah. >> how was everybody's day today. >> reporter: but he's not the only musician at the dipper table. all three of his siblings are also in orchkids. >> that's it! >> reporter: his 17-year-old sister deshay banks plays the cello. ♪ how proud are you of your ability? >> i'm very proud because i never thought i could do this, so like knowing that i can make something come out of that instrument is just like everything. >> and the other two started as percussionists. >> reporter: the director says orchkids is not about making music. it's about fine-tuning young lives. >> many people who grow up in baltimore never leave their neighborhood and our students leave every week, and that opportunity is going to take them places. >> reporter: for keith fleming, his talent has taken him to the highly selective baltimore
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school of art. without orchkids where would you be? >> i can't see what path i would have taken or where i would end up. >> reporter: when you're famous and leading your own band will you remember us and hang out with us? >> yeah, i got ya ♪ >> reporter: now that's the sound of success. vladimir duthiers, cbs news, baltimore. ♪ >> that is the overnight news for this wednesday. 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. ♪
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm tony tony dokoupil. millions of federal workers are facing the threat of a christmas layoff after president trump vowed to shut down the government over money for a border wall. with cameras rolling at the white house, the president got into a heated argument with the democratic leaders of congress. the president wants $5 billion to fund a barrier on the mexico border and said he'd be proud to shut down the government if he doesn't get it. major garrett was in the oval office for the fireworks. >> and then we have the easy one, the wall. that will be the one that will be the easiest of all. >> reporter: that was president trump's attempt at a joke in his first face-to-face meeting with democratic leaders after the mid-term elections and with a partial government shutdown ten days away. >> the shutdown is not worth
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anything and that you should not have a trump shutdown. you have -- >> a what? did you say trump? >> reporter: democrats came to the white house hoping to brand esident's name.th the the toughest issue, future funding of plaintiff trump's proposed wall on the southern border. the president wants $5 billion for construction of the wall passed now while republicans still have control of the house while the democrats are only offering $1.3 billion to fund broader border security measures. >> you have border security without the wall. there's a commonality on border security. >> the wall is part of border security. >> can you define what it means to have border security. >> the wall is a part of border security. you can't have very good security without the wall >> that's not true. >> reporter: the political fencing intensified. >> and the experts say you can do bothered security without a wall which is wasteful and doesn't solve the problem. >> it totally solves the problem.
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>> reporter: democrats arrived fresh off a 40-so the mid-term gain in the house. >> we gained in the senate. excuse me, did you win the senate? we won the senate. >> when the president brags that he won north dakota and indiana, he's in real trouble. >> i did. >> let me say this. >> we did win north dakota and indiana. >> reporter: in a unique white house, the legislative clash was in a class all by itself. >> we're entering into this kind of a discussion in the public view. >> but it's not bad, nancy. >> no. >> it's called transparency. >> i know. it's not transparency when we're not stipulating to a set of facts. >> reporter: at one point the president tried to speak for the likely speaker of the house to be. >> you know, nancy is in a situation where it's not easy for her to talk right now, and i understand that. >> please don't characterize the strength that i bring to this meeting as the leader of the house democrats who just won a big victory. >> elections have consequences, mr. president. >> let me just say. >> that's and that's why the country is doing so well. >> the back and forth land, it
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appears, where both sides wanted it, a televised political standoff. >> 20 times you have called for i will shut down the government if i don't get my watch. none of us have -- you want to know something. you want to put that on my -- i'll take it. >> oh, okay, good. >> you know what i say, yes. if we don't get what we want, i will shut down the government. >> okay. fair enough. >> and i'm proumd. >> we disagree. >> i am proud to shut down the government for border security, chuck. i'm not going to blame you for it. >> reporter: leader pelosi vying to be the next house speaker told democrats in a private motoring the encounter here at the white house with the president, quote, goes to show you get into a tinkle contest with a skunk, you get tinkle all over you have. as for the president's push for the wall. pelosi said, and again i quote, it's like a manhood thing for him. as if manhood could ever be associated with him. for his part, the president said border security and wall funding is common sense and a political
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winner, even if wrapped around a government shutdown. >> the ceo of internet giant google was summoned to capitol hill to answer questions about how his company secures user data, but republicans want topped know why google searches turned up bad reviews of conservative causes. nick thompson reports. >> reporter: today's hearing focused on transparents and the conservative concern was crystal clear. >> we need to be sure that any political bias won google's workforce does not creep into its search products. >> reporter: some republicans suggested that left-leaning employees could be putting their thumb on the search engine's scale. >> how do you explain this apparent bias on google's part against conservative points of view? is it just the algorithm? >> congressman, i understand the frustration of seeing negative news. what is important is that we use a robust methodology to reflect what is being said. i can come at you and assure you we do it without regards to political ideology
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>> reporter: democrats pushed back on accusations of political bias. >> if you're getting bad press articles and bad search results, don't blame google or facebook or twitter, consider blaming yourself. >> reporter: today's hearing comes as giant tech companies are coming under increased scrutiny by congress, concerned about silicon valley's growing concentration of power, especially google's, with billions of queries made each day, more than 90% of all internet searches are on google platt forment, and they spent more than $18 million lobbying congress in 2017. that's more than any other company. in france a community was put on lockdown after fun fire erupted killing two people and wounded several others. mark phillips reports. >> reporter: where there should have been a cheerful christmas street market, a manhunt was underway in the french city of strasbourg. witnesses say a gunman had opened fire. some reported a dozen shots. amateur video shows several people wounded. french authorities confirmed
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that others had been killed. the center of the historic town on the french-german border was locked down as the wounded, some of them critically, were treated. one eyewitness, a man named peter fritts, said over the telephone he saw one of the shootings. >> and i went around the corner, and i saw a person with apparently two shots into the head lying on bridge here. we tried to engage in resuscitation activities, and after 45 minutes we stopped the resuscitation efforts because the doctor told us over the phone that it's senseless. >> reporter: police say the gunman was known to them and had a criminal record. one report claimed the attacker had been wounded himself in an early exchange of gunfire with police, but through the evening he remained on the run. several security sources have revealed that french police raided the home of the suspected gunman earlier today as part of a separate attempted murder
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this is "the cbs overnight news." a congressional investigation has determined that the data breach at equifax last year was entirely preventible. they slammed the credit monitoring agency for not deploying basic safety information. they allowed hackers to steal the personal information of 148 million americans. you may be one of them. anna werner has the details. >> the house overnight committee reports as hackers gained access to the equifax network in may of last year and attacked the company for 76 days. thieves stole sensitive information, including social security numbers from nearly half of u.s. adults and some consumer advocates want equifax to pay. >> this is the credit score after consistently going down.
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>> reporter: kelly crouse's identity theft nightmare gan months after the equifax breach. >> i couldn't figure out how this could have happened as careful as i am with my information. >> reporter: kraus says she discovered 12 accounts opened in her name by people using her personal information to buy things like a car, even charging an $868 veterinary bill for a pet she didn't own. >> i pictured myself maybe not being able to get loans in the future, having bad credit. >> reporter: now the report from the house oversight committee says the equifax breach was entirely preventable. republican congressman will hurd is on the committee. >> this breach could have been prevented if equifax would have followed some very basic things when it comes to good digital system hygiene. >> the 96-page report says equifax failed to modernize its technology, failed to patch its systems when vulnerabilities were detected and stores
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sensitive data on out-of-date and subpar systems. equifax told news a statement during the few hours we were given to conduct a preliminary review, we identified significant inaccuracies and disagreed with many of the factual findings, but consumer advocates like mike lipp with the u.s. public research group said the company should pay the price for harming consumers. >> it's really only when there's actually fines attached that we're going to see the credit bureaus take our data security seriously. >> reporter: congressman hurd says congress should develop a national breach standard. >> we should be exploring whether there thud be penalties for companies not following some of the very basic things. >> reporter: well, the committee made several recommendations to prevent future incidents like those at equifax, including to reduce the use of social security numbers as personal identifiers, and here are a few reminders of what you can do to protect yourself. freeze your credit at the three agencies. have secure passwords, we've heard that before and, hey,
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shred your sensitive documents. >> if you find yourself running short of cash this holiday season but still have some gifts to buy, you may be tempted by a new way of paying. it's called a point of sale loan or instant installment plan. the loans are approved in seconds and lenders call it a public service. but with interest rates as high as 30%, critics say old-sharking loan sharking with a silicon valley smile. whether you need a new watch, a new sweater or perfect decor for your holiday party, what you no longer need is money. not even a credit card, to make it yours. what changed. >> reporter: buy now and pay later, the premise of the san francisco-based affirm founded in 2012. how many people are doing this? >> we've not really disclosed but it's millions and millions. how is that. >> reporter: billions and billions in loans outstanding? >> correct. >> reporter: demand is driven in large part by millenials or generation "z," many fearful of
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credd because their payment plans have a pre-determined interest rate with no compound interest or hidden fees, customers know exactly how much they will pay each month for the product they purchase. >> so we limit the transaction to a thing that you want to buy at a store that you want to buy and a price that you want to buy and it creates financial certainty for our customers, especially the ones that real need it. >> reporter: what's the average sifz an affirm loan? >> $799. >> reporter: how long does it take to pay it off? >> the typical term is about 11 months. >> reporter: he says the company used its own formula to approve loans to a wider pool of people, including people with bad credit scores or no credit at all. each purchase will show up as a separate loan on your credit report and issues with the loan can quickly hurt your credit score. >> biggest barbecue here. checking in from conrow, texas sghoo they learned that last year when he tried to return a
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ra to promote their business. >> we didn't open the box. we slapped that return sticker on and sent it back and expected everything to go smooth from there. >> reporter: while they said use the service was easy, the process to finally cancel their loan. >> well, it was a nightmare, absolute nightmare. >> reporter: just had the features that we need. >> seven months later two diengs on my credit and having a hard time get hag loan. just wasn't right. >> the way it is structured it's not a sit-down and think movement do you want to make the purchase or not. >> the executive director of the consumer advocacy group consumer resources and warns that affirm's average interest rate is 17% sim haar to most credit cards and it encourage irresponsible buying for young people who may not be able to afford it. >> so the product could be a very helpful product, but right now the way it's being marketed,
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it's enabling bad behavior. >> reporter: you're inviting people down a road that they may not be able to pay the bills on? >> no. i am inviting them down the road to responsebly have access to things they should be able to afford. >> reporter: a tread mill, i used affirm to get a pair of pants of work in the fast. paid it of course, it cost mow $20 in interest. that's $20 i don't have for the pair of pants in the spring and now i need another affirm loan and it's $40 and $80. >> is the alternative to go pantless. >> reporter: and the return policy varies from merchant to merchant and if the merchant offers a full refund, the company will work to unwind the loan. a better piece of advice, perhaps. if you can't afford, it don't buy it. the overnight news will be right back. ever since darrell's family started using gain flings, their laundry smells more amazing than ever. [darrell's wife] uh, honey, isn't that the dog's towel?
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apple picking season is long gone, but some orchards are still hard at work making cider. ice cider. it's all the rage in new england and parts of canada. adriana diaz got a taste. wish i got a taste of that. that's a good story. >> reporter: in evidence nestled in the quebec countryside is a farm so picturesque it locks like a living postcard. horses graze in the pasture as their owner and his best friend roam the grounds, but despite his tranquil surroundings christian is no ordinary farmer.
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he's a disrupter, credited for reviving canada eats apple industry. it takes a village, they say. >> not a village, big town. >> reporter: he did it three decades ago when he invited ice cider, an alcoholic apple drink akin to dessert wine. it takes advantage something of canada has in abundance, the cold. >> well, i pick apple when there is minus celsius in the apple. >> reporter: instead of picking apples in the fall, he waits until they freeze in the winter when the apple sugar peaks. he was inspired by a popular drink called ice wine which is made from frozen grapes. >> i look at on the tree and asked why i don't try with apple and you put it in basket for frost, and that's how ice cider was born. >> reporter: what started with one apple tree has grown to hundreds at his vineyard where tourists flock for tastings.
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outside he walked us through his process. do you pick like this? >> i pick like this. >> reporter: you go to the trunk and shake interest? >> i put a big -- >> reporter: blankets. >> and helmet and -- >> the apples are then pressed immediately. that allows the frozen water to remain with the leftover pulp so only the concentrated sugary nectar is extracted. >> all the stainless steel tanks, that's ice cider. >> reporter: during fermentation half the sugar content turns to alcohol allowing the cider to keep its sweet taste despite a 10% alcohol content. >> oh, that's delicious. but it's not like regular cider or apple juice. it's sweet and tart and fruity. but ice cider was once a hard cell since his partner. >> since oat 70s big companies decided to do cider, but the
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cider was very bad, even for health so the government decided to take this out of the market, and the people, they kept the idea that cider was a very bad thing to have. we said, okay, it's apple wine. since wine was that, apple wayne, what a good idea. >> reporter: with its new found success canada approved them to sell ice cider and soon other quebecers spread in and this spread south to vermont where one woman's hobby flourished into a company. >> we went to a couple of restaurants and stores and all of them bought and rebought and wanted more and that's when we looked at each other and said oh, maybe this is not at happy. >> reporter: she founded eden specialty ciders and a year later became the first american ice ciders approved by american regulators. >> it was critical because our whole intention when we started in 2007 was to make ice cider
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primarily, not hard cider and if we didn't get approval for ice cider, then we weren't going to do anything commercially with it. >> reporter: unlike christian in canada, legere like most ice cider apple-makers picks the apples in the fall, not the winter and later freezes its juice to make the ice cider. >> the fastest we can make an ice cider is about a year, year and a half, but there's a lot of time where we're just letting time and nature do its thing to develop the flavors in the tank or in a barrel. >> reporter: legere is considered america's top ice cider-maker and in 2016 she collaborated with the laenchingt hard crider company angry orchard. >> this is crisp apple, our flagship cider and what sets it apart from some of the work we're doing around ice cider is generally in ice cider you're not use the bittersweet cider apples. >> reporter: robert burke is the head cider-maker at angry orchard which is now making its own ice cider.
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>> i think it gives it a new experience nor cider drinking. it's great as an apertif and it makes it more of a cider, too. there's so many ways that cider can be its own thing and then within that very different from each other by style. >> reporter: but it's not cheap. each bottle requires up to 100 apples, and that's just one of the challenges to making this sweet treat. >> we'll see what this winter brings but, you know, for us, last year it didn't get cold enough to freeze-thaw, freeze-thaurks the process that you need to make great ice cide sneer weather is a key ingredient, but it may also be the delicacy's downfall. >> i think the best of ice cider is behind. i'm not sure there is ice cider here in 15 years. >> reporter: because of global warming? >> yes, sure. >> reporter: is it getting warmer here? >> yes. >> reporter: you notice? >> oh, yes, yeheres ten year ity diaz,
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quebec. and there's a scandal in the house of windsor. the duchess of sussex meghan markle went to a fashion show and get this, she wore black nail polish. apparently that's a faux pas which is a no-no. mark phillips has the lowdown from kensington palace in london. >> reporter: it was an a-list event oozing with glamour. the british fashion awards drew for than british celebrities like the beckhams and rows monday pike and penelope was there and uma and a parade of supermodels and music stars, but the surprise of the evening was the newest and brightest current royal star. >> we have a very special guest to announce the winner. her royal highness, the duchess of sussex. >> reporter: meghan proudly pregnant is currently the brightest star in the royal celebrity firmament and enda, as
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empowerment through fashion. >> for me this connection is rooted in really being able to understand that that's about supporting and empowering each other, especially as women. >> reporter: as it happens, this year's winner was claire wright keller who just happens to be the designer of meghan's wedding gown. even at the palace it seems what goes around comes around. meghan, royal watchers will recall, was supposed to be yet another breath of fresh air to blow the cobwebs out of the palace corridors, but lately the wind may be blowing too strong. the tabloids always in search of a juicy new story have been sniffing around the alleged royal feud between meghan, the common mixed-race american and kate, prince williams's also common wife who was the previous breath of fresh air. the two don't get along, it
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said, which is why harry and meghan are moving to the country and away from kensington palace where william and kate also live. professional royal watchers though say the spat may be more about the press than the princes' wives. >> there's no doubt that meghan and kate are two very different characters, and, you know, aides at kensington palace don't try to report that, but reports that there's a huge fight and fallin. >> reporter: manned now, shock horror, comes the saga of meghan's nail polish. seems she wore a dark color last night to watch the dress. royal protocol calls for a lighter shade of pale. what a scandal. >> and if you're a wondering we're a no black polish broadcast ourselves at the overnightnous and that's it for the overnight news on wednesday. for some of you the news continues and for others check back a little bit later for the morning news and,
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this is the "cbs morning news." a gunman opened fire on a christmas market in france leaving at least three dead and a dozen wounded. what's known about the alleged shooter. judgment day. today we find out if president trump's former lawyer michael cohen will go to prison or not after cooperating with prosecutors. and, the desperate search for three people trapped in a for three people trapped in a west virginia mine. captioning funded by cbs
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