tv CBS Overnight News CBS February 20, 2019 3:12am-4:00am PST
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partisan effort to unseat a dually elected president. jeff? >> okay, paula, thank you. as we have been reporting here, catholic leaders are gathering this week at the vatican for a summit on church sexual abuse. to illustrate the scope of this problem, in december, illinois's attorney general reported church official there's withheld the names of at least 500 clergy accused of abuse. the chicago archdiocese is responding. in tonight's eye on america report, nikki battiste gets a rare look at a program that teaches young students how to spot potential abusers. >> good morning primary campus.
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let's all get settled in our classrooms for today's prayer announcement. >> reporter: it's not a typical school day for this third grade class. >> if you can just close your books, let's go on over to the rug. >> reporter: they're sitting down to take sexual abuse prevention training, run by the archdiocese of chicago for all kindergarten through 12th grade catholic school students. >> god gave us all this really awesome little voice inside of our heads and inside of our hearts. this voice can tell us when something is exciting, but it can also tell us when things seem a little maybe unsafe and not so comfortable. >> but it's not just at school, all right? it's anywhere you feel uncomfortable. >> reporter: mayra flores trains teachers like meredith flynn to carefully use age appropriate language with students on how to detect, resist, and report sexual abuse. >> what should we do when we hear that voice and we know i am not okay with this? jack? >> listen to it. >> listen to it.
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>> tell an adult. >> tell an adult. >> and walk away. >> and walk away. and say? >> no! >> reporter: do you ever worry that these children are too young to be learning about a topic like this? >> it's not that they're too young. i think that's what sexual perpetrators are counting on, that we adults are uncomfortable with it. we want to say oh, we want to protect their innocence. well, this is a way to protect their innocence. >> even though you're kids, it's okay for you to say no. >> reporter: do you think in third grade your students understand their body and what's appropriate and what isn't? >> i think they do. we talk about our private body parts and anything that is covered by a swimsuit, and knowing that that's for them alone. >> what if it's an adult that we really have always kind of respected, but they're asking us to do something that we're really feeling unsafe about. is it still okay for us to say no? >> yes. >> we live in a dangerous world, and kids are precious to us.
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>> reporter: cardinal blaze cupich is the archbishop of chicago. why has it been so important for the chicago archdiocese to provide sexual abuse prevention training to kids? >> we feel that it's important to protect them, but we also have to admit that we do so within a backdrop and where children have been injured. since we've put in those safe environment programs back in 1992, the incidents of abuse have dropped dramatically. >> reporter: those prevention programs were put into place after nearly two dozen chicago priests were credibly accused. now the cardinal has been tapped by pope francis to head a high-stakes meeting at the vatican this week during an unprecedented global meeting of bishops. >> the days are organized around three themes, responsibility, accountability and transparency. >> reporter: i think a lot of victim survivors that we've spoken with, they hear transparency, they hear accountability, and they just don't believe they're going to site. >> yeah.
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>> reporter: so much time has passed. this is such a huge problem. >> yes. and i can understand that frustration. i'm frustrated too by it. this is a watershed moment. it's a moment in which i think there is going to be dramatic change in the way we handle these cases. >> reporter: back at northside -- >> do cow feel safer now that you have learned this? >> yeah. >> now i feel a lot safer so if i'm in a situation where i don't feel comfortable, now i know what to do. >> dear god, when i am confused or feel scared -- >> reporter: a rite of passage for a new generation. >> help me remember what i have learned today. >> reporter: nikki battiste, cbs news, chicago. >> amen. >> our eye on america report tonight. up next, she ran away from the u.s. to become an isis bride. should she be allowed to come home? and later, a
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in syria, u.s.-backed forces are getting ready for a final surge into the last town held by isis. even if isis is wiped out, there is the question of what happens to hundreds of isis fighters and their families, including a former american college student. here is holly williams. >> reporter: hoda muthana was 20 years old when she left her home in hoover, alabama in 2014 to become the bride of an isis fighter in syria. now a mother and a widow, she is
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living in a refugee camp. >> i know i ruined my future and my son's future, and i deeply, deeply regret it. >> reporter: while studying business at the university of alabama, muthana told her family she was going on a school trip, and instead flew to the middle east. in a letter to her family, seen by cbs news, she wrote "i was a naive, angry, and arrogant young woman, but seeing bloodshed up close changed me." muthana is one of a small number of u.s. citizens who have joined isis. but america's allies are said to be holding around 800 foreign isis fighters, along with their wives and children. in the same camp is shamima begum, who ran away from her home in london at 15 and had a child with an isis militant. >> i just want foepter: but unl muthana, she hasn't expressed much remorse, and today the uk government said it would strip
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begum of her british citizenship.pe to hoda muthana, but america takes its nationals home from syria where they can be arrested and charged. president trump has demanded that european countries do the same, but some governments are reluctant. the french government has reason to be worried about taking back a man like adrien guihal, who we interviewed in syria in june for "60 minutes." he'd been convicted of plotting to attack a police station before he even went to syria. a member of the group holding him insisted on sitting in on our interview. >> how do you think you deserve to be treated? "forgiveness," he says. "i would choose forgiveness, of course." that's a tall order after joining a terrorist group. but leading foreign militants into chaos in syria could mean they rejoin isis.
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ponytail, fingerless gloves and black coat, karl lagerfeld was one of the most recognizable designers in the world, even to the unfashionable. the creative force behind chanel, lagerfeld spent decades making clothes coveted by celebrities and first ladies, including melania trump, who included this video. he worked his way up the fashion ranks, saving chanel by making an iconic little jacket cool again. the owner of over 3,000 books and a cat lover, lagerfeld was one of the few designers left who still sketched his creations by hand. >> i like to create images. >> reporter: his sharp eye was matched only by his sharp tongue. he defended the use of super thin models, deemed sweat pants a sign of defeat, and called the singer adele a little too fat. one of his last appearances, he lit up the champ-elysees, but his own brilliance never immed.
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dangerous hazards. carter evans explains. >> we tested the bottom just to see if it was deep, and it seemed to be okay. >> what seemed to be a shallow pool of water at utah's zion national park turned out to be quicksand, and ryan osmun's girlfriend jessika mcneill was sinking. >> i told her kind of calm down and don't make any fast movements. >> as he was helping her out, ryan began to sink. >> my right leg had sunk all the way up to my hip. and there was no chance of moving it at all. i had told her she was going to have to leave to go get help. >> the hardest thing was to leave him for sure. i didn't know if i could do that hike alone. it was pretty scary. >> reporter: she hiked for three hours to get help, but it would take ten hours for rescuers to hike back. they used a pulley system to yank ryan free from the quicksand, with i is fairly common along rivers at zion. >> it was probably one of the worst pains i've ever felt as they were pulling me out of the
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sand. once they got it free, it was one of the best feelings i have ever had in my life. >> reporter: then a blizzard hit. ryan and his rescuers were trapped for the night before finally being hoisted to safety. >> you see the stuff in movies, and you don't think it would happen to you, and then it is. >> reporter: it may not be hollywood, but this is happily ever after. >> thanks to them, i'm still alive, and thanks to her i'm still alive. i don't know how to put it into words to thank them enough. >> reporter: it sounds like he just did. carter evans, cbs news, los angeles. >> that is the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back a bit 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 jericka duncan. one of the candidates that fired up big crowds during the 2016 campaign wants to know if voters are ready to feel the burn again. vermont senator bernie sanders has declared another run for president in 2020. sander, an independent, was hillary clinton's biggest challenger for the democratic nomination in2016. well, now he is the tenth candidate to join the most diverse democratic party field in u.s. history. only on "cbs this morning," the 77-year-old former mayor and congressman spoke to john dickerson about his second shot at the presidency. >> so senator sander, you're going run for president? >> i am going to run for president, that's correct. >> what's going to be different
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this time? >> we're going to win. we are going to also launch what i think is unprecedented in modern american history, and that is a grassroots movement, john, to lay the groundwork for transforming the economic and political life of this country. that's what's different. >> and that's your theory, which is that without the groundswell, without the grassroot, you can't change the politics? >> look, somebody can come before you and say look, i want to do a and i want to do b, and that's fine. at the end of the day, the only way that real change takes place is when millions of people stand up, fight back, and say enough is enough. we're going to have a government that works for all of us, not just the few. but bottom line for me is i think it is absolutely imperative that donald trump be defeated because i think it is unacceptable and unamerican to be frank with you that we have a president who is a pathological liar, and it gives me to pleasure to say that, but it's true. we have a president who is a
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racist, who is a sexist, who is a xenophobe, who is doing what no president in our lifetimes has come close to doing, and that is trying to divide us up. >> but all of your opponents will say we've got to get donald trump out of the white house. that's not your distinguishing characteristic. >> that is not my distinguishing characteristic. i think what i am very proud of, and in a sense this campaign, john, a continuation of what we did in 2016. you will recall, you may recall that in 2016, many of the ideas that i talked about, medicare for all, raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour, making public colleges and universities tuition-free, all of those ideas people say oh, bernie, they're so radical. they are extremely american people won't accept those ideas. you know what's happened over three years?
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all of those ideas are part of the political party mainstream. >> so you're saying the party came your way? >> i don't want to say it. i think most people would say it. >> is that your argument against your competitors? before medicare for all was cool? >> that's one way of looking at it. white house exception, i am fond of them. they are in some cases my friends. >> let me ask you on your medicare for all you have talked about the fact that polls show 70% are in favor of medicare for all, but that number drops to 37 if somebody hears private insurance is going to go away, which is what your plan offers. so i guess my question, you're offering something that the polling shows people can get spooked very quickly about. >> but that's because we're going to be taking on the insurance companies and the drug companies who are going to spend a whole lot of money distorting what we believe in. the bottom line is the average middle class family will save money, will spend less money on health care, will have more choice and have more coverage
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than is currently the case. >> the o c health care plan will be cost. people will say my goodness, there is no way everybody is going to get coverage. you hear some of the estimates that come out. >> you do in the media. no more out-of-pocket expenses. no more deductibles. the cost of prescription drugs is going to go down. we expand the kinds of coverage available for senior citizens. it's a god deal. >> howard schultz said he would not run as an independent if the democrats nominate a moderate. >> oh, isn't that nice. why is howard schultz on every television station in this country? why are you quoting howard schultz? because he is a billionaire there are a lot of people i know personally who work hard for a living and make 40, $50,000 a year who know a lot more about politics than with all due respect does mr. schultz. but because we have a corrupt political system, anybody who is a billionaire who can throw a suddenly becomes very, very credible.
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so what mr. schultz, what is he, blackmailing the democratic party? if you don't nominate bernie sanders, he's not going to run? well, i don't think we should succumb to that kind of blackmail. >> what's your view of capitalism? >> look, i think what we see in this country and around the world, there is a lot of great entrepreneurs, but i think what is happening is some of these folks, we have a system which allows these people to accumulate huge amounts of income and wealth. so when i talk about democratic socialism, somebody wants to call me a radical, okay, here it is. i believe that people are inherently entitled to health care. i believe people are entitled to get the best education they can. i believe that people are in a environment. people are entitled to have decent paying jobs. that's what i believe in. >> the president mentioned socialism in his state of the union address. >> yeah, i heard that. >> what's he going after there? >> look, he is going to appeal, he is going to lie, he is going
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to say bernie sanders wants the united states to become venezuela. bernie sanders does not want to have the united states become the horrific economic situation that unfortunately exists in venezuela right now. what bernie sanders wants is to learn from countries around the world, why other countries doing a better job in dealing with income and wealth inequality than we are. >> there are charges in your last campaign that women felt there was discrimination against them, there was sexism. you met with some of the staffers. what did you learn? >> i learned that was true, and it breaks my heart, and, you know, our campaign kind of exploded. it went from a few people to a loft people, and i will be very honest in telling you that in retrospect, some of the people that were hired should is not have been hired, and some went through some experiences that they should not have. but i will also say this. in my 2018 campaign for reelection to senator for vermont, and in this campaign for president, we are going to
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have the strongest protocols to protect women and anybody else against any form of harassment. we are going to be training every employee who works for us, and we're going to give people who feel that they've been harassed the opportunity to talk to people outside of the campaign. so this has been an issue that has upset me, and we're going rectify it in this campaign. >> you'll be 79 when you're inaugurated. >> yes. >> that's old by the standards of presidents. >> yes. >> should people be concerned about that? >> i think, you know, when we look at people, whether they're old or they're young, you've got to look at the totality of the person. i'm sure you have bumped into people who are 90 who do great work. you have bumped into people who are 45 or 50, you've got to wake up because they're falling asleep all of the time. have i been blessed, thank god. i'm going to knock. this is wood. i'm going to knock on it, with good health and good runner, a distance runner when i was a
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> president trump declaration of a national emergency to build a wall on the southern border has touched off a legal battle that could reach the supreme court. this as people across the country debate how effective a wall would be in stopping illegal immigration and drug trafficking. best-selling author don winslow has spent much of his life studying the border. what he says he learned might surprise you. cbs evening news anchor jeff glor got a firsthand look in a story for "sunday morning." >> so tell me where we are. >> you're in the big nowhere. >> reporter: the heat in the windy southern california desert. it's 109 right now. is searingly familiar to don
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winslow. >> mexico is just across those hills, and these are drug trails coming up out of mexico by foot, mule, horse, all terrain vehicle, usually come at night. >> reporter: the drug trails almost lock like snake tracks. >> they do. that's how you know what they are. >> reporter: winslow, now 65, and a best-selling author, has spent a third of his life at our southern border, writing two critically acclaimed novels based on what he's seen. after more than two decades, he thought he exhausted the topic. >> i swore, i promised to myself, i promised to my wife i wasn't going to do another one about the border, about drugs. told. >> reporter: he tells that story in "the border," out later this month. his crime trilogy will soon be made into big bunt movies by acclaimed director ridley scott. >> it's about internal borders, about ethical border, moral
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border, political borders, and whether we cross them or not. and if we cross them, can we ever cross back. >> reporter: winslow's been a fierce critic of president trump. he even took out a full page ad in "the new york times" criticizing his border policies. >> we want to stop drugs. we want to stop traffickers. we want to stop criminals from coming in. walls save lives. >> reporter: can you imagine seeing a wall out there some day? >> no. i've been on every mile of this border. >> reporter: every mile? >> let's go to cloud cuckoo land for a while and say you can build that wall. build it as high as you want, deep as you want, high as you want. it has gates, jeff. those gates are always open. >> reporter: winslow believes a wall would make the drug situation worse by driving small-time smugglers into the hands of big-time dealers. >> what we critically have to understand is that a border is also something that joins two
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communities, two countries, and two cultures. >> reporter: you think we forget that sometimes? >> we've completely forgotten it. >> reporter: what is it that people don't understand about what's happening there right now? >> there is no invasion of the united states through this border. these are not armed people. these are people for the most part hardworking family people trying to find a better life. something we used to welcome in this country. are there bad people in these caravans? are there some criminals? of course. i would also argue there were bad people on the mayflower. there were bad people who came into ellis island. but that's what built this country. >> reporter: don winslow didn't expect to be spending his 60s speaking his mind about politics. with 21 novels to his name, he is now one of the most in demand
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crime writers in america, but for many years it wasn't that way. you're a late bloomer? >> yeah. overnight success, but it was an arctic night. it's the job i've always wanted, and i'm grateful now i have it. it took the world a long time to agree with me, that i should be a writer. >> reporter: but he knew from the beginning. >> about 6 or 7 years old. >> reporter: 6 or 7? >> yeah. my dad was a sailer who loved book. that's what he wanted to do, float around on the water and read books. my mother was a librarian. we were always encouraged to read. we were always allowed to read anything we wanted. if i could make my living telling stories, that's the way i'd like my life to go. >> reporter: winslow published his first book in 1991. he sold just enough to pay the bills, but kept at it. there have been >> reporter: giving up. >> yeah. >> reporter: so what is itinwo
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yeah, write a>> just work. >> that's it. >> reporter: finally four years ago winslow hit the big time with the blockbuster international best-seller "the cartel." you don't share this much. >> never shared it with anybody before you. >> reporter: it's this view, he says, in the hills east of san diego that gives him his inspiration. >> it's a lot of times where i come to think, where i come to create characters. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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so you don't have to stash antacids here.... here... or here. kick your antacid habit with prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. priscilla chen, a billionaire philanthropist and wife of facebook founder mark zuckerberg usually doesn't share much with the press, but only on "cbs this morning," the 33-year-old is opening up about life, work and the zuckerberg initiative. it's one of the northwest well funded philanthropic organizations in the world. chan sat down for a wide ranging conversation with "cbs this morning" co-host norah
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o'donnell. >> you don't do a lot of interviews. >> no. >> why is that? >> i would rather be doing the work. at the heart of it, i'm a practitioner. i worked in the classroom. i worked in the clinic, and that's where i get the inspiration and the nurturing for my soul that i need, as well as being able to see and stay connected to what we need to keep our eye on in order to build a better future. >> reporter: a better future is exactly what her chinese-vietnamese parents were chasing when they came to the united states in the 1970s as refugees. >> my grandparents did something i think is completely courageous. they put their kids on a boat and watched that boat drift off to sea. we know very firsthand that hardship is real and opportunities are available, but not available to everyone. >> reporter: but those opportunities led priscilla chan to harvard university on a full scholarship. at first, it felt like an alien world. you almost left harvard.
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>> yeah. i had my transfer paperwork done. >> reporter: when was that light bulb moment i am kind of the epitome of the american dream and i do need to stay here at harvard? >> i think i immediately knew when i showed up on campus that something out of this world had happened, but i wanted to give up, but i also found a home running an after school program. and when i saw what those kids faced in challenges, far beyond what i faced, and i saw what needed to be done, i knew i had to stay. >> reporter: and what year did you meet mark zuckerberg? >> i met mark four weeks into college. >> reporter: so you were going to leave, even though you had met >> yeah! >> reporter: it wasn't love at first sight? >> he just had totally different mentality in terms of being able to do things and take risks than i did. and i thought he was fascinating, but i was 18. i didn't think i was going to
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marry him. >> reporter: they eventually did marry in 2012 and now have two daughters. >> you got this, you got this! >> reporter: and a hungarian sheepdog that has become an internet sensation. how did you end up with beast? >> oh, boy. i didn't know better. i didn't have a dog growing up. >> reporter: you ever think you would go from being a child of refugees to child pediatrician and now billionaire philanthropist? >> even before i met mark i knew i had received more than i would have ever imagined. and it was going to be my life's work to mike sure that was true for others. >> you're getting a little teary-eyed. >> yeah. it means a lot to me. >> it's not enough to just connect people. we have to make sure that those connections are positive. >> reporter: 2018 proved to be the most challenging year yet for facebook. the social media giant is facing a multibillion dollar fine for a series of privacy scandals, including a massive data breach. has it been a tough year in your
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house? >> you know, we've done a lot of work in thinking about how we should be operating. and mark and his team have done a great job at facebook. but for the chan-zuckerberg initiative, we also want to make sure that we are making good choices and being good stewards of the opportunity. so it's an accelerator for us to really think through some of the harder problems. >> does the initiative and all the good work that it does, is that a way to whitewash some of the problems that facebook has had, especially in 2018? >> we have always known that we were going to give back, and we launched formally the chan-zuckerberg initiative in 2018. we are going to be doing this for decades, and frankly, there are a lot easier ways to build up pr than trying to tackle education reform or criminal justice reform. >> reporter: the initiative's goals are ambitious, tackling
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global health and trying to cure and end all diseases by the end of the century. you want to eliminate all disease? >> yeah. well, if you think about it, penicillin didn't exist 80 years ago. it's micscop chang the world. our we are not the ones doing it. we are empowering scientists to actually be on the forefront in making those discoveries. >> what do you think will ultimately have a greater impact on society, facebook or the initiative? >> too soon to say. i hope the chan zuckerberg initiative is able to achieve its goals, but we have ambitious goals. so if committee can cure, prevent, domestic all disease, i think that will be astounding in itself. >> do you have political ambitions? no. >> no? >> i don't even want to sit here and talk to you! >> well, thank you. does mark have political ambitions. >> no. not for family. >> you don't think he'll ever
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run for office? the reason i ask, because these are in some ways initiatives that impact the public policy debate. and at some point you start getting deeply enough involved in it that you start saying i can only do so much with my money. i have to change the laws. >> we believe in advocacy, but we don't believe that we're the right people in our experience and voice should not be the most powerful in the room. >> what does your family think of the work you're doing now? >> you know what's funny? my mom is still are you a real doctor yet? and do you still work as a doctor? but they are incredibly proud and excited about the work that we're doing. yeah, my mom's mainly really proud. yeah. >> and get this. chan and her husband have pledged 99% of their facebook shares to the chan-zuckerberg initiative. we also met chan at an oklahoma prison where an innovative program is teaching female inmates to code to help break the cycle of mass at redfin, we charge you a 1% listing fee.
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a small coffee shop is serving up drinks that are giving people a boost well after the caffeine wears off. meg oliver has the story. >> reporter: on this coroner crown point, indiana, this one, "believe there is good in the world, be the good". >> reporter: some might say 31-year-old breanne is better than good. the former nanny opened this coffee house six years ago, and on a whim started writing the uplifting messages for customers. >> i hoped it would add some positive light to their day. >> reporter: customer reaction was overwhelming. so much that she took it further.
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>> just have to go drop change in a salvation army jar and film it. >> reporter: challenging them to perform good deeds for a free cup of joe. >> pay for someone's coffee, donate clothes to a homeless shelter. >> how many free cups of coffee have you given out? >> oh, thousands and thousands. >> reporter: is that such a good business plan? >> i feel like if you're spreading positivity, people want to be a part of positivity, good people helping good people. >> reporter: the fabric of crown point is tightly knit, and serving that community goes well beyond the walls of her cafe. instead of pocketing the cash from the tip jar, she pays it forward every month. >> hello, how you? >> reporter: on this day she uses the money to surprise shoppers at a supermarket. >> have a good day. >> what just happened? >> we just paid for your grocery. >> what did you do that for? >> you have to spread positivity. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> thank you.
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>> reporter: so people come to thank you? >> yeah. >> reporter: what's that like? >> we had this one person that he was homeless, and we had bought a bike for him. and he came back two years later after we had purchased the bike for him and said you don't know how much you changed my life. because you bought me a bike, i got a job and i got an apartment. even talking about him makes me cry. >> reporter: and how has this changed the community? >> i hope that it's spread positivity throughout not just this community, but other communities that are around us. for us to play a small part in a lopeople's lives is the most amazing feeling. >> reporter: it's a job inspired boost the entire community of crown point can rally behind. >> on count of three, one, two, three, yeah. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," meg oliver, crown point, indiana. that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some you have, the news continues. for others, check backtl later for the morning news and
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of course "cbs this morning." captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, february 20th, 2019. this is the "cbs morning news." blast of winter weather from coast to coast. snow and freezing rain bring dangerous commutes across the country. prosecutors reveal disturbing evidence in the case of a missing colorado mom. her fiance will now stand trial for murder. and a flat denial from president trump about a hush-money investigation. what he says he never asked his former acting attorney general to do. ♪
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