tv CBS Overnight News CBS April 4, 2019 3:12am-3:58am PDT
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saw it for ourselves. how you doing? i'm tony. i work for cbs. we're doing a story about recycling. so i have a very weird question for you. can we please take a look at your recycling and see if you're doing it right? >> sure. >> reporter: on a recent day in about chinese espionage at orlando, three brave souls mar-a-lago. agreed to haul out their and number two, he thinks the secret service did a very good recycling bins. job. jeff? >> okay, chip. one, two, three! another question here, though. and let us take a peek inside. we're just learning that the with the help of mitch headland ways and means committee now is giving the irs a week to turn from recycle america. over the president's tax we're going to do an audit here. returns. of course, this has been an >> all right. issue since the campaign in >> reporter: each bin 2016. what do we know? >> well, this was not questionable. >> this in, you could rinse tha unexpected. it's the top tax writer among the democrats on the house side. and it would be better. and he is using a fairly unused >> in most communities you wouldn't be able to recycle a measure in the law to do this. flower pot? the president is expected to resisttmightily. >> correc >> cardboard, yes. but normally it needs to be at that session a short time ago broken down. >> reporter: with many things that should have gone straight where reporters got to ask him to the trash. >> this is a total no-no. some question, he said he is not inclined to agree to the styrofoam cannot be recycled in
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request. your community. i think he is going to have a whatever the chip bag, that's a much more ferocious response problem. >> this is a problem here? that that. >> okay, chip, thanks very much. >> yes. >> paper is recyclable, but not the house committee voted along party lines to issue a full release of the mueller this kind of paper. >> reporter: it does look like it was a good dinner, though. report without redactions. >> oh, that's good intention, jerry nadler says he'll give but so not recyclable and so bill barr, quote, time to change dangerous. his mind. >> paper towels and napkins and >> the committee must see all tissue are not recyclable. the materials and make judgments as to what can be redacted to this all together might lead to the public release by ourselves. all of everything that you've we handle confidential material done and you've put good effort all the time. we have facilities to do that. towards, the whole thing going to landfill. we make those judgments, and >> reporter: now before you we're not willing to let the judge, know the errors we caught here -- and that's your attorney general, who after all is a political appointee of the souvenir! thank you. president, make that -- here's your bucket of trash. substitute his judgment for >> reporter: are being repeated across america. >> just in general, recycle ours. >> republicans called today's move political theater. asking be so confusing that the secretary of homeland people just don't take it security is comparing the seriously. >> reporter: and if you've ever situation at the southern border wondered where all that to a cat-5 hurricane disaster. recycling ends up, there is a good chance it's at a sorting kirstjen nielsen says that means facility like this one owned by possibly shutting down the southern border or sending in waste management. 24 hours a day, five days a troops to stop a surge of week, its workers are catching migrants seeking asylum. thad all our mistakes.
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in night's eye on america, >> nice to meet you. >> reporter: mike taylor oversees recycling operation here is in elkridge, maryland. omar villafranca shows us how a shift in u.s. asylum policy is sending hundreds back across the he show us what happens to the recycling materials we put on border into legal limbo. the curb. where are we in this process? >> these hardworking men and >> reporter: along the southern border, migrants seeking asylum women are looking for the items that shouldn't be in the system in the united states are now in the first place. being told to wait here in >> reporter: workers here target what they call tanglers which mexico. can get caught up in the sorgt migrants like 19-year-old angel and 29-year-old jose from equipment. things like plastic bag, coat haers. honduras who are legally seeking asylum in the united states have other recycling programs refuse been sent back to remain in items like yogurt cups and mexico to await their hearing. shampoo bottles. their attorney asked us to what should not be in the change their names to protect recycling? their identity. >> we shouldn't have the plastic fill in our recycling operation >> translator: i am fleeing here. because they want to kill me. foil. well don't like foil. i am not a thief or a >> reporter: no foil. egg carton? >> egg carton, the styrofoam egg church with more than 40 other men, women, and children. carton isn't part of the program. >> reporter: golf ball? >> golf ball. angel told us that back in no golf ball. >> reporter: is that recyclable? honduras, he was the target of >> there is another one. local gangs. when in doubt, throw it out. he showed polic reports >> reporter: when in doubt, throw it out.
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alleging there easy. who came up with this phrase when in doubt, throw it out. >> we actually started that. >> translator: how can i return >> reporter: mitch headland's to my country when my life is at organization is trying to remove risk there? that's why i'm trying to get to all doubt. the u.s. recycle across america advocates and right here i'm not safe. for standardized labels on home and public recycling bins, he means tijuana, one of the spelling out exactly what can be most dangerous cities in the recycled in each community. the labels in use here in western hemisphere, more violent than any city in guatemala, orlando and coming soon to other honduras, or el salvador. there were more than 2,000 cities may be our best hope for pulling recycling out of the dumps. >> if the public is willing to murders in tijuana. do it and we have the this is a very violent city. infrastructure in place to do last year two young honduran it, then the industry and migrants were murdered here municipalities owe it to all of after leaving a shelter. mexican officials tell cbs news us to make sure it's easy for us at least 500 migrants, including to do right. families, are among the asylum >> reporter: and the reason this seekers sent back to mexico. is such a big deal is china now turns down any recycling that is the trump administration says not 99.5% pure uncontaminated they need to expand the remain material. so check your labels. in mexico program because of a dramatic surge in the number of check with your asylum seekers to the u.s., which they say is overwhelming the system. secretary of homeland security kirstjen nielsen says it's pant for another reason. >> they will not be able tod .tr
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approval to come into the united states. >> reporter: 2017 justi show t cases processed last year, almost 90% of the applicants showed up to their court hearing. with a backlog of over 800,000 asylum cases now pending in the u.s., angel and jose might have to wait in mexico for months. if the u.s. says you cannot come into the u.s., what are you going to do? >> translator: we want to get to the u.s. legally. we don't want to jump walls. >> translator: if they say no, we have to find another way to get there. >> reporter: angel and jose's american dream is right across the border, but their legal journey is just beginning. omar villafranca, cbs news, tijuana, mexico. coming up next, why george clooney wants hollywood to
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oh, yeah! get ya some! no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars on my car insurance with geico. ed! ed! we struck sprinkles! [cheers] believe it. geico could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. six states and washington, d.c. have sued the department of agriculture, accusing it of lowering the nutritional standards in school meals. well, one famous chef is fighting back. nancy giles got a taste of what's new inside some school cafeterias. >> reporter: it's lunchtime at winthrop elementary in new london, connecticut, and these kids are hungry. they can eat pasta or tuna, or something a little more exotic. >> have you ever had the hummus that we serve?
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>> reporter: the man behind the hummus, a nutritious middle eastern dip is 34-year-old dan justy. he is the tall one. he founded and runs brigade, a company that's revolutionizing cafeteria cuisine. >> there is a problem with school food in general because this idea that the kids don't deserve high quality, which obviously they do. if anybody, they're a captive audience, and they're our kids. if anybody deserves the best food we can give them, it's them, because they have no women are standing up for what they deserve in the office choice. in the world >> reporter: no more processed food or mystery meat for these and finally, in the bedroom our natural lubrication varies every day kids. brigade hires trained chefs to it's normal make high quality school lunches so it's normal to do something about it ky natural feeling from scratch. the lubrication you want nothing you don't how dan justy ended up in this cafeteria is quite a story. get what you want >> the fact that i was the head chef at noma is the reason that opened a lot of doors for me. >> reporter: that's right. dan's last job wasconsid bob i world, ma pe talk to meut fin s restaurant,
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seats. >> 45out the average. >> two people about $2,000. harsh islamic law took effect today in the nation of >> juhe decide he wanted to do brunei. that includes death by stoning something bigger. for homosexuality. >> i wanted to feed more people. that has prompted george clooney i wanted to make food with real and others to call for action. purpose. >> right. here is jamie yuccas. >> that really contributed to >> reporter: they're some of the something. world's most exclusive hotels, >> reporter: so in 2015, he nine of them owned by one of the announced he was leaving noma to richest a men in world, the fix america's school lunches, stunning the food world. sultan of brunei. >> you're the head chef of noma. effective today, his repressive government is calling for gay sex and adultery to be >> yeah. punishable by death. the move has been condemned by >> why the [ bleep ] would you the u.s. state department and ever leave that? >> yeah. >> reporter: foodies may have the u.n. secretary general. been flummoxed, but justy found but actor george clooney is his calling. taking aim at the sultan's $20 >> it's called school food. that's weird. billion fortune, calling for a >> right. >> it should just be food. boycott. he write, we're putting money a lot of food served in a school directly into the pockets of men would never be served anywhere who choose to stone and whip to death n headline else. >> reporter: right. >> and that's the unfortunate fact. >> reporter: new london now the list of those boycotting the benefits from a technique he picked up at noma.
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hotels. but they've been down that road >> who is going to eat hummus before. whenn2014, there were today? anyone? >> reporter: the power of the personal touch. >> if you don't like it, you protests and boycotts. know you don't like it. jim key was an organizer. but if you like it, now you have >> most people supported it five something new to eat for your years ago, and they still went whole life. back. so i hope that people will have >> reporter: so it's policy that their brigade chefs talk to greater principles when it comes students about their food. to the boycott this time. >> food comes to you and you dot ut to it, >> reporter: even celebrities are split about the impact of it's just food. such an i heatist protest. when jeff west made this, you >> this idea that the sultan of like that person. therefore the food has more brunei is going over the meaning to it. >> reporter: what have you receipts from the polo lounge, learned about the kind of food you're eating? oh, no, we only sold two soups >> that it's actually fresh. it's not from a box. today. what the -- >> it's made from scratch. >> reporter: still, key says >> reporter: isn't that nice? >> sometimes i want to go up for that anti-gay sentiment has gone seconds. >> reporter: do they allow seconds? unchecked for years. >> no. >> reporter: do you like the doesn't it seem shocking that in food here? >> i love it! 2019 we're talking about something like this? >> yes, yes. but what more heartening to its >> reporter: but kids can be picky eater, and they don't always love it. it's a whole different thing ke geoe clooney and others, i du cooking for kids. >> no, no, it is. be talki it.theargets one time we had this butternut protesters.s squash soup. it had coconut milk and ginger
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it in. jeff, in a statement, the hotel it was delicious. says it does not tolerate i remember this kid was eating it and he spits it out. >> reporter: oh, man. discrimination. >> jamie you cans casyuccas, th >> okay. >> reporter: lucky for new london, manuel rivera isn't picky, but he is choosy. much. still ahead, they told their >> if we can't eat it, we shouldn't serve it to our kids. >> reporter: rivera was the news to cbs. school superintendent who hired dan justy in 2016 to cook for new london's 3500 school kids. now justin fairfax responds. i can't believe it. some folks thought he was that we're playing "four on four" wasting tax. with a barbershop quartet? >> we had one comment, boy, the [quartet singing] bum bum bum bum... pass the ball... pass the rock.. next thing you know rivera will be getting limousines for students. >> reporter: compared to what you were spending with the prior ...we're open just pass the ball! food service company. >> i will tell you the cost is no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars zero to new london public school taxpayers. on my car insurance with geico. >> almost sold out, $5 a meal. yea. [quartet singing] shoot the j! shoot, shoot, shoot the jaaaaaay... >> reporter: thanks to fundraiser efforts like brigade's popular weekly community dinner and generous beitgeo could save you fifteen percent corporate and private grants, or more on car insurance. new london's taxpayers still haven't been hit. but cost and what the federal school lunch program will reimburse new london is an issue.
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it's around $3.50 a meal, which doesn't sound so bad -- >> that's actually for maintenance. that's for paying people to make the food. when it's all said and done, you have about $1.25 for food. making food, a meal that kids really want to eat for $1.25 is super challenging. >> these are literally some of the best chefs in the country. >> reporter: last spring, dan justy invited a dozen star chefs up to new london to compete in a fundraiser. >> this is mae lynn, those familiar with top chef. she won it. >> reporter: and see what kind of meal they could create for a buck and a quarter. they came from l.a., san francisco, chicago, new york city, and washington, d.c. beitgeo could save you fifteen percent just between us, cleaning with a mop and bucket is such a hassle. well i switched to swiffer wet jet and it's awesome. james speared winner jeremiah it's an all-in-one that absorbs dirt and grime deep inside. langhorne. so how much does a meal cost at your restaurant? and it helps prevent streaks and haze. >> it depends on what you get. but easily, you know -- stop cleaning. start swiffering >> reporter: well, jeremiah, do you have anything at your restaurant that is $1.25? >> no. >> reporter: chef jeremy fox was more optimistic.
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what's the average price of a virginia's lieutenant meal at your restaurant? >> 75 to $80 per person. governor justin fairfax wants prosecutors in two states to >> reporter: whoa. investigate sexual assault s ag. >> that's with wine. two accuser, vanessa tyson and these kids aren't going to drink nearly as much wine as the meredith watson spoke this week adults. >> i'm making the seasoning right now. >> reporter: knowing that the to gayle king of "cbs this winning meals could end up on the brigade menu, the chefs morning." fairfax says what happen was didn't let their budget limit their imagination. consensual. they whipped up chicken tacos, >> when all of the facts in evidence are examined by unbiased law enforcement food-amaki rolls, tofu lasagna, professionals, i am confident they will reach the same conclusion that was reached by one of the nation's leading monte cristo sandwiches, ten meals in all. polygraph experts that i am telling the truth. then the chefs delivered the >> tyson and watson want a food. >> seasoned with herb, lemon public hearing. up next here, a tough marine juice. enjoy, guys. >> reporter: a panel of new who wasn't afraid to open up. london students. >> i think thisne w win ouof-t >> this portion is sponsored by adults were the dg. liberty mutual insurance. taco. >> i know. only pay for what you need. >> reporter: yes, i was a judge of evething. and pick a winner. >> you're just going to have to give me one. got to go.
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got to do it. >> reporter: that winner was ghetto gastro of the bronx. >> ghetto gastro. >> reporter: with a caribbean fish sandwich. hardly what you would expect kids to eat willingly. >> fish is one of those things it's kind of hard to approach to children, you know what i mean? just the smell. but i think we wanted to take a challenge, you know, and show them that could be a really delicious. >> reporter: and their secret ingredient? the power of the personal touch. >> not to say that the other chefs aren't charismatic, but they put extra effort. >> reporter: they sure did. >> and they told me. they're smart. we're going to sell this to the kids. you knew who to talk to. >> reporter: and now dan justy and brigade are expanding to the largest school district in the country, new york city's. starting here at morris high school in the bronx. once more, dan justy is thinking big. >> 1800 schools in new york city. but i mean, the goal is to get everywhere. today, my dream is in ten years
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you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you. (dad) this ice cream cake needs a freezer. we end here tonight with a final farewell to a marine who (mom) freezer's full. made a huge difference in the way he served and in the way he (vo) only frigidaire's custom flex temp drawer can switch from fridge to freezer. wrote. dean reynolds on an american hero. >> ready, aim, fire. (son) nice save! (vo) that's using your frigidaire. >> reporter: everybody who knew marine colonel mark smith felt he had a gift. >> the way that he would show his emotions, i'm not sure that i've been around many leaders who believe in the people that they're around and show that as much as he did. >> reporter: smith was adam holten's superior in the reserves 2nd battalion 24th regiment south of baghdad, an area known as the triangle of death. >> he knew that it was important for our families to know what we were going through so they could relate to us as well as
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possible. >> reporter: colonel smith would write weekly emails to the families stateside, soul-searching stories of life and death in iraq at the height of insurgency in 2004 and 2005 as he told cbs news back then. there is a young girl in arkansas who is able to grant >> how many marines did you anybody three wishes. lose? >> we've lost ten. steve hartman found her and her magic on the road. >> and how many wounded? >> we're up to about 67 wounded. >> reporter: at a nursing home in northwest arkansas, we found >> reporter: this is what smith wrote to the families a gem named ruby. afterwards. >> i saw some of the toughest marines i have ever known shedding tears and talking of 11-year-old ruby chitsy likes to the importance of holding the hands and stroking the heads of go to work with her mom. amanda is a nurse who travels to their fallen friends in and several nursing homes in the their undying love for them. area. and it was on one of those >> the colonel didn't sugarcoat visits that ruby started going it. >> oh, he did not. >> reporter: four died in one up to residents with her note d ied attack that nearly killed notepad. >> if you could have any three things, any three things, what would they be? >> what would you want. corporal scott kruchten. >> he had his finger on the >> reporter: she came this idea, pulse of where we were, what was these questions? happening. >> reporter: barbara wentworth's >> yes. son served under smith, sand she >> reporter: with the intention of what? >> i don't think she had anshe s volunteered to distribute his emails to an anxious address th
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christmas time. >> i'm bright enough to know and just curious. >> reporter: were you surprised? enough t see this time of year is dealing a hefty below to >> yes. i thought people would say money, houses, lamborghini. my beloved marines. i know they long for the sights, instead, here is what she fosome hunger for the tastes and yearn for the touch of loved ones. [ "taps" playing ] asked for vienna sausage, and >> reporter: last friday, colonel mark smith died of cancer at the age of 54. other really basic items. he was buried today, but his >> that's all they wanted, and i really decided i needed to do words live on. dean reynolds, cbs news, something. >> reporter: so she called a indianapolis. charity called three wishes for ruby's residents. >> good evening. >> that is the "overnight news" i'm going sit right beside you. for this thursday. >> reporter: now, while her mom for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for is caring for patients, ruby the morning news and "cbs this goes room to room. >> cheese. >> i love cheese. morning." from the broadcast center in new >> i do too. york city, i'm jeff glor. >> reporter: jots down wish, and then sets out to grant those wishes. >> thank you, sweetheart. >> you're welcome. >> reporter: ruby has a gofundme to cover costs, but again, no one is asking for a sports car here. her expenses are minimal. ♪ especially compared to the rewards. >> it really lifts you. it ry >> reporter: on this day, she came back with a wheelchair full of sausages and other grocery items. >>
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yourself. >> reporter: but make no mistake, this isn't about food. >> watermelon and oranges. >> reporter: no one has this kind of reaction over fresh fruit alone. >> it's okay. thank you so much. i can't believe it. this is the "cbs overnight news." >> reporter: whether she knows it or not, ruby is satisfying >> welcome to the "overnight some much more basic human needs news." i'm meg oliver. the battle over the mueller here, to be remembered, to be report now seems headed to cherished, especially by a court. attorney general william barr child.% ignored a request from democrats that is what our seniors are in congress to release the truly hungry for, and that is foot in a nursing home.ime she report tuesday, saying they can get an edited version in a couple of weeks. that didn't sit well with the who needs a lamborghini? house judiciary committee, which >> you know, i'm a hugger. has approved subpoenas. >> reporter: when you've got and not only for the full home delivery of all the happy report, but for all the exhibits you can handle. and underlying evidence. steve hartman, on the road near chairman jerrold nadler said he harrison, arkansas. will give barr some time to turn over the materials. >> thank you, ruby. >> the committee is entitled and and that's the "overnight news" must see all the materials and for this thursday. make judgments as to what can be for some of you, the news continues. for over, check back with us a redacted for the public release little later for the morning by ourselves. we handle confidential material news. and of course, "cbs t this
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all the time. mo ing." from the broadcast center in new we have facilities to do that. york city, i'm meg oliver. we make those judgments. and we're not willing to let the attorney general, who after all is a political appointee of the president, make that -- substitute his judgment for ours. >> vice president joe biden is breaking his silence about the growing chorus of women who accuse him of unwanted touching. ed o'keefe has the story. it's thursday, april 4th, >> social norms have begun to 2019. this is the "cbs morning news." change. they've shifted. brea ove it's thursday, april 4th, and the boundaries protecting 2019. this is the "cbs morning news." personal space have been reset, and i get it. i get it. >> reporter: former vice president joe biden acknowledged today that he has caused discomfort for some, but he didn't apologize to his accusers more women accuse joe biden and defended his personal of unwanted touching. the vice president's latest interactions. >> scores, if not hundreds of people have come up to me and response. reached out for solace and and democrats demand comfort, something, something, president trump's tax returns. anything that may help them get through the tragedy they're going through. and so it's just who i am. >> reporter: biden's comments come five days after lucy
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flores, a former nevada assemblywoman described an incident at a 2014 campaign event where she says biden approached her from behind, put his hands on her shoulders, smelled her hair and kissed her head. >> i really need him to acknowledge that that behavior wasn't appropriate. >> reporter: in the days since, three more women have described similar interactions with biden. nobody has accused him of sexual assault. >> i hear what they're saying. i understand it. and i'll be much more mindful. that's my responsibility. my responsibility. and i'll meet it. >> reporter: biden isn't expected to officially announce his candidacy until later this month at the earliest. but just last night, president trump took notice of his troubles. but i meant it. >> reporter: other democrats already in the race have faced days of questions about the presumed front-runner's behavior, like former texas congressman beto o'rourke today at a civil rights conference in new york.
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>> i think we need to listen to those who are raising their stories, who have the courage to come forward to share their experience. >> reporter: and minnesota senator amy klobuchar earlier this week. >> if we spend all our time talking about what men have done, we're never going to be able to see what women can do. >> reporter: tonight, one of the two most recent biden accusers is speaking out, telling the spanish network univision that at a 2016 event in nevada, biden was, quote, uncomfortably physically affectionate. the behavior shouldn't disqualify him from running, but his long record should be drawn into scrutiny. >> ed o'keefe, thank you very much. it was standing room in a boston courtroom. don dahler is there. of red carpet e treatment the actresses were used to receiving, but the media
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crush was their premiere of sorts where actresses lori loughlin, felicity huffman, and ten other allegedly overzealous parents made their initial appearance in front of a federal judge. all accused in a $25 million scheme by lie or by bribe of fraudulently getting their kids into elite schools. loughlin and her designer husband mossimo giannulli face fraud charges, allegedly paying half a million dollars to have their two daughter's named as recruits to usc's crew team, even though they were not competitive rowers. when the "full house" actress arrived at boston logan airport yesterday, she did pause to sign autographs for fans. "desperate housewives" star felicity huffman faces similar charges after allegedly agreeing to pay $15,000 to get her daughter's s.a.t. score higher. her celebrity husband, william h. macy was not charged, although officials believe he knew about the scheme. in court, the parents listened as the judge told them the conditions they'd be living under for the foreseeable
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future. limited travel, no firearms in their homes, don't break any laws. they left court under a barrage of camera clicks. loughlin and giannulli chose to remain silent. cbs legal consultant rikki klieman. >> i think it is more than likely that some of these parents are going to serve prison time, and the more that your scheme was elaborate, the more money that you paid, the higher the likelihood is that you are going to be the example. >> reporter: the first guilty plea by a parent was entered just hours ago for paying $15,000 in order to rig his daughter's a.c.t. test. another parent, according to court documents, is in discussions with prosecutors about a possible plea deal. senate democrats want the fbi to investigate the security breach at president trump's mar-a-lago resort.
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a chinese woman with two passports, four cell phones, a hard drive and thumb drive loaded with malware was able to scam her way inside. chip reid has the details. >> reporter: yujing zhang, a chinese national in her early 30s has been this the palm beach county jail since she was arrested five days ago for illegally gaining access to mar-a-lago. according to court paper, here's how she did it. she entered a parking lot across the street from the resort where the secret service screens visitors. she said she was going to the pool, which is here. club officials incorrectly assumed she was related to a member with the same last name and allowed her to be taken by golf cart to the main reception area. after going through a second checkpoint, she told the receptionist she was there for a united nations friendship event. no such event was on the schedule. the receptionist notified secret service that zhang was not authorized to be on the property. she was taken off property for questioning and was later arrested. she possessed four cell phones, a computer and a thumb drive
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containing malicious malware, which can be used to tamper with computers. in a statement, the secret service said it does not determine who is invited or welcome at mar-a-lago. club management determines which members and guests are granted access to the property. cbs news security contributor fran townsend says the secret service has a difficult job protecting a property that it doesn't fully control. >> they do the best they can, but this instance was sort of a perfect storm where she lied her way past multiple checkpoints. >> reporter: president trump was asked about this incident a short time ago, and he said, number one, he's not concerned about chinese espionage at mar-a-lago. and number two, he thinks the secret service did a very good job. jeff? >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> do you recycle? most people do, and believe it or not, most people do it wrong. it's gotten so bad that china, the world's biggest buyer of recycled materials stopped importing a lot of our salvaged goods last year. the chinese say they're contaminated. that's prompted some communities to end their recycling programs. others cut back on the items they collect. tony dokoupil went digging for answers. >> reporter: tell me if this sounds familiar. you're in your kitchen, and you're not sure if something can be recycled or not, but you toss it in the bin anyway.hard to be
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