tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 21, 2019 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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had permission to hug lani. afr post of the democrats. she thinks his comments were understand. >> maybe some of his competitors are overthrowing it? >> they are going to look to get a leg up. adding more intrigue to this stor story. both gentlemen displayed what they had for publicized. >> ed o'keeffe in columbia, california. a rookie deliver was the first
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officer killed in the line of duty in sacramento in many years. >> we're devastated tonight. >> the might mare ungolded in seconds. >> officers down. officers down. >> reporter: but seemed to learn into a high-power rifle. sacramento police officer tara o'sullivan, lay on if ground, hit by gunfire. the hookie had just helped to gym back, firing and pinning them down. >> you should hear where the shooter is. >> reporter: tried to bare kid,
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the 22 agonizing o'sullivan. as a hears carrying her body left, police provision. those that knew her best, she was always devastated. >> i remember thinking this is who we need in our community to keep us safe. and she died in honor and integrity. >> the domestic abuse area, she is okay. ramos will be arraigned next week. maurice? >> thank you. protesters are philadelphia in does nls of police officers
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for posting other messages on social ped ya. jeff pegues is there. >> reporter: protesters ratcheted up and go ahead and fire the officer of making racist, violent and offensive statements in 2017. had a sick -- >> we started this conversation about policing. i'm happy that's happening on a national level. >> reporter: as of yesterday, 153 homicides in the city, a number that 9% higher than the same time last year. >> we understand how this
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tarnished our reparation. >> i want your initial reaction, when you heard these allegations. >> i thought they were idiots. >> but curtis joins tells me about his concern whether the important poets are evidence. >> you can have an written. if you stop a business or interact with a citizen. how many of those officers have complaint s geng them. >> a chicago man graft says that there is a car lace of the 230 post of them had one or more civil weights law school them
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himself. up next, inside a crime lab dealing with back lob nitting for justice. and later, are cell phones causing some people to grow horns? ♪ i want it that way... i can't believe it. that karl brought his karaoke machine? ♪ ain't nothing but a heartache... ♪ no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars on my car insurance with geico. ♪ i never wanna hear you say... ♪ no, kevin... no, kevin! believe it! geico could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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crime labs across the country are overwhelmed by a backlog of cases. evidence sits in charge while victims and those wrongfully accused waits for justice. we have one woman's story. >> reporter: on new year's eve in 2019, officers showed them called over. they were calm and cooperative. >> when was the moment went things changed? >> a search of the car turns up blue cotton candy. a roadside des test kit identifies it as meth. >> i wanted to cry. >> reporter: she was charged
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with methamphetamine with her unable to ribt." was that the hardest time of your life? >> it was. is we desperate to get out. she wanted to take a lee bill was podsed. in georgia, testing any kind of evidence should take up to three months. >> there's a chance to people take this just to get out of jail. >> it isn't a backlog oop it's a fact. >> it's everything. >> everything that needs to be wested by a crime weight loss agains. dozens of sates are backlogged. in south carolina, it could take nine months to get results back on dna orfire arks dptesting.
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severe weather is thundering up and down the east coast, and across the northern plains. the same system swamped philadelphia and southern new jersey overnight. it left a trail of debris across texas. roy moore says he is running again in 2020 for the u.s. senate seat in alabama. the 72-year-old former chief justice lost a special election two years ago, amid sexual misconduct allegatioallegations. do smart phones alter people's culls? one in four young adults had bone growths in the back of their skulls. this is caused by the forward
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tilt of their when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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the u.s. women's soccer team shut out sweden today 2-0. there are a lot of ways to get to the world cup. roxana seberry took the road less travels. >> reporter: this the leads tos to a field of dreams. >> i wanted this since i was a little girl. >> reporter: she set an unconventional path, leaving california for paris to play professionally. she made headlines. she became a star but mised the world cup roster in 2018.
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she says her love of the game pushed her even harder. i remember this was the game that i fell in love with. that's what kept me on this path so long. >> reporter: that led her back to the u.s. women's cocker league, when she was named ovp. >> knowing i am on the world cup roster is incredible. >> when she scored her first goal against thailand, it has to be solo. she has to show you are so pave your own path, severery. that is "the overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. check back in for the morning
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news and "cbs this morning." "this is the cbs overnight news." >> welcome to "the overnight news." i'm nikki battiste. prump brought reporters to the white house, to discussi navy ar decisions. the iranians say it flew into their air space. either way, the u.s. will not respond for it. david damartin. and the corkscrew as it went into the sea. a direct attack on a u.s.
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aircraft. >> ran made a mismistake. it was the international waters. it's documented scientifically. they made a very bad mistake. >> how will you find out? >> you'll find out. >> reporter: but after that, the president seemed to give his point. >> it was a mistake by somebody that shouldn't have been doing what they did. >> reporter: there was no loss of life since the drone was unmanned. and the destruction of an aircraft, costing $10 million, off on some triggerhappy officer down in the bankranks. "later, congressional leaders were breeched in the situation, after happened 4:00 nation.
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look where the missile bay renn a the drone. the u.s. military says was 20 miles off of the coast of iran at the same area. last week, two pank tankers wer attacked by iranian mines. >> this attack is trying to halt the shipping and congress. >> reporter: the owner claimed me have received the military drone in our territorial waters. there was bombshell democrat at the trial of a navy s.e.a.l. murdering on isis fighter in iran.
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held my thumb over his tube until his quit breathing. the defense attorney asked, why did you kill him? asked replied, i knew he would die anyway. he did it to prevent him being tortured later. this shows the teen after he was injured by an air strike. she told an iraqi dv reporter, that his father forced him to join isis. other steve members they saw a soldier, and friends saying. >> good story behind this. cory scott believes he got me the gallagher before he left.
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he is threatening to retall yent under canopy. >> today, someone went to the witnesses and asked them, what is the cause of death? chief gallagher is not guilty of murder. >> reporter: cory scott received immunity and today in court, the jr. prepared to get him back on jail. joe biden insists he has nothing to apologize for. widen has been taking criticism from his rivals for the presidential nomination. at issue, bidens wires about working with decades ago.
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>> reporter: several of joe biden's opponents are hammering him. >> i don't understand why he needs this lesson. >> reporter: at the event, he touted working with people that he didn't agree with. >> at least there was some civili civility, he said. at least we got things done. >> apologize for what? cory should apologize. >> reporter: he defended his record. >> there's not a basic bone in my body. >> reporter: but they said they wish he would use self-inflicted example. >> i just want you to know, i had permission to hug lani. >> reporter: it's an unnecessary distraction for biden as most of
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the field heads to carolina this weekend. 72 police officers have been pulled off of the street and assigned to desk duty, because of social media posts described as racist or violent. thousands of people have identified post-to-coast posting hate on the internet. jeff pegues has the story. >> reporter: protesters tried to get the officers off of the street. they are accused of making ray ses, violent or otherwise stats. the posts were uncovered by the plainview project, led by emilie baker white. we wanted a conversation about
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subcultures and policing. i'm happy that conversation is having a national level. 153% homicides, up 9 points. at a news conference on wednesday, richard ross, the police commissioner, acknowledged how the facebook boasts can have an initial reaction when you heard these allegations. >> i thought they were idiots. >> translator: he says his swaepts are more evidence. how many of those officers have do active investigation and concern to another level. >> reporter: of the 328 posted o
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this is "the cbs overnight news." >> crime labs across the country, have a problem on their hands. a growing backlog of criminal evidence that needs to be tested. that has victims and suspects living in limbo. maria via reial has more. >> reporter: on new year's eve 2016, she was on her way to a pawnshop. were you nervous at all? >> no. we weren't doing anything wrong. >> reporter: dash cam video hows the couple were calm and
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cooperating. >> reporter: it was a bag of cotton candy. it was left in the car, turning the fluffy treat to blue crystals. he said it was meth. >> i wanted to cry. i didn't think i would go to jail. >> reporter: less than eight minutes later, she was in handcu handcuffs, charge with me methamphetamine. she sat in jail for three months. >> i was always calling home and telling them to please come down and do something. >> you wanted to get out of there? >> yes. it's been two years and i get upset about it. >> is that the hardest time in your life? >> it was. >> reporter: fincher decided to take a deal before it was tested by the crime lab.
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in georgia, the testing process can fake three months. >> there's a chance that someone is doing this just to get out of jail? >> it's a fact. >> so, the backlog isn't just about bases? >> it's not just accused criminals. it's everything that needs to be tested by the crime lab. >> reporter: but georgia isn't the only state facing a backlog. dozens of states are behind. na it could take more than nine months on firears
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the problem escalated six yearses ago. in his lab alone, kkda. >> it's not marijuana. it's methamphetamine. this is where it happens. we have 28 chemists. we were allowed inside the crime lab, where each piece of evidence is tested. >> i can smell the evidence. >> reporter: you can. >> each of those becomeses holds essential evidence. and in drug cases alone, there are 23,000 of them coming in a year in arkansas, over 150 days to get that case in a position
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and fortune on "home improvement" and then as buzz lig lightyear. he will be returning to standup. tracy allen sat down with him in a very famous and fast cars. >> he may be the most famous street racer in america. you probably know his face. but every kid old enough to watch a tv screen knows that voice. tim allen is the man behind buzz lightyear, the make believe score toir. >> that's great. bonnie had a great deal in
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class. >> reporter: most heartr string. but this one gives it a yank. >> tom and i read it. and neither of under the circumstances could tan our emotions. >> it made you cry? >> you don't want our money. he has created some of the mur charact characters on stage. how can the big screen? >> because santa is watching his catch rated fats. >> to a tv show that became a ratings powerhouse. >> there is drive all of these. >> reporter: used to. he has the show to co for this. but unof this, the cars or the
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skreer, came easy. timothyenleby a drunkdriver. a tragedy do to this kid? what were your dreams when you were a young boy? most of my dream was wundzerring why that happened. what sort of a world is this that your father's there. next moment, he's not there. >> in college, young tim studied philosophy and design. in the did two weeks on drug charges. i ended up doing prison time. humiliated my family.
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>> reporter: what clicked for you then? >> i want to pay my mom back. what do you want to do? i want to get on "the tonight show" withny carson. in akron, it's just eat gulf code. i started mimicking that. these guys were like, that's funny. and that idea became home improvement. >> tim, do you ever listen to me? it was the last thing i said in bed to you last night. >> the last thing you said to me in bed last night was, no. >> reporter: "home improvement"
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drew 25,000 viewers a night. and back again, it seemed that everything he touch turned to gold. in 1994, he had the number one tv show, the number one book and the whole condition. >> i struggled with alcohol kwuonce a week. i don't like wine. but two bottles were part of my story. >> hey, i'm happy. >> reporter: but after a run-in with the law and a few years of personal turmoil, tim alan cleans up his access. >> i've been a sober guy for 21 years. through it all, tim the foolman was the heart of improvement.
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and he was ultimately the one who decided to pull the plug. you said, we're cone. >> it's the big decision. the powers that be -- the offers were obscene. >> can you tell me how much you'd ever seen? i would look at it and go, oh, boy. are we poor? >> you are. we're doing very well. >> tim allen is still on tv. the last character himself, but a baxter describe last-minute hollywood. you like the push people's buttons on that show? >> what is that?
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>> trump. >> we dressed up as trump supporters. we insided to public that button. if you don't think one way, you are completely dibbled a million different things. he showed us, he didn't believe home improvement to be accurate. allen, who turns 66 next week, he takes in the "tool time" set. >> it is still here. >> reporter: he hang on to a
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soft spot demon. asis la to do this. >> it's an angry automobile. >> okay. it's also a really fun bauble. it's more smiles per miles for me. >> reporter: and it's only for quick trips. turns out his main car is a battery-powered tesla. he has two daughters and he says he dreams of a cleaner world for them. >> all of the "toy story" movies, are about -- >> fuel, batteries, we think around with the cars. that would be something to shoot for. justice fixing something. how appropriate is that?
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you don't have to be a carry godmother to make wishes come true. steve hartman found a young lady with her own style of magic on the root. >> we found a gem named rubby. 11-year-old ruby, likes to go to work with her mom. her mom is a nurse who likes to go to the hospital. she started to go up to residents with her note pad -- >> she came up with this idea of the questions? >> yes. >> with the intention of what? >> i don't think she had an intention, really. >> reporter: she said she was
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downs you what houses. >> i thought people wanted houses, a lab gazer, new shoes. >> that's all they wanted. and i really decided i needed to do something. >> she started a charity. now, while her mom is caring for patients, ruby goes room-to-room. jots down the issues. but no one is asking for a sports car here. her expenses are min wall, especially after this day.
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>> reporter: on this dre, she gets to eat all of this by ourself. >> this isn't about foot. >> watermelon and peaches. >> no one has this reaction for esche fruit alone. >> reporter: whether she knows it or not, she is providing some basic human needs are. to be cherished by a child. that's what rubby brings every time she steps into a nursing home. >> i'm a bugger. >> when you have home deliveries of all of the happy you can handle. steve hartman, on the road, near harris harrison, arkansas. >> what a kid. that's "the overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. you can check for this morning
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news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in captioning funded by cbs it's friday, june 21st, this is the "cbs morning news." standing down. cbs news confirms president trump approved an air strike on iran in response to the downing of a u.s. drone but then backed down. president trump faces tough questions about immigration. his response when pressed about child separation. >> i hated to have the child separation policy. and zion williamson earns the top pick in the 2019 nba draft. we'll show you theth
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