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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  June 28, 2019 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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say was given away online. whoever claimed it.n these are the last known images of lueck, a university of utah student seen here on june 17th after landing at salt lake city airport. she took a lift to a local park where she met someone waiting in a car. the home police are now zeroed in on is five miles away. what led them there is still unknown. police will only say they used tracking technology in seeking a search warrant. >> this is a digital forensic investigation. this is covering computers, cell phones, ip addresses, urls, texting apps. >> reporter: but the court questioned what happened to mackenzie lueck remains a mystery. the police chief said he had an emotional conversation with lueck's father. >> i can feel the heartache and the pain and the suffering in his voice as we spoke. >> reporter: and police searched that home for 19 hours using
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dogs and shovels. so far no arrests have been made, and maurice, they say that this remains a missing persons case. >> jonathan vigliotti in salt lake city, thank you. the two american soldiers who were killed in a taliban ambush in afghanistan this week were identified today. master sergeant michael riley, originally from germany, was a decorated green beret. he was 32 and on his sixth deployment. and sergeant james johnston from trumansburg, new york, was an ordnance disposal specialist. he was 24. the u.s. women's soccer team takes on france tomorrow in the world cup quarterfinals. on the eve of the big game, two big former team usa players are raising awareness about possible brain injuries from playing soccer. dr. jon lapook has the story you'll see now only on cbs. >> goal! >> reporter: 20 years after this magical moment that won the 1999 women's world cup, brandi chastain and some of her former teammates are trying to leave
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another legacy. they will be studied for signs of cte, chronic traumatic encphalopathy, the degenerative brain disease caused by repeated hits to the head. how many times you think you got hit so hard that you saw stars that you might have had a concussion? >> i'd say probably four times that i clearly remember that were like wow, that was pretty, you know -- i had to blink, give it a minute. >> reporter: but research suggests it's not concussions that lead to cte. it's the repeated hits to the head that often occur in practice, and there is some evidence women's brains may be more vulnerable than men's. >> oh, i did a lot of heading the ball, and very proudly so and very determined and very aggressive. >> we don't know a lot about the effects. we know virtually nothing about women getting this disease. >> reporter: the research will be done by professor of neurology robert stern and his
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team at the boston university cte center, the group that is also studying the brains of former football players for signs of cte. they hope to recruit 20 former women's players. >> we really have to start understanding whether there is a link between heading the ball and later life neurodegeneration. >> oh, a tremendous header! >> reporter: michelle akers, a minutes a stay of the women's team in the '90s, has agreed to join the study. she scored the game winning goal in the very first world cup in 1999 one and was part of the 1999 team. she remembers practicing headers for hours. >> my coach would just serve balls and balls and balls and balls into the box, and i would do header after header after header after header. >> reporter: akers is a legend. now 53, she suffers from migraine headaches and wonders whether her playing career will affect normal aging. >> i am definitely vulnerable to this kind of problem. so it's important to figure it out. and if i am vulnerable, then
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lots of other people are. >> cte has been diagnosed in male soccer player, but never in a female. perhaps that's because it was only in 199972 that title ix legislation spurred participation of women in soccer, and players like chastain and akers are only now reaching an age where they might start to have symptoms. >> we'll be watching. dr. lapook, thank you. we have video of a deadly plane accident in russia today. a passenger captured the moment a twin-engine plane made an emergency landing and then hit a building and burst into flames. the plane had been carrying 48 people. two people were killed, including the pilot. next, she was shot in the stomach and lost her baby. so why is she being charged with manslaughter? and later, an american woman is attacked and killed by sharks in the bahamas.
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a woman from alabama suffered a miscarriage after being shot, and now she is being charged with manslaughter for the death of her unborn child. the case has outraged abortion rights advocates nationwide. mireya villarreal is in alabama tonight. >> reporter: marshae jones' arrest came some six months after the 28-year-old, who was five months pregnant at the time, was shot in the stomach. according to the indictment jones intentionally caused the death of her unborn baby by initiating the fight. the fight happened last december at this birmingham, alabama suburb shopping center. the grand jury found the shooter, 23-year-old ebony jemison acted in self-defense when she pulled out a gun. the manslaughter charges against
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jemison have been dropped. this case has quickly become a lightning rod for pro-abortion activists. one group said they would help raise jones' $50,000 bail, posting losing a pregnancy is not a crime. alabama recently passed one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the country. some see jones' case as a new attack on women. pro-abortion rights activists are calling this a slippery slope, and they question if a pregnant woman is seen having a drink or not properly practicing prenatal car, could she or would she be arrested? maurice, we spoke to the family of marshae jones. they tell us she did not start the fight in this alabama parking lot, and they say losing her child has been punishment enough. >> mireya villarreal, thank you very much tonight. still ahead, a swarm of sharks kills an american woman in the bahamas. when you need it.
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[chanting] it's not just easy. it's geico easy. oh, duncan. stay up. no sleepies. a young american woman was killed after being swarmed by three sharks yesterday in the bahamas. carter evans has more. >> reporter: it seemed like an idyllic vacation. that's 21-year-old jordan lindsey right in the middle of this family photo taken in the bahamas before she was brutally
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attacked and killed by multiple sharks. it happened while the california college student was snorkeling just a few feet away from loved ones. jordan's father tells us her family saw the sharks approaching, but couldn't save her in time. a witness who took this photo says this may be one of the three sharks involved in the attack. bahamian police say she was bitten all over her body, her right arm severed. those attacks can be more violent, according to marine biologist chris lowe. >> unfortunately what happens is they become more aggressive quite often. because when more than one shark is involved, they compete with each other. >> reporter: there have been a rash of human shark encounters just this month, three of them in north carolina. 17-year-old paige winter lost a leg. worldwide, there were 66 shark attacks last year, four of them fatal. it seems like we're seeing more of them. is that the case? >> well, the numbers aren't exploding. they're going up slightly, but
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we're putting more people in the water than ever before. >> reporter: carter evan cbs ne
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how far would you walk for a good donut? chip reid on one creature's epic journey. >> reporter: the saga of mink the bear is well-known to tv viewers in hanover, new hampshire. >> this bear and her cubs were caught last year -- >> reporter: the story began three years ago after a resident
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fed mink a donut every day. seeing humans as a food source, her cubs broke into someone's porch. the authorities decided to euthanize the entire family. >> you can't fault her for trying to feed her cubs. >> reporter: after a public outcry, her sentence was commuted. then last year mink and her cubs discovered bird feeders. this time mink was relocated 100 miles away. in what can only be described as an incredible journey, her tracking collar shows her circuitous path and thousands of miles that last month finally brought her back home. we visited the nearby kilham bear center, now home to mink's cubs and some younger ones who opened us with open paws. noted bear expert ben kilham has been caring for and releasing orphaned bear cubs for more than 25 years. did you think she would return? >> i knew she would return or try to return. a bear's home range is a bear's home. >> reporter: black bears he says are much smarter than people think.
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>> they recognize their own image. >> reporter: that's self-awareness. >> yeah, that's self-awareness. >> come on, guys. >> reporter: kilham usually takes in about eight cubs a year, but this year it's more than 80, due to a severe food shortage that forced mama bears to search for food far away. some never returned to their cubs. the day we were there, two more starving cubs arrived. as for mink, this time she doesn't appear to be causing problems. kilham says that's because people here are finally following a simple rule. >> don't put any food out for bears. when you feed a bear, it's like inviting your brother-in-law over for dinner and he stays for a month. >> reporter: and let's face it. no one wants that. chip reid, cbs news, hanover, new hampshire. >> and that is the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm maurice dubois.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the "overnight news." i'm nikki battiste. more than two dozen democratic presidential hopefuls will be heading out on the campaign trail after round two of their nominating debate. ten of the candidates took to the stage last night in miami. here some of what they had to say. >> i believe that we must make public colleges and universities tuition-free and eliminate student debt, and we do that by placing a tax on wall street. >> every proposal that i have brought forth is fully paid for. >> and the one thing i agree on is we can make massive cuts in the $1.6 trillion in tax loopholes out there, and i would
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be going about eliminating donald trump's tax cuts for the wealthy. >> there is something else that doesn't get talked about in the college affordability debate. yes, it needs to be more affordable in this country to go to college. it also needs to be more affordable in this country to not go to college. you should be able to live well, afford rent, be generous to your church and little league whether you went to college or not. that's one of many reasons we need to raise the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour. >> joe biden was right when he said it was time to pass the torch to a new generation of americans 32 years ago. he's still right today. if we're going to solve the issues of automation, pass the torch. if we're going to solve the issues of climate chaos, pass the torch. if we're going to solve the issue of student loan debt, pass the torch. if we're going the end gun violence for families who are fearful of sending their kids to school, pass the torch. >> vice president, would you like to sing a torch song? m still hol o t t guts to take
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wall street, to take on the fossil fuel industry, to take oe unbelievable influence over the economic and political life of this country. >> these issues -- >> senator harris, senator harris, i'm so sorry. we will let all of you speak. senator harris? senator harris. >> we will let you all speak. senator harris? >> part of the issue -- >> hey, guys, you know what? america does not want to witness a food fight. they want to know how we're going to put food on their table. >> the immigration issue is playing a big role in the political debate this campaign season. and while they were in florida, several of the democratic candidates paid a visit to the largest private holding facility for migrant children. manuel bojorquez reports. >> the situation at the border is a challenge to the conscience of america. >> reporter: the house of representatives passed the senate version of the bill, which would allocate $1.1
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billion to ovrndlmost $3 billion to care for migrant children, though the white house did pledge to notify lawmakers within 24 hours if a migrant child dies in government custody and limits stays of children at temporary facilities to 90 days. facilities like this one in homestead, florida. it's the nation's largest and only privately run shelter for unaccompanied minors, with approximately 2500 kids, age 13 to 17. the facility is not subject to state inspections. lawyers who have been inside filed a motion last month alleging prison-like rules. a 13-year-old salvadoran told an attorney you can't share food. you can't hug or touch anyone. a 16-year-old guatemalan who had been there 138 days said nobody here has explained to me why i have not been released. >> the children were in despair. >> reporter: hope frye was part of the team that went in. >> we do not need to detain children this way. children can be promptly released and handled within the existing shelter system. >> reporter: but federal
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officials say shelters are currently holding 13,500 children, and some shelters are beyond 90% capacity. the company the government pays to run homestead, caliburn calls allegations of prison-like conditions inaccurate, adding in a statement the physical and emotional well-being of each and every child is the shelter's primary concern. but critics argue the shelter is holding some migrants far longer than necessary, sometimes months. caliburn says it must ensure minors are released to vetted sponsors and the process takes time. the company says the average stay here is 35 days. the supreme court wrapped up its session with two landmark decisions that could shape the political landscape for decades. ruling federal courts have no role in drawing congressional districts and a citizenship question should not be on the upcoming census, at least not yet. jan crawford has the details.
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>> reporter: in a sharp rebuke, the justices said they would have to be naive his rationale for adding a citizenship question to the 2020 census. commerce secretary wilbur ross said it was to help enforce voting rights. but chief justice john roberts joined by the four liberal justices called that explanation contrived. >> every single person in this country deserves to be counted, plain and simple. >> reporter: it was a victory for immigrant rights groups, who accuse the administration of adding the question to deter noncitizens from responding to the census. blocking the question for now, the justices sent the case back to the lower court for more evidence, which likely will include documents from a deceased republican operative outlining a strategy to undercount minorities by adding the citizenship question. on twitter, the president said the decision was totally ridiculous, and the fight wasn't over. he said he was asking lawyers about a delay in the census while the administration gave the court additional information. >> i think it's a very fair question.
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it's like how old are you, you know, what's your race, what's your gender. i never thought it was inappropriate. >> reporter: it wasn't the only politically loaded case on the court's last day. in another 5-4 decision, this time with the conservatives joining roberts, the court looked at partisan gerrymandering and said federal courts should stay out of it. the justices refuse to strike down electoral maps in north carolina drawn to favor republicans and in maryland, drawn to help democrats as too extreme, saying that political question was better for state courts and legislatures. the constitution requires a census every ten years, which means it has to be done in 2020. so it's really unclear whether this issue could be resolved in time for that. there was terror in the water of the bahamas. a woman from california was attacked by sharks and killed. carter evans has the story.
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>> reporter: it seemed like an idyllic vacation. that's 21-year-old jordan lindsey right in the middle of this family photo taken in the bahamas before she was brutally attacked and killed by multiple sharks. it happened while the california college student was snorkeling just a few feet away from loved ones. jordan's father tells us her family saw the sharks approaching, but couldn't save her in time. a witness who took this photo says this may be one of the three sharks involved in the attack. bahamian police say lindsey was bitten all over her body, her right arm severed. >> to have multiple sharks involved is rare. >> reporter: and those attacks can be more violent, according to marine biologist chris lowe. >> unfortunately what happens is they become more aggressive quite often. because when more than one shark is involved, they compete with each other. >> reporter: there have been a rash of human shark encounters just this month, three of them in north carolina. 17-year-old paige winter lost a leg. worldwide, there were 66 shark
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attacks last year, four of them fatal. carter evans,
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is the "cbs overnight news." >> president trump is in osaka, japan for the g20 summit. the president has several side meetings planned, including one with china's leader xi jinping. the president's trade war with china could put a crimp in the upcoming july 4th celebrations. adriana diaz explains. >> reporter: as the fourth of july gets closer, that's celebrated here over lake michigan, fears that tariffs could affect future shows are setting in. fireworks companies are worried that tariffs could drive up prices and drive down sales. i s
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>> how many of these products >> skip mccall manages the country's largest consumer fireworks retailer. do you think it could affect your livelihood if these tariffs are applied? >> i think it could. i worry more about the people we employee. >> reporter: how many people do you employ? >> this time of year we're at max, probably around 3,000 nationwide. >> reporter: bruce is phantom's ceo. and at this 1.2 million-square-foot warehouse in youngstown, ohio, the shelves are packed with exploding novelties. all have traveled halfway around the world from china. but as president trump proposes tariffs up to 25% on all chinese products, domestic fireworks sales could fizzle. >> we depend on china for a lot of imports for a lot of
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products. >> reporter: this is "the wall e fireworks are volatile because there aren't any american-made substitutes. >> a lot of the stuff we import from china is only made in china. american importers can absorb the costs themselves, or they can pass the costs on to their customers. >> reporter: even if the price goes up by 25%, for example, you'll still buy? >> just might buy less. >> reporter: oh my goodness. >> reporter: that worries bruce zoldan, who hopes the u.s. and china reach an agreement before tariffs blow up his bottom line. >> it's my opinion they're going to make a deal. i'm guessing, but i'm also praying. >> reporter: this is prayer for you? >> it is. >> reporter: here is a fun fact. fireworks were actually invented in china more than a thousand years ago. actually i remember from my time being face based there seeing the big role they play in celebrations like the chinese new year. we asked phantom why not make firework here is? he says it could take a decade
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for the u.s. to catch up. the u.s. women's soccer teap plers areaising awareness about possible brain injuries from playing soccer. dr. jon lapook has their story. >> their concern is chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or cte. they suffer from symptoms like memory loss. now these women are helping to launch a landmark study of former female soccer players. >> oh, a tremendous header! >> i was the one -- the target. so i won every punt by the goal keepers as far as headers went, usually 50 a game. a lot. >> oh, i did a lot of heading the ball, and very proudly so, and very determined and very aggressive. >> reporter: two decades after michelle akers and brandi chastain celebrated those championship plays. >> i love you. i miss you.
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every day i don't see you, i miss you even more. >> that is hilarious! >> reporter: the former teammates are still close friends. >> when i was in elementary school -- >> reporter: michelle has suffered from migraines for decades, and both women, now in their early 50s, wonder if their occasional memory lapses are out of the ordinary. when you have those moments, what are you talking about? >> i can't remember some details of a place we went or somebody's last name. but then my friends seem to reassure me that they too are experiencing that as people in my age group. so i'm thinking okay, maybe i'm all right. >> one of the difficults is how do you determine what's not normal and what is. >> reporter: that's why you're participating in this study? >> yes. >> reporter: what's just part of normal aging and a senior moment, so-called, and what's a problem. >> or what is just michelle. >> reporter: akers' questions mounted after she saw a 2017 documentary by british soccer legend allen shearer, who
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underwent testing to see if he had any early signs of cte. >> i was watching that going oh, my gosh. that could be me. it stopped me in my tracks. >> reporter: to help find answers, akers and chastain have joined a long-term study into possible cognitive effects of all those headers and collisions. >> they're at that age now where if there was going to be some worsening difficulty, this is when we would see it. >> reporter: professor of neurology robert stern is leading the new study at boston university school of medicine. >> but what we're concerned about for cte are all of those subtler repeated hits that we refer to as subconcussive trauma. >> so this protein goes awry in cte. >> reporter: the study will follow 20 former high level female soccer players 40 or older. baseline testing includes an mri of the brain and evaluation of cognitive function. there. >> you go. she can take it forward. >> reporter: findings could
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impact soccer all the way to college and youth levels. >> i am concerned that this game played by hundreds of millions across the globe might be played in a way right now that could lead to later life brain disease. that's pretty scary. >> nice and easy. >> reporter: now a youth soccer coach, mother of two, and a new grandmother, chastain is determined to protect young players from unnecessary headers. >> and land on your shooting foot. >> i have absolutely done a 180 on that. heading five-story punted balls? no. not going to happen. we're not going to do that. >> reporter: while raising her 14-year-old son cody and cheering on the next generation of soccer superstars, michelle akers is wondering about her own future. >> as i'm getting older, i want to have a great life. i'm planning on that. and if not, then i need to, like, prepare. huge career, and you're at a
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point now where you're thinking oh, maybe it damaged me in some way. >> yeah. >> reporter: knowing everything you know, would you do it again? >> i would not be here's a simple true-or-false quiz for you. if you're between age 50 and 85, it's important for you to know the truth, so please listen closely. i'm alex trebek, and all of the answers are false. so what is true? you can get coverage, regardless of your health, with the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. whether you're in the best of health or you have high blood pressure or other health problems, you can get coverage, with no health questions and no medical exam. you can't be turned down for any medical reason. you don't pay a higher rate because of your age.
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ok i'll admit. i didn't keep my place as clean as i would like 'cuz i'm way too busy. who's got the time to chase around down dirt, dust and hair? so now, i use heavy duty swiffer sweeper and dusters. for hard-to-reach places, duster makes it easy to clean. it captures dust in one swipe. ha! gotcha! and sweeper heavy duty cloths lock away twice as much dirt and dust. it gets stuff deep in the grooves other tools can miss. y'know what? my place... is a lot cleaner now. stop cleaning. start swiffering. the rock band the black keys scored six grammys earlier this decade and then disappeared.
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after five years, they're back. let's rock dropped today. eynor ahat wony man. bg it ask the very first idea we even had when we sat down. ♪ >> reporter: dan auerbach and patrick carney had not performed together in three years when they reunited at easy eye sound in nashville last fall. when you came in here and started recording, you had nothing. >> nothing, no, no. >> all we had was a ouija board and a note pass. >> reporter: but the simple approach has always worked for the black keys, known for the raw rock sound of songs like "lonely boy" and "gold on the ceiling." on their new album, let's rock, the songs typically were recorded on just the second or third take. >> it feels like every time we work on something for too long, we lose it, you know.
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it just gets worse. >> reporter: what is it you lose, do you think? >> the magic, the thing that you don't have to think about to get. that's the cool thing. ♪ >> reporter: auerbach and carney started making music together as teenagers in akron, ohio. >> when we first started, pat was just learning how to play the drums. i was learning how to play guitar. but for some reason, we were able to make things that sounded like music somehow. ♪ >> i really didn't know how to play the drums. >> our first show that we played, his drums just like exploded. >> fell apart. >> everything fell apart. there are drums and parts everywhere. all over the stage. >> what did you do? >> washers flying off, wingnuts. i was chasing drums around. >> i'm sitting watching him, watching everything just move away from his body. ♪ >> reporter: a gritty garage band, they recorded one of their
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early albums, "rubber factory," in an abandoned tire plant. >> 600,000-square-foot building. it was just us, and we could look through the floor there was a hole in the floor that you could see down to like the main and there were stacks of tires. why are there still tires down there? no one even bothered moving them. it's like everyone just died of cancer one day and come on in. >> there was always some weird sentient cloud strolling around the second floor. >> i smoked back then. smoking actually cleaned the air. ♪ >> reporter: the black keys broke through in 2010 with their album "brothers" which won them three grammys. their next album, el camino won them three more. suddenly, the indie band was filling arenas. ♪ gold on the ceiling was there a part where the black
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keys got too big? >> it didn't get too big, it's just we toured too much. we toured too hard. the reason we did that is we spent so long making absolutely no money. >> you can't say no to the work. and the shows are a lot of fun. it's addictive. the problem is you start gradually whittling down your psyche and what you're able to process. >> reporter: they finally took a break in 2015, but as it dragged on, rumors spread it was a breakup. you haven't spoken to each other in five years. >> reporter: they make light of it in their latest video "go". >> i haven't heard from them in a while. >> i heard they hate each other. >> reporter: when a spiritualist sends them to a retreat. >> did you get sick of each other? >> not in any legitimate way. you get sick of anybody if you're stuck on a boat with them for 15 years. you know what i mean. >> my brothers and i, we used to beat the crap out of each other.
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dan and i are more passive-aggressive about it. it's not that we're sick of each other. it's just that you just need space, you know. it's like -- >> yeah, it's not that we hate each other. we're just sick of each other's faces. >> i can't stand the way each other smell, you know. his fragrance. ♪ >> reporter: auerbach spent the past few years recording a solo album and producing other acts. carney married and toured with singer michelle branch. they have a new son, and carney's enjoyed the time at home. >> its first time in my adult life like after the age of 21 where like for months able to wake up in the same bed. ♪ >> reporter: the black keys go back on tour in the fall. but auerbach and carney say their days of epic touring are over. >> we won't do that again. >> we won't.
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>> well, we might. it depends if it's like -- >> the pri
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you know the saying a dog is a man's best friend. well, that bond is even tighter between a wounded warrior and his service animal. dean reynolds has one soldier's story. >> ready to go to work? >> reporter: to say retired army staff sergeant carlos cruz depends heavily on his service dog hannah is an understatement. have you found yourself in positions with hannah where you say to yourself thank god she's with me? >> every day. >> reporter: cruz was diagnosed with post traumatic stress
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disorder after returning from service in northern afghanistan where he hunted for enemy explosive devices. he acquired hannah in january of last year and has been grateful ever since. what is that that the dog gives you? >> a sense of security. >> hi. how you doing? >> it's amazing what she does for me. it's amazing. i don't even know how she knows half the time, but most events, it's an unspoken language i guess you can say. >> reporter: it may be more than that. part of an unprecedented study, cruz collected his saliva three times a day for three straight days to test his stress hormones. he also dons a wristband to track vital signs hannah may be actually affecting, and hannah gets tracked too. date from his home in florida goes to purdue university in indiana, where researchers led by professor maggie o'hare are looking into the science behind
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the bond. >> so this is our saliva samples from our veterans who have collected. >> reporter: ice-cold saliva. >> ice-cold saliva. >> reporter: about 100 veterans and their service dogs are being studied. >> i think there are people out there who question whether or not service dogs actually help. and they are looking for numbers and science. >> reporter: so she is trying to find out if there is a chemical reaction service dogs ignite in their owners and vice versa, findings which could say for certain that dogs can help and why. >> sometimes just feeling her heart beat and her breathing helps to calm me. i wish i didn't need one, but since she is in my life now, she is great. >> reporter: carlos cruz can't define it, but he knows it when he feels it. dean reynolds, cbs news, orlando. >> what a friendship. and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news, and of course "cbs this
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morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm nikki battist captioning funded by cbs it's friday, june 28th, 2019. this is the "cbs morning news." democratic divide. our 2020 debate coverage continues from florida. >> reporter: i'm laura podesta in miami where at the debate last night, one of the democrats on stage took most of the heat. i'll show you the attacks on joe biden coming up. face-to-face with vladimir putin. president trump sits down with the russian president at the g20 summit. the joke mr. trump made about election meddling. plus 50 years since the stonewall riots.

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