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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 26, 2019 7:00am-8:59am PDT

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your next local update is that; 26. >> cbs this morning is coming up next. good morning to you, our viewers in the west. welcome to "cbs this morning." military misconduct. a human smuggling investigation leads to the dramatic arrests of 16 marines at camp pendleton plus an entire platoon of elite navy sooels is sent home from iraq. securing the vote. the senate intelligence committee issues a stark warning about u.s. election vulnerabilities in all 50 states. what the report says about the extent of russian meddling. burying bad reviews. cbs gnaws goes under cover to investigate the sometimes shady tactics of reputation management companies to make bad online reviews go away. >> it's fraudulent. it's neent before. and photo treasure trove. a stunning archive of pictures
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chronicling seven decades of hiw home. it is friday, july 26th, 2019. here is today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. a black eye for the marine core. >> 16 marines face charges in a human smuggling and drug system. a massive arrest of u.s. marines. >> the arrests took place in a public display for the entire unit to see. >> a deadly shooting spree. police in los angeles arresting a man suspected of killing at least four people including his father and brother. >> we haven't come up with a motive. >> parts of europe continuing to be in the grips of a scorching heat wave, shattering records. >> it hitn09 i paris. >> my brain is actually melting. >> the co-founder was grilled on capitol hill as lawmakers probe the growing trend of teenage
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vaping. >> you sir are nothing but a poison and your target has been young people. >> north korea says the latest missile test was a warning to south korea over its plan to hold military exercises with the u.s. >> the derailment of about 70 train cars. this video is incredible. >> loose tire went flying into an suv. >> and all that matters. >> donald trump blasting sweden for refusing to release rapper a$sap rocky. >> he tweeted sweden should focus on its real crime problem, #free rocky. he definitely thinks they're holding sylvester stallone, right? >> from "cbs this morning." >> as ruth bader ginsburg once said a senator once announced with glee she would be dead in six months. >> that senator whose name i have forgotten is now himself dead and i am very much alive. >> wow.
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that was ruthless. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. >> i know what stephen colbert means. when i first heard that the way she said, he's dead, now i've forgotten his name. >> that was great. >> before we went on the air our producer said let's give america its news. i like that. welcome to "cbs this morning" america. i'm gayle king with tony dokoupil, anthony mason is off so vladimir duthiers is still here. >> can you believe it? >> before we got started he went, last day. last day. we'll begin with this. two of the country's most famous military units are under intense scrutiny today over troubling incidents on opposite sides of the world. a human smuggling investigation led to the mass arrests of 16 marines from the first marine division yesterday at camp
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pendleton in california. two other marines were arrested and charged earlier this month. now, the accusations range from smuggling illegal immigrants into the country to drug related offenses. >> in a separate case an entire platoon of elite navy seals was sent home from iraq over allegations of sexual misconduct and drinking while deployed. we'll go to camp pendleton north of san diego. what more do we know? >> reporter: this is what we know. the 16 marines are in the brig on the base and authorities here say they've already questioned eight additional marines. marines are known for their discipline and dedication to country but in the past months authorities here have arrested 18 marines from this base, some for allegedly helping ferry undocumented immigrants into this country in exchange for money. >> it's a shock to the system. >> reporter: thursday's arrests of 16 marines occurred in dramatic fashion in front of their own entire unit. >> the release of this information was really so we could be completely transparent
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about what happened today. it was a very large arrest. >> reporter: the marines were made to line up in morning formation. like this one the marine corps filmed earlier at california's camp pendleton. they were arrested for offenses that range from human smuggling to drug related activities. all 16 suspects are members of the oldest active duty marine division headquartereded here jt 60 miles north of the mexican border. none of the marines were among the 6600 active duty and national guard troops assigned to bolster border patrol at the southwestern border. the marines say thursday's arrests stem from an earlier arrest of two more camp pendleton marines near the mexican border in early july. the pair were pulled over with three undocumented immigrants in their back seat and charged with human smuggling. both have pleaded not guilty. according to authorities, the undocumented immigrants said they agreed to pay the marines $8,000. the marines said it was not their first time doing this. and border patrol expanded the
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investigation, which led to thursday's arrest. >> if they are, in fact, found guilty of those crimes, then they'll be held appropriatey accountable for that. >> reporter: in a separate case on the fourth of july, an entire platoon of 22 elite navy seals in iraq allegedly held a drunken party. that not only violates regulations against consuming alcohol in iraq, but there have also been allegations of sexual assault. when questioned, the whole platoon from seal team 7 in iraq refused to speak with investigators. when their commander ordered them home on wednesday he said he, quote, lost confidence in the team's ability to accomplish the mission. >> jamie, thank you very much. a new bipartisan report from the senate intelligence committee says russia targeted election systems in all 50 states in 2016, more than previously known. and it issued blunt warnings about the 2020 election. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. nancy, what else are we learning about from the report?
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>> reporter: well, this is a bipartisan report, vlad, two years in the making. it says that significant vulnerabilities remain in the u.s. elections system ahead of 2020. this is something that robert mueller touched on as well at his hearings. this report cited as examples aging voting equipment, paperless machines with no backup, and insecure voter registration data bases. senator mark werner who is the top democrat on the intelligence committee spoke of some of the ways to guard against interference on cbs this morning yesterday. now, senate democrats did try to push through more funding for election security yesterday, but the gop leader mitch mcconnell blocked that bill. he called it a partisan effort and said that the trump administration has already done a lot to boost election security. vlad? >> all right. so, nancy, president trump is also blasting former special counsel robert mueller's recent testimony, calling his
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investigation a coupe. republicans say it is time to move on but democrats are not ready to give it up. what is the plan? >> reporter: the consensus among democrats we've spoken to is they need to do more to convince the american people that impeachment might be the way to go. they don't believe that the mueller hearing moved the needle very much. so next steps, first, investigate go- investigating the president's finances particularly any financial ties to russia. and possibly going to court to get access to e-mail communications among white house aides to see if they violate any record keeping laws by using private accounts. today democrats are expected to take legal action to try to force the president's former white house counsel don mcgahn to testify about the president, pressuring hic pressuring him to fire the special counsel. democrats believe it was a clear cut case of obstruction of justice and want the american people to hear more about it. >> thank you very much. democratic presidential front-runner joe biden is out
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with a stark warning for his opponents today ahead of next week's debate. if you come at me, this time i'm ready to hit back. his threat comes amid yet another fight centered around race between the former vice president and senators kamala harris and cory booker. ed o'keefe is in washington with more on this story. it is getting very feisty already. where is the new biden stance coming from? >> reporter: it's coming from an understanding the democrats are looking most especially for the candidate they believe is best equipped to defeat the president. doing so likely requires a strong debate performance. so biden knows he has to step up his game at next week's debate. >> wall street did not build this country. middle class people and access to the middle class did. >> former vice president joe biden and other democrats appeared this week at conferences hosted by civil rights organizations touting their plans to revamp the criminal justice system. biden also took time to defend his record on civil rights, in part by referencing president obama.
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>> they did a significant background check on me for months with ten people. i think i doubt he would have picked me if these accusations rights is correct.ng on civil - >> biden's lead has slipped since the first debates. >> do you agree today that you were wrong to oppose busing in america? >> this week biden was asked about a cbs news poll that identified california senator kamala harris as the most strong candidate among democratic voters. >> i was probably overly polite. >> reporter: in a radio interview thursday he also raised questions about harris's motives at the first debate. >> i thought we were friends and i hope we still will be. you know, she asked me to go to her convention and be the guy from outside of california to nominate her at her convention for the senate seat. i did. >> reporter: biden, harris, and new jersey senator cory booker, will be front and center at rai biden's new plan to revamp federal sentencing laws and drug
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policy since the former veep backed tough on crime bills in the 1990s. >> for a guy who helped architect mass incarceration this is an inadequate solution. >> reporter: biden hit back raising questions about booker's record as mayor of new jersey. >> his police department was stopping and frisking people, mostly african-american men. if he wants to go back and talk about records i'm happy to do that but i'd rather talk about the future. >> reporter: part of what booker and harris are doing is trying to build support among black voters but our cbs news battleground tracker poll out this week gives biden a double digit lead over his rivals. for example in the early primary state of south carolina driven in part by deep support for him among black voters. tony? >> all right. thank you very much, ed. north korea says its latest missile launches are a warning to u.s. ally south korea. new pictures released by pyongyang show kim jong un overseeing yesterday's launch of two short-range ballistic missiles both fired into the sea.
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north korea says the launch was meant to send a message to south korea ahead of next month's joint military drills with the united states of america. now secretary of state mike pompeo played down the provocations, saying stalled nuclear talks with north korea could restart in a couple of weeks. a california man is under arrest accused of killing two family members before going on a deadly shooting spree in los angeles. police say he shot and killed his brother and father and wounded his mother. less than an hour later investigators say he killed a suspected ex-girlfriend at a gas station. he was captured on surveillance video afterward calmly walking down the street. police say he then shot and killed a man on a bus before he was finally arrested. >> once we got to the station that's when you heard the gunshots and the bus driver opened the door. once he opened the door, everybody started running out. >> during the hours-long man hunt he also reportedly tried to rob a man at an atm. investigators have not revealed a possible motive for his rampage.
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eight wisconsin teenagers are in the hospital with severe lung damage. doctors suspect it could be from vaping although we should point out it is not clear what they inhaled. all of this comes amid growing concerns concerning vaping by teens. yesterday ecigarette maker juul responded to claims it marketed to young teenagers. we're on capitol hill where the co-founder answered questions from lawmakers. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. during two days of hearings members of congress heard from concerned parents, teens, and juul executives. some members of congress accused them of trying to market e-cigs to young users by targeting schools, using social media, while at the same time downplaying the dangers of e-cigs. >> you, sir, are an example of the worst of the bay area. you are nothing but a marketer of a poison. >> reporter: lawmakers mostly democrats blasted juul
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co-founder thursday blaming his company for what they say is a teen vaping epidemic. >> we never wanted any nonnicotine user and certainly nobody under age to ever use juul products. >> reporter: he argued juul has taken steps to keep e-cigarettes from kids including shutting down facebook and instagram pages and pulling several flavored pods from stores but that wasn't enough for some lawmakers. >> flavors hook kids. though you say you took all the flavors out of the stores, you left the mint flavor. >> reporter: nearly 1 in 5 u.s. high school students reported using e-cigs in the last month. still, the company insists its goal has always been to help adult smokers transition from traditional cigarettes. >> are you concerned about the number of teenagers vaping or using juul? >> i could not be more concerned. >> reporter: lawmakers contend the company used big tobacco marketing tactics by donating to
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youth wellness camps offering some schools $10,000 for anti-vaping education programs. wednesday a 17-year-old testified that a juul representative spoke at his school during a mental health and addiction seminar designed by the school to be attended by students only. >> i believe the presenter was sending mixed messages by saying juul is totally safe and following up every totally safe statement with, but we don't want you as customers. >> reporter: juul said it ended the education program in september after the purpose was misconstrued and say the purpose was really to warn teenagers of the dangers of addiction. the fda did this month launch an ad campaign to warn teens about vaping. >> an ongoing conversation. thank you very much. a deadly heat wave is gripping europe. it is starting to break today. that's good news. at least ten european countries have experienced record temperatures this summer. europe is now on track for the
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hottest july ever recorded. one woman died yesterday in belgium in more than 104-degree heat. we'll go to paris where temperatures have set a new all-time high. what's the temperature there today? >> reporter: gayle, it is a nice 81 degrees right now in paris. as you can see it's also overcast. yesterday much of europe felt like an oven and because air conditioning isn't widespread across the continent, a degree of creativity was needed to keep cool. temperatures soared as records tumbled across europe. in the uk the mercury hit 100 while germany reached 106. here in france, paris smashed the all-time high with 108. jets sprayed relief for tourists wanting to beat the heat outside the eiffel tower but there is a serious side to the frolicking in the fountains. in 2003 a heat wave killed more than 20,000 people across
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europe. this one delayed trains in several countries, melted glaciers that flooded a swiss resort, forced nuclear plants in france and germany to take reactors offline, and even had officials fearing the notre dame cathedral which almost burned down in april could see its damaged ceiling collapse from the latest inferno. this is the second heat wave in as many months making it the hottest summer on record with temperatures more like baghdad and cairo than your typical european city. the continent now faces another middle eastern problem. scientists call it the urban heat island. buildings and roads absorbing the heat during the day then releasing it at night like a radiator. a new challenge for old europe. how will that affect cities going forward like paris? >> the more concrete you have over a large area the more the urban heat affects, makes temperatures rise. >> reporter: to ease the heat experts say cities need to be redesigned with nature in mind.
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things like more trees and less concrete. tony, scientists also say it all boiled down to climate change as the reason for these record breaking heat waves. if greenhouse gas emissions aren't reduced, they predict extreme heat could become more frequent and intense. >> in fact, ian lee for us in paris. thank you very much. in fact, the extreme heat has already become more frequent and intense. we are breaking more heat records than cold records every single year and the planet is getting hotter is what experts tell us. >> i keep thinking about the people who plan their vacation. you're going to europe some people for the first time. oh, it's 108 degrees. >> though you are playing in a fountain by the eiffel tower. >> that's not so bad. >> i wouldn't mind. online reputation management companies promise to clean up personal or business search results. ahead how our cbs news
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it's 7:30 on "ctm." here's what's happening it's 7:30 on ctm. 16 marines are arrested in a human smuggling investigation along the border. >> very frightening. a 12-hour shooting rampage leaves four people dead in los angeles. appearing before congress the ceo of juul defends the e cigarette maker against cushions its products are marketed to teens. >> sending mixed messages. >> flooding continues to threaten the livelihood of many farmers in the midwest where extreme weather has become their new normal. >> 50 degrees this morning. it's june in nebraska. it was 90 something last week. that's not normal. plus iconic photos
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chronicling black history in america will soon be on display for the public after they were auctioned off. we got access to this historic collection. >> to be surrounded by it, you feel special. yes. >> i see why she feels special. i remember as a kid living in turkey, there were very few black people in turkey at the time so when they would come to our house, like wow. this is really great to see people that kind of look like you. >> and 4 million photos. there are some gems in there. >> can't wait for that piece. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm tony dokoupil with gayle king. anthony mason is off and he is having fun. the latest picture is a caption, contemplating the poolside dandelion. that is called a vacation. we'll begin with this. googling yourself may be easy but changing what google
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finds about you is nearly impossible, so difficult that many small businesses pay tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars to get rid of negative comments. the companies that do this are known as reputation management companies. here is our investigation into this growing online industry. jim, good morning. >> good morning. online reputation management companies promise digital magic to make negative web pages disappear. while much of the work is legitimate our cbs news investigation unmasked a scheme in the industry that very well may be criminal. >> i'm here to tell you what i could do for you is bury it and hide it. >> reporter: what you're watching is a meeting with hidden cameras, cbs news producers set up with john rooney who runs web savvy llc, one of those reputation management firms that buries bad reviews online. >> look. when it comes to this kind of suppression, quot frs a
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lot of which depends on google. >> reporter: reputation management companies like these legally try to trick google by flooding the internet with positive content about their clients forcing negative links down to google's second and third pages where almost nobody looks. but that's not fool proof. john rooney told us some companies employ other shadowy tactics. >> are there tricky ways to do it? kind of gray areas if you will? >> yeah. i wouldn't risk it. i've seen it done. >> reporter: one of the only ways to get google to permanently remove a link is with a court order. we sorted through thousands of these court orders and found all kinds of small businesses across america trying to clean up their reputations. we also spotted a problem. dozens of these court orders were fake. >> it never even crossed my mind people would have the guts to . >> reporter: as a ucla law professor who specializes in
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internet law points out, forging a court document is criminal. >> part of it is just how brazen it is. they take a judge's signature and they copy it from one order to another order and they pretend something is a court order. it's cheaper and faster if they don't get caught. >> reporter: we worked with him and identified more than 60 fraudulent court orders sent to google. some are obviously fake like this one with a case number of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. others are more sophisticated, like these, that appear to be drawn from nine different federal courts across the country. >> if somebody says i'm advertising guaranteed removal service, and i've seen that advertised, you should be suspicious. >> reporter: it is not just oc rurt disappear. we uncovered bogus court documents submitted on behalf of two convicted criminals who wanted google to forget about their crimes. both were child sex offenders.
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of the more than 60 phony documents, we found that 11 had signatures forged from judges in of all places hamilton county, ohio. >> some of them were pretty good forgeries, frankly and some were utterly terrible forgeries. >> reporter: after we brought the documents to the court clerk, his office launched an investigation. >> it is absolutely criminal. >> reporter: one of those fake ohio documents was submitted for a client who hired web savvy llc. the company run by john rooney. that's why we invientd him to meet us with our hidden cameras rolling. my name is jim axelrod. i'm with cbs news. i want to ask you questions about this contract you have. you recognize the name of the company. >> i certainly do. >> reporter: this appears to be a court order, same name as the client. one problem, john. this is fake. it's fraudulent. it's phony. >> okay. >> reporter: can you explain to me? >> i didn't file that. never seen it before.
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>> reporter: is this a technique you would ever use? >> no. >> reporter: i'm trying to figure out how the same links that are in this contract that you were paid $7500 to remove end up in a fake court order. with the client's name. >> i'm telling you, i don't know the answer to that question. >> reporter: do you understand how this works, right? >> i do. i appreciate your time but there is nothing else to discuss. >> reporter: we followed up with rooney after the meeting but he had nothing more to say. in response to our reporting on those 60 fake documents, federal prosecutors have sent at least two cases to the fbi. google declined our request for an interview but they say they do work hard to spot bad actors trying to game the system. >> mr. rd a str face w you're s with it. if he didn't file it, who did? >> a good question and i think some people will be looking into just that. >> mr. rooney may need some reputation cleanup online
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himself. >> one of the points i think we should stress is people when they hear this story think it's about a bad restaurant review but your point here about convicted criminals trying to wipe the record clean, is really -- >> doesn't get much more serious than that. >> thank you very much. new information has emerged in the murder investigation involving an american woman and her australian boyfriend. ahead, what police are saying about their search for the teen suspects. and if you're on the go we invite you to subscribe to our podcast and get the day's top stories in less than 20 minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." thank you for that. we'll be right back. minutes. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we'll be right back. n or breaking new ground? this is the time to get an exceptional offer on the mercedes of your midsummer dreams at the mercedes-benz summer event, going on now. lease the gla 250 suv for just $329 a month at the mercedes-benz summer event. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing.
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including north carolina native chynna deesse and her australian boyfriend lucas fowler. police say there have been two sightings of the suspects in the area where they found their burned out suv. >> this is very challenging terrain, a large area. >> reporter: the royal canadian mounted police believe the pair are on foot. authorities have charged the teens with second-degree murder in the death of a canadian man, a university lecturer whose body was discovered about 300 miles from where deesse and fowler were found dead. the canadian publications report the suspects are linked to now enactive social media accounts. they share themes including the communist icon, far right politics, and nazi symbols. the globe published this photo from a source allegedly showing him with a gun. >> a normal child doesn't travel across the country killing people. >> reporter: his father worries his son may be on a suicide
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mission. >> i'm so sorry all this had to happen. >> reporter: the story and the man hunt have consumed canada. i's been on cable news here around the clock, people saying things like this just don't happen here in canada. meanwhile, the search is expected to continue today in a rural part of manitoba. that is the region that has been described as very swampy, buggy, and brutal. >> the anguish on that father's face, janet. thank you very much. ahead a look at some of the stories you'll be talking about today including how an asteroid dubbed a city killer came surprisingly close to earth. that's not good. plus see the 65 million-year-old piece of history u
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put put down the tooth brush. toothbrush, move away from the sink, your tv beckons. it is time to watch. >> make sure you brush your teeth later. let me make that clear. here are a few stories we think you'll be talking about later today. propublic kasays three students face. they posted an instagram photo in front of a bullet-ridden sign of a civility rights leader. it was brought to its attention in march. the local kappa alpha fraternity chapter suspended them after learning of the photo on does. till's 1965 murder served as a catalyst for the civil rights movement and obviously this sign and memorial has been defaced before. >> many, many times. >> it's painful to see that picture. >> the fact that they're smiling and taking that picture in the
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dead of night near the tall haatchi river is cruelty. >> it's part of the definition of ignorance. >> maybe people can learn of the history and how inappropriate it absolutely was. it was quite the haul for a group of armed robbers who got away with more than their wakt in gold in a heist inbrazil. men in masked disguised as police officers drive to an parent. their getaway vehicle looked like a police car. they hoisted the gold in their truck before the getaway. good news, no one was hurt. $40 million in gold. this is a movie. >> it's a movie. >> i was smiling at the start. this is a movie. >> the fact that these guys are still at large, they're really at sfloorj so well planned. this was something that
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surprised a lot of people, not well plained. scientists revealed an asteroid some dubbed as a city killer came closer to the earth than the moon this week. to make it even scarier, scientists had no idea it was coming. asteroid 2019 ok came hurling toward us at 16 miles a scored before it came to pass. scientists say it posed no immediate threat but they had no idea it was head odd ur way because it came from the direction of the sun. it only became visible a few days ago. they weren't away or it. >> 2019 ok. >> not ok. >> tony, you be bruce willis, i'm be ben affleck. we'll fly up and blast it. >> it all makes sense. the asteroid that hit and the remnants from it, one california college student made a discovery of a lifetime on a paleontology dig.
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he was with an excavator and professor in the badlands. he thought it was a piece of wood. turns out it was a piece of history. >> the first reaction is lchl like disbelief. you're in awe. yu don't know how to process the moment. sure enough as we kept digging underneath the ground and exposing more and more of the skull, it got so much more exciting. and sure enough, we have a pretty decent portion of a dinosaur skull on our hand. >> the team discovered a 65 million-year-old dinosaur skull. he's been obsessed with dinosaurs since he was a child. they named the skull alice named in honor of the woman on whose land they were digging. >> he was the kid who went to the la brea tar pits instead of a baseball game. >> you love dinosaurs as a kid and then you discover it.
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the 6-year-old inside of him was cartwheeling. >> no doubt he's very happy. we're happy for him. thank you, dana. >> thank you. we're going to continue our conversation at the table during the break on facebook tton. many midwest farms hit by record flooding have spent the summer growing season under water. ahead we show you thethat. we're going to take a break. we'll be right back. ♪ being lost ain't never really been my style. ♪ but i told ya... yo, jer! we gotta get to the show. ♪ i was looking for a sign. get on the bus. ♪ i need something to believe in. ♪ throw my hands up to the ceiling. ♪ oh sky won't you give me a sign. ♪ tell me will the world one day ever be mine? jeep wrangler. freedom to do it all. ♪work so hard give it everything you got♪
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this is a kpix five san kpix five san francisco news morning update. >> good morning, the atf is helping with a fire investigation in oakland. the fire happened last night at stanford avenue and 60th threet. nobody was injured. california's utility companies will contribute to the state's new wild fewer fund. today kicks off three full days of food, live entertainment and cooking exu titions, it is the gilroy garlic festival. we have news updates throughout
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the day on our website, sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com
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good morning, this is the real time traffic center, lets look at what we have going on on the roadways, nothing bad to report as far as the toll plaza, looking at mass transit, everything is running on time. but at this point you need to know that the ocean view line is rerouting, give yourself some extra time, you are going to need it. we are at average temperatures for july, lower 90s for inland spots. 87 in santa rosa, 86 in san jose, this weekend is going to be hot. so much so that there is an excessive heat watch in place
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for the valleys from concord to livermore. we will feel much better next week
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♪ good morning to our friday. friday, july 26th, 2019 to be exact. welcome back to "cbs this morning." troubling allegations rock the military. why 16 marines were arrested yesterday in a mass takedown on their own base. plus, a new report raises concern about a potentially deadly bacteria in leafy greens, including some that have been labeled prewashed. and we take you inside the priceless archive of photos documenting black lives in america since world war ii. first, here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. a huge smuggling investigation led to the mass
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arrest of marines in california. >> those 16 marines are in the brig on the base. authorities say they have already questioned eight additional marines. >> this is a bipartisan report and it says that significant vulnerabilities remain in the u.s. election system. members of congress heard from concerned pa teens, and juul executives. some members of congress accuse those juul executives of marketing e-cigs to young users. >> it's 81 degrees right now in paris. yesterday much of europe felt like an oven. a degree of creativity was needed to keep cool. the democrats are looking most especially for the candidate they believe is best equipped to defeat the president. doing so likely requires a strong debate performance. so biden knows he has to step up his game. in the democratic primary campaign, each candidate is trying to carve out a signature issue to run on. kirsten gillibrand gender equality. beto o'rourke is laser focused on the sickest kick flip you
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have ever seen. >> can beto o'rourke skateboard? i missed that. apparently he can. people are always doing tricks or attempting them. i never see anyone land them, right? >> no. they are always like, oh, do it over. >> the board goes up, the guy goes up, and then down to the ground. so close. almost. anyway. >> something i will never try. >> really? >> i'll buy you a groupon. >> okay. we will do it together. >> hello. i'm tony dokoupil with gayle king, anthony mason is on vacation somewhere nice. vladimir duthiers is joining us today. we are in good hands. good to see you. we begin with this. 18 united states marines under arrest in an investigation of human smuggling along the u.s./mexico border. more arrests could be coming. a dramatic arrest of 16 marines took place yesterday at camp pendleton in california north of san diego. two others were taken into custody earlier this month.
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jamie yuccas is outside camp pendleton. how did these arrests come about? >> reporter: we should point out camp pendleton is 60 miles north of the mexican border. the 16 marines were allegedly involved in crimes ranging from human smuggling to drug related offenses. they were lined up and arrested in front of their unit as port of an ongoing human smuggling probe. july 3rd court documents say two other marines from the same battalion were caught near the border with three undocumented immigrants nair car. the immigrants claim they were going to pay the marines $8,000 to sneak them into the country. the court documents say the two marines admitted it wasn't their first time doing this. leading to the expanded investigation. and yesterday's bust, eight other marines are being questioned now for unrelated drug offenses. these arrests come at the same time we're learning about another military incident. sources tell cbs news a platoon of 22 navy s.e.a.l.s were sent
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home after a drunken fourth of july party in iraq, drinking alcohol in iraq is against military regulations, but there are also allegations of sexual assault. >> thank you very much. there is growing pushback against the department of justice's announcement it's resuming the federal death penalty. democratic representative pressley of massachusetts plans to introduce legislation to abolish the death penalty in member. in a tweet the member of the so-called squad said the death penalty has no place in a just society. it was accompanied by a short bill she plans to introduce. yesterday attorney general william barr announced it will resume. he ordered five men to be executed in december and january. they would be the first fedexcutions since 2003. there have been three since the federal death penalty was reinstated in 1988. >> that's a heavy thing to do. you are not making an abstract policy change. you are pointing to five individuals and saying those five. >> we have seen thousand floud
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th flawed that system is. north korea claims to have tested a high-tech weapon and says the missile launch was meant as a warning to u.s. ally south korea. north korea released these pictures of leader kim jong un overseeing yesterday's launch of two short-range ballistic missiles into the sea. >> south korea says the weapons were similar to this russian-made missile that flies lower and can make in-flight adjustments. the launches were the first since president trump briefly entered north korea last month during his latest meeting with kim. cbs news senior foreign affairs correspondent and "face the nation" moderator margaret she joins us now. marg lit, good morning. we should remind people this region of the world is vitally important to the global economy and global security. five nuclear declared nations already. the u.s. is hoping north korea will not become number six. does this test set back those negotiations? >> well, president trump is basically saying he is going to
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overlook these two missile tests. they were fired into the sea of japan. his national security advisor was in the region, but the president is giving kim jong un a pass because he wants to get that stalled diplomacy going. he and secretary pompeo publicly dismissed the tests last night saying they are only short-range, which into does pose a threat to america's allies, but not here on the u.s. mainland. so it is still worth pointing out though as our david martin has reported that the pentagon notes the u.s. had no warning these tests were about to happen, which suggests north korea's ability to covertly develop weapons is getting better. >> margaret, i remember you were at that failed summit in vietnam back in the day. do you think now that the talks have stalled between the two countries? >> they have stalled. and that's why president trump took that extraordinary trip to the dmz and stepped into north korea last month. this was a play to try to get the talks going again. no meetings have taken place
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since that. >> why do you think they have stalled? >> well, north korea so far doesn't want to give up any part of their program. they continue to develop their weapons. they want the u.s. to pull back sanctions. so far, they haven't gotten what they wanted and the united states hasn't gotten what it wants. as those presidential levels they come out all smiles with the hope of negotiations. it's the working level that just is stalled. secretary pompeo said last night in a handful of weeks he thinks there may be another meeting scheduled. that would be with the u.s. envoy. >> while we are trying to negotiate with north korea, the united states is participating a joint military operation, military drills with south korea. so what is the geopolitical strategy of the u.s. in the region? >> you know this, vlad. there are about 30,000 u.s. troops stationed on the peninsula. they practice these drills every year with our ally in order to show readiness. but north korea continues to think that this is preparation
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for an invasion. the u.s. presence on the peninsula has been there to offset the threat from north korea, but as you know, in asia the big concern is the growing threat from china. so there is little appetite for pulling out entirely. >> all right. margaret, the tensions continue in the region. sunday on "face the nation," margaret speaks with acting white house chief of staff mick mulvaney. also the vice chairman of the senate judiciary committintelli sunday on cbs. testing by consumer reports found a potentially deadly bacteria in some leafy greens recently sold at supermarkets. we will look how you can stay safe. i worry about this because i buy those triple washed leafy greens. reporting. plus, cbs arj goes to midwest farms still underwater for four
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much more news ahead for you. a rare look inside ebony and jet magazine's expansive photo archive featuring images like one of the supremes. ahead, how the powerful images will be preserved for everybody to see. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank you for that. we'll be right back. watching "cbs this
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switch to geico. it's a win-win. a new report out a new report out this morning discovered some leafy greens recently sold at supermarkets were contaminated with a potentially deadly bacteria. consumer reports says it tested nearly 300 samples of fresh greens like lettuce, spinach and kale and they say they found six of those samples tasted with listeria. consumer investigative reporter anna werner is here and where did consumer reports find these greens? >> the six samples in various locations in about three states. connecticut, new jersey, and new york in june. it's a sampling. but they did find listeria in pre-washed and the bagged greens that some people are told not to wash. all the retailers are stressing that food safety of course is
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their top priority. public health officials have not reported any illnesses or concerns following their own inspections. and consumer reports does note the study is not large enough to draw any conclusions about a specific brand or retailer. but this is intended to highlight the safety, the overall safety of the supermarket industry. now, the trade association that represents retailer, wholesalers and suppliers, that sell products to grocery stores, told us that the incidents outlined in consumer reports remind us that the entire supply chain has a responsibility for safe food handling. and they do agree that you can make improvements in that. but the important thing to note is that listeria can be a very serious illness for people who get it, and especially for those who are vulnerable. if you have a compromised immune system, if you are older adults, infants, and young children, and especially pregnant women. >> so i buy those packages of ley greens that say triple washed, do not wash, because i'm lazy and i don't want to wash my
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lettuce. >> and you think it is safe. >> you think it is safe. what should you do to avoid getting sick? >> what is interesting about that is that actually the food association agrees and says that government regulators also will tell you not to wash the triple-washed that you're exposing the greens and yourself to more contamination from things in your kitchen, when you re-wash triple-washed greens. so even though they did find it in a couple of samples here, it is hard to wash listeria off. you might wash something and it might still not come off. >> i don't know what to do now. what are we supposed to do? >> i think consumer reports is talking about the overall safety of the food system for this, it needs to be improved with whatever improvements they can make, because you as the consumer are not necessarily going to know if the sample that you bought at the grocery store is contaminated by listeria. >> it could be ice cream for dinnertime. >> i love that plan. i've been on that plan
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occasionally. >> i know that plan. thanks very much, anna. some farms in the midwest, they are still under water, after severe flooding four months ago. ahead, cbs originals adam yak gucci takes us to the heartland and why many farmers there do not want to talk about climate slike aour letter word. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. than just dishes. with 3x more grease cleaning power per drop, it tackles tough grease on a variety of surfaces. try dawn ultra. (has me feeling super healthy. my beneful superfood blend with salmon, cranberries... ...oh, but we are not done yet! here comes superfood wet with beef, salmon, and pumpkin. it's like a superfood sundae. on a monday. (avo) beneful superfood blend dry and wet recipes. this is not just a headache. this is not just a fever. this is not just the flu. it's meningitis b...
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thousands across the midwest are still struling to recover after historic flooding left entire towns and farms under water. in an original, adam yamaguchi met a farmer who was reluctant to acknowledge clooi mat change >> do you and other farmers here chalk it up as a freak occurrence, the levee broke, or are you talking about climate
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issues? >> you know, i'm not a climate change guy as far as climate change, warming, whatever that stuff. has the climate changed, yes, so those two words go together, but am i believer? i haven't seen all the facts i guess just to make an assumption on my own. but have i seen the weather change in, say, my 20-year farming career? absolutely. >> do you feel like farmers around here are talking about climate more? >> i don't think they're talking about climate change. they're talking about climate, the drastic swings in it. i mean it's just like today. you're here. it's -- it was 50 degrees this morning and it's june in nebraska. it was 90-something last week, you know? that's not normal. >> the sense they get is that people are noticing changes, but it seems like the words "climate change" are still a four-letter word around here. >> i don't know if climate
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change is a four-letter word. you know, maybe we're just slow to adapt. i don't know. >> adam yamaguchi is with us. adam, good morning. he says he's not acknowledging climate change but he ak norjed climate is changing and he put the words together. why is he reluctant? >> it's a bizarre conversation you can have across the region. it wasn't just brett, this farmer. the sentiment across these parts is the term is so politically charged that by conceding that climate change is real and that humans may have a hand in it is tantamount to buying into a certain terminology which farmers are not willing to do. >> even though he's so vastly impacted. >> standing next to -- his farm has essentially become a lake. he's got 4,000 acres. 80% is still under water but yet there's that reluctance to take
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it one further step. >> are they linking the floods to climate challenge? >> scientists won't point to any one storm and say this is a result of climate challenge. they say there is climate change an based on where we are, these events are likely to happen. they'll point to the fact that 100-year storms are happening every five to seven years. >> the met for that got me is kind of like the hand is like a deck of cards and the weather is stacked like a deck. thank you, adam. you can watch the latest, "a climate reckoning in the heartland" right now. it's streaming on cbsnnews.com. our dr. tara a narula is in the toyota g janie
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stelter. she shares her struggles to get this is a kpix five san francisco news morning update. good morning, the atf is helping with a fewer investigation in oakland after flames broke out at an apartment building under construction. nobody was hurt. police say a solar vehicle crash involving a car and fewer hydrant in san francisco was a hut and run, the car's driver fled the scene. araugust 10th. training camp is they will let fans attend 11 pre- season work outs at their
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delays is north bound 101 approaching the san mateo bridge. it's slow and go in the north bound 101 commute. past that area you are good to go, no problems. looking at today's day time highs you would think there are no issues hoar, numbers are right where they should be. inland, 80 you one, livermore, 87. if you look at the seven-day forecast you see how we have an issue. the numbers are going to excessively hot, there is an excessive heat watch in place that will come to an end by early next week, quite a rollercoaster coming our way, stay hydrated if r going to be
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's time to bring you some of the stories we call "talk of the table"? why? we are at the table and we're talking. we pick out a story we want to share with you and all of us sitting here. tony, you want to go first? >> sure. president trump recently appeared before a group of young conservatives, turning point usa, and while he was talking on stage there is a presidential seal that appeared behind him. you can see it there. and people realized after the event that it's not the actual seal. if you look closely, it looks like the seal, but instead of arrows and olive branches for war and peace, it has golf clubs and cash on the other side.
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and then where on the actual sale it says in latin out of many one, it says 45 is a puppet and the eagle has two heads instead of one, which is an homage to a russian symbol. you see that on the left there. >> how did that happen? >> apparently, it was an error by one of the organizers. it came up in a google image search and they put it on the screen. that person has reportedly been signed. the guy who designed it, a republican, voted twice for bush. became a never trumper. did it for friends. didn't show it was going to show up. was drinking his coffee, said it made his day. >> when i looked at it, i didn't see anything wrong. golf clubs and cash. >> you see how it can happen. >> you google the image and you go with the first one that comes up. you got to know our history. you've got to know what our presidential seal looks like.
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>> it's an example of looking but not seeing. >> especially if the president is coming by. >> yeah. >> double-check. triple check. >> mine is about halloween. might be a frightening proposition for many, but there is growing online support to change the date we celebrate halloween. i love this. there is a proposal. it's got 67,000 signatures so far to make halloween the last saturday in october. i think this is great because then it's not on a school night. you can stay out later than you normally could. it's always a pain, i thought, trick or treating on a school night, get the kids ready to hit the road. also, i thought it's cold on halloween. could we move it to a warmer month? you are wearing a coat and sometimes you can't see the costumes. but 51% of millennials say that halloween is their favorite holiday. that surprised me. why cram it intoushed evening weekdays when it deserves a full day? they say the halloween and costume association say this
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will make halloween safer for parents and kids, too. >> how is it safer? if you focus on a saturday night, people have all week to get excited about how crazy they are going saturday night. teenagers on a saturday night are already difficult in the fall. they are going to be halloween saturday night? every night we have a halloween on a saturday, we have a table chat about how authorities are worried about this halloween. >> okay, thank you debbie downer. i thought it would be nice on a weekend, tony dokoupil. >> i'm with you on moving it into a warmer part of the year. >> have you been on the lower east side on halloween? >> yes. >> they take it seriously. >> that was my dad moment of the morning. i apologize. >> that's okay, debbie. what do you have? >> an uplifting story. a fascinating story that makes you realize that there are really good people in the world. when a regular commute turned into an overwhelming experience with a little boy with autism, a stranger jumped in to help.
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this happened to parents all over. a little kid, he is getting excited, he is screaming, people are looking and giving disapproving looks. a metro transit police officer in d.c. calms the little boy named andrew by holding his hand. he received training as part of his training as a police officer to calm children down. his mother was so happy. look, he meets him afterwards. >> that's lovely. >> i like that. >> this is a great story. it shows you not only are police departments taking very seriously some of the mental husband th husband /* issues that people may have, mental training, and the officer is doing a great thing. >> and the range police officers have. >> most officers are doing good things. >> and you know what he gave him as a gift? >> what? >> a bang. >> i want a badge. >> thank you, vlad. more women are sharing personal experiences with early pregnancy loss. the american collection of obstetricians and gogis , mic they
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aboutheir miscaiages in breakin >> a 24 hour news channel we know well here in new york city, shared her fertility struggles on social media and live tv. she revealed she five miscarriages while trying to conceive. in an op-ed for "glamour" magazine she writes the sting of all the loss and the trauma fades for sure, but it never goes away. i wear these losses like scars. they each have their own story to tell with dates and numbers and wait times. but how can you possibly quantify them? you can't. she has 2-year-old daughter named sunny. she is due to have another baby in two weeks. yay. she joins us with dr. tara narula to discuss. it's so poignant, so painful, but at the same time so powerful. i like what you said about every woman has a story by the
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numbers. help us understand your number story when it comes to hthis. >> it wasn't until i had miscarriages and i realized there was this giant club of women all speaking in their own language in terms of how many miscarriages and then there is all of the how long until you have to wait until you get your period again after a miscarriage. how long is a pregnancy? and as soon as you get pregnant, you are thinking to yourself, okay, i'm having a baby in 40 weeks from now. then when you have a miscarriage, you have to, quote, sort of start over. and it's very overwhelming when you think about these numbers on a day-to-day basis. and you are trying to wrap your head around it and you are grieving at the same time and then also trying to live your normal life at the same time. >> many people may not know you were pregnant. a lot of the suffering and grieving is happening in private? >> well, we are in a culture where you are taught to not talking about your pregnancy
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until the three-month mark. so most miscarriages happen in those first three months. if you never told people you were pregnant, you are surely not going to march around and tell people you had a miscarriage. >> yeah. >> miscarriages are is common, yet many women suffer in silence, which is heartbreaking. why is there still a stigma. >> i want to thank these women. they are breaking town the stigma. that vulnerability and honesty will bring empathy and understanding and support. as women so much of our sense of self is tied into motherhood and fertility. when we lose a child the feeling is i somehow lost it. i failed . there is something wrong with me or my body and there is a tremendous amount of shame and guilt and we insulate and not share that. what she mentioned wills, we are told culturally don't talk about your pregnancy until the end of the first trimester.
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there is not that outpouring of community support to give us love and embrace us. when you lose someone, a friend or parent, we mark it in our culture with religious is the same sense of profound grief and trauma as with any other kind of loss. >> i thoughthiaving sunny, and i see you wear a necklace that says that, it would make it easier for you. in many respects it made it harder? >> it did. first of all, you see how beautiful having a child is, and you see that it can work. so when i had two miscarriages between sunny and this healthy pregnancy, why can't my body do this again? >> you talk about women who have a baby and you think why are they trying to have another one? they at least have one and i don't even have one to begin with. i thought that was interesting. >> i hear people complaining or being sad about secondary infertility.
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i am like, you have one. you are going so greedy. i felt guilty about that dp abo greed. should i just be happy with her? the truth is that we want her to have a sibling. >> yes. when you break a silence on a subject like this it's a little bit scary. i am curious to learn what you heard from other women after the story came out and what are the benefits of sharing this type of story? >> when i was in your makeup room i was getting another private message from a woman telling me her story. i get these stories on a daily basis on all my social media platforms, and after i share, after i wrote the glamour op-ed i went to my bosses at new york one and i said i am overwhelmed and inundated by these stories. about miscarriage. these women are looking for a venue to talk about their feelings. like you were saying, to create a vocabulary around the grief of
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it all. >> was it easier for you to talk about it because you are pregnant with another baby coming up in two weeks? >> yes. >> was it easier for you to step out there in a private and personal way? >> absolutely. and i tell women when they come to me and ask me questions, i say, listen, it's so much easier from where i sit to tell you how to act and what i think is best for you to do because look at me. >> who is most at risk, terra? >> 80% of these happen in the first trimester. half are due to genetic or chromesomele abnormalities. however, one thing that increases the risk that is advanced maternal age. over 35. 20% of miscarriage around5.atju 40. previous loss. thyroid conditions, pcos, clotting disorders, obesity, uterine conditions can raise risk. >> there was silence around it. i am glad that is ending. we brought that
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friday might fool you into thinking that the weekend will not be that hot. today we are just a few degrees above average and the real issue is the fact that the weekend is going to be much hotter. 105 for saturday. we range from the lower 80s to the upper 80s across the bay, go easy on yourself this weekend there are moments in life that leave a lasting impression. like the feeling of movement as a new journey begins, or the sight of soft fur, warmed by the morning sun. you might remember new flavours, or a view that defies all expectations. these are the memories that stay with you, long after the moments have passed.
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♪ more than four million prints and negatives from ebony
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and jet magazines were bought for $30 million. the photos will be donated to museums including the smithsonian. it captured the stark ree america. some may bte i0 of american hi immortalized on to glossy paper, mostly in black and white. this pulitzer prize-winning photo of martin luther king and his wife, muhammad ali, and james brown. the images humanize celebrities and celebrated regular people. >> the core of this collection is our history. it's the essence of the black story in america. >> reporter: perry earlier is president of the museum of african-american history. >> reporter: did you grow up reading ebony magazine? >> i did. you would be hard pressed to walk into a black home back in the day and not see the current issue of ebony or jet magazine. we knew we were getting the
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truth. we knew we weren't getting someone else's version of us. >> reporter: but decreasing subscriptions and rising debt forced johnson publishing to sell the magazine and put the prized photo archives up for auction. who do we have here? >> you have muhammad ali. >> reporter: vicki wilson gave us rare access to the files. no fingerprints allowed. >> just look at ray charles playing dominoes. where can you find an image like that? we travel with the freedom riders. >> reporter: some photos were a catalyst for change when jet published open casket image of a man beaten and lynched in 1955. it sparked the civil rights movement. rosa parks said she was thinking of him when she refused to give up her seat. these are images wilson wants why is it important to have this record? >> just to let people know that we can see how far we have come.
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>> reporter: there is hope in these boxes. >> a lot of hope. >> reporter: hope and history preserved in time heading to a new home. for "cbs this morning," adriana diaz, chicago. >> makes me so proud. shopping for backpacks... ...and mom also gets a back-to-school bag? that's yes for less. ross has the brands you want for back to school. and it feels even better when you find them for less. at ross. yes for less.
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and realize you can get youeverything you need...oss oh, yeah. yep. yes! ...to feel like a boss? that's yes for less. 20 to 60 percent off specialty store prices for every room and every budget. at ross. yes for less. we say it was good to have salad with us at the table. >> any time. >> that will do it before us. here's a look at the past week. have a good weekend. we'll see you monday. again, you're fake news and you're right at the top of the list. >> republicans portray robert mueller as a not very strong witness. >> at the end of this, the needle has not been >> he will not make a fool of us. puerto rico kicked him out. >> it's about changing the island for good. >> protesters defied police orders, marched here, and defaced a building.
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>> police are now saying that they are casting a wide net. >> if you see brooi eyer or kam consider them dangerous. >> that's a small baby. >> you have a 20-year-old-something daughter. would you allow her to be with r. kelly? >> absolutely. i wouldn't allow my daughter to be with anybody accused of pedophilped fe feel -- pedophilia. >> he's stepping down. >> you put it on the main line of the suburbs and put it on the main line of the ghetto, you'll see chaos on one side and people going to their mailboxes and kids coming from school the other side. >> let's give america its news. ♪ i'm a girl watcher i'm a girl watcher
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watching girls go by ♪ ♪ my, my, my >> vladimir duthiers. the hags sensation. >> michelle mill eric my sister from another mister. >> gave them a fright. >> anthony mace season off and for the record he's having fun. i've seen his instagram. the latest photothe dandelion. he says, contemplating the poolside dandelion. >> i hope you went someplace fun. you look ready ghoul. >> i told her, i've never had a tan like this in my life. >> sun's out, gun's out. >> sun's out, guns out. >> i don't have any. >> i don't either. alamo, mexico, is ranked the top destination for single women moving abroad. i was thinking i know you all would support me when i say
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let's take this show on the road to alamo, mexico. lots of people in th
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this is a kpix five san francisco morning update. >> good morning, the atf is helping in a fire investigation in oakland after flames broke out at ang apartment building that was under construction, nobody was hurt. no sign of the expensive bay area housing market, a new report finds that home open hit a seven year low last quarter, 52% of in several bay areas. that's a new low. today is the final scoops for the breyers ice cream
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parlor. we have news updates throughout the day on our website, sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com
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good morning, lets look at your travel times this morning, nothing is in the red. we have a few nairs in the yellow but still not bad. we have a couple of issues in
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the eastbound direction of 580 as well as right mawz, it's slowing down a bit but nothing too terrible. looking at the bay bridge, look, no cars. >> that's quiet. the other thing i noticed in the shot was how gray the skies were in that shot. much of the bay area is looking at gray skies, that helps with the daytime highs, the numbers are a little above average but at least they are not like saturday's numbers. when you look at the seven-day forecast, you see a big difference, we are going from 91 inland to 105 saturday. that's a 14-degree jump in one day, plan on the weekend feeling quite different, it's an excessive heat watch for the tri valley and concord areas this weekend
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wayne: ah! - i'm gonna take the money, wayne. jonathan: $15,000 in cash! wayne: we do it all for the fans. jonathan: my personal guarantee. tiffany: yummy. wayne: two cars! that's what this game is all about. she's leaving here with the big deal of the day. ten years of deals, right? jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody. wayne brady here, this is "let's make a deal." who wants to make a deal? you, right there, cassie. everybody else, have a seat, come on over here, cassie. how are you doing, cassie? - good, how are you? wayne: excellent. and what do you do? - i'm an operating room nurse. wayne: give her a round of applause, operating room nurse. saving lives. now we're going to make a deal with you right now. you ready for this? - i'm so excited.

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