tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 22, 2020 3:00am-3:59am PDT
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president trump's return to the campaign trail a reality check. the road of empty assets were not. the president said this about crisis -- >> so i said to my people slow the testing down please. >> white house says it is a joke. but this was not. >> the left wing mob is trying to mappedlize our history. >> and the new tell-all book. the administration tries to bounce back. 12 states hit new records, sounding alarms. >> this is going to be hard to get under control. >> and push-back. >> the government is telling us we have to do something we
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shoomt have to do. >> going, going, gone. how will we strike out baseball. and breaking myths while pushing ahead. >> good job! this is the cbs "cbs overnight news." >> good evening, every. i'm major garrett in washington. history will record when american application return to its pandemic pause, it did so in tulsa, president trump, the headliner, the crowd, large by conventional standards, small. masks were treated casually. the president said little about racial tepgss policing or reconciliation. he did defend "that beautiful heritage of ours." here's more from tulsa.
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getting ba n downtown tulsa is prum whirlwind t. ♪ >> the president chose tulsa, oklahoma, for his first campaign rally since early match when the pap democratic halted campaigning in the country. president trump revved up the crowd. >> joed biden's record can be summed up as four decades of betrayle and calamity. >> the oklahoma rally happened during the surge of coronavirus in the sooner state. the president contests the only reason the numbers are on the rise is because of increased testing which the president says is vital. >> so i said to my people, slow the testing down, please. >> in this red state, lots of empty blue seats inside the
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building. trump campaign manage brad park pollsed on line about receiving one million requests for tickets. but during the speech, the stadium was largely element. the capacity is just over 19,000 and just over 66,000 attended. the crowd inside heard the president link the virus to that ra racist prope. >> kung flu. >> they want to demolish our heritage so they can impose their new present gheem its place. >> after the speak there were minor skirmishes outside but the heavy police and national guard preps kept things relativi
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peaceful. the speech was just under an hour and 45 minutes. in arizona 3,000 people are expected to here him speech. i don't remember? >> garrett: thank you. firing optical a top federal prosecutor in new york. nick thomps nicole kill yam continues our coverage. >> reporter: first campaign rally. after making these comments about coronavirus testing -- >> i said to my people, slow the testing down please zploo -- the white house said the president was speaking in jest. >> that was tongue in cheek what you heard from the president was frustration, frustration in the sense of that we are pesting. >> senior mpgs official said that never happened. more than 25 million tests have been conducted. this week task force members are
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scheduled to appear before a house committee. speaker nancy pelosi says the american people are owed answers meaning the president slowing down testing to hide the true extent of the virus means more americans will lose their lives. they're demanding investigations into the firing of u.s. attorney jeffrey berman. >> the real unanswered question here is why did the president and mr. barr do it? >> he says he's invited berman to testify, suggesting the house could impeach the attorney general. >> he deserves impeachment. >> john bolton recalled the president floating the idea of intervening in an investigation by berman's office of a turkish bank. >> the president said at wumt point those prosecutors in new york are obama people.
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bait till i get my people in and we'll take care of this. i told myself -- i'm in the department of justice. i'd never heard any president say anything like ever. >> bolton's book will officially be released tuesday. the president has said any money he makes off should be given back. major. >> nikole killion, thank you. there are, according to health officials aplarmg new numbers of daily cases. we're back to where we were in april. 2.2 million cases, the death toll nearly 100,000. the worst in the country. >> reporter: coronavirus daily case record. as the country reopens, dr. sam gottleib is sounding the alarm. >> they're going to tip over exponential growth in the coming
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week. everything looks ok until suddenly it doesn't. >> up fedexs are trending up with on saturday florida broke a single day record with more than h,000 new cases. the governor now stressing the importance of social distancing and masks. >> it will make a difference in terms of being able to minimize transmission again particularly amongst 20 and 30-year-olds. >> in los angeles county where nail salons and massage and tattoo parlors reopened friday, state law requires face coverings, temperature checks. >> we have to be careful. >> the icu's near capacity. >> we've been called kmounists, nazis, nigh servers have been cussed out. >> they're telling us to do something we shouldn't have to do. >> as many as 300,000 people to return to work. here i n califor
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this is the cbs "cbs overnight news." >> garrett: let's go to ed o'keefe. ed. president trump's rally crowd fell far below expectations. nevertheless, testament to the president's political pull. the campaign is scrambling and sounding defenses. >> the sound playing at the end of the rally playing "you can't always get what you want" and the president certainly didn't. there was not a full arena there. maybe it is covid or the prank by teenagers across the country to reserve and not show up. they now expect it to lead to
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repercussions. the family of the late tom petty have sat with the president to ask him not to play "i won't back down" at rallies. >> what did. >> they're steezing on what the president said about slowing down testing for covid-19, saying that's for the sign of how unserious the president is about addressing the pandemic. we'll not see any large scale event of any kind another least not until must be health officials say it's ok to do so. the battle ground state closest to his home. the big event this week on biden's calendar is a virtual dpund raiser with his former boss, barack obama and expected to earn millions of dollars.
quote
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>> his recent fund raising success suggests there's some success there but even so there are primaries that could reimagine or reintroduce us to some party fall lines. >> that's correct. speaking to the ongoing idea logical, demographic struggle. first in new york, elliott engle is the chairman of the house for affairs compete and faces this from a pribs pal, jamal bowen in a district right next door so where what went on two years ago when cortez defeated an income bemt. the other race to watch is the kentucky democratic primary to take on senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. amy mcgrath has raised money to do so. she faces a surging charles booker, who's made racial justice a big part of his
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campaign. the democratic presidential primary may be over but this is a reminder there's a struggle going on down the ballot nationwide. >> ed o'keefe, thank you. spain reopened its borders this weekend. in some places the pandemic is making a comebackor foreign cor elizabeth palmerer has the latest. >> reporter: in beijing health workers stemmed in thousands of delivery drivers to try to stamp out coronavirus. again. it was declared gone in early june. then it came back. underlining just how tenacious this infection really is. the latest kbrim milestone in this pandemic came late last week when the w.h.o. reported the largest number of cases in a
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americcialazil.ecwions tn still weeks away, it's grappling with 60 no new cases a day. here, as in the u.s., covid-19 is dividing the nation. on koba cabana beach, crosses were knocked down at a symbolic memorial. their father who lost their so to the virus angry. the rush to ease lockdowns as in india may have helped the economy but it's helped the virus, too. now new delhi is diverting train carriages to makeshift covid wards. some oxygen but absolutely no social distancing. the kremlin, too, has locked down this month and staged a rehearsal of the traditional
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victory day parade but all the p russia from racking up the third largest covid infection on the planet or descend the 500 doctors and nurses who died fighting it. thbsz, london. >> o'donnel >> garrett: video posted to social media show people rushing for cover. one person was killed. 12 others wounded. police say multiple people opened fire on each other. no madestraight ahead -- real es counting on a rebound. basketball money striking out. why a shortened season comeback is now in doubt. and the march of dads. the stroller squad. celebrating fatherhood.
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♪ the calming scent of lavender by downy infusions calm. laundry isn't done until it's done with downy. when you scant move, you can't move. that's been a pandemic rob for real estate. sales are down across the country. there is theep reopening will mean properties once again pop. here's cbs's jon vigliotti. >> reporter: when coronavirus hit, the hard charging housing market went into lockdown. ralph and kim spent 32 years in
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this burrback house with plans to sell this spring. >> all of after sudden we're stopped in our tracks and nothing's going on. we've got an antique store and it's not selling. >> with their business shuttered, they are anxious to get the house back on the market. the impact is rippling through the housing economy. prices are down over 25% in california in one month. nationally they're down 17%. prices remain steady. how long has this house been on the market? >> about 40 days. >> before coronavirus, it would have sold in ten days, says this realtor. how many bills are impacted? get the s an inspector and painters and hardwood floor
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guys. there are a lot of people that are involved. >> one is home indicator kim. her house is filled with furniture. >> none of our designers are working at this point so they're obviously in financial hardships themselves. >> if people are not making moves, neither are those that move them. >> we feel it here. >> the industry is hoping virtual open houses will get gears moving again but in an industry built on that feeling you get when you first wal rough a ice ifbu ft jon vigliotti, cbs news, los angeles. >> still ahead, a baseball season is in doubt as bickering threatens the game. devin,owffering an extra 15 percent credit on car and motorcycle policies? ok? that's 15 percent on top of what geico could already save you. so what are you waiting for? dj khaled to be your motivational coach? yo devin! remember to brush in a circle motion.
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gotcha! and for that nasty dust on my floors, my sweeper's on it. the textured cloths grab and hold dirt and hair no matter where dust bunnies hide. no more heebie jeebies. phew. glad i stopped cleaning and started swiffering. major league baseball parks are empty this father's day, closed down at first by the coronavirus. the owners and players now can't decide on the length of a shortened season. salaries and the future of the game itself may hang in the balance. new complication, players at two training catches tested positive for the virus. carter evan reports. >> reporter: it's america's pastime and many feel it's past time for baseball to return. especially with other sports already in the comeback trail. baseball commissioner rob
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manfred said -- >> the chance we're playing this year? >> 100%. >> now that sunny optimism is gone. >> i'm not confident. it's just a disaster for our game. >> it's a fallout between the union and owners over how the season can get salvaged and how much players will get paid per game. but now ballparks across the country including dodger stadium sit empty. their parking lots has become one of los angeles's largest covid testing sites. that's the harsh reality that some players and coaches have tested positive. players want to may, the same message from brice harper and mike trout, tell us when and where. but that's only if, after all the talking, the oeshs and players don't break out. carter evans, cbs news, los angeles. >> garrett: next,
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>> garrett: finally tonight, father's day, a day for dads to be preached. brothers, an opportunity to shatter a shero type. there are some men who are doing just that. >> reporter: when shawn williams moved to this mostly white area of the island he said his neighbors would often compliment him for spending time with his own kids. >> my wife didn't get compliments like that. i knew it was a thing about a black guy or seeing a black
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father being as active as i was. >> why does that anger you? >> to get a compliment about sticking around for your child or being an active dad is insane. good job! >> black fathers are more that just present. according to the cdc black fathers who live with their kids bathe, dress or diaper that child every day at higher risks that other groups. he's showcasing this reality with his organization called the dad back. ♪ >> with the goal of bringing black fathers together like this showing him. with a huge social media following, he promotes heartwarming moments of father hood. to reunions, surprising his son at the high schoolra
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with a motorcycle parade. >> i told him i love you and this is for you. >> the original video viewed more than a million times online. >> go! >> i hope it sticks in the mind of those who thought we were m.i.a. today despite what the world says, despite the stereotypes we are out there, we are dad goals. >> jumping into an image of black fatherhood. cbs news, long island, new york. >> garrett: that is the yoecht news for this t news continues. for others, check back later for cbs news this morning and follow us on line anytime at cbs news.com. aim major garrett reporting from the nation's capital.
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this is the cbs "cbs overnight news." >> good evening, everyone. i'm major garrett in washington. history will record when measure politics returned from its pandemic pause it did so in tulsa. president trump, the headliner. the crowd, large by conventional standards was nevertheless much smaller than the president's norm and the advanced billing. social distancing and masks, like the virus itself were treated casually. the president said little about policing or reconciliation. he did say "that beautiful heritage of ours." >> reporter: downtown tulsa is getting back to normal after president trump's whirlwind visit. the crowd for this rally was
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noticeably smaller. the president chose tulsa, oklahoma, for his first campaign rally since early march when pandemic altered campaigning in the country. mr. trump revved up the crowd with democratic rival joe biden. >> joe biden's record can be summed up as four decades of betray betrayal, calamity -- >> reporter: the president raised a few eyebrows by suggesting that the only reason the numbers are on the rise are because of increased testing which officials say is vital to checking and tracking the virus. >> so i said to my people, slow the testing down, please. >> reporter: trump campaign manager boasted online about receiving one million requests for tickets for the eemt but during the speech, the stadium
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was largely empty. capacity is just over 19,000 at the bok center. the fire department said just under 6,200 attended. trump campaign claims protesters were blocking the entrance. the crowd inside heard the president link it to a racist prope. >> kung fu. they want to demolish our heritage so they can impose their new oppressive regime in its place. >> reporter: there were minor skirmishes outside but with heavy police and nascar presence kept things relatively peaceful. the president's speech lasted just under an hour and 45 minutes. 3,000 people are expected to hear him speak at his next stop.
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>> the white house is downplaying the president's comments on testing while facing the scrutiny over the firing of a top person in new york. nikole killion. >> reporter: winding down after his first campaign rally in months. after making these comments about coronavirus testing -- >> i said to my people slow the testing down please. >> reporter: -- the white house said the president was speaking in jest. >> that was tongue in speak. that's what you heard was frustration. frustration in the sense that we are testing. >> reporter: they say they never directed the coronavirus test to slow testing. reflecting a steady national increase. this week task force members are scheduled to bear before a house committee. speaker nancy pelosi said the american people are owed answers, the president's testing
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to hide the drew position of the virus. dmapding investigations into the firing of u.s. attorney jeffrey berman. >> the real unanswered question here is why did the president and mr. barr do it. >> house jishy chairman gerald nadler says he's invited berman to testify. ian. >> he certainly deserves impeachment. >> the prentd he wasn't involved but in his new book john bolton recalled the president previously floating the idea of intervening in an investigation by berman's office of a turkish bank. >> he said at one point look those prosecutors in new york are obama people. wait till i get my people in and we'll take care of this. alumnust to myself -- and i'm
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myself -- i'd never heard any president say anything like that, ever. >> the book will officially be released tuesday. the president said any money he mexico off of it should be given back. >> garrett: let's turn to ed o'keefe now. ed. >> president trump's rally crowd fell far short of expectations, pulling in t 6,000 is the sesment to the president's continued political poll. the song played at the end of the rally was the rolling stones saying "you can't always get what you want" and the president certainly didn't. maybe it's covid. maybe it's his alleged prnk pulled by thousands of teenagers to register but not show up. republicans close to the white house say they expect it to lead to repercussions in the coming days. even the family have sat with the president calling on him to
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not play his hit "i won't backr. even me trole for the white house. what degreer vice president joe biden's pivot off his campaign? >> they're seizing on what the president said about slowing down testing, saying that that's a further sign of how unserious the president is in addressing the pandemic. we will not see biden hold any large scale event of any kind until it's safe. we can expect modest ones. onbide calendar, a fund raiser tuesday night with his former bous barack obama. >> garrett: that speaks another imperative, needing and wanting to pull the democratic party together. his recent fund raising
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success -- suggests there's some success there but there are primaries this week that could reimagine or reintroduce us to some party fall lines. >> that's right. two key contests to watch this week. demographic struggle with the democratic party elliott ingle is the president of the house foreign affairs committee and jamal bowen is another establishment versus rookie contest in a district right next door to what went on two years ago when cortez defeated an income bent. the other race is to watch the kentucky primary to take on mitch mcconnell. she faces a surging charles booker who has made racial justice campaign. the democratic presidential
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this is the "cbs overnight news." i'm major garrett reporting from the cbs studios here in washington, d.c. thanks for staying with us. the worldwide coronavirus pandemic won't stand in the way of apple's worldwide developer's conference online starting at 1:00 p.m. eastern with a key note address by the ceo tim cook. as usual cook is being tight lipped. jonathan dickerson spoke to him. >> you're full of secrets. >> i'm full of secrets and it's hard not to overflow right now but i've be trained well. >> tim cook will finally get to share those secrets when he gets
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to kick off the worldwide developers conference. >> we want to talk about the next document to transform the world. >> it's a gathering of programmers from around the world that control content and half a trillion dollar app-based economy. find o some of your mo favorite features are announced there. if you're a developer, you get some new technology that you can incorporate in your new app and make your app even better. you're somebody like me who looks at it all, you see the intersection of technology and the liberal arts and it makes your heart sing. >> were you among your people when this happened? >> oh, yeah, oh, yes. if it were physical i'd be right there with everybody else. >> the conference will not be physical this year for the same reason we're doing this interview 2500 miles apart. it's a consequence of covid-19. apple will host a virtual
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conference promising more than a green workaround. they're promising to innovate the board. and we are calling it iphone. >> apple's i phone introduced in 2007 has transformed not just communication but nearly every aspect of our lives and has helped make apple one of the wealthiest companies in the world with a market capitalization comparable to the gdp of australia, spain, or even saudi arabia. it's about $1.4 trillion. what is the role of the ceo that has that kind of size in the world? >> there was a tile many years ago when ceos were just supposed to focus on profits onlyot so much the constituencies.
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>> ream addressed the death of george floyd at the hands of minneapolis police, an incident that may have develop unnoticed if not for cell phone video. >> do you ever reflect on the role of the iphone plays in the almost nine minutes that george floyd had the officer's knee on his neck? >> we are humbled by it. we are humbled by it. you look back in time some of the most dramatic style changes was changed because somebody captured video. it was true about things that happened in selma and birmingham. the thing that has changed, though, and we're very proud of this, is that we put a camera in everybody's pocket and so it becomes much proper on society to convince themselves that it didn't happen or that it was --
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or it happened in a different manner or whatever it might be. and i think fundamentally, this one will change the world. >> tim kook has been apples' co-for over a decade now. he was born in 1960 in a small town in alabama. >> do you remember your first experience at racism? >> i remember, john, as iftwe y that said -- and sometimes it had been tried to scratch through "whites only," and fundamentally not understanding how people could convince themselves that this was belies is one of those moments that we can make significant progress. for so many things it seems like there's such slow progress and then all of a sudden there's a
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giant leap. >> you want leap bigger? >> that's exactly right. >> six years ago cook took a leap of his own, becoming the first openly gave fortune 500 ceo. >> there can no longer be discriminates against people biechbd their orientation. what was your response to that? >> i was incredibly grateful for their opinion and i applaud the justices who stood up and did that. >> cook's outspokespersonness has put him on what might appear to be a collision course with president donald trump. in your interactionsdona trump you have policies on immigration, on human rights that are anti-threat cal to your permanent views. do you bring up some of these things in your conversations with him? >> of course i do. and in that issue, in my mimed,
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as i said before, all roads read to equality. i believe that everyone should be treated with dignity and respect. it's basically that simple. and yet we start life on this life on this equal footing and beam get ahead and those sorts of things but we should start life on an equal footing and i long for that day. >> there is one issue, however, where cook appears to see eye to eye with the president, keeping corporate taxes low. >> what the the metric you think about in your desire to be socially responsible and your fiduciary dude to keep paying as low taxes as possible? >> well, our responsibility is to pay what we owe, plain and simple. >> you think about it paying what you owe, that's the standard, every company does that. is there a way in which the
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value, the proposition you've been talking about operates when it comes to paying taxes? >> well, you can see that we do a lot more that pay taxes. we turned the company up side-down to help the world on koefd and donated all of that, hundreds of millions of dollars. so i think -- my own view is you pay what you owe in taxes and then you give back to society. and apple is doing that. >> covid 19 is affecting more than just the company's bottom line. take a look at apple's multi-billion california headquarters. it's nearly empty and tim cook would like nothing more than to get his people back under one gleaming roof. >> that is the biggest challenge, i would say. the thing i worry we'll be missing is the serendipity that we all count on and so that -- for that reason i can't wait until we're all back together again. >> we are all called in the age of covid 19 to the tolerate
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extraordinary uncertainty. how has it been managing that both in terms of products and also your employees, the up certainly of the world we live in now? >> you know, people jimmy just like uncertainty. i would say as a gem rule. i know very few people that thrive on uncertainty. they try to take an uncertain thing and make it a bit more certain. they do it by estimating where things are going, by predicting tn en the se let me tell you. but the most important thing for us is we viewed it as a challenge to overcome. >> you can stream apple's worldwide developers conference on youtube and apple tv. we previewed a new film called dads which looks at fatherhood. we told you it was available on
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>> how are you? >> two. >> two! yay! >> these are our three-year-old twins alexander and zachary. >> when did you turn three? >> believe it or not this is father's day number 10 for me. i have an almost 11-year-old son, an eight-year-old daughter and then the baby. >> ok. one more finger. >> of an evening when you have that privilege of becoming a father, you have a higher sense of purpose. you now turn into that selfless zone where there are individuals who are far more important that you are. >> how do you define being a good father? >> more meaningful for me -- i wasn't raised by my real d. i' oy met him three times. what it meant to be a dad. >> time is most important thing.
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that's how i would define a great father. >> a father to three sons. what's important for me is not for them to emulate me or essentially grow up like me but to be better than me. >> somebody that gives their kids the confidence to tackle the world with a full held of steam. part of that is kipping kids with tools to overcome adversity. >> father's dayhood did that for me. >> to be a citizen of the world and to look at things for what they bring to the table, not the color of their face. >> don't think that anybody will understand what they are a dad of color. >> i'm very mindful that i have a black daughter and that is the best blessing in the world.
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it can also be something i love so much. >> i want to tell her about the reality of things. i want her to know how the world works. if it don't look like her, it works the same. >> able to walk into a room and know that he's supposed to be there and why is she supposed to be there? because his dad helped prepare him to be there. all the dads out there l day care. even though you know. there's no -- everything is on the block. you can only see as far as the headlights but you make it there safely most of
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we wrap up this father's day weekend with steve hartman venturing deep into the woods to solve a year's old father's day mystery. >> deep iide this park there's a mystery. back in 2011 someone walked way out here you would the cover of night and a mailbox. leaving no explanation aside from that three-letter klu. dad. >> after keeping a secret for so many years i knew someone would find out about it and i think now is a great time to share it. >> barry put it there because he
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has always been a letter writer and his favorite penpal was always his father george. >> that was my way to connect with him, so when he passed away, about a year later i realized that that piece of our relationship was missing, so that's when i decided to find a way to continue that connection. >> again, until recently no one knew how it got there, but many have stumbled upon it. peaked inside, and made it their connection, too. strangers now leave blank jurms for others to write in. there are hundreds of memphis for dads gone by. showed me how kind and gentle a truly strong man is. how challenging it is sometimes to keep your part of my life when the living are so needy. i often wish i could see you but i don't miss you because your spirit glide by so fauch. of course, the most recent --
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>> ddy our private conversation but so many people have found this to be a place of love, appreciation and healing. as we strug to survive the pandemic and heal the wounds we have created adds a country, your gift will be a place we can all come together and share stories. love forever and a day, barry. >> and with that, the portal closes yet again, ready for the next grateful child to come along. steve hartman, onn the road, in heinzberg, vermont. >> garrett: that is the yoecht news for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others, please check back plart for cbs this morning. follow us online anytime cbsnews.com. from the nation's capital, i'm major garrett.
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♪ captioning sponsored by cbs >> garrett: tonight president trump's return to the campaign trail gets a reality check. the cheers in tulsa were familiar, the rows of empty seats were not. the president said this about coronavirus. >> so i said to my people, slow the testing down, please. >> garrett: the white house said it was a joke. but this was not. >> the unhinged left wing mob is trying to vandalize our history. >> garrett: also tonight, some are stressed by supreme court litical adwinds thell book and administration tries to boun12so levels. >> this will be hard to get under control. >> reporter: and pushback. >> the president is already telling us we have to do stuff we shouldn't have to do. >> going, going, gow
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