tv CBS Overnight News CBS February 11, 2022 3:12am-3:59am PST
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solution to this crisis. now, four u.s. navy warships are on their way to the region tonight to meet up with american forces already in the area as russia's military build-up continues to show no sign of slowing down. norah. andincee' here in londongn w he's the uk minister for europe. he told us if russia invades ukraine they will face a quagmire and russian troops will, in his words, go home in body bags. >> in moscow today your foreign secretary was walked out on by her russian counterpart, sergey lavrov. he said she wasn't listening to him. it looks like the dmatic s are not going well. >> well, the fact that liz got a bit of a frosty reception in
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moscow is unsurprising because she was saying things that they don't really want to hear. so -- >> like what? >> she's taken a really very, very clear message that their actions are unacceptable. i really hope that russia listens. >> is there any sign, though, that vladimir putin wants to de-escalate? >> well, sadly, we are not seeing any of the things that we would want to see. we're not hearing any of the things that we would want to hear. >> given where the number of troops are with so many russian troops in belarus, that vladimir putin could move to quickly seize the capital of ukraine, kyiv. what would then happen? >> well, i think what russia would experience is a very strong defense by the ukrainian people of their own country. this would not be a quick or easy conflict for russia. it would be drawn out. it would be painful. it would be bloody.
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it would be a quagmire. and the best thing for russia to do is to de-escalate, to move its troops away from the border and engage meaningfully in diplomacy with both european and our friends across in the united states. >> but is putin listening to that? >> well, we are trying to make sure that if the russian generals aren't being honest with vladimir putin we're being honest with vladimir putin. if he's getting messages from the front line that this will be quick and easy, we're giving him a more truthful message that this will be long, drawn out, and painful. >> it's an incredible moment you're in when you hear officials say this is the largest deployment of troops since world war ii. >> it is. it does not need to happen. it would be protracted. it would be painful. it would cause huge loss of life not just to the ukrainians but also to russian people. we don't want to see that. >> and as we arrived in london
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this morning, the news broke that prince charles had tested positive for covid and is se t health. charles was with his mother, the 95-year-old monarch, just two days ago. tonight we're told her majesty is not experiencing any symptoms and is being monitored. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. facing expensive vitamin c creams with dull results? olay brightens it up with new olay vitamin c. gives you two times brighter skin. hydrates better than the 100, 200, even $400 cream.
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i just heard something amazing! one medication is approved to treat and prevent migraines. don't take if allergic to nurtec. the most common side effects were nausea, stomach pain, and indigestion. ask your doctor about nurtec today! and two months ago tonight a deadly december tornado outbreak left a trail of destruction across eight states. in tonight's "eye on america" we travel to the hardest-hit state, kentucky, where the devastation was so widespread that the cleanup alone could take another two months. cbs's jonathan vigliotti reports on the long road to recovery. >> reporter: december's unprecedented swarm of tornadoes carved out an interstate of destruction 260 miles long through parts of arkansas, missouri and tennessee, before
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bearing down on kentucky. >> and what you're seeing used to be brick buildings, historic landmark buildings. >> reporter: the road to recovery is a long one for towns like mayfield. >> good morning. >> reporter: fema and the army corps of engineers invited us to see the many hurdles ahead. >> so what we've got here is one of our self-loading trucks. >> reporter: george minges directs debris removal. >> how much are we talking about? >> so our estimates, somewhere in the neighborhood of about 2 million cubic yards of debris across the entire county. >> reporter: that's on scale with the cleanup after 9/11. and when it comes to rebuilding downtown, what that will look p. about 50% of mayfield's historic buildings were destroyed in the tornado. [ knocking on door ] >> fema. >> meanwhile, fema is still reaching out to those like kevin reed who are living in damaged homes. >> by the time it gets back to where it was i'm probably not going to be around. >> it's fema. >> when you knock on a door, you
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never know what you're going to find. you may have survivors who actually were having to register for assistance forp funerals. >> reporter: and what drives you to do this? >> just the desire to be out here, the desire to help. >> reporter: from dawson springs to the town of bremen -- >> we've been driving for more than 100 miles and we're still seeing communities like this destroyed from a single tornado. >> reporter: lives and livelihoods were shattered. bowling green is home of the corvette, where 186 vehicles are assembled every day. >> we actually shut down for a week and a half because we had doornlg damage in the plant. >> reporter: t.j. massey helps build america's sports car. >> i mean, it ripped straight through here. >> reporter: and now his hometown. >> i just hope the community ng. there are many in need. know thatghborsregone.
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>> rep f say cleanup an rebuding along america's tornado interstate won't just take years but likely generations. for "eye on america," jonathan vic vigliotti, kentucky. there's a lot more ahead on "cbs overnight news." some breaking news just coming in. what fueled a wildfire that is burning homes in l.a. county?
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whittier. down the coast another fire came dangerously close to homes in laguna beach. evacuation orders were lifted just a short time ago. we're also learning flu details tonight about the tragic death of beloved comedian bob saget. a medical examiner in florida says saget's death was an accident and that he died from blunt head trauma, likely from an unwitnessed fall. saget had fractures at the base of his skull and around his eye sockets. the coroner believes saget accidentally hit his head or the back of his head on something, thought nothing of it, and then went to sleep. no illegal drugs were found in his body. all right. coming up next, a little girl with big dreams.
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finally tonight, president biden said he has done a deep dive on about four potential nominees for the supreme court. but there's someone else who wants to be on that list. 11-year-old madison morgan of washington wrote to the president asking that he consider her for the nation's highest court. >> i decided hey, why can't i be a part of the supreme court? it doesn't hurt to ask. >> reporter: she said she understood that he may wonder why he should "appoint some silly little girl." so she listed a number of reasons. among them she wrote that children don't have a voice in this country and she could give them a small one. she also wrote that she heard the president would appoint a black woman and wrote, "well, that's me." another good reason is the fact that she lives just a few blocks from the supreme court, so she can walk to work. it's always a great day when
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little girls are dreaming about reaching the highest court in the land. i love that. we'll be right back. on tomorrow's "cbs evening news," voices lifted in song 20 stories high. cbs's steve hartman goes on the road with a thrilling musical tradition. and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. reporting from cbs news headquarters in london, i'm norah o'donnell. flash."
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i'm tom hanson m new york. president biden met with democratic members of the senate judiciary committee ahead of his plan to announce a pick for the supreme court. biden has conducted background checks on at least four candidates. he promised to select an african american woman. the cdc has proposed new guidelines for prescribing opioid painkillers. the agency removed previous limits on dosages but said doctors should opt for non-opioid therapies wherever possible. and hitmaker sting is surely walking on the moon after selling his entire songwriting catalog to universal music group including his work with the police. while the financial terms were not disclosed, the award winning
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songwriter's work is estimated to be worth around $300 million. for more news download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm tom hanson, cbs news, new york. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." good evening and thank you for joining us. tonight we're here in london watching the largest troop deployments in europe since world war ii. britain's prime minister warning ominously today that they're facing the most dangerous moment in decades. and this news just coming in. the u.s. state department urging americans get out of ukraine now. we will get to that story in just a moment. but we're going to begin back at home tonight with the growing frustration over the pandemic and the anger over mandates that has now turned into protests. protests which are now threatening our already fragile supply chain. the biden administration tells cbs news that they are working with their canadian counterparts
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to resolve these border blockages. and there's a new statement tonight from a group calling themselves the people's convoy. they just announced plans to rally in california on march 5th and then head east to d.c. the following day. so we have a lot of news to get to tonight, starting with cbs's kris van cleave, who's in detroit. good evening, kris. >> norah, we're learning that if one of those protests happen in the u.s. law enforcement is going to be focused on protecting people's right to protest but also preventing disruptions across major cities around the united states. what is disrupted tonight, anything trying to go across this bridge. and that includes an awful lot of commerce. tonight the trucker blockade in canada is growing, with vaccine mandate protests closing border crossings in three provinces, bordering michigan, north dakota and montana. in detroit the ambassador bridge remains closed for a fourth day, cutting off about 25% of all trade between the two countries.
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michigan's governor demanded the canadian government open the bridge. >> they've got to clear the path so that commerce can flow or a lot of people are going to be unemployed. >> reporter: gm, ford and toyota are among several automakers forced to cut production at several plants in the u.s. and canada as far away as kentucky due to a lack of parts. at mbh trucking outside lansing these trailers are parked instead of making their cross-border runs. owner brian hitchcock. >> what portion of your business is cross-canada, cross-border? >> about 40% o our revenue. so we go in and out of there every week. >> 40% is a big hit. >> yes, it is. >> reporter: the cross-canada protests started nearly two weeks ago. in ottawa authorities have still not been able to get the trucks off the streets. >> this can go on for days, weeks, months, it doesn't matter. and if it's not here it's going to be somewhere else. >> reporter: police are now asking for help clearing out the protesters. >> more reinforcements means more results. a speedier, safer, more lawful
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end to this unlawful and unsafe demonstration. >> reporter: there are new concerns a similar trucker convoy could start this weekend at the super bowl. cbs news learning tonight the department of homeland security is surging additional staff to its incident command post there. >> i think dhs is going to let things play out and be very alert for the possibility of violence. and that's what would actually trigger a much more serious response from law enforcement. >> reporter: and it's not just automakers feeling the impact. the white house is acknowledging tonight that significant disruptions are being felt by a number of businesses and industries. norah? >> kris van cleave, thank you. let's turn now to the u.s. economy. have you noticed that everything is costing more and your paycheck isn't going as far as it used to? well, new numbers released today show that's exactly what's happening. because of the highest inflation in four decades. we get more now from cbs's nancy cordes. >> inflation is up.
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it's up. >> reporter: president biden didn't sugarcoat it today after consumer prices rose even faster than predicted. the surge driven in part by a 40% hike year over year in gas prices. the national average for a gallon of gas hit $3.47 today, a price not seen since 2014. >> it used to be like $30 every time i filled up, and now it's like over 50. >> reporter: electricity is up nearly 11%. meat and eggs up 12%. used cars up 40%. at piece of cake movers in queens, new york a used moving truck that used to cost them $25,000 is now 45,000. >> we have to keep looking at our expenses. we have to keep looking at our pricing models. and we have to keep making changes. >> reporter: moody's estimates that all those price hikes are costing the average american family an extra $276 a month.
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>> your purchasing power, the amount that you can spend in the economy, is diminishing. and there's no getting around that. >> reporter: cbs news business analyst jill schlesinger notes that average wages also rose over the past year by nearly 6%. but they still didn't keep pace with inflation. >> that means a lot of americans are falling behind every single pay period. >> reporter: president biden said today he's going to "work like the devil to try to bring down gas prices." but there's very little he can do. and if the federal reserve raises interest rates to try to slow inflation, that could slow the nation's economic growth as well. some tough trade-offs ahead, norah. >> indeed. nancy cordes at the white house. thank you. and there's this major news that is just coming in. the u.s. state department is asking americans in ukraine to leave that country now. that's because of the increased threat of a russian invasion.
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and a major headline also in london tonight. british prime minister boris johnson visiting nato headquarters in brussels today said the crisis has become the most dangerous moment europe has faced in decades. as the prime minister spoke, russian troops stepped up their war games in the region. and we get more now from cbs's imtiaz tyab, who's near ukraine's border with belarus. >> reporter: thissiveli anything seen since the cold war. the start of ten days of joint 30,000 russian troops overseen by top commanders. western military and intelligence officials are looking for any sign moscow might be shifting from threatening an invasion to launching one. the enormous russian build-up follows president vladimir putin's demand for an end to nato's expansion. ukraine, while not a member of nato, still wants to be part of that alliance.
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says alexi danieloff, the country's top security official. >> are you concerned president biden will make a deal with president putin that could potentially block your country's membership from nato? "nobody can make a deal about us without us," he says. "ukrainian civilians are ready to die for our liberty." as ukraine begins its own military exercises, european leaders in berlin today are in diplomatic overdrive trying to find a peaceful solution to this kras. crisis. now, four u.s. navy warships are on their way to the region tonight to meet up with american forces already in the area as russia's military build-up continues to show no sign of slowing down. norah. >> imtiaz tyab in ukraine for us tonight. thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news a new trial is set to begin this month in the killing of bakari henderson, a 22-year-old black man who was beaten to death outside a bar in greece. in 2017 henderson was chased and attacked by a mob after a violent altercation inside a bar. henderson, who is from austin, texas, was in greece on a business trip involving his own clothing line. the attack was captured on camera. we're warning you now that the video is hard to watch. nine of the attackers went on trial in 2018. six were found guilty of deadly
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assault. but none was convicted of murder. cbs mornings co-host gayle king spoke to bakbakari's parents wh say more than four years later they are still fighting for justice. >> why don't you first start us off by telling us what the past five years have been like. >> it's been a lot of highs but mostly lows, trying to process the grief. and i would say the hardestn fe focused on bakari and the retrial and just trying to keep his legacy alive because miss him so much. >> we think about him daily. >> you think about him daily? >> oh, yeah. there's something that happens every day that makes me think about him. >> reporter: phil and jill henderson's son bakari was a world traveler. in july 2017 the recent college graduate was visiting the greek island of zakinthos when a night out turned deadly.
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the woman seen in this surveillance video told authorities the altercation began after she asked to take a selfie with bakari. she says a serbian customer nearby then said, "there are a lot of serbs in the bar. why are you talking to a black guy?" that man then hit bakari in the face. bakari hesitated, struck back, and then tried to escape. a mob then chased him down the street beating him against a car and then on the ground. less than 30 seconds later bakari henderson was dead. his death made international headlines. >> somebody getting beaten to death over a selfie, it just makes no sense. it's very hard to imagine that people would have that much hate to do something to another human being. >> reporter: in 2018 six of the nine suspects charged with intentional homicide, which carries a life sentence in greece, were found guilty of a lesser assault charge. the attackers, five serbian
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nationals and a british man of serbian descent, face between 5 and 15 years in prison. the other three men were acquitted. no one was found guilty of murder. at least four of the men have already been released. >> you should not be able to chase a man down and beat him to death and then not go to jail and serve jail time. that's all i have to say. >> reporter: take us through the first trial, what that experience was like for you. >> it was eye-opening because it was so different. >> reporter: is the trial in english? >> no. the trial is all in greek. >> and even though you can't understand what's being sailed, both of you still feel it's very important for you to be there in person. >> yes. >> why? >> just so that they realize that bakari is loved and we are there to support the outcome of this trial. we want to see justice served. >> does the language barrier add to the stress of the case? >> oh, yeah. you can see their body language. in their culture they're so
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animated. so you're not sure if they're arguing. and you're kind of, you know, tense and stressed just trying to figure out okay, what's going wrong, what are they talking about? >> reporter: during the first trial, phil, were the defendants in the courtroom? >> yes. they brought them in. >> reporter: what was that like for you, to see the men accused of taking your son's life? >> it was rough. and the whole time i felt like they were there to have a good time just like he was there to have a good time. i just kept saying to myself, if they only would have got to know him, they would have loved him. if they only would have got to know him they would have loved him. >> it was very hard because they brought them in and they have them sitting in the middle of the courtroom in front of you and they never make eye contact with you. they never tried to even look to see that we're even human. during breaks they would allow their family to come upike give them hugs and kisses and stuff like that. and i'm like, really?
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you're doing that in front of us? and we'll never get to do that with our son. it just felt like there was just no real respect for the fact that we were there grieving. so. >> do you think the people of greece or the public of greece understands what this case is about? >> i think that the people of greece overall support justice being served because greece views themselves as a country that is very hospitable and built on friendship. and so i think that they would prefer that, you know, justice would be served so that this back mark would be taken off of the country as a whole. >> you you know, when i was in your home in austin five years ago we went in bakari's room. what have you done with his room? >> we really haven't done much. we haven't even unpacked his suitcase yet. >> you haven't unpacked his suitcase from greece? why, jill? >> we just haven't been able to.
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i don't know. >> after he died you found a journal in his room? >> yes. he actually had a few journals and he had one with like all the clothes line stuff and he had his designs. he had what logo went where, the colors, the price points. i mean, everything. and another journal he had people he wanted to meet, books he wanted to read. he had songs he wanted to hear, movies he wanted to watch. and he had favorite quotes from people. >> who did he want to meet? i'm curious. >> elon musk. >> yeah. >> he wanted to meet elon musk? >> elon musk. he had robert smith on there. he'd actually tried to reach him in austin to intern. he wanted to intern for him because he was -- >> i think that's a treasure to have. >> it is. >> you've also continued his work. he was in greece because he was shooting a photo shoot for his fashion line. >> correct. so that's what i spend all my time doing. >> what do you think he'd say about you doing this?
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>> well, he always told me i was going to be working for him. so we laugh now because we are working for him full-time. >> reporter: next week the hendersons will return to greece for the fifth time. seven of the original nine men accused in his brutal attack are being retried for murder. >> are you more optimistic this time, jill? >> i want to be. i'll say that. i'm trying to be. it just was so devastating last time to have all that optimism and then have it just kind of thrown in your face at the last minute. >> i don't think they view us, black peop, ts the over there. and i felt that in the trial and the results of thema >> i just truly hope that this time they really view bakari as a child of god and the human that he is and view him as somebody that could be their brother, their son, their
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grandson, their nephew, their friend. i really want them to be able to understand that when they're doing the sentencing this time. >> that was cbs mornings co-host gayle king with jill and phil henderson. the retrial is scheduled to the retrial is scheduled to begin on february 21 depression can make you feel like...just...noooo. it comes with different symptoms... a whole grocery list of them. yeah...enough! and your doctor tells you about trintellix, a prescription medicine for adults with depression. and you feel this relief...from your overall symptoms. with—get this—no significant impact on weight in clinical trials. trintellix may increase suicidal thoughts and actions in people 24 and younger. call a doctor right away if you have these, or new or worsening depression, or new or sudden changes in mood, behavior, thoughts, or feelings. do not take with maois. tell your doctor about all medicines you take to avoid a life-threatening condition. increased risk of bleeding may occur,
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from super bowl lvi, where the los angeles rams will host the cincinnati bengals. protecting sunday's game could become an even bigger challenge this year. the department of homeland security is warning of a convoy of truckers that could try to block traffic around the stadium to protest vaccine mandates. carter evans spoke exclusively with dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas and got a firsthand look at the security preps under way from the sky and the sea. >> reporter: 1,500 feet above los angeles agents from customs and border protection are on patrol in blackhawk helicopters. when you're in the air here, what are you looking for? >> any unusual movement of people that just seems suspicious or odd. >> reporter: and the security perimeter for the big game extends miles beyond sofi stadium. >> there are super bowl events all over this city and customs and border protection is watching over all of it. the crew with this helicopter is
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looking for small aircraft moving low and slow that could be a threat. >> any aircraft that looks like it's heading toward our restriction area they're going to vector our aircraft to go investigate the situation. >> reporter: does that pose any specific challenges when you have to keep such a large area secure? >> i think the logistics are incredibly challenging. >> reporter: in an exclusive one-on-one interview homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas gave us a glimpse behind the scenes. where every day up to 400 trucks are x-rayed at this secure compound. >> there are security efforts both seen and unseen. more than 2,000 people working 24/7 to make sure that 70,000 will watch the super bowl and g california coastline is part of the
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sofi stadium is many miles that way. what's the concern out here on the water? >> we feel we're that first line of defense for any threat that could be coming in from offshore. >> reporter: agent evan waggly took us out on one of cbp's high-speed boats where they patrol waters off the massive ports of l.a. and long beach. this 1,400-horsepower boat can go up to 70 miles per hour. and speed is important because if they see a suspicious vessel they've got to be fast enough to catch it. >> obviously, if there's any boats that stick out to us we're going to go board those. but we're also going to board the ones that may not seem out of place. >> reporter: and to find them they can downlink video from aircraft overhead. >> if they feel that there's a boat out of place they can vector us into that area and we can stop them and board them as well. >> reporter: and less than a week before the game new potential threats arrives daily. the anti-vaxx trucker rally in canned avenue, they've made some threats to come down here.
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are you prepared for that? >> individuals have a perfect right to exercise their first amendment rights. once they intervene in other people's freedoms and liberties, it becomes a more complicated landscape. but we're working with law enforcement to address any eventualities. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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you can see qr codes just about everywhere these days, at restaurants from menus, inside stores offering deals. even random stickers on the street. but security experts say that you should think twice before scanning one with your own phone. cbs's jesse jones explains why. >> reporter: qr codes are those black-and-white boxes you shoot, your phone interprets, and then everything from menus to deals pops right up on your device via the internet. companies share them on social media and on signs and flyers. >> but they're everywhere. >> and they're a cool technology and that means they're subject to abuse like all cool technologies, right? >> reporter: tim helming, a computer security expert from
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the company domain tools, says scammers are now in the game turning those codes into your misery. >> it could be that they are making a fraudulent payment. it could be that they are downloading malware onto your phone. >> reporter: the other issue at play is a person can check a web address to see if it's legit. a qr code doesn't give consumers that chance. >> you have fewer ways to validate what it is you're about to get to than you do if it's an actual link. >> reporter: the better business bureau scam tracker shows one person lost $65,000 in a con that used qr codes. and they're easy to get. i found a number of sites that offer qr codes for free. just enter the website you want you're good to go. so tim says consumers need to consider the source before pointing and clicking. >> if i saw a qr code that was slapped up on a telephoe pole or the side of a building or something like that, i don't care how tempting the offer sounds. i'm running away from that.
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>> reporter: jesse jones, cbs news. and that is the "overnight news" for this friday. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm jeff pegues. this is "cbs news flash." i'm tom hanson in new york. president biden met with democratic members of the senate judiciary committee ahead of his plan to announce a pick for the supreme court. biden has conducted background checks on at least four candidates. he promised to select an african american woman. the cdc has proposed new guidelines for prescribing opioid painkillers. the agency removed previous limits on dosages b said doctors should opt for non-opioid therapies wherever possible. and s is surely walk on the moon after selling his entire songwriting catalog to universal music group including his work with the police. while the financial terms were
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not disclosed the award-winning songwriter's work is estimated to be worth around $300 million. for more news download the cbs news app on your cell phone or co ected it's friday, february 11th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." blockades grow. more people join the freedom convoy movement in canada. how the protests over vaccine rules are having a ripple effect here in u.s. the cost of living, rehing a 40-year high.gain how much more american families are paying each month for everyday items. i was trying to survive. that's all. he said, i won't harm you or molest you. >> grandmother saved. how a chicago woman was rescued thanks to the popular online game wordle. good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. there's new pressure to end the
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