tv CBS Overnight News CBS May 9, 2022 3:30am-4:00am PDT
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states stand with the people of ukraine. >> you feel it. >> at the white house president biden met virtually with president zelenskyy and other g7 leaders. they announced a new round of oil sanctions. this as vladimir putin gets ready to celebrate russia's annual victory day. these seen at victory day. cbs's charlie d'agata is there and has the latest. >> reporter: good evening, jamie. everywhere we've gone here in eastern ukraine we've witnessed the wholesale destruction of civilian areas. in luhansk. >> reporter: a direct hit in the
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smoldering ruins. the governor said 90 people were inside and in his words all 60 who remain under the rubble are now dead. with ukraine's troops resisting the groundoffensive, the russian military has gone to the air. like the russian rocket attacks on homes here in krematorsk. scattered among the debris, a woman's shoe, children's toys, a leather jacket hanging from a tree. heartbreaking evidence of lives blown apart at the moment of impact. >> look at the size of the crater left behind. the force of the blast was so powerful it tore through this entire residential neighborhood. >> i felt the wave of shelling andre smirnov told us. it threw me from the bed.
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no doors. >> windows left in my part. nothing. the first lady's surprised mother's day visit, a show of support ahead of that adding to a growing list of western visitors to ukraine including prime minister justin trudeau reopening the canadian embassy in kyiv. even a surprise acoustic gig by bono in a bomb shelter. substituting stand by me withstand by ukraine alongside a ukrainian pop star turned soldier. standing united in song. >> charlie joins us from eastern ukraine. charlie, that's the mood like there on the eve of victory day tomorrow. >> nervous, jamie. soldiers tell us they're on edge
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because of the uncertainty of what president putin may say, whether he's going to declare a limited victory, launch a spectacular attack and either way it may prove to be a pivotal day. >> we'll be watching. thank you so much for your hard work. on the diplomatic front, president biden met with leaders and he pledged more pain for putin. christina ruffini is at the white house. >> reporter: good evening, jamie. they spoke for an hour and released a joint statement that called the action unjustifiable, unprovoked and illegal. the g-7 countries plan to phase
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out support. today they used mother's day to launch what they call a national strike. >> reporter: barricades in are in place outside saint patrick's cathedral as police try and stay prepared for ongoing demonstrations. >> what side are we on, my people. >> reporter: supporters nationwide are vowing to keep up the fight, from oklahoma to ohio and outside the supreme court today, outrage over a leaked draft majority opinion indicating the supreme court may be poised to overturn roe v. wade which would end the constitutional right for abortion. >> i would be dammed if i don't fight and we don't fight because we cannot go backwards. >> reporter: in wisconsin firefighters confirmed the headquarters of an antiabortion group was the site of abortion.
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>> you don't get to take away my bodily autonomy and enjoy your saturday night at home. >> the justices home addresses were leaked online renewing concerns for their safety. on friday clarence thomas told a judicial conference the court cannot be an institution that can be bullied into giving you just the outcomes you want. a cbs news poll shows 64% of americans believe the supreme court should keep roe v. wade in place. the poll also shows those who want to make abortion illegal in their state say abortion is not a right, that abortions are too easy to obtain or that abortion is against their religious beliefs. >> if you believe as i believe, that's an unborn child in that mother's womb. what we are trying to do is stand up for the rights of those unborn churn. >> reporter: democrat leaders say the battle on capitol hill is not over. >> here we are on mother's day,
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a week where the court has slapped women in the face in terms of disrespect for their judgments about the size and timing of name lis. >> reporter: today in new york chuck schumer outlined a vote planned in congress this week aimed at protecting abortion rights. it is not expected to pass, but schumer says he wants americans to know where lawmakers stand ahead of mid-term elections. jamie? >> elise preston, thank you. to the southwest where fire conditions are reported to be extreme. that's where the nation's biggest fire is raging. hermit's peak fire has burned an area twice as large as the city of philadelphia. and in the everglades more than 20,000 acres have burned. ash north all the way to palm springs. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news."
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this is the "cbs overnight news." i'm jamie yuukas in new york. thanks for staying with us. the lke th could end access to abortions continues to send shock waves from coast to coast. a cbs news poll shows 2/3 want the law to remain as it is and even a greater percentage think making abortion illegal will lead to more restrictions on birth control. we have two looks at the issue. >> reporter: never mind justice
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samuel alito's leaked opinion was a draft, not a final decision. its impact was like a hurled grenade. >> our body our choice. >> abortion is violence. >> reporter: once detonated it ignited all of the pent-up passions surrounding the expected overturn of roe v. wade after 50 years. >> abortion is murder. >> our bodies. >> reporter: the news was a shock but not surprise. >> in 2019 we got a preview of -- and a dry run of what living in a post war is like. >> pro life, pro woman. >> reporter: in 2019 only last-minute court intervention
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kept the planned parenthood clinic open, the last abortion clinic in the state. >> it was at that moment that we started to be really strategic for planning for a future without abortion in the state. we built this facility in secret. >> in fair view heights they built this. in illinois, abortion laws are as liberal here as they are restricted in missouri. last year it performed approximately 6,000 abortions. it is prepared to perform 14,000 a year going forward. >> so we are doing this not just for patients but for patients across the midwest and the south. >> if you want to see what a post roe world will look like, this is it. just look at a map of the states where abortion will be legal
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like illinois and all those others where it likely will not. a new kind of continental divide. in january in the fair view heights clinic opened this first in the nation regional logistics center. >> i heard it. it's okay. >> reporter: it provides patients money, transportation, lodging, whatever they say they need wherever they are. >> any type of travel. >> reporter: koanna shannon runs the center. i'm sure there are antiabortion supporters who will say, you're facilitating people killing their babies. >> i will tell you that i am sitting here every day facilitating a person's right to choose what they want to do with their body. >> i dreamed of being a mom and when i learned that some children don't even have the right to live, it just shocked
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my conscience. it still does. >> reporter: equally passionate but on the opposite side is missouri state representative mary elizabeth coleman. elated that the supreme court could actually overturn roe soon. >> seems like an incredible victory for the american experiment. we have a decision that was wrongly held 50 years ago. we've been working to change that bad law since it was passed. >> mother of six, a lawyer, coleman is the face of her state's waiting in the wings law banning abortion. roe gets overturned. what happens? >> the abortion will be illegal in the state of missouri except for the life of a mother. >> reporter: coleman has proposed legislation that goes further, targeting not the woman herr self but any professional service provider anywhere.
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the sort of services the fair view heights provides. i don't think if you live in new jersey you'll tined to foo this. more than 6 out of 10 want roe i ds fall as expected -- the battle over abortion shifts from the courts to the legislative arena at all levels of government. and both sides agree on this one thing. >> right now vote because your life and your future actually depends on it. this is jim axelrod. the security fence surrounding
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the supreme court is all you need to see to understand the gravity of what unfolded in washington this past week. while the court may have decided on a presidential election and roemd on who could protect whom. >> reporter: the draft suggesting roe versus wade have been overturned. >> the republicans have been working for this day for decades. >> reporter: a reaches more comfortably. the vast majority will be dominating supreme court election hearings. u.c.c. law professor, mary ziegler. what is the underopinioning of
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overturning roe v. wade? >> there are only a limited subsets of rights recognized in our constitution. those have been deeply rooted in tradition or history. >> reporter: this explains the reason for protest. what's next? >> we don't know if the court is going to stop with reversing roe. there are some who would like to reversing other things. somebody who says the relaxed deliver riff is a slippery soap. >> i say it's first abortion, they would have had it's
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politically important here. the possibility that the court may overturn roe by a 5-4 term. as president of the national cons city tuesday. he's withering in how we found out. >> this is the most sacrosanct product. >> its for rosen the leak and who did it is no side show and justices have a chance to rework, recast. >> there are many motives that have been wouldn'ted.
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>> chief justice roberts is trying to get it right. >> the court has historically not been that untethered from what people think especially when the court is inserting itself into virtually every major issue of the day from guns to abortion action the court is literally in every conversation we're happening, it operated in such a way. >> reporter: the recent
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so you don't have to. trap the bugs. hah! and simply send 'em away. zevo. people-friendly. bug-deadly. an 80 to 1 long shot won this weekend's derby. rich strike wasn't set to run. a horse was scratched and that let to his amazing run for the roses. steve hartman has the story of one beloved thoroughbred who was an inspiration to many without ever winning a race. not long ago they faced zippy chippy. >> zippy loved being a race horse. he just wasn't very good at it. >> reporter: and farsickle.
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>> he'll live forever in my heart. >> reporter: this memorial is hardly horseplay. >> it could be a joke to some people. >> reporter: he was born into a racing royal family. he's the grandson of northern dancer. zippy, too, could have been one of the all-time greats if only at the start of every race he just would have started. >> they're off. well, in the gate is zippy chippy. >> never quite understood why everybody was in such a rush. he lost every race he was in. 0 for 100. >> zippy chippy finishes last. >> reporter: 101 if you count the time he lost to a minor league baseball player. that cemented his reputation as the losingist race horse ever. this is zippy with his owner
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felix monseratti. felix died a few years ago but he never tried. any time he run, then it feel good. >> reporter: zippy lived out the remainder of his life at the old friends farm. he died last month at the ainge of 31. he is being celebrated as the winner that he was. >> he will be loved. >> not anyone mentioned his record. do you think people see themselves in zippy? >> oh, yeah. because it was always on zippy's terms. whatever zippy wanted, zippy did. >> reporter: at the kentucky derby all that matters is speed. but zippy reminds us there's
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the latest unemployment figures there are twice as many job openings as people who are looking for work. >> reporter: these top 12-year-old girls have a powerful command to the pub. simone byrnes has been on the ice since she was 5. >> it feels so free. i used to take my mind off of everything. >> reporter: play is on pause because there aren't enough referees. at one point the organization was down nearly 900 officials. we looked at it, abuse. abuse and mistreatment by
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players. a massachusetts and this unsuspecting referee plowed down on a california soccer field. >> why do you think we're seeing more of these? >> i think there's a general lack of respect for the past few years. >> reporter: there's been a dramatic drop. early data, an estimaed 30,000 high school referees have quit since 2018. >> i don't think there hasn't been a game how does it jeopardize the safety of the kids? >> you could miss a major penalty. >> reporter: do you think this impacts the future of youth hockey?
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>> absolutely. >> reporter: she dreams of going pro and wants to play. elise preston, cbs news, austin. that's the overnight news for this monday. reporting from the cbs brocast center in new york city i'm jamie yukkas. > . >> reporter: this is cbs news flash. a top ukrainian official is pleading for help from the international community. this as the last 600 people were rescued. two trespassers on the track in maine were struck. graduating class in riley college. they paid the students' lone.
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for more news, download the cbs news app from y r cell one o it's monday, may 9th, 2022. it's monday, may 9th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." ukraine school bombed. dozens are feared dead after russia attacks a school building being used as a shelter. it comes as russian president vladimir putin accuses the west of preparing to invade russia. shocking claims. the jaw-dropping accusations former defense secretary mark esper told "60 minutes" about his time working for then-president trump. > and nationwide mnt coti before she aedped >>ll
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