tv CBS Overnight News CBS May 18, 2022 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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grains of sand on the ocean beaches. how do we collect that? what do we do with it? >> reporter: the writings were found on discord, a chat room host where users create groups for certain interest. >> discord chat rooms are private and encrypted which means your friends group, your interaction circle is unique to you. discord other and people cannot simply scan and see the content in that chat room. >> reporter: sources say that law enforcement did not know about the writings before the shootings, and they need tips from the public to go searching. >> unless the american people get their head out of the sand and find a way to be aware of their children, their neighbors, and their coworkers, we're never going to solve this problem. >> reporter: in those writings online, the suspect wondered that was about two weeks before the shooting.
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the suspect's alleged writings speak to motive and will play a role in potential hate crime charges. norah. >> o'donnell: jeff pegues with all those new details, thank you. turning now to sunday's shooting now to the impact of the nationwide baby formula shortage. we're learning for the first time about children hospitalized because they were unable to get a specific formula. two kids, one a toddler the other a preschooler, have special medical needs and rely on a formula made by abbott. they were treated with i.v. liquids at a hospital in memphis. one child was discharged today and the other remains hospitalized. and nestle announced it's stepping up its shipments of gerber formula flying it in from its plants in switzerland and the netherlands. they will import two brands for babies intolerant to cow's milk protein. in more medical news, the f.d.a. authorized pfizer's covid-19 booster shot for 5-11-year-olds.
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the c.d.c.'s scientific advisers are scheduled to meet on thursday to decide whether to formally recommend those children get booster shots. if the advisers agree, boosters for elementary-aged kids could start as early as friday. well, the pandemic has had a profound impact on america's children. as we mark the once-unthinkable milestone of one million covid deaths, it's estimated more than 200,000 kids in the u.s. have lost a parent or caregiver to the virus, leaving them vulnerable. we get more now from cbs' manuel bojorquez. >> reporter: as an emergency medical technician near miami, 23-year-old kenia penalba comforts her patients but was powerless to do the same for her own stepfather, rudolpho, when he was hospitalized with covid last august. >> he had to get intubated and as soon as he was intubated his organs started failing and we were told he had a day or so left to live. i had to say good-bye on facetime because they wouldn't allow visitors due to the pandemic. >> what's worse, her mother,
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ivis, was sick with the virus, too. >> she died two days after. >> penalba was left to care for her 13-year-old brother, lazaro, and 90-year-old grandmother paulina. >> i never expected to lose them. they were my best friends. i was like this with my parents. so, obviously, that's the hardest part. i never thought i'd have to live without them. so that was my low, realizing that they're gone. >> as soon as i heard my mom died, i just, it broke my heart in a million pieces. >> reporter: lazaro is now among the more than 214,000 children in the u.s. who have lost a parent or primary caregiver to covid-19. experts say the loss of a parent can be linked to an increased risk of substance abuse, dropping out of school, depression, and suicide. penalba has become the head of the how farred, managing a full-time job, giving insulin shots to her grandmother, and ensuring lazaro stays on top of
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his homework. >> did you shuffle them? >> i can't really go on a vacation or anything like that. and that hurts me, i guess. but ultimately, they matter the most to me. so i don't mind sacrificing those things. >> reporter: and it's appreciated. >> she is exactly just like my mom. >> reporter: she's like your mom? >> yes. >> reporter: i mean, that's the important thing is to have each other, right? >> exactly. >> reporter: manuel bojorquez, cbs news, florida city, florida. >> o'donnell: we are thinking of all those families. and still ahead on tonight's "cbs evening news," a tunnel found under the u.s.-mexico border, and the massive amount of cocaine, meth, and heroin found inside. and congress gets serious about u.f.o.s. what's being said and what can't be explained.
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cast a long shadow, former es has rsed dozens of candidates. last night, he had mixed results. ted bud came out on top in a crowded senate primary. >> we would not be here tonight without you, and friends, i want to thank president donald trump. the support cannot save controversial first term congressman, madison cawthorn. he lost his bid. >> the thing that i love about president trump is that when you get your back pushed up against the wall, most people in politics, if it's not important for them, they will turn their back on you. no matter what you are facing when donald trump has your back, he has your back to the end and that is what -- >> and in pennsylvania, trump's
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hand picked candidate in the republican gubernatorial process -- >> god is good and all the time. any freedom loving americans in the house. apiro.will face >> it was too close to call between dr. oz and businessman david mccormick. >> we are not going have a result tonight. when all the votes are tallied, i am confident we will win. >> the state lieutenant governor in the fall, fedderman could not attend his victory party because he received a pace maker implant yesterday as the votes were being cast. the overnight news is back in two minutes.
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authorities discovered a ÷rug tunnel etween san diego and tijuana. the tunnel, the length of six football fields and six stories below ground, has rail tracks, ventilation, and electricity. law enforcement seized more than 1,700 pounds of cocaine as the u.s. attorney said there's no more light at the end of this narco tunnel. u.f.o.s are unexplained, it's true, and they are real. that was the word today from the head of a congressional subcommittee looking into unexplained aerial phenomena. the hearing was spurred on by several mysterious videos like this, taken by u.s. military pilots. well, the committee stressed the matter is a national security issue and that u.f.o.s could be the product of foreign adversaries. okay, memorial day, the start, unofficial start of summer, is right around the corner, and a.a.a. warns a lot of people
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woman decided to live a life without limits, she gave herself a huge personal challenge-- a run for the record books. cbs' mark strassmann has her inspirational story. >> reporter: marathoners typically run on two legs and grit. jacky hunt broersma does it on one. >> i didn't want to be an amputee. i was like this is not my life. i'm just going to be normal. >> reporter: 20 years ago, at age 26, the south african native got bone cancer, a tumor near her left ankle. >> within three weeks i went from cancer diagnosis to having my leg amputated and i was like, no, i'm going to fight this. >> reporter: from the beginning your mind said this will not limit me. >> i was very suburban. still am. >> reporter: but you need beyond stubborn to run marathon after marathon day after day, jackie's
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journey this year, in all, 104 marathons in 104 days. she raised almost $200,000, enough to buy running blades like hers for 50 paraathletes. people are going to look at you and go, "are you raze?" >> i had to, like, convince myself, yes, this is crazy, but you can do it. >> reporter: so your messages we're all capable of so much more? >> yes, that's exactly my message. you go and try something hard, something personal to you. >> 102 marathons in 102 days. >> reporter: jacky hunt broersma challenged herself and stuck to it for the long run. mark strassmann, cbs news, phoenix. >> o'donnell: i am in awe. we'll be right back. . you can follow us online any time at cbs news.com.
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reporting from new york, i'm norah o'donnell. this is cbs news flash. it is the largest primary so far in the 2022 mid term elections. we start in pennsylvania on the republican senate side, where the race between dr. oz and mccormick is a toss up and on the democratic side, lieutenant john fedderman will win the nomination. and chuck eduards wins the republican nomination in the 11th congressional district. he defeats madison cawthorn. in kentucky, cbs news projects charles booker will win the democratic senate primary. that will pit rand paul against booker in the general election. primary elections also took
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place in oregon and idaho. for more news, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm matt piper, cbs news, new york. this is the "cbs overnight news." the investigation of the buffalo supermarket massacre. the suspected shooter remains behind bars tonight, and president biden traveled to buffalo, new york, today, to meet with grieving families, offering them comfort and support. the president and first lady placed flowers at a growing memorial near the tops supermarket. and in a speech, president biden issued an impassioned plea calling on americans to reject hate. and those who pedal and promote the racist conspiracy known as replacement theory.
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there is a lot of news to get to tonight in the investigation, but cbs' jericka duncan is going to start us off. good evening, jericka. >> reporter: good evening, norah. as i stand here right now, there are vigils happening to my left and to my right, right outside of the supermarket where that massacre occurred. you know, earlier today, president biden told about 70 family members of those who lost loved ones that democracy was in danger. he said that hate and fear had been fed too much energy. but he also ended on this positive note. he said that hate will not prevail. >> white supremacy is a poison. it's a poison. it's a poison. ( applause ) >> reporter: today, president biden called saturday's massacre an act of domestic terrorism. speaking to a community in pain, he condemned the racism that drove a gunman to target black people at a buffalo supermarket, killing 10 and wounding three others. >> we need to say as clearly and forcefully as we can that the ideology of white supremacy has
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ño place in america. >> reporter: the president spoke about each victim. >> andre o'neil, 53, went to buy his three-year-old son a birthday cake. >> reporter: he later hugged the three-year-old after speaking with some of the families to listen and console, bringing comfort to vyonne elliot and his daughter, lynda. >> my uncle's story and what happened wasn't just kicked under a rug like it meant nothing because it meant a lot. >> reporter: do you think things will get better moving forward? >> it will take time. like you said, ain't nothing going to change overnight no one. we all need to change, like i said, come together to make that change. >> reporter: this morning, the president and first lady visited the site of the shooting where they placed flowers at a growing memorial. based on his online postings, the shooter appeared to go inside tops grocery store multiple times on march 8 and again the day before the rampage, monitoring the busiest
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times of day at the store. this photo shows two of the three weapons the accused gunman brought to the attack. it was covered with writings which included a racial slur and the phrase, "white lives matter." eight-year-old londin thomas was at the store with her parents when the shooting started. she hid with her father inside a milk cooler until they were rescued by police. >> i was really scared. like, i was scared for my mom. >> reporter: but 65-year-old celestine chaney did not escape. she was shopping for ingredients to make a strawberry shortcake with her granddaughter joann with her sister joann daniels. they were about to exit the store when they heard gunshots. >> people running in. they were running in, and they-- i guess they ran over her. so i reached down to try to pick her up. and she said, "go ahead, go ahead, i'm coming. i'm coming." >> reporter: chaney was a mother, grandmother, and cancer survivor. her life is now a reminder to her sister to live. >> i thought she was behind me. but she wasn't. so she saved my life because i
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was going to stay there with her. >> o'donnell: oh, my goodness, jericka. i know you spoke with family members of the victims after they met with the president. of today. today. what did they tell you? >> reporter: they said that they needed that. they know that the president's visit doesn't bring their loved ones back, but it helps. and you know the president even leaned in on his own experience with loss, telling the crowd that there will come a day when a memory of their loved one brings about a smile instead of a tear. norah. >> o'donnell: jericka duncan, thank you so much for your reporting. we want to turn now to the investigation as federal authorities are combing through hundreds of pages of the suspect's writings in the months and days prior to the attack. cbs news has learned that some of the writings include other possible targets, such as elementary schools, churches, and hasidic jewish communities. the postings also provide a detailed timeline of the shooter's planning. we get more now from cbs' jeff
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pegues. >> reporter: f.b.i. agents continue scouring the tops grocery store, piecing together the shooter's movements during the attack. they are also poring over writings the suspect kept online. cbs news has reviewed the postings, which sources believe to be authentic. the writings run over 600 pages and indicate that he was radicalized and starting planning five months ago. in january, the suspect identified the rifle he wanted to purchase. he was able to buy it legally, despite undergoing a mental health evaluation after making disturbing comments at school about murder and suicide. >> he fell through the cracks but he should have been put on a-- on the ncis and flagged not to be able to purchase a gun. >> reporter: in february of this year, three months before the attack, he first mentioned the tops grocery store writing, "damn, that is looking good." he called tops "attack area one" and cited two other possible targets. according to the suspect's
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posts, he drove to buffalo on march 8 to look for targets, got a speeding ticket, and even sketched diagrams of the tops grocery store. katherine schweit, a former f.b.i. agent who investigated mass shooters, says they are nearly impossible to find online. >> the internet is as big as the grains of sand on the ocean beaches. how do we collect that? what do we do with it? >> reporter: the writings were found on discord, a chat room host where users create groups for certain interest. >> discord chat rooms are private and encrypted which means your friends group, your interaction circle is unique to you. discord other and people cannot simply scan and see the content in that chat room. >> reporter: sources say that law enforcement did not know about the writings before the shootings, and they need tips from the public to go searching. >> unless the american people get their head out of the sand and find a way to be aware of their children, their neighbors,
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and their coworkers, we're never going to solve this problem. >> reporter: in those writings online, the suspect wondered that was about two weeks before the shooting. the suspect's alleged writings speak to motive and will play a role in potential hate crime charges. norah. >> o'donnell: jeff pegues with all those new details, thank you. turning now to sunday's shooting at a taiwanese church in california. the suspect made his first court appearance today. prosecutors say 68-year-old david chew of lives was motivate by his hatred of taiwan when he opened fire. investigators say chew chained the church's doors shut and then used super glue to disabling the locks before starting his rampage. we're also getting our first look inside the church as
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this is the "the cbs overnight news". in washington, thanks for staying with us. president and mrs. biden traveled to buffalo to show their support for the community after last weekend's massacre. a white supremist targeted le in an attack that left ten people dead. the suspect picked the neighborhood because it has a high concentration of african-american residents. i targeted that store because it's the only supermarket for miles around. the area is considered a food
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desert, and the problem is more acute in rural areas as local food shops close their doors, we visited a community that found a solution. >> reporter: unlike many grocery stores in rural america, st. paul, kansas has one that will never shut their doors. >> who's your boss? >> we have six of them, a mayor and five council members. >> they run the only market in town, but the city owns it. a unique arrangement to keep food available. >> reporter: you lived mere when there was not a store, what was it like? >> it was rough, you learned to pack coolers with you everywhere you went, we are literally 17 miles to the next walmart closest grocery store. >> reporter: 40 million live in food deserts nationwide, in rural areas that is ten miles from a store. more than 20% are low income. the irony is that they are
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surrounded by growing fresh food, there's no access to it. the humanity house in kansas feeds close to 2,000 people a month. rural pantries are not at as plentiful as in cities. without this resource what would the families do? >> they would starve. they would starve. >> reporter: when they learned their grocery store in kansas could close, they bought it. if the store did not exist, where would they get their groceries or whatever they needed? >> most of them would have to drive at least 30 minutes in any direction. >> reporter: along with fresh produce, they brought in nostalgic foods. >> we smoke our own bologna. >> they added a dance spot. >> was it a purposeful decision to make it a destination?
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>> not originally, it was originally to save the store and it has changed to so much more. >> when you hit the door, you feel at home. that's how we want you to feel. >> starved for food access, small towns relying on themselves. >> there's never a day that goes by that somebody doesn't say, hey, we appreciate you being here. >> reporter: as groceries become the heart of america's heartland. cbs news. kansas. in washington, congress took a step to allow some of the own staffers to unionize. so far the decision applies only to the house and not the senate. but it comes amid a nationwide push for labor rights as workers take on the biggest corporations. we have the story. >> reporter: for a decade, working on capitol hill seemed like a dream job. >> every day you are working in a living museum. the same time, the first you
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don't -- the first job i worked in, i was making $33,000 a year. splitting an apartment with a college friend. it was not uncommon to get a meal at seven-11. working long hours, working through covid and then the january 6th insurrection, it got to a point that i enjoyed my ten years here and it was time to go. >> reporter: turnover reach today highest rate in 20 years among house staffers. a study found 1 in 8 congressional staffers make less than a living wage. after a viral outcry for months on the instagram account dear white staffers, a resolution was adopted allowing 10,000 workers to organize and collectively
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bargain. >> it's a big deal, to say as a matter of law, you, staffers of capitol hill, have the right to form a union. andy levin introduced the measure. why do you think it's gaining transaction now. >> it is a broader issue in society, you had teachers and then industry after industry form unions. amazon and now, starbucks. >> reporter: the coffee giant recently announced new pay hikes and benefits for employees. but excluded those that formed unions at their stores. this for amazon workers established the first union in the 28 year history in a warehouse in staten island. >> you have to treat our people right. >> drawing attention and scrutiny from lawmakers. >> you determine amazon is a piece of crap company, that's
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your political bias. >> it's not a democrat or republican thing. it's a worker's thing. >> for rich, the action by congress is an important first step. >> if you are asking do i wish i had been a union member ten years ago when i was making 33,000 a year, absolutely. people are working longer and longer hours for less money on top of that inflation is just running away. >> and there's a recognition that people who work hard should be able to provide for themselves. >> and for their country. >> nicole, killian, washington. the "the cbs overnight news" will be right back. your projects done right . with angi, you can connect with and see ratings and reviews. and when you book and pay throug you're covered by our happiness check out angi.com today. angi... and done. better skin from your body wash? and when you book and pay throug try olay body washour happiness with skincare super ingredient collagen! olay body wash hydrates for healthier-looking skin in just 14 days,
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i'll hold onto that. bounty, the quicker picker upper. if your summer vacation plans include a trip to yellow stone national park, each year, five million people visit the park, and many come to see the wolfpacks that roam freely. the gray wolf is on the endangered species list. but in some states, hunters can kill wolves that leave the park. 114 wolves were killed when they wondered outside the park. a local community is divided over this. biologists and tour operators want to see the wolves protected and local ranchers say the wolves pose a threat to their way of life. michelle miller has more on
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this. >> reporter: in the foothills in the northern rockies. >> as we look to the south, that is yellow stone park. >> reporter: father and son run a six generation cattle ranch. >> we always had cattle here. >> reporter: a tough business as profits shrink and real estate soars. >> everything is always fighting against you. whether it's sickness in the cattle, predators, weeds. >> reporter: so they run a side hustle. guiding elk in deer hunts. now, with fewer to track. could you sustain your cattle ranch if you did not have the hunting business as well? >> no, no, we couldn't. >> a lot of ranchers are finding recreation is another avenue to sustain the family farm. >> reporter: both businesses compete with wolves they say prey on their game and life stock. >> i came up one morning a wolf just killed a calf, so i opened the window and shot the wolf
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right from the tractor. >> wolves have been absent here for a century until they were relocated to yellow stone from canada 27 years ago. >> it was a disaster for us. >> reporter: at least one pack left the park and moved in nearby. >> they were killing between five and $10,000 worth of calves a year. so, you know, with the extra stress, our cows were getting bred again for the next cash crop. >> reporter: nor the park service, the wolves have rebalanced an eco system that was thrown off by over abundant elk. >> you can see, this is prime elk range. >> reporter: we spoke to biologist doug smith who led the effort. before the predators were returned all of this was heavily grazed and the trees were eaten down by the elk and we did not
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cougars, wolves and bears like we should be. so it changed how the plateau functioned. >> reporter: as many as five 00,000 roamed the west. now, the wolves are making a comeback. >> and now, west of the mississippi river, we probably have 3,000, across seven states. and that's not that. and where they exist makes those places unique. it's saving the ecosystem. but it's also an economic driver. >> reporter: the 100 wolves that settled inside the national park became a tourist draw no one had expected. bringing in at least $35 million to the local economy every year. you live in finland, and you came all the way to montana? >> absolutely. it's unique, it's the only place in the planet we can see the wolves like that in nature, interacting with the buffalos and wild life.
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>> reporter: capitalizing on this, nathan barley started wolf trackers 50 years ago. you have invested in vans and scopes and people you employ? >> yes, this is our livelihood, we get to meet interesting people from all over the country and world. we love what we do. but we need the wolves to do that. >> reporter: jeopardizing that, montana's decision to scrap the buffer zone on land outside yellow stone's northern border. now, as many as ten can be shot by a single hunter. >> the harvest of wolves was disproportionately focused on the wolves that lived in and around those that are in yellow stone national park. >> reporter: 19 of the park's wolves were killed last season. pat with the fish and wild life commission said that the new hunting policy has been divisive. >> the community severing over wolves. it's not a good policy for any
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agency to create division and tear apart a community. >> reporter: are you concerned it could wipe out everything that you worked for? >> oh, yeah, for sure. i mean, yellow stone is the most famous wolf population in the world. our studies was the most recognized scientific studies on wolves. >> reporter: the social situation is complex. with so many competing economic interests. >> we are the endangered species, when we are gone, the beautiful ranches that you are about to see, are going to be subdivided and there ain't going to be habitat for wolves or elk or any wild life, that's why we have to have a balance s. >> reporter: the stakes are high for everywhere. as another hunting season approaches. >> listen to the people who rely on the wolves either for business or recreation or stock growers who protect their live stock from predators.
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do you let your dog sleep on the bed, if so, the next story is for you. a couple from tennessee have three dogs that usually climb on the bed at night, when they woke up one morning, there were four and now they are all having play dates. we have more on this. >> reporter: the johnsons woke during a thunderstorm to find their bed was more crowded than usual. >> i said hey, julie, who's dog is this? >> reporter: cuddled next to them was a dog they didn't know. >> rolled over on my side of the bed and he said, no, no, it's not our dog. >> reporter: who was the mystery visitor? >> one, how did the dog get in the house, we have three dogs and they bark at anything. >> reporter: this time, they didn't and the intruder wandered
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in through the back door. the johnsons posted pictures of their new friend on facebook and a neighbor replied. >> we got a facebook message saying that's our dog, we will be there in a few minutes. >> i was still laying in the bed snuggling with her when her mama came in. >> nala is on her way over. >> the happy reunion when nala's owners brought her back as a visit. what started as strange bed fellows ended as new best friends. and that is the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for cbs mornings and follow us online any time at cbs news.com. reporting from the nation's capitol, i'm erol barnett.
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♪ ♪ this is cbs news flash, i'm matt piper in new york. it is the largest primary so far in the 2022 mid term elections. we start in pennsylvania and on the republican senate side where the race between dr. oz and mccormick is a toss up. on the democratic side, cbs news projects that john fedderman will win the nomination. chuck eduards won the nomination in the 11th congressional district and defeats madison cawthorn. in kentucky it's projected that booker will run against rand
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paul. primary elections started in idah it's wednesday, may 18th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." >> in america evil will not win, i promise you. hate will not prevail. >> calls for unity. president biden asks americans to reject racism after the mass shooting in buffalo. what he said about the suspect and radicalization. breaking overnight, primary election results. voters have their say in five states. who won, who lost, and the high-profile race that's a tossup. border visit. the head of homeland security travels to southern texas. his plan to deal with an expected increase of migrants if title 42 goes away.
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