tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 10, 2022 3:12am-3:58am PDT
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we turn now to grand rapids, michigan, where a white police officer was charged today with second degree murder after shooting a young black man in a traffic stop that escalated into chaos. the shooting in april ignited protests and calls for justice. cbs's jericka duncan has been following the case. >> reporter: in a much-anticipated decision, kent county prosecutor christopher becker explained why he is charging grand rapids police officer christopher schurr with a felony. >> first, there was a death-- a death done by the defendant, and the death was not justified or excused, for example by self-defense. reporter: thootinearll, aft sco a congolese r thatolice say did not match the license plate. >> i'm stopping ya. do you have a license? do you have a license? >> reporter: police body cam footage, surveillance, and cell phone video captured the entire incident.
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>> no, no, stop. >> reporter: the officer approached the car, but lyoya resists. >> stop! >> reporter: then runs. >> stop! stop! >> reporter: there's a two-minute struggle, during which the officer twice tries to use his taser, but misses. >> let go of the taser! >> reporter: officer schurr's body camera turns off-- it's not clear why. but other video shows the officer taking out his gun and shooting lyoya once in the back of his head. >> get back! >> reporter: reaction today was swift. demonstrators praised the decision to prosecute schurr. speaking in swahili, lyoya's father said today's announcement was only a first step toward justice for his son. >> it can be long, but what i want is final justice for my son. >> reporter: officer schurr is now in police custody. he's expected to be arraigned tomorrow. as for that second-degree murder charge, norah?
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if he's convicted, he faces anywhere from 25 years, to life behind bars. >> o'donnell: ora 3tin row, the price of gas in america hit an all-time high. nationally, it's averaging states and here in washington, d.c., it's at or above that price. well, tonight, cbs's carter evans shows us how this is fueling financial stress. >> reporter: every time p.j. mcnall starts up his truck-- the maker of zab's hot sauce is burning more money than ever before. how much do you usually spend a week for gas? >> well, normally costs about $140 to fill up the tank, and that's every, probably every four days-- it's painful. >> reporter: and it's almost double what he paid at the start of the pandemic. as a small business owner, mcnall still makes all the deliveries himself-- 60 miles a day. high gas prices, inflation-- that has real implications for you. >> yeah, it does, and prevents
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us from expanding our team and giving jobs to other people. means more work for me. >> americans now spending $700 million more every day on gasoline than they did just a year ago. >> reporter: energy analyst patrick dehaan says gasbuddy's live data shows the national average actually hit the $5 mark this morning and he expects to see it keep rising. >> we should see prices eclipse alo should there be any disruption, there's basically no margin for error. >> reporter: with people on the road, returning to work and taking vacations, even with these prices, demand is at its highest point this year, with americans now guzzling 9.2 million barrels of gasoline every day. >> i don't have a choice, whether it costs $80 or $150, it is what it is, and i have to absorb it or-- or the business will die. >> reporter: gas prices are highest here in california, and
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diesel is even higher. and, even if your car doesn't take diesel, you're paying for it. that's because the trucks and trains that deliver goods all run on diesel, and it's making everything more expensive. norah. open talenti and raise the jar. to gelato made from scratch. raise the jar to all five layers. raise the jar to the best gelato... you've ever tasted. talenti. raise the jar.
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u.s. marines osprey aircraft crashed yesterday during a training mission in the southern california desert. the names of the five marines onboard have not been released. the tilt-rotor osprey takes off and lands like a helicopter, but it flies like a plane. this was the second deadly osprey crash in just over two months. let's turn now to the chronic crisis of homelessness in america. according to a university of chicago study, more than four million young people experienced homelessness every year in the united states, and research shows that as much as 40% of homeless youth identify as l.g.b.t.q.+. in tonight's "eye on america," cbs's meg oliver takes a look at a non-profit that's trying a new approach to ending an old problem. >> reporter: fletcher has to take two trains and a bus to get home-- but would never complain, because having a home to go to wasn't always a guarantee. >> i was very much, like, i'm going to have to sleep in the street. >> reporter: fletcher is just one of the roughly 41,000 youth who experience homelessness on a
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given night. the 22-year-old left an abusive home in georgia, with no job and no support in boston. >> it's been an incredible turnaround. >> reporter: fletcher works at breaktime, a new non-profit helping end the cycle of homelessness among young adults. >> young adult homelessness is at a peak in this country for a number of different reasons. one is that young people who are l.g.b.t.q.+ are being kicked out of their homes. we also have many young people who are transitioning out of the foster care system. >> reporter: connor schoen is the executive director. the recent harvard graduate was inspired to start breaktime while working at a shelter during college. >> i found again and again that the thing that they were most asking about was jobs. >> reporter: were you surprised by that? >> i was surprised by that because you're at a homeless shelter and you expect that people will be >> reporter: tr- program starts with workplace
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training, followed with a three-month job placement at a non-profit or small business, and credit counseling. >> if i would had known about this ten years ago, i wouldn't be going through what i am going through now. >> let's pick up the donations. >> reporter: for armani, the job is just the beginning. breaktime helped him apply for an apartment and rent assistance. >> breaktime gives you an opportunity to further yourself even with the hurdles that you go through. even if you make a mistake, they're saying it's okay to go back and try again, because only you are your biggest hurdle. >> reporter: helping people like armani and fletcher find meaning and purpose in their own life again. >> it's this thing that you don't realize it till you're on the other side, that it saved your life. >> reporter: breaktime saved your life? >> genuinely. >> reporter: meg oliver, cbs news, boston. >> o'donnell: there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news". the bitter fight in the pro-golf world, as phil mickelson reportedly banks a $200 million
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"these players have made their choice for their own financial-based reasons, but they can't demand the same p.g.a. tour membership benefits, considerations, opportunities, and platforms as you." mickelson has refused to deny reports he cut a deal for $200 million, but has defended his decision to take part. >> i understand that many people have very strong opinions, and may disagree with my decision. >> reporter: add to the backlash that's being bankrolled by a saudi regime and a p.r. campaign to distract from a history of human rights abuses. >> there are many who see this quite simply as sports-washing. >> reporter: but with more big names lured by massive multi-million-dollar paychecks, the breakaway tour has already driven a wedge through the p.g.a. charlie d'agata, cbs news, st. albans, england. >> o'donnell: and coming up
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on the next episode of "turning point." right here on this station. >> o'donnell: schools across the country have begun a new program, that begins before the first bell. the walking school bus is helping both kids and seniors start the day off right. here's cbs's jan crawford. >> hi, natalia. the bus is here. toot-toot! >> reporter: 77-year-old andrea walker is not your traditional bus driver. >> when i heard about this bus thing, i wanted to do it. >> reporter: butthisisn't walker's bus. she's leadingthiskind. >> left, right. okay, guys. >> reporter: it's called an intergenerational walking school bus. once a week, senior citizens walk with students to oakridge elementary in arlington, virginia. >> the bus is here! >> reporter: everyone gets exercise, it keeps cars off the road, and, more importantly, connections are made along the way. >> molly, i asked her, how did i
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go and move, you know, the icons on my phone? and first, molly corrected me and said, it's apps, not icons. (£aughter) >> reporter: they hope to expand it to all county schools this fall. >> just get picked up by a bunch of happy people and you get to walk with your friends. i mean, what's not to like? >> not a major commitment, but, boy, a major impact. >> reporter: and a major impact on you, how? >> i can't tell you how-- how my spirits are up. i can't stop smiling. >> reporter: seniors and students, starting the day off together, step by step. jan crawford, cbs news, arlington, virginia. >> o'donnell: that is the "cbs overnight news" for this friday for some the news continues for others check back later for cbs morning, or online at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital i'm norah o'donnell.
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this is cbs news flash from new york. the house committee had never before seen testimony of key players including claif sal of the election were bs. and officer spoke who has not returned to work since. economists believe inflation may have fallen with the exception of food and gas wells. and tony awards, airing sunday on cbs.
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for more news download the cbs news on the app on your cellphone or connected tv. i'm matt pieper from cbs news, new york. ♪ this is the "cbs overnight news" i'm katelyn burns from washington thank you for joining us f it was must-see tv last night as the house committee investigating the january 6th on the capitol took over prime time, presenting the first of the series of public hearings into both the deadly assault and eveo nt the capital siege is already the largest criminal investigation in american history. five people died. 800 defendants are charged, and faith in american democracy was shaken. saying
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former trump was part of a conspiracy to defraud the united states by overturning the results of the joe biden victory. here's some of last night's presentation. >> donald trump lost is the presidential election in 2020. the american people voted him out of office. it was not the cause of a rigged system. it was not because of voter fraud. don't believe me? hear what his former attorney general had to say about it. >> in that context i made it clear i did not agree with the idea of saying the election was stolen and putting out this stuff which i told the president it was bullshit and i didn't want to be part of it and that's one of the reasons i decided to leave when i did. i observed, i think it was on december 1st, you know, you can't live in a world where the incumbent administration stays in power based on its view unsupported
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by specific evidence that the election -- that there was fraud in the election. >> donald trump had his days in court to challenge the results, he was within his rights to seek those judgment, in the united states law-abiding citizens have those tools for pursuing justice. he lost in the courts just as he did at the ballot box. and in this country, that's the end of the line. but for donald trump, that was only the begngat , mui-step conspiracyed the presidential election. january 6th was the culmination of an attempted coup, a brazen attempt, as one put it, shortly after january 6th to overthrow the government. the violence was no accident. it represents trump's last
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stand, most desperate chance to halt the transfer of power. >> vice president pence has spoken publicly about this, >> president trump is wrong. i had no right to overturn the election. the presidency belongs to the american people and american people alone and there's nothing more unamerican than the notion that any one person could choose the american president. ce was unconstu. this is the president's daughter commenting on bill barr -- that the department found no fraud sufficient to overturn the election. >> how did it effect your perspective about the election when attorney general barr made that statement. >> it effected my perspective. i respect attorney general barr so i
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accepted what he said -- was saying. >> yeah, be a advised there's probably 300 proud boys marching eastbound in this 400 block of kind of independent mall towards the u.s. capitol. >> i'm not allowed to say what's going to happen today because everyone's just going to have to watch. >> whose streets? >> our streets! >> because if mike pence does the right thing, we win the election. all vice president pence has to do is send it back to the states to recertify and we become president and you are the ppieeondpplause ]ou'lr take back oouith akness ha to shtr>> we riot war
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>> mike pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and constitution giving states a chance to certify and correct the facts. >> hang mike pence! hang mike pence! [ alarm ] >> please, house members walk over now to the tunnels. >> i need port -- support! >> nancy! nancy! nancy! nancy! oure w
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[ hysteria ]. >> i want to start officer edwards with a short clip that shows the horrible moment when you were injured as the peace circle was breached. >> usa! usa! usa! usa! usa! >> what i saw was just a war scene. it was something like i had seen out of the movies. i couldn't believe my eyes. there were officers on the ground. you know. they were bleeding.
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they were throwing up. they were, you know, they had -- i mean, i saw friends with blood all over their faces. i was slipping in people's blood. never in my wildest dreams did i think that as a police officer as a law enforcement officer i would find myself in the middle of a battle. you know. i'm trained to detain, you know, a couple of subjects and handle -- you know, handle a crowd, but i'm not combat trained. and that day it was just hours of hand-to-hand combat. hours of dealing with things that were way beyond any -- any law enforcement officer has ever trained for, and i just remember -- i just remember that moment of stepping behind the
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♪ >> is this the "cbs overnight news". from washington, thanks for staying with us. russia's invasion of ukraine has touched off the food crisis with repercussions around the world. moscow forces blockade the black sea port leaving 20 million tons of grains stuck in silos or rotting on the docks. talks in turkey to allow safe passage nowhere ukine iefusgo mo itfr. african nations get much of the
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grain from ukraine and there's a fear of wide-spread famine and meanwhile a scamable for food inside ukraine. zhang lipeng >> repr:g a raid shelling or ri eating. they've attacked the food and water supply forcing the people here to line up for rations of both. looking at two grandmothers, one 89 the other 97 they are too afraid to leave the house. that's where world central kitchen comes in, a charity cooking hot meals and delivering to civilians, soldiers and even russian pow's no matter the risk. >> was this a cluster bomb. >> yes it's a cluster. >> i see a whole above my head. >> russian war ships and mines are blocking ukrainian ports holding hostage 20 millions tons
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of grain worsening the global food crisis. there's also a local food crisis noughoat world foodause farmers aetting tract by russian rockets. that happens to sgei when shrapnel tore through his lung and liver and narrowly missed his heart and said they're bastards. >> if this city falls there's little from stopping russian force from capturing odesa and the black sea -- >> chris lipsay in ukraine. closer to home the house of
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representatives pasd gun control bill that's came after powerful testimony on capitol hill from families of those killed in the uvalde and buffalo massacres, the bills are expected to die in the u.s.. the u.s. gun makers produced 11 anff pegs . streets than before, some toren traceable, many not. >> all of these weapons were recovered off the street in new york. >> reporter: the atf and deputy new york city commissioner miller said there's a bigger problem. >> 80% of people we arrest with loaded guns in the street are
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not in jail or prison. >> 4900 gun arrests last year alone, only 17% were prosecuted. >> only 17%. >> yeah. >> reporter: they believe a combination of factors including back logs in the courts caused by covid and bail reform are contributing to the problem. >> so that's a combination of factors including new laws in this state, in new york state, that's a, people should be released without bail or it has to be a bail the definitely can afford under the least restrictive conditions. you are seeing a lot of people involved in gun crime who would have been in who are ou >> the also a influx of weapon moving to new york in what is called the iron pipeline, higher capacity and more firepower. >> i wish there was a pipeline because that would be easy to identify, investigate and stop.
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we have unknown number 6 garden hoses around this country on a slow trickle feeding the market on a daily basis. >> and now there's a plastic pipeline, a plastic ghost gun parts ordered online and built at home, a tougher pipeline to shut down. after a recent raid police found a machine still carving out with new ghost gun parts to keep up with what law enforcement says is currently an insatiable demand. >> we're seeing ghost guns made in basements, closets, you don't need much room to put these guns together. >> to combat the gun violence, miller says there mass to be renewed focus on prosecution. >> if people go to jail then you're going to find your gun problem is going to go down. when you are arresting your way through the gun problem and there's the no consistent
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consequence to people carrying guns you are going to see what you're seeing now. which is people are not afraid to carry. not afraid to shoot. >> there's a lot of people in this country that feel the more guns out there the safer we're going to be. >> statistics have proven that be wrong again and again. >> miller believes there's a boo. on ghost gun orders because of a new rule to take effect in august requiring the plastic guns are tampered to make it easier to trace them if use in a crime. >> jeff pegues reporting. ininflation is not only is squeezing family budgets but also school cav teef -- cafeterias. >> rorte inhis t oer tra a
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day but now down to one. this 8th grader notice what many are seeing. >> we don't have ketchup up and mustard and ranch which i loved. >> reporter: is shifting and shrinking school lunch menu. supply chain disruption and spiraling cost of key ingredients forcing school districts to pull back and make substitutions no more hamburgers or chicken patty sandwiches due to the price and instead offering tacos or bunless options and healthy options like carrot sticks. >> our students are very savvy. they know what they eat and what they want. >> even the trays and plates were in short supply. >> plates were unavailable and we had to call manufacturers to develop the relationships the to see how the to get the trays we need to service our students. >> 97% of school programs reported challenges with higher
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cost and98g getting spliez and ingredients. in montgomery county, maryland, the local school system has a central kitchen to cook for all 135 elementary schools. >> that tray of food i get at lunch cost more than it did last year. >> yes. >> significantly? >> yes, we are up about 15%. 15 sometime 20z% in inflation ra >> cost of some ingredients are so volatile many u.s. schools are making last-minute changes to the monthly menu. used to be set in stone. >> we are down to weekly menu planning and our families and even student and staff are not used to that. >> cost are poised to rise again for u.s. schools july 1st when an emergency measure enacted at the start of the pandemic expires. the u.s. department of agriculture offered schools $4.50 reimbursement for every
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appearance since taking office. he visited jimmy kimmel live and used more casual setting to address the nation. >> this is a not your republican party it is a maga party. >> reporter: president biden discussed the nation's problem and also the actions taken to solve it. >> voting rights and climate change, so many things we moved backwards. >> in climate change we made some real moves. >> this comes as' grapples with who won't pass go or follow the rules, how do you ever make any progress if they're not following the rules. >> gotta send them to jail, you know. >> the president appea t with as on a more personal level
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something many white house hopefuls have done for deck auds on late-night tv, john f. kennedy the first to do in 1960. >> the united states the only guardian gate against the communist advance. >> but the candidate played it straight. eight years later richard nixon flipped the script appearing on laugh-in. >> sock it to me. >> through the years it's often become a talent show for candidates and presidents alike. ♪ and g o c ♪ >> ah, yeah. >> but it wasn't until 2009. >> president barack obama. >> that the first sitting president hit the late-night air waves. >> i do think in washington it's a little bit like american idol except everybody is simon
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cowell. >> barack obama's successor did not, but then donald trump did make late-night headlines. >> can i mess your 45ir up? >> threes days, the white house knows many people are watching late night watching social media rather than tuning in at night and president using humor to reach the younger generation online. comedic timing on twitter isn't quite like television when you have sensitive documents that you need to flush down the toilet is that done in your office toilet or in the bathroom in the personal bathroom area. >> i call trump. >> that video with bts quickly became one of the most-watched videos by the white house stirring the biden presidency, he's officially here to lead the
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there are meatless burgers and milk made of almonds and now honey without bees, michelle medina with that story. >> reporter: in the heart of new york this little chocolate is serving up plant-based menu. >> they make sweep grapes and honey is popular sweet owner. >> reporter: inside these grapes is a sweet, new alternative to honey catching a lot of buzz. >> no one can tell the difference. >> the world is definitely hungry for honey. >> this is a former bee honey industry executive, uses synthetic biology they've produced real honey without the
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bees. >> we learned how to create a proprietary process to put it together in a plant-based honey. >> reporter: other companies like israeli based bee io is working to create bee-free honey. scientists believe several man made factors are to blame as the bee population drops, so does the production of honey, usda saying it was down 14% from 2020 to 2021 and he believes his product could be an at alternative especially for vegans who avoid food that come from animals. >> is finally we can offer the substitute of honey. >> it has that taste a lot of vegan honey lack and tasted exactly like honey. >> restaurants in new york are trying out the product and they hope to start selling to
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consumers next year. michelle medina, "cbs overnight news" los angeles. >> that's the overnight news on this friday from the nation's capitol. this is cbs news flash from new york. the house committee had never before seen testimony of key players including former attorney general barr saying the claims of the steal of the election were bs. the first law enforcement officer injured by the rioters also spoke and she's not returned to work since. economists believe inflation may have fallen with the exception of food and energy prices. and tony awards, airing sunday on cbs. celebrating under studies and swings who helped to keep
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broadway shows open during the pandemic. for more news download the cbs news on the app on your cellphone or connected tv. i'm matt pieper from cbs news, new york. ♪ it's friday, june 10th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." >> we can't sweep what happened under the rug. the american people deserve answers. >> primetime hearing. the january 6th panel lays blame on former president trump for the capitol riot. the new video and new testimony never seen before. rapid rise. national gas prices approach the $5 mark for the first time ever as americans brace for another brutal inflation report. response time. new records may explain y one hour to confront the gunman in the uvalde school shooting. good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green.
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