tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 15, 2022 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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african nation. >> we have taken the painful step to suspend food assistance to 1.7 million people. and these are people that are experiencing emergency and crisis levels of food insecurity. >> reporter: and south sudan isn't the only developing country to suffer. the world food program normally sources about half of its grain from ukraine. but now because of putin's blockade, it's warning that millions of people around the world will die. norah? >> chris livesay, thank you. well, today a somber ceremony was held in buffalo, new york, marking one month since ten people were shot to death in a supermarket. the 18-year-old suspect is accused of targeting his victims because they were black. and today breakthrough in congress. mitch mcconnell signaled his support for a bipartisan framework that includes expanded background checks for gun buyers between 18 and 21 years old. negotiators hope to finish
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writing the bill this week. tonight, a high-stakes meeting is getting under way in southern california. delegates from the southern baptist convention, the nation's largest protestant denomination are choosing new leaders and confronting shocking allegations of sexual abuse. cbs' nikki battiste spoke with a survivor. and a warning that some of the details are disturbing. >> it started with sleepovers, and you'd have two or three or six boys. that's when the abuse would take place. >> reporter: in the 1980s, at age 12, david pittman says the music minister at his southern baptist church in georgia raped him repeatedly. >> it would be oral, digital insertion, you name, it occurred. i froze. >> reporter: he says frankie wiley sexually abused him until he was 15, more than two decades later, pittman reported wiley to police, but the statute of limitations had expired. so he says he then told numerous
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church leaders. >> i was told unceremoniously, be quiet, go away. there is nothing we can do for you. but we would like to pray for you. >> reporter: a new 288-page report by independent firm guide post solutions alleges that the southern baptist convention's executive committee was stonewalling survivors, including pittman. after the report, sbc leaders released a secret database listing accused pastors and church staff spanning decades. >> we need to fix what we've done, and we need to apologize. we need to be grateful for what the report has exposed so that we can correct it. >> reporter: in this 2019 email, pittman provided to cbs news, wiley did confess to sexually assaulting five boys, corroborated in the independent report. >> all right, come on up on your feet. >> reporter: yet here wiley is playing the keyboard at a service this past sunday in a church that recently cut ties with the sbc.
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if you could go to trinity community church and speak to the parishioners there, what would you say? >> wiley is a professional liar. he is a sexual predator. your children are not safe. please keep them as far away from him as possible. >> reporter: i spoke with two other men who share similar stories of sexual abuse by wiley as young boys. i reached out to wiley and trinity community church in georgia where he works but have not heard back. wiley has never been charged with a crime. norah? >> really important reporting. thank you so much, nikki. and back here in washington, the house voted overwhelmingly today to bolster police protection of supreme court justices and their families, sending the bill to president biden's desk. concern is rising about threats to justices as the court prepares to issue a ruling on abortion rights. just last week a man was ar
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complete the 2-week challenge and receive a $5 reward. sweet pillows of softness! this is soft! holy charmin! oh! excuse me! roll it back, everybody!! new charmin ultra soft is now even softer so you'll want more! but it's so absorbent, you can use less. enjoy the go with charmin. now to a challenge facing american colleges with enrollment down 5% over the past two years. among the factors, the pandemic and soaring costs in tonight's american innovation. cbs' mark strassmann visits one school in georgia that is trying
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something different. >> we can create some fast sketches. >> reporter: hey sneakerheads, for a class in sneaker design -- >> because you've got time. i think this is cool. >> reporter: or shoot a virtual kmert in the arctic, head to scad, the savannah college of art and design. >> not a lot of people when they're applying for a beauty marketing job can say they majored in beauty and fragrance in college. >> reporter: something's working at scad, where design meets technology. 15,000 artistic students. enrollment was up 9% last year. >> we're very oriented toward invention, more so than tradition. >> how often is the curriculum critiqued, updated? >> more than once a year. >> reporter: most popular may job, animation, filmmaking, fashion. sneaker design is now a minor here, in a curriculum evolving nimbly and practically. >> how do you launch a product? how do you bring ideas to life?
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>> reporter: and engaging employers. >> what are you looking for when you hire for students that are coming out? >> reporter: scad claims students have a 99% employment rate within ten months of graduation. >> no starving artists at scad. >> no starving artists. and how is that? >> creativity is really about invention that relevant. we don't teach anything that you can't get a good job in. >> reporter: scad has an entire school dedicated to business innovation. >> our students want to work at disney, google, l'oreal, and those businesses want to hire, and they do hire from scad. >> reporter: employers now circle. scad graduated more than 3200 students this month. mark strassmann, cbs news, atlanta. >> looks like a fun college too. there is still much more news ahead, including a stern new warning to parents about when this fisher-price baby rocker should never be used. and the surprise announcement involving serena williams and wimbledon.
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tonight there is important news for parents. fisher-price and the consumer product safety commission issued a stern warning about the company's infant to toddler and newborn to toddler rockers after at least 13 babies died between 2009 and 2021. this is not a recall, but parents are advised the rocker should never be used for sleep, and infants should never be unsupervised or unrestrained. and two big developments tonight in tennis, the u.s. open will allow players from russia and belarus to play this year, despite the war in ukraine, as long as they compete under a neutral flag. and serena williams will play at wimbledon after being awarded a wild card entry. williams hasn't completed since a leg injury forced her to drop out last year. coming up next, we mark the army's 247th birthday with the branch's highest ranking officer.
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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army chief of staff general james mcconville commemorated the army's 247th birthday today with a wreath laying ceremony at the tomb of the unknown soldier. we spent time with the branch's highest ranking officer to talk about how the revered institution is changing. >> the army's history is america's history, and it's a very proud history at that. >> a history older than the declaration of independence and america itself. 247 years of army strong. >> we're living up to a legacy of those who have gone before us. when you take a look around the museum, you see all the streamers that represent all the campaigns that american soldiers have fought over the years. >> 190 military campaigns from
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the revolutionary war to the war on terror. >> the army is people. the army is soldiers. >> reporter: the museum is designed not to honor the institution but those in uniform. >> people are our most important asset, or most important weapon system and our greatest strength. >> and general mcconville says that's why the army of today is prioritizing quality of life for those who serve, which hasn't always been the case. some military housing, for instance, is so unsafe that congress is investigating. really you have to take care of families. >> that's right. that's right. 89% of our leaders have families. so we have to make sure that they have good housing, health care, child development centers because we have kids we need to take care of. >> both of us are military families. the general's wife maria and three children are all army, as are my father and sister. >> we recruit soldiers, but we retain families. >> so while the army itself may be old at 247 years, it's
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preparing for the new generation of soldiers. >> and that is the "overnight news" for this portinom the nation's capitol, i'm norah o'donnell. this is cbs news flash. i'm matt pieper in new york. two southern california police officers have been shot and killed. the officers from the el monte police department were investigating a possible stabbing in a motel when they were shot. the suspect also died at the scene. fda advisers recommend that the agency authorize moderna's vaccine for children 6 to 17. if the agency agrees, it would become the second option for those children, joining pfizer's vaccine which is already available for that age group. and russia has extended wnba star brittney griner's detention until at least august 2nd. she has been detained since she was arrested at a moscow
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airport, accused of smuggling cannabis oil in her luggage. for more news, download our abc news app or connected tv. i'm matt pieper, cbs news, new york. ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> tonight there is severe weather that is impacting virtually every corner of the nation. excessive heat watches and warnings are in effect in more than a dozen states and more than 170 million americans will see temperatures above 90 degrees. flooding across parts of montana and wyoming forced the closure of yellowstone national park just as the summer tourist season was kicking into high gear. look at this video just in. it shows a rock slide narrowly missing a car that was exiting the park.iza force thousands to evacuate. and in the midwest, severe
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storms damage buildings, downed trees and knocked out power to thousands in the chicago area. we have a lot of news to get to tonight, and cbs' adriana diaz will start us off from chicago, which at 100 degrees for the first time in nearly a decade. good evening, adriana. >> good evening, near ra. with the humidity, it feels like 107 degrees. and that's not conjecture. that is the heat index. this is a tale of two cities. last night we had torrential rain tornadoes. today the sun is out with outserslace to hibut chicagoanspe to cl off flocked to lake michigan. >> it's a sign of what's to come. it's going to be a hot summer. >> reporter: the extreme heat could be deadly, with at least 15,000 people in the chicago area out of power and air conditioning because of this. >> this wind, holy crap. >> reporter: a supercell thunderstorm pushed through the area last night. triggering a tornado warning in
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the nation's third largest city. the high winds peeled the roof off this three-story apartment building. >> we all went to the basement to make sure that we were safe and called 911. >> reporter: wind gusts as high as 98 miles per hour slammed into fort wayne, indiana, blowing a hole through this airport hangar. today in milwaukee, the body of a 10-year-old boy was found after he got swept away in a drainage ditch during the downpour. two adults went after him and were also pulled under. at yellowstone national park, torrential rains pushed the river to nearly 14 feet, the highest ever recorded. major flooding even swept away homes. >> that is insane! >> reporter: washing out bridges and forcing evacuations. >> oh my god. >> reporter: there is little relief out west, where a wildfire forced evacuations near flagstaff, arizona, fueled by e ging eh other to check s.
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on themselves, to check on their neighbors, and go to cooling centers if needed. now there are people here like we mentioned that don't have power, don't have ac. and nationwide, roughly 600,000 people are out of power due to these storms. norah? >> thanks to you and the crew for braving the heat tonight. thank you, adriana. the record breaking heatwave will grow in the days ahead as it pushes east, impacting nearly a third of the nation with above normal temperatures. for the forecast, let's bring in mike bettes for our partners at the weather channel. good evening, mike. >> norah, good evening to you. certainly more dangerous thunderstorms in our forecast and excessive heat. this is exclusive view of what the skies could look like over minneapolis, minnesota tomorrow morning. the storms will last through the morning, the afternoon and the evening across the midwest. for many of us, it could mean a threat for some tornadoes as well. the morning commute brings wild thunderstorms through the twin cities, lunchtime also storming.
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and then the cold front catches up and more storms slide through green bay, milwaukee, chicago, back through kansas city through the afternoon and evening. the oppressive heat is there once again. temperatures mid 90s to low 100s. in annapolis, 96. a place like nashville, looking for 99 in memphis. heat index, norah, likely to go 105 to 110 in most of these cities. >> thank you, mike. well, from the summer heat to white hot inflation spikes. president biden defended his economic record in philadelphia today, arguing that the unemployment rate remains near a 50-year low. and with gas prices hitting record levels, the white house today announced the president will visit saudi arabia. here is cbs' meg oliver. >> reporter: the expected interest rate hike comes as everything from gas and food to air travel have seen the largest annual increase in nearly 40 years. president biden today said reining in rising prices was his top priority. >> i put america in a position
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to tackle a worldwide problem that is worse than everywhere here. inflation is sapping the strength of a loft families. >> reporter: while the president tries to tackle surging inflation, interest rate hikes could potentially cause more economic pain for consumers by increasing borrowing costs and discouraging spending. >> if they raise rates by too much or too quickly, they run the risk of slowing things down so much that we tip into a recession. and right now the fed is in a very unenviable position. >> reporter: soaring rental rates in brooklyn prompted daniel to put an offer on a home in new jersey which he did quickly ahead of tomorrow's action by the fed. >> i would say the only difference is that with interest rates rising, we decided to buy perhaps a little faster than we otherwise would have. we might have spent a couple more months looking if interest rates were still lower. >> reporter: mortgage rates have steady increased this year, already up by 2 percentage
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points, which has slowed home sales. an average of 550 more a month than a year ago based on a median priced house of $425,000. what does higher interest rates mean for consumers? >> so the real direct impact is usually felt with short-term borrowing. that's usually a credit card. but it can actually impact longer term interest rates as well. and those rates can mean that perhaps you pay more for even a 30-year fixed rate mortgage. the experts say if you're considering buying a house, you probably don't want to wait for the interest rates to go back down because it may be a while. after tomorrow's expected hike, the fed will likely forecast additional large rate hikes through the rest of the year. norah? >> meg oliver, thank you. well, today a somber ceremony was held in buffalo, new york, marking one month since ten people were shot to death in a supermarket. the 18-year-old suspect is accused of targeting his victims because they were black. and today breakthrough in congress.
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♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> i'm catherine herridge in washington. thanks for staying with us. a disbarred lawyer from pennsylvania has been sentenced to time served after pleading guilty to threatening to kill democratic senators. kennel. shirk was arrested on his way to washington. inside his vehicle police found and ar-15 rifle two, handguns, loaded magazines and hundreds of rounds of ammunition. shirk has been behind bars for 17 months and could have been sentenced to ten years in
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prison. the job of protecting members of congress falls on the capitol police, who have investigated nearly 10,000 threats in just the past year. scott macfarlane has the story. >> reporter: a college graduate with a public health degree, san ysidro mathur had no civil or criminal history, until he broke the law, committing a felony with his cell phone. >> at that moment i let the anger get the best of me. >> reporter: weeks after the 2020 elect, mathur called his congressman and said he knew where the congressman and his family lived and he would blow up his office. mathur says he was angry his congressman was challenging the results of the election. you went a lot farther than that. >> i did. when i pick up the phone, i was so infuriated at this time, there was an unfortunate thing that i did, and i'm very sorry. >> reporter: mathur is now serving a sentence of home detention after pleading guilty to communicating a threat. this man with zero history of political activism or protest is part of a fast growing wave of
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threats under investigation by federal authorities that has only increased since the january 6th attack on the capitol. u.s. capitol police report a spike in threats against members of congress. in 2021, investigations of threats were up 11% from the previous year when there were nearly 9600 of them. that's more than double the number from five years ago. >> lucky to be alive. i know god definitely took care of me that day. >> reporter: some threats have already resulted in violence. a gunman opened fire and severely wounded republican house wip steve scalise at a baseball practice in virginia in 2017, before capitol police returned fire and killed the shooter. scalise, who has been undergoing physical therapy for years says there should be a zero tolerance policy and rigorous prosecution for threats, including the verbal ones. >> clearly people, there has to be mental illness involved in it, the rage that some people might get where they think it's okay to take a political difference and then want to go and commit violence based on it. >> reporter: and just last week,
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a man was arrested for threatening to kill a supreme court justice. the man was found near justice brett kavanaugh's maryland home with a gun and a knife and is charged with attempted murder. >> that's an actual, an actual violence against the justices strike at the heart of our democracy. >> put your mask on! >> reporter: the southern poverty law center says the increasingly overheated and inflammatory rhetoric of politicians is fuelling a combustible, toxic environment. >> the gentleman is not in order. you believe elected officials could do more to denounce this? >> there is no question that hearing from elected officials that this is unacceptable behavior, that there are consequences for embracing this kind of hate speech and extremist ideology. that makes a difference, just as the failure to do that makes a difference. > reporter: though it's not only politicians who bear responsibility, according to sid mathur, who knows people must resist going too far, like i di. >> i still think about it every
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day like when i wake up or go to sleep. it's going to stay with me forever, basically just for that one mistake for that one night. >> reporter: the u.s. house sergeant at arms has recommended more security cameras and more security upgrades in the hometown offices of members of congress when they're not here at the capitol. and capitol police tell cbs news they're trying to hire and deploy 280 more officers by the end of the summer. >> that was scott macfarlane at the capital. overseas conditions are deteriorating for ukrainian soldiers and civilians in a strategic city in the eastern donbas region. the last bridge linking the city to ukrainian-held territory has been destroyed. russia says it will open a humanitarian corridor for some civilians, but that corridor leads to russian-held territory. chris livesay is in ukraine. >> reporter: the last bridge to severodonetsk destroyed. now for 100,000 ukrainians, there is no way out. "you have two options," say the
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pro-russian separatists. "surrender or die." ukrainian army is high on tenacity but low on ammo. to make sure none is wasted, they launch these american surveillance drones to help the gunners with coordinates for attack. they can't afford to miss, says major oleksandr. "we have to get closer and take more risks because our enemies have long-range artillery." long-range artillery like this russian grad rocket launcher destroyed by ukrainians using american made howitzers. if only they had more of them, says joe goddard, a former british soldier now training ukraine's national guard. >> that's the sad part. they want to fight. they want to push the russians back. but the problem is the sheer unevenness of -- well, the equipment they've got. they're being smashed every day in the trenches with these heavy guns. and they want to do more, but they can't. >> reporter: ukraine is now asking for an additional one thousand howitzers, 500 tanks,
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and one thousand drones, among other heavy weapons. without them, the city of severodonetsk, that crucial domino in the donbas, risks falling any day. chris livesay, dnipro, ukraine. >> ukraine's president zelenskyy is pleading with western nations to supply his forces with more advanced weaponry. the problem is that a lot of weapons already provided are sal oed without instructionma >> reporter: army veteran mark hayward volunteered for frontline duty with the ukrainians and witnessed firsthand their courage in facing down russian tanks with javelin anti-tank missiles. >> everybody i know who got a shot got a kill on an armored vehicle took significant amounts of personal risk to get that. >> reporter: but he came back frustrated by what he sees as the achilles heel of the biden administration's efforts to arm ukraine. >> the supply system is not working.
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if you can't get the tools that you need to make the stuff you have more effective. >> reporter: hayward and the ukrainians he was advising outside kherson suffered from a crippling shortage of batteries needed to operate the javelins. >> only one battery for the launch unit had been shipped. and that battery will only run the launcher for about four hours, and it will only let you launch two to four missiles. >> without spare batteries, the ukrainians couldn't even train with the javelin, much less fight. hayward, a former special forces medic had to come up with a workaround. did you know how to operate the javelin? >> not when i went in country, sir. >> reporter: but you were their trainer. >> we taught ourselves. we learned next to our students. >> reporter: this sounds like a pretty fly-by-night operation. >> it had a strong air of we're making this up as we go along. >> reporter: here is what hayward and his battle buddies made up. >> this shell gave us the connector that we needed to
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route power from the motorcycle batteries to the javelin launcher. >> reporter: so that's what you were using as your power source? motorcycle batteries? >> yes, sir. >> but without a battery, you don't have a javelin? >> no, sir. you have a very expensive paperweight. >> reporter: with batteries, the javelins came out of storage and teams went hunting for russian tanks. >> 96 hours after we prototyped our first battery, one of those teams had its first kill of a t-72. >> reporter: ukrainians are now on the offensive against russian forces in kherson, and the pentagon has promised to send them 4,000 more javelin batteries. batteries. we all have heroes in our lives. someone who cares about other people and gives of themselves. to help others, who can't always help themselves. those are true heroes. and for a kid like me, who's had 13 operations, and can now walk, you might think that i'd say my hero is my doctor, or
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(grunts) for a noticeably smooth shave. dollar shave club. if you've ever built a sand castleton beach, you can certainly appreciate our next story. seth doane travelled to wales where an artist is making temporary masterpieces. >> reporter: the windswept atlantic coastline of wales in the united kingdom provides all he needs. rocks and a receding tide. >> the low tide kind of reveals this canvas in a way. do you know what you're going to do before you hit the the beach? >> i've drawn it out already, and i've just got an idea, and kit change as iwo
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>> repter: ltist j formantion 's already there.ove about ston it's shapeable. when you use enough of them, you can create a form. >> reporter: those forms can be mesmerizing. he plays with perspective and patterns. >> this beach has this beautiful colors, purples and blues and violets. a lot of people don't believe it's real. they ask me if i paint the stones or carry them all in. can you imagine me carrying these from my car? >> reporter: sometimes he uses the sand itself, which allows him to work on a much bigger scale, raking and combing it into spectacular designs. what was your first introduction to land art as a practice, as an art? >> it was probably golds worthy's work is probably the most prolific, most well-known land artist in the world i'd say.
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>> reporter: nearly 20 years ago, sunday morning profiled the pioneering english sculptor. >> i need to touch, i need to feel things, to understand them. >> reporter: whose medium ranged from twigs and snow to the most delicate, ice. >> it's a tough thing to work with the land, because the next second, the next day it's not going to be there. >> reporter: has land art evolved? >> i think it has, yeah, partially because of social media, because it's so easy to share your work. and that's kind of the best way with land art, because it's kind of a medium, and you have time limits because of weather and tide. >> reporter: forman sells prints and occasionally does commissions. this one for burberry. he admits land art is not the most lucrative, but social media has allowed him to share his work with people around the world. >> it's difficult because social media is the opposite to where i
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am in a way, scroll past it. then that's it. you've seen it. you spend three, four seconds to look at it. come on, that took me hours! that's the way social media is. >> i've always seen his work online, facebook, instagram. and it's just absolutely phenomenal to see an artist use all the local material, local space and just create something so visually stunning. >> reporter: hugh owen was passing by at just the right moment. it's so beautiful, but it will be washed away. >> i mean, it's kind of poetic, isn't it? i really enjoy the fact that it's only here for a short amount of time, like we are, essentially. >> you have how many minutes to enjoy this piece of art? >> 20 maybe, if we're lucky. >> reporter: does a little bit of you feel frustrated or defeated or like oh, i really liked that one? >> not at all. not at all. that's what makes it special is
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it's short-lived. that moment hen the sea hits it, it's a special moment, you know. that's that last second that it exists. (dr. david jeremiah) there may have never been another time in history when end times prophecy has been more aligned with the culture and circumstances of the world than it is today. i believe there are ten phenomenon we are witnessing today that were recorded centuries ago in bible prophecy. (male announcer) join dr. david jeremiah in his new series, "where do we go from here?" on the next episode of "turning point." right here on this station.
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if your vacation plans include a trip to the northern coast of spain, there is a vineyard where you can sip wine aged on the bottom of the sea. ian lee reports. >> reporter: there is sunken treasure in these waters, put there on purpose. yes, dive deep below the surface off the spanish coast, and you'll discover wine. >> we are very proud of that. >> reporter: borha got the idea from wine discovered in old ship wrebs. now his one-of-a-kind i knowry ages thousands of bottles under the sea. white wines are submerged for around six months, while reds for about a year. the flow of a nearby river helps keep temperatures cool in this dark corner of the atlantic. salty waters help produce some
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unusual flavors and colors too. >> the red wine turns to a more violet color. and the white wines turn to a more green color. >> reporter: researchers found the wine is chemically different to that aged on line. the taste is just absolutely unique. it's not sweet, but at the same time it's not bitter. >> reporter: allen and his family from florida are in spain for a bit of sun, sea and sunken sampling. >> you will never tour another vineyard underwater. you'll never be able to go out on a boat ride at a winery. >> reporter: while toasting this taste of the sea. ian lee, cbs news. >> and that's 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 all the time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm catherine herridge.
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this is cbs news flash. i'm matt pieper in new york. two southern california police officers have been shot and killed. the officers from the el monte police department were investigating a possible stabbing in a motel when they were shot. the suspect also died at the scene. fda advisers recommend that the agency authorize moderna's vaccine for children 6 to 17. if the fda agrees, it would become the second option for those children, joining pfizer's covid vaccine, which is alrey available for that age group. and russia has extended wnba star brittney griner's detention until at least july 2nd. the 31-year-old has been in russian custody since february when she was arrested at a moscow airport, accused of
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smuggling cannabis oil in her luggage. for more news, download our abc news app on your cell phone or connected tv. it's wednesday, june 15th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." economic anxiety. all eyes on the federal reserve as it considers a historic increase in interest rates to deal with re infla yellowstw after staggering rainfall ow >>x abuse coup. onve agrees to major changes following a bombshell investigation. well, good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. we begin this morning with the latest efforts to control skyrocketing inflation while trying to prevent a recession. later today the federal reserve could announce its large
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