tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 17, 2022 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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punta gorda, florida, prices are up a whopping 34%. >> everyone's very nervous. >> reporter: the rising rates are intended to help cool the housing market. compared to a year ago, mortgage applications are down more than 50%. what's your advice? >> i say, take a deep breath. understand what your buying power is, and then, when you go out and look at homes, you have to adjust what you're looking at. >> reporter: for kristenia, that means searching in a lower-priced neighborhood. >> i will do everything that i possibly can to make it work. but right now, we just have to see. >> reporter: so, to put it into perspective, norah, with the higher prices and mortgage rates, the average new home-buyer is going to pay $500 more a month, or $180,000 over the course of a 30-year loan, than somebody who bought their home just a year ago. norah. >> o'donnell: that really does put it in perspective. lana zak, thank you. new tonight, the state department says it is aware of reports that a third american has gone missing in ukraine.
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this comes as the families of those captured u.s. veterans are desperate for any information about their whereabouts. they fear the russians may be holding the men. cbs' chris livesay reports from ukraine. >> reporter: they had just gotten engaged. >> we decided to get engaged so we can get married when he gets back. >> reporter: but now, joy black doesn't know when, or if, that will happen. the whereabouts of her fiancé, 27-year-old andy huynh, along with 39-year-old alexander drueke, are still unknown. their families say huynh initially did humanitarian work with church groups, while drueke was training ukrainians to fight. but both eventually wound up on the front lines. >> i'm really hoping that we can get some answers and find out where andy and alex are and get them home. that's all i want, is andy back. >> reporter: both men, from alabama, were fighting with a unit of foreign volunteers, when something went wrong. his fellow soldiers called
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drueke's mom, bunny, to tell her the news. >> all but two of the people had made it back, and alex and andy were the two who had not reported in yet. >> reporter: the kremlin has not confirmed their capture, but russian state media wasted no time discussing their punishment. "based on the precedent, there will be a death sentence," the presenter asks this law-maker. "yes, there are no other options." an unthinkable fate for alex's mom. >> i'm not worried about him being in the russian hands-- not because of russia, but because i know alex's character. he is brave. he is tough. he is well-trained. there's part of him that's going, "yes, i can do this!" >> reporter: now, the timing and circumstances are ominous for the americans who went missing here in the kharkiv region. just last week, a russian-backed separatist court sentenced a
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moroccan and two british p.o.w.s to death for fighting alongside ukrainians. norah. >> o'donnell: chris livesay with that new information, thank you. tonight, yellowstone national park, one of america's treasures, is in shambles following an unprecedented amount of rain and flooding. it has suffered so much damage that the federal government is stepping in to help. cbs' jonathan vigliotti reports tonight from montana. >> reporter: tonight, as the water recedes, new drone video shows what engineers say will take months to fix before reopening yellowstone's north gate. more than half a million people use roads like this to get to this part of the national park each year. many of them stay in towns like red lodge, which was also hit by flooding. hone ringing) now, businesses here are facing a wave of cancellations. >> okay, you're needing to cancel. >> reporter: larry young owns the alpine lodge inn. when did the cancellations start coming in for you and your business? >> immediately-- we've had over 150 cancellations. >> reporter: still, he considers himself lucky. 250 businesses and homes were damaged or destroyed, according
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to fire chief tom kuntz. >> the river literally came right through here and went through these folks' house. the river was going through their living room. >> reporter: the surging river first ripped through the national park sunday. before-and-after satellite photos show the full extent of the destruction inside the park. today, lieutenant governor kristen juras toured the damage, standing in for governor greg gianforte, who came under fire for not returning from an overseas trip. where has he been all this time? >> for security reasons, we haven't disclosed his-- his-- where he's been. >> reporter: juras signed a disaster declaration in his absence, which was approved by president biden this afternoon. but for now, this gateway to yellowstone is closed, leaving towns like red lodge on the line. >> just help our town out by supporting us by coming to see us again, all right? >> reporter: fema agents have arrived in town tonight. they're now inspecting dramatic scenes, like the one behind me. the lieutenant governor tells
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♪ ♪ >> o'donnell: as the country prepares to mark juneteenth, which commemorates the end of slavery in the united states, we are taking a look at the effort to bridge the nation's racial divide. we traveled to louisville, one of the most racially segregated cities in the country. in tonight's "eye on america," cbs' adriana diaz shows us how narrowing the gap begins with a walk across one street. >> reporter: ninth street in louisville is where the divide happens. west is mostly black... >> i grew up as far west as you can go. >> reporter: east, mostly white. >> i was born on the east side. >> reporter: sherry bryant hamilton and angie mccorkle buckler grew up on opposite sides of ninth. but they've been coming to the symbolic street, to the frazier history museum, to create a bridge. >> if we don't talk about it, we don't learn about it. >> tension was high. >> reporter: they're attending
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packed panel discussions about race relations in louisville, from policing to bussing. though the city's more diverse than ever, segregation has proven stubborn, compounded by years of systemic racism. what do you say to people who think that there's too much discussion about race? >> i don't know where they're living. >> may i have your blindfold, please? (£aughter) >> reporter: the panels are organized by rachel platt, a former news anchor running community engagement for the museum. >> they're tough conversations. not everybody's in for them. not everybody agrees that a museum should be having them. you have to really be committed to this. >> we want to go to may 7, 1968. >> reporter: this panel was about the "black 6"-- five men and one woman, bryant hamilton's mother, arrested in 1968, after a white police officer beat a black man. >> that history is not so long ago. you think something happened 50 years ago, 55 years ago, but it could have happened yesterday.
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>> reporter: in 2020, breonna taylor's killing became a painful reminder of that past. >> i've heard people say, "well, but-- but-- you weren't part of slavery, you know, that's been gone for years." well, it's these kinds of incidents, and the toll and effects they can have on the families, long-lasting, for years to come. so we have to understand that, in order to try to meet people where they are, i think. >> people are too complacent, and they don't realize that we're all in this together. we're going to sink or swim together. >> reporter: a community trying to change its future by understanding its past. for "eye on america," adriana diaz, cbs news, louisville. >> o'donnell: and today, the mayor of louisville publicly apologized for the mistreatment of hamilton's mother and the other members of the "black 6." still ahead, a new twist on the baby formula shortage.
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lines. all right, coming up next, how a daughter came to her father's rescue, in more ways than one. 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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>> o'donnell: ahead of father's day this sunday, we have this great story about a special father-daughter bond. as cbs' jan crawford reports, in this case, it was life-saving. >> reporter: even before she took a class at auburn university on hearing loss, rachel ruhlin knew something was off with her dad, joe. >> we would say something to him and he would not hear it, or he would, like, repeat things and we would be, like, well, we just said that. >> reporter: the more she learned, the more she pushed him to get it checked out. he wasn't worried. >> i thought it was maybe-- back in my 20s, i was at a concert that was really loud, or something like that, and i messed up my one ear. >> reporter: home for thanksgiving, rachel insisted he see a doctor. since his hearing loss was only in his left ear, joe assumed he would just be getting a hearing aid. >> we never would have thought it was a brain tumor, though. >> reporter: a tumor, called an
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acoustic neuroma, that, if left untreated, can be fatal. >> we don't know what would have happened if i didn't take that class. >> reporter: joe had surgery to remove the tumor in february, and is back to living life to the fullest. what are some of the feelings that you'll be having on father's day, rachel? >> just probably super grateful that he is able to live the life that he lived before. >> reporter: and what about you, joe? >> i'm just happy that we'll have many more years together. >> reporter: thanks to a daughter taking a page from the "dad playbook:" looking out for the people we love. jan crawford, cbs news, washington. >> o'donnell: that is "cbs overnight news" for some of the news can continues, others check back for cbs mornings or follow online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capitol, i'm norah o'donnell. ♪
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>> this is cbs news flash, i'm matt pieper in new york. three people were shot in a church in alabama while having dinner. the suspect has been taken into custody. >> studies have suggested exposure to burn pits can lead to cancer. >> and the golden state warriors are your nba champions, beating the boston celtics, 103-90 in game six. it is their fourth title in eight years and 7th overall. and the warriors steph curry was named most valuable player. for more news download cbs news
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on your cellphone or connected tv. i'm matt pieper, cbs news new york. >> this is the "cbs overnight news." >> o'donnell: today we witness what did some consider the most important january 6 hearing to date, with powerful testimony from one of the most respective conservative lawyers in the republican party, warning ominously that the threat to democracy isn't over, and that former president donald trump and his allies present "a clear and present danger" in 2024. former federal judge michael luttig said vice president mike pence prevented what would have been a revolution within a constitutional crisis. strong words. and we learned today that rioters came within 40 feet of mike pence.
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and we saw new pictures today of the former vice president huddled in a secure location under the capitol, reading trump's tweets. in the words of one of the committee's witnesses, "if the violent mob had found mike pence, they probably would have killed him." and we have some new reporting. cbs news has learned that former president trump is following these hearings, and he's reportedly furious. we have team coverage tonight, starting with cbs' scott macfarlane on capitol hill. scott, good evening. >> reporter: hi, norah, the committee detailed an unprecedented pressure campaign against mike pence, which ignited the crowd, some of whom, the committee says, were willing to kill pence. the riotous mob got within 40 feet of an evacuating mike pence on january 6. pence's lawyer, greg jacob, was with him. >> i don't think i was aware that they were as close as that. >> reporter: at least some willing to murder, according to the committee and an f.b.i. informant. >> the proud boys would have killed mike pence if given a chance. >> reporter: the committee contended the mob was egged on
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by a tweet from donald trump, saying pence lacked courage. >> the situation was already bad, and so it felt like he was pouring gasoline on the fire by tweeting that. >> hang mike pence! hang mike pence! >> reporter: new images showed pence hiding in an underground safe room. the committee also showed trump in the oval office on the morning of january 6, when he put final pressure on pence to block certification of the election in an explosive phone call. >> the conversation was-- was-- pretty heated. it was a different tone than i'd heard him take with the vice president before. >> reporter: ivanka trump telling an aide what vulgarity he called the vice president. >> do you remember what she said her father called him? >> the "p" word. >> reporter: his aides say pence never considered the scheme, devised by california laywer john eastman, to have the former vice president reject the electors and throw the election to trump. >> there is no justifiable basis to conclude that the vice president has that kind of authority. >> reporter: the committee said
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even trump's chief of staff, and eastman himself, knew the plan was bogus and dangerous. former white house lawyer eric herschmann said he warned eastman. >> "you're saying that you believe the vice president, acting as president of the senate, can be the sole decision-maker as to, under your theory, who becomes the next president of the united states?" and he said yes. and i said, "are you out of your effing mind?" i said, "you're going to cause riots in the streets." >> reporter: after the attack, eastman emailed rudy giuliani, asking to be considered for a pardon. >> i assert my fifth amendment right against being compelled to be a witness against myself. >> reporter: and when deposed by the committee this past december, eastman took the fifth more than 140 times. conservative judge michael luttig, an outside adviser to pence, said the threat to democracy remains to this day. >> donald trump, and his allies and supporters, are a clear and present danger.
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>> reporter: during the hearing, there was a letter released, sent by the justice department to the january 6 committee, asking the committee for copies of all the transcripts from all their interviews. the committee won't comment, but in the letter, the justice department says it needs those transcripts, norah, to prosecute more january 6 criminals. >> o'donnell: scott macfarlane, thank you. also new tonight, we learned the committee now wants to interview supreme court justice clarence thomas' wife, ginni, after new emails were revealed from the conservative activist. cbs' robert costa is here. so, wow, this is a new step forward. i mean, how soon could this happen? >> reporter: very soon. norah, for months after cbs news and "the washington post" broke the news on this program that there were text messages between the white house chief of staff and ginni thomas, we have sought comment. now miss thomas has told a conservative media outlet, the daily caller, that she is willing to cooperate with the committee, and the committee this afternoon issued an
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invitation for her to appear. they will ask about those text messages, as well as emails between her and john eastman, who played such a prominent role in the story of today's hearing. >> o'donnell: right, what were they talking about? and what do we know about supreme court justice clarence thomas' role, if any? >> reporter: that is the lingering question, and the committee will certainly probe it. they have held off on a subpoena until now, but they want to know: did the justice, who oversees cases on the election, have any kind of discussions with his spouse, or perhaps john eastman, his former clerk, about those cases? >> o'donnell: feels like there is still so much more to learn. >> reporter: this story is still unfolding. >> o'donnell: robert costa, thank you. well, tonight, president biden in a new interview, arguing that a recession is not inevitable, as he tries to calm the markets as the federal reserve works to bring inflation under control. but, it was a brutal day on wall street. the dow sank below 30,000 for the first time in over a year, and the s&p dropped deeper into a bear market. and with stocks down, mortgage
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rates are up, hitting their highest level since 2008. the average 30-year loan rose to 5.78%. that's up more than 2.5 points since january. here's cbs' lana zak. >> reporter: across america tonight, housing anxiety. >> our family is getting really big, and we really need a house. >> you have to put more money in. >> reporter: kristenia hargrove, a real estate agent herself, has been crammed into a two-bedroom condo with her family, house-hunting for the last six months. >> wow, susan. >> reporter: what is keeping you up at night? >> trying to find a house, with the mortgage prices going up, and gas prices and everything else-- it's just been a bit of a nightmare, honestly. >> reporter: her search, like those of other first-time buyers, is harder with mortgage rates skyrocketing, the largest weekly jump since 1987. >> it creates a significant affordability challenge. not only do they have very high rates on house price growth, you also have now, you know, a
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pretty rapid increase in mortgage interest rates. >> reporter: it's a one-two punch for buyers already struggling to keep pace with the frenzied housing market. since last year, home prices in atlantic county, new jersey are up nearly 10%, up nearly 28% in salt lake city, utah, and in punta gorda, florida, prices are up a whopping 34%. >> everyone's very nervous. >> reporter: the rising rates are intended to help cool the housing market. compared to a year ago, mortgage applications are down more than 50%. what's your advice? >> i say, take a deep breath. understand what your buying power is, and then, when you go out and look at homes, you have to adjust what you're looking at. >> reporter: for kristenia, that means searching in a lower-priced neighborhood. >> i will do everything that i possibly can to make it work. but right now, we just have to see. >> reporter: so, to put it into perspective, norah, with the higher prices and mortgage rates, the average new home-buyer is going to pay $500 more a month, or $180,000 over the course of a 30-year loan,
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than somebody who bought their home just a year ago. norah. >> o'donnell: that really does put it in perspective. lana zak, thank you. feeling sluggish or weighed down? it could be a sign that your digestive system isn't working at its best. taking metamucil everyday can help. metamucil psyllium fiber, gels to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down. it also helps lower cholesterol and slows sugar absorption to promote healthy blood sugar levels. so, you can feel lighter and more energetic. metamucil. support your daily digestive health. feel less sluggish & weighed down after just 14 days. complete the 2-week challenge and receive a $5 reward. do you have a life insurance policy you no longer need? now you can sell your policy - even a term policy - for an immediate cash payment. we thought we had planned carefully for our retirement. but we quickly realized we needed a way to supplement our income. if you have $100,000 or more of life insurance, you may qualify to sell your policy. don't cancel or let your policy lapse without finding out what it's worth. visit coventrydirect.com to find
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♪ >> this is the "cbs overnight news". ♪ here from washington, thanks for staying with us. fresh water is begin running in billings, montana, where record flooding in and around yellow stone national park forced the local treatment plant off line. officials say the plant is back to full capacity and the water is safe to drink. meanwhile the park remains closed to visitors after torrential rain left behind a trail of destruction cutting off local communities. a massive clean up is underway as all that water worked its way downstream.
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jonathan vigliotti is there. >> reporter: these are the flood waters which tore through montana which some say came without warnings. road turned into rivers in a matter of minutes. >> i woke up to my 10-year-old screaming down stairs, the water was rising so quick and fast i needed to get the breakers the off. >> reporter: they are the same waters that devastated yellowstone national park last week leaving scars on one. the nation's most treasured land marks. >> with the weather we're going to see more extreme events in not only montana, around the country and around the world, events that we haven't seen in recorded history. >> the national guard flew 90 people to safety. >> no one has seen anything like this. >> the fire chief said 250 homes
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have been damaged by the floods. >> that boulder there gives you a sense of the power of this water. that boulder originally was in the main stream. >> the river literally came through here and through this folk's house. the river was going through their living room. >> he said it has been unpredictable. >> we have the highest flows the area has ever seen. >> experts fear over nation's protected parks like yellowstone are at risk because of the changing environment. >> we have to plan for change. the infrastructure in places like yellow stone is not ready for climate change. we've seen roads wash out, land slides. we need to give that more thought. >> the water has receded leaving behind what you could not see at the time these are massive
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boulders, easily hundreds of pounds that came from the river bed putting into perspective how strong that current was. the fire chief told me in 27 years hasn't seen a flood like this. in fact last week they had thousands of sand bags they were thinking of giving away. >> jonathan vigliotti in montana. the southern baptist c will have its first annual meeting since the new report detailing a cover up that reached the top of the organization. one survivors pressed his fellow worshippers for change. >> he made sure to pick me up first and drop me off last. this is the youth minister and a monster church that is giving me all this time. >> reporter: it was that level of attention from frankie wily the youth minister in the 1980s
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that a young, date pitdman says he craved. >> i'm thinking i'm special. >> reporter: looking back now was frankie wily grooming you then. >> absolutely. not just me. he groomed the family. he groomed the church and it turns out he was grooming the entire state, he has victims all over the state of georgia. >> you were 12 years old when he began sexually abusing you. >> right. it started with a sleep over and it would be full, you know, digital assertion and i froze. >> he is now 54. he said wile eye repeated him until he was 15 >> we about sex much less sexual abuse. >> reporter: he found the courage to report it to the police in 2005 but the criminal statute of limitation had passed
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and he then told numerous church leaders. >> they said there's nothing we can do. >> reporter: nearly 40 years later this clovis 288-page investigative report alleges how the southern baptist executive committee stonewalled survivors, including pitman de tailed how the church ignored his and other abuse allegations and saying there was nothing he could do but pray. >> what was your reaction to the report. >> i was naziiated. >> reporter: he was a . >> i was nauseous. >> reporter: they were at a convention where they vowed to change approving two recommendation recommendations, an updated abuse task force and database to track abused
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ministers and pastors and the task force said the system would be retroactive and tempt to identify and remove abuser. from the church even if the statute of limitation passed on the accusations >> survivors believe they won't be institutional change. >> i understand that. and i understand that we've talked a lot. and we're really trying to make a -- really a monumental shift in how we handle sexual abuse as a convention of churches. >> reporter: david pitman travelled 2500 miles to attend the sbc meeting, it is where we sat down and he gave me this 2019 e-mail in which frankly wily confessed to sexually abusing five boys. >> it's a relief it's on paper. >> finally you're being believed. >> right. the person who committed these crimes has acknowledged it, and said yes. it just feels sick that i was
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just a gratification and an evil person. >> as we sit here frankie wily is a music minister in a church in georgia. >> yes, ma'am. >> you can see wily playing the piano at trinity community church in georgia this past sunday, a church that recently cut ties with the sbc. >> did they ever apologize to you? >> he tried. if he is locked up one day that will be the apology i would like to see. >> i spoke with two other men who share similar stories of sexual abuse by frankie wily as young boys, i reached out to wily and the church where he works but have not heard back.
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when you really need to sleep. you reach for the really good stuff. you've ever tasted. zzzquil ultra helps you sleep better and longer when you need it most. its non-habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil. there are deep concerns this morning about the fate of two americans missing and believed captured in ukraine. andy nguyen and alex drueke left their homes in alabama to serve in ukraine's army and dace peered in a firefight. the news comes as france, u.s. and germany travel to meet with president volodymyr zelenskyy and testing new weapons that may show up some day on the battle
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field. >> reporter: the future of war is unmanned partially. the u.s. army is testing this reconvehicle. >> we can get better understanding of the ground before committing soldiers to the fight. >> reporter: the war in ukraine shows the need for these kind of weapons with both sides suffering heavy losses since russia invaded. while the u.s. troops aren't in that fight they're getting ready in case russia goes after a nato ally and in war believe the robots could save lives. >> instead of sacrificing six of my men out there i can send this up front, do the probing, get the positive identification of other tanks. >> reporter: ukraine also exposed the importance of logistics, getting supplies safely to the front lines. robotic trucks could keep them well armed reducing risk to drivers, think of the technology
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like follow the leader. >> we have a kit that goes on the existing truck and as it is driven by humans the other vehicles reproduce the path rowe bottomicly. robotically. >> reporter: a group of illustrators have banded together to use their art to document the atrocities of war in their homeland. margaret brennan with that story. >> this artist does not know when she will return to ukraine. she is haunted by the war. >> i don't have any experience of the war. only through hate and it's terrible feeling. i was drawing this feeling. when you feel only that, you cannot do anything else. >> reporter: she co-founded a collective to share graphic art from fellow illustrators. >> most of them decided not to leave the country. they were never stopping working and drawing.
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>> reporter: like artist oleksandr shatokhin. as russian bombs dropped on his city, he sent anna works of art each day. when i saw this, it made me tear up. >> he was trying to capture all the child victims in one picture. >> reporter: anna's collective helped organize more than 40 exhibitions around the world to auction artwork and raise money for ukraine, including at >> many of the women have left. they're refugees. she's one of them. >> she's now in germany. >> this is putin again. >> i call it my secret dream and i think that how this war against ukraine will end up to putin like that. he started something terrible. >> reporter: you wrote you never thought you could hate so much. >> i felt like i'm a nice, good person. >> reporter: illustrator tania yakunova's work is inspired by the bravery of ordinary ukrainians. [ chants ] >> we have these videos where russians shooting and people
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don't even scare at the sound of the guns. >> reporter: she drew even while fleeing the bombing of kyiv and is now documenting it the horrific atrocities left behind. she calls this piece "bucha mother." >> this image is a collective image of several victims who they can't share their stories unfortunately. army found corpses of several young women naked and raped on the roadside, and russians tried to burn them. >> reporter: tania used to illustrate children's books, but the war has robbed her and so many others of that innocence. >> there is more stories about women who was raped in front of her small baby, and neither -- woman nor baby survived. they were shot. i feel so much hate for people who did it. this is the hardest piece i ever drew. >> reporter: these women can't tell their stories, but you're telling their stories.
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a radio show in western massachusetts has become appointment listing, not just for its community outreach but in part because of the co-host providing it. here's that story. >> reporter: daisy ecobar by day but one night a week she's the voice of connection to a growing immigrant community in massachusetts. >> for those new to the area -- >> reporter: the 17-year-old hosts a radio show. at the mike, someone she knows well, her mom, marta. >> our intermission is to keep the communiep iic service. the rest pure dance classes.
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mart u would host solo until a then 8-year-old daisy asked to join. >> what's it like to spend this time with your mom. >> 24 is a moment we get to equity connect. we . >> this is a moment we get to connect. >> we love to dance. >> wtbr is a favorite in the region. from from law offices to the local garage. >> you work together every week. who is the boss? >> i think we're a good team. >> a mother and daughter on the same frequency keeping their community informed. cbs news, massachusetts. >> that's the "cbs overnight news" for this friday. for some the news continues. for others check back on cbs
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mornings and follow us online all the time at cbsnews.com. capitol i'm catherine herridge. >> this is cbs news flash, i'm matt pieper in new york. three people were shot in a church in alabama. two of the victims were killed. it happen in a suburb of birmingham while the church was hosting a pot luck dinner. the suspect was taken into custody. the u.s. government hosted a bill exposure to burn pits can lead to cancer. >> and the golden state warriors are your nba champions, beating the boston celtics, 103-90 in game six. it is their fourth title in eight years and 7th overall. and the warriors steph curry was named most valuable player. for more news download cbs news
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on your cellphone or connected tv. i'm matt pieper, cbs news new york. ♪ it's friday, june 17th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." underground safe room. new photos show the protection around mike pence during the capitol attack as rioters got within 40 feet of the former vice president. stocks slide. another massive selloff on wall street over fears of a recession. president biden's new comments on the economic downturn. the fourth title in eight years. the doves' dynasty is still very much alive. >> nba champions. the golden state warriors win another title as their star player achieves a career first. good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-mar
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