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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  June 24, 2022 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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that their voice is heard and not muted. and we'll continue to fight until every legal remedy is exhausted, and that's what he should do. >> well, earlier we spoke with documentary film maker alex holder for his firstntervi sig behind closed doors for more than two hours with the house committee investigating the january 6th assault. >> no one in the trump family ever gave me direction whatsoever, and no one in the trump family has seen a single frame or piece of footage. >> how did you find the president after he interviewed him after the january 6th assault? >> so, i interviewed him twice after january 6, and the first time he did come across as quite irate and quite depressed and frustrated. the second time, which was in bedminster in new jersey, he suddenly came across more jovial and content. >> why were you up on capitol hill on january 6th?
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>> so, we were covering the rallies that the president was having throughout that period after the election. and this particular event we knew was happening. i actually said the night before that -- i was sort of half joking and i said, you know the president is going to tell everyone to march on the capitol. this is the night before january 6th. and we sort of prepared for that potentially hang. >> how did you know that the president would call on people to march on the capitol? >> the volume of rhetoric and sort of the belligerent that was coming out was so significant that, in my mind, there was sort of -- it eventually had to end with something violent. even if you look at the way the campaign was going before, the idea of the election being something that was going to be irregular was already coming up during that time as well. so to me, january 6 doesn't happen by itself. >> it was the culmination of what you had been hearing on the
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campaign trail, or even after the election? >> absolutely. to me it wasn't surprising, and it's obviously awful to say this, but in some ways it's like i thought it would be even worse. >> why did you think it would be worse? what did you hear? what did you record? >> if you're telling 75 million people that their election doesn't count and they believe you, you're their president and they voted for you and you're saying their election doesn't count, what else is going to happen? >> are there revelations from your interviews with donald trump that will shock people? >> i believe so, yes. >> do you get a sense that president trump wanted violence to occur on january 6? >> i think the president saw it as inevitability in that the people that were there were doing what he thought was to be correct, which was that they were fighting for their election and for their votes to be counted. >> and alex holder told us the
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reason the trump family agreed to the documentary was because they believed that trump was going to win the election. but now that he's lost, holder thinks donald trump will not run again in 2024. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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to a company that once dominated the e-cigarette market that is blamed for sparking a surge in teen vaping in the u.s.. the food and drug administration said the company was unable to supply the data needed to determine relevant health risks of its products. juul said it will appeal. now to the growing shortage of police on patrol across the country. the recent survey from the national police foundation found 86% of departments reported staffing shortages with applications down, and officers leaving the force in record numbers. in tonight's "eye on america," cbs's charlie demar traveled with the chicago police department looking for a few proud new recruits. >> reporter: it's graduation day for 46 brand-new chicago police officers. it's a start, but still 1300 cops short of what the department says it needs. what is the reality for the chicago police department in terms of the officer shortage? >> the reality is that we need to fill the gaps quickly. >> reporter: so the city is looking here to fill the void.
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>> it's been a great job. >> reporter: at camp pendleton near san diego, about 9,000 marines become civilians every year so deputy chief brought six officers, all former marines, to recruit. >> good afternoon, marines. >> these are every mother's son and daughter. these aren't bad people. these are american heroes. >> reporter: it's not always an easy sell. what are some of the biggest challenges for you in recruiting? >> the negativity that goes around it. >> reporter: since the national reckoning following george floyd's death in 2020, departments across the country are struggling to keep cops. according to a recent survey of 172 police departments, resignations are up by more than 40% since 2019, and retirements were up almost 25% during the same period. some worry that skills meant for battle fields won't be suitable for city streets. >> the first thing is, you know,
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are we making the law enforcement process too militant? no, we're not. they're individuals just like us, just like you. the process is we have issues. >> reporter: background checks, drug screens and a written test were given immediately on-site to the 19 marines who applied. a process that usually takes several months now compressed to just three weeks. >> that's really all we need. >> reporter: corporals christopher rivera and jeremiah harrington both signed up. any hesitation? >> ion joining a police department? >> no, not at all. joining the marine corps, you know what you're signing up for. >> i want to serve a great community. >> reporter: a department in need of officers, finding marines in need of a new mission. for "eye on america," charlie demar, cbs news, san diego. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news." we'll tell you about this dramatic rescue after an olympic
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there is now more than 170 cases -- confirmed cases of monkeypox in the u.s.. the youngest patient so far is 20 years old. new york city started offering shots to at-risk groups today. demand was so high that walk-in appointments were cut off and scheduled vaccinations are already booked into next week. it was a terrifying scene wednesday at the world aquatics championships when an american swimmer anita alvarez lost consciousness and sank to the bottom of the pool. the 25-year-old swimmer appeared lifeless at the end of her routine. coach fuentes, a four-time medallist swam to alvarez and got her to safety. >> i just went as fast as i could to grab her and pull her up to the surface. and once i pull her up, i was just -- my goal was only to make her breathe. >> fuentes says a similar incident involving alvarez happened last year. alvarez is okay now, but it's not clear whether she is going
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to compete in the finals tomorrow. all right. coming up next, 50 years later, how title ix helped hange more
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that the world of sports and equality were forever changed. cbs's jamie yuccas takes a look at the landmark law known as title ix and how women have never looked back. >> reporter: title ix was a grand slam, especially for female athletes who began playing before 1972. >> billie jean serves -- >> reporter: one of the most famous advocates, tennis legend billie jean king. >> we can never understand inclusion, until we have been excluded. >> reporter: tara vanderveer has more wins than any other women's
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basketball coach in history and olympic gold for team usa. >> we should have never needed title ix because it should have been fair all along. >> reporter: when she was in >> iwas alsoy painful, not to have the plan, not to have the experience boys got. i think it is important we do know the history and that we keep working to have true equality with -- within sports and within education. >> reporter: the ncaa's dr. amy wilson says the fight is just beginning. >> are we making sure that women, girls and women of all identities are getting access, you know. are minority women getting the same opportunities, and we see that that's not the case in a lot of our sports. >> reporter: celebration and a continued battle for equal pay and equal play. jamie yuccas, cbs news, los angeles. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others check back later for cbs mornings.
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and you can follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. is cbs news flash. i'm matt piper in new york: senate has passed a gun control bill 65-33. speaker nancy pelosi says the hoe will vote on it friday, then send it to the president's desk. the bill gives millions to mental health and expands background checks for those under 21. it has been one year since the surfside building florida collapse. the judge has given final approval to a settlement topping $1 billion for victims. 98 people were killed when the champlain tower south came crashing down. the supreme court will release more decisions in the morning. there are nine of them yet to be announced this term. the most notable being a mississippi law that prohibits abortions after 15 weeks. for more news, download the
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cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm matt piper, cbs news, new york. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." in the past few weeks we have heard gripping new testimony from the january 6 hearings. but what we learned today was particularly egregious. three former high-level justice department officials testified that the president of the united states repeatedly sought to pressure and manipulate the d.o.j. to, in the words of president trump, just say the election was corrupt. and when those officials told the president over and over again that there was no evidence of fraud, trump sought to replacement attorney general with an environmental attorney with no experience. we also learned of an oval office showdown on january 3rd.
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that was just three days before the insurrection. we've got more on that in just a minute. the other big headline from today's hearing, that six house republicans asked for pardons for themselves from the white house. cbs's nikole killion starts us off, all those details. good evening, nikole. >> reporter: good evening, norah. this appears to be another case of the former president ignoring advice from his own administration as he tried to pressure senior justice department officials to overturn the 2020 election. >> between december 23rd and january 3rd, the president either called me or met with me virtually every day. >> reporter: testifying under oath, top former department of justice officials told the house select committee investigating former president trump that - relentlessly pressured them to investigate false claims of election fraud. >> we had concluded, based on actual investigations, actual witness interviews, actual
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reviews of documents, that these allegations simply had no merit. >> reporter: weaving previous interviews with live testimony, committee members painted a picture of a desperate president attempting to force former acting attorney general jeffrey rosen and his deputies to cast doubt on election integrity. >> you also noted that mr. rosen said to mr. trump, quote, d.o.j. can't and won't snap its fingers and change the outcome of the election. how did the president respond to that, sir? >> he responded very quickly and said, essentially, that's not what i'm asking you to do. what i'm just asking you to do is just say it was corrupt and leave the rest to me and the republican congressmen. >> reporter: instead jeffrey clark, an environmental lawyer at d.o.j. with no experience in elections, wrote a draft letter that he intended to send to battle ground states trump lost, saying the department had identified significant concerns that may impact the outcome o onat w false.efhe january 6th attack on the capitol, a tense hours long oval office
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meeting took place where trump threatened to replace rosen with clark. >> toward the end of the meeting, the president again was getting very agitated and he said, people tell me i should just get rid of both of you. i should just remove you and make a change in leadership, put jeff clark in, maybe something will finally get done. >> reporter: also at that meeting, steven engel and former acting attorney general richard donohue, they helped knock down claims of voter fraud and told the former president they had hundreds of attorneys at d.o.j. who would resign immediately if he went through with his plan. only then, donohue said, trump backed off. >> and i began to explain to him what he had to lose, and what the country had to lose and what the department had to lose. and this was not in anyone's best interest. >> reporter: jeffrey clark did not testify today, but invoked the fifth amendment at a previous deposition. and yesterday federal
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investigators raided his northern virginia home. meantime, the committee named more republican lawmakers who sought pardons after meeting with the former president to strategize ways to block the certification of the election. norah? >> it's like there are new revelations every day. nikole killion, thank you. let's go now to the other big story today. the supreme court and the most significant case regarding the second amendment in more than a decade. as the nation deals with a recent wave of mass shootings, the supreme court expanded gun rights, nullifying a new york law that required applicants to show a special need for a concealed carry permit. the ruling could jeopardize similar laws in five other states. we get more from cbs's jan crawford. >> reporter: striking down some of the nation's strictest gun laws, the court emphasized the second amendment is not a second-class right. writing for the 6-3 majority, justice clarence thomas said conceal carry laws in new york and five other states prevent
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law-abiding citizens with ordinary self-defense needs from exercising their right to keep and bear arms. new york said the ruling was a blow to public safety. >> this decision has made every single one of us less safe from gun violence. >> my response to that is that's the same clap trap that they have been using for 20 years. >> reporter: but gun rights advocates like tom king who challenged the law said it did nothing to solve the real problems of gun violence or stop mass shootings like the one in buffalo. >> it's not the gun owner. it's not the carry pistol permit holders. it's the criminals that are causing the violence and the gun problem in new york state. >> reporter: the ruling follows the court's 2008 landmark decision that individuals have a right to have a gun for self-defense in their homes. 43 states allow legal gun owners to carry concealed weapons in public. half don't even require a permit. but new york as well as five
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other states went beyond standard permitting requirements and made gun owners prove they had a special need to protect themselves. in dissent, justice stephen breyer, writing for the court's liberals, said the court severely burdens states that want to pass laws in various ways who may purchase, carry or use firearms of different kinds. several conservative justices stress there are limits to the second amendment. some say the ruling does not invalidate other state gun licensing requirements and suggesting that states can still restrict who can lawfully possess a gun and, norah, what kind of gun they can own. >> and, jan, we are still waiting for that big decision from the court about abortion rights that could overturn roe vs. wade? >> reporter: that's right, it could come any day, norah. >> jan crawford, thank you. all right, tonight the fda made it official, announcing a ban on juul, e-cigarettes and nicotine pods. the action is a devastating blow to a company that once dominated the e-cigarette market that is
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sparking a surge in teen vaping in the u.s.. the food and drug administration said the company was unable to supply the data to determine hill health risks of its products. juul said it will appeal. there is now more than 170 cases confirmed cases of monkeypox in the u.s.. the youngest patient so far is 20 years old. new york city started offering shots to at-risk groups today, but demand was so high that walk-in appointments were cut off and scheduled vaccinations are already booked into next week. it was a terrifying scene wednesday at the world a qualityics championships when an american swimmer anita alvarez lost consciousness and sank to the bottom of the pool. the 25-year-old swimmer appeared lifeless near the end of her routine. coach andrea fuentes, a four-time olympic medallist swam to alvarez and got her to safety. >> i just went as fast as i could to grab her and pull her up to the surface. and once i pull her up, i was just -- my goal was only to make her breathe. >> well, fuentes says a similar
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overnight news." i'm jan crawford in washington. thanks for staying with us. run away inflation and rising mortgage rates are threatening to cool off the red hot housing market. as mortgage rates spiked above 6%, applications for new loans plummeted, and morgan stanley announced it is cutting hundreds of jobs in its mortgage business. what does that mean if you're in the market for a new home? kris van cleave has the story from st. louis. >> reporter: with inflation, soaring interest rates, cooling the market here in st. louis, pending home sales were down nearly 10% in may compared to a year ago, and there are parts of the country where property
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values are actually falling. cheryl lesli is house hunting in fort worth, texas, hoping to move closer to her grand kids. >> this is cute. so i'm looking now so when the prices come down just a tad, i'll be able to know exactly what i need and what i want and where to go. >> reporter: but as interest rates surge past 6%, hitting their highest point since 2008, an estimated 18 million households who would have qualified for a mortgage in january are essentially frozen out of the market, no longer eligible for that loan. and those who can still afford to buy, a typical new mortgage payment has spiked 52% over the last six months. >> the market is going to change dramatically. >> reporter: mark zandi is chief economist. >> the price will decline in the juiced up markets. in my mind that's a correction when house prices start to go lower. >> reporter: mortgage applications are down more than 15% compared to 2021, dropping
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5% in may alone. that's prompting nearly one in five sellers to drop their price. this week realty company red fin announced it would cut hundreds of jobs because of the slowing housing market. >> the housing market is in a downturn right now. it's sickly call. it just doesn't support the number of employees we had before. >> reporter: this home in arlington, texas, has been on the market for 28 days, not selling even after the price was dropped. only a few people came to the open house. >> six bedroom, 5 1/2, 4282 square feet. >> reporter: realtor tina says that's a marked change. this home, i imagine six months ago, would have sold -- >> very quickly. >> reporter: it would not have been on the market two weeks later. >> no, no. >> reporter: now, there is still more demand than supply for homes, so you can't call it a buyer's market yet. but even in red-hot dallas, the compass realty agent that's working with cheryl in our story there is starting to tell sellers not to expect a bidding
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war, especially if it's a house that needs work. >> that was kris van cleave in st. louis. with the cost of nearly everything on the rise, food companies have found a way to keep some prices the same while protecting their profits. it's called shrink-flation. trinity chavez explains how it works. >> reporter: you probably wouldn't notice when you're shopping at the grocery store, but many products on the shelves are shrinking. >> i started noticing changes in product when i would simply go to the store to buy them. >> reporter: mary is a consumer advocate, and last week she spotted gatorade for sale in a new bottle. >> newer bottle is a little bit slimmer. 32 ounces down to 28 ounces, and they were both exactly the same price. >> reporter: it's called shrink inflation. more and more products with less inside, a small box of kleenex now has 60 tissues. a few months ago it was 65. a popular yogurt went from 5.3 to 4.5 ounces.
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and the dawn detergent on the right is a half ounce less, but the packaging looks similar to the old one. >> usually we see shrink-flation coming in waves. and at the moment because of inflation, it's a tidal wave of shrink-flation. >> reporter: edgar is the founder of consumer world.org. he says manufacturers, production and shipping costs are going up, and many companies don't want to raise prices. >> they know consumers are price conscious, and they're going to catch that. or they can do it the more subtle way. take a little bit out of the product. >> reporter: and some companies are up front about the changes. earlier this year, when chicken prices soared, dominos announed it would be shrinking the number of chick in wings in its carry-out deal from ten to mpanieneverut zirsre reallydy want tou aers a package that says, look, 20% more. unfortunately we're never going to is see one of those that says, look, 20% less.
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>> reporter: some manufacturers may reintroduce larger packages when inflation eases. once a product has downsized, it usually stays that way. trinity chavez, cbs news, new york. the lack of workers has led to a crisis that's affecting every nursing home across the country. according to a recent survey, 87% of providers are facing staff shortages and the lack of qualified care givers has led to unsafe conditions for many of the nation's seniors. mark strassmann has the story. >> reporter: jackie rojas sanchez is a cna. a certified nursing assistant and the face of a staffing crisis that her boss amber mcintosh knows all too well. >> i think covid took it to a different level. >> reporter: without cnas, nursing homes really captain function. >> absolutely not. they're the backbone. >> reporter: sanchez looks after eight residents each shift at abernathy laurels, a nonprofit outside charlotte. but deandre clark, a traveling cna in the same area, sometimes
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has to look after 20 or more. >> i have never been to a place that was fully staffed yet. >> reporter: what's the impact on care? >> it's really bad. they be hollering. some of them done fell out the bed. you go in their room and they're on the floor. >> reporter: last january north carolina sanctioned this nursing home after two deaths there. one nurse and two cnas cared for 98 people. in a recent survey of nursing home operators, 98% report having trouble hiring. 60% say they are losing money. nearly three in four say staffing issues could force them to close. >> the status quo is unsustainable. for workers in this industry, for the residents that are cared for, and for the best employers. >> reporter: to recruit more ynas like sanchez, abernathy laurels raised pay to $16 an hour. and started paying to train and certify new cnas.
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>> it's a measure of how much the world had changed. >> that's right. it was an investment. >> reporter: most nursing homes remain under staffed, some dangerously so. >> this is the form of neglect and i don't want to be part of that. >> reporter: part of an industry where too often help just isn't there. mark strassmann, cbs news, newton, north carolina. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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steve hartman and his adorable kids are backit a new installment of their series "kindness 101." today's lesson, fortitude. >> reporter: this is my daughter merrill. >> hi. >> reporter: we have two forks on our desk. this one merrill made out of stone, this one i made out of cards. merrill, which fort would you
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rather live in? >> stone one. >> reporter: right, because this fort has more -- >> fortitude. >> reporter: the word fort is right in there. what's that mean? for that let's go to emmet at the dictionary desk. >> good morning. fortitude is to have or feel strength. >> reporter: yeah. in people it's the emotional strength you need to get through tough times. so whenever anything bad blows your way, fortitude helps you withstand the adversity. and there's no better example of this than the woman in the story we're about try pled zierans.the livimbodiment of kayla mckeyian may be washington's most unlikely power broker. as a lobbyist, the only registered lobbyist with down syndrome, kayla roams the capital advocating for the down society. >> she's an incredible asset to
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this organization. >> reporter: sarah heart weir is her boss. >> she's extremely articulate and fast on her feet. >> reporter: they hired you for your skills and your charm. >> you're good at this. >> reporter: it takes a schmoozer to know a schmoozer. but kayla also has a certain sincerity that can turn almost any politician into putty. >> you need a sponsor? >> i definitely need you. >> reporter: she's in washington, d.c. calling on senators and congressmen? >> yes. >> reporter: her parents mark and patty say although their daughter continues to surprise, kayla never let down syndrome slow her down. they say even at 2, kayla decided she would drive a car some day. to pass the permit test, we said you have to be able to read. >> that gave heron couragement to knuckle down and read. even now she reads a book a week. >> reporter: and she got her driver's license, too. that's her celebrating after
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passing the road test. she's now one of a handful of people with down syndrome to have a license. what about that parallel parking? really? >> that's challenging. >> reporter: fortunately today she does more flying than driving. a couple times a month, she leaves her home in syracuse for her office in d.c., where kayla is focused on passing a law that would make it illegal to pay people with disabilities anything less than minimum wage. >> i got it. >> reporter: she says if it passes, it would be a monumental achievement. but a thrill regardless. just to be part of the process. >> i just love the feeling of, wow, i'm here. i'm making history. >> reporter: hard to believe? >> oh, yeah. >> reporter: kayla mckeon, lilly in the swamp. joining us now, my friend and my inspiration, kayla. hello. >> hi, steve. hi, emmet. >> hi, kayla.
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>> reporter: is it true you're getting your college degree now? >> actually i'm two courses away from my associates degree and i just passed my meteorology class last time. >> reporter: you passed meteorology? i tapped out of that class. that's hard. >> yes, very hard. lots of math. >> did you pass your driving test the first time? >> not my first time, but my fifth time. >> how do you not give up? >> i am very persistent. yes, i'm tempted, but no, never going to happen. >> reporter: seems like a big part of fortitude is patience, and budging congress on anything would take a lot of patience, right? >> oh, absolutely it does. >> reporter: where does that law stand now? >> talk about patience, because it has to go through many channels. >> reporter: and you're not going to give up because you have -- >> fortitude, darn it. >> reporter: well, thank you for joining us. >> absolutely. thank you so much.
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>> reporter: and good luck to you powering through whatever obstacles you face today. we'll see you next (dr. david jeremiah) there may have never been another time in history when end times prophecy has been more aligned with the culture
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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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forgotten, even if it takes generations to say a proper thank you. i met two families that share an unbreakable bond forged in the fires of the second world war. when the greek restaurant became a culinary casualty of the pandemic, the owner had doubts about the future. >> everything we had, we sunk into that old restaurant. >> he didn't know the past is what would save him. >> in 1943 you were 7. >> his mother angela and her friend josephine were children in greece during world war ii when the nazis invaded the country. the jewish family was in mortal danger. >> they were fighting. they were killing people. it was bad.
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they killed my father's two brothers. >> at great risk, angela's parents hid josephine's family for a year. do you ever think about what her father did for your family? >> oh, my god, yes. it was the best thing you could ever do. >> after the war both families moved to baltimore and remained the best of friends. but angela's family would never accept any payment. 80 years later, finally a way to give back. after they lost the first restaurant, josephine's family pooled their money to help open a new one. >> i was stunned. i was speechless. >> my son will never forget, and they are going to continue to thank with another 80 years. >> a lifetime of friendships for two families through tragedy and triumph. and many more memories to create in the years ahead. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for cbs mornings. and follow us online any time at
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cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm jan crawford. this is cbs news flash. i'm matt piper in new york. the senate has passed a gun control bill 65-33. speaker nancy pelosi says the house will vote on it friday, then send it to the president's desk. the bill gives millions to mental health and expands background checks for those under 21. it has been one year since the surfside building florida collapse. the judge has given final approval to a settlement topping $1 billion for victims. 98 people were killed when the champlain tower south came crashing down. the supreme court will release more decisions in the morning. there are nine of them yet to be announced this term. the most notable being a mississippi law that prohibits abortions after 15 weeks. for more news, download the
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cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm matt piper, cbs news, new york. it's friday, june 24th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." breaking overnight, bipartisan deal passed. the senate approves a measure to tighten gun-control laws. the key takeaways as lawmakers break a decades' long stalemate. pressure campaign. former justice department officials testify in the latest january 6th hearing. how they say former president trump tried to mislead the department on election fraud claims. dramatic rescue. a coach saves a u.s. swimmer who blacked out under water during a championship event. well, good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. breaking overnight, theat

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