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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  November 22, 2022 3:12am-4:30am PST

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and walls of a bowling line buckled under several feet of snow. >> sadly, that building was condemned today and they are tearing it down asap. >> tonight, the driving ban for the entire buffalo area has been lifted, but drivers are urged to stay off the roads unless there is an emergency. schools will be closed tomorrow which means kids here at least will get another snow day. with just three days until thanksgiving, the holiday travel season is already underway for millions of americans. aaa says nearly 55 million will be hitting the roads and the airports this year. the third most on record. cbs's kris van cleave is at a busy o'hare international airport. >> reporter: tonight, the turkey travel trott is turning
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into a thanksgiving russia's millions of flyers fill airports nationwide. note nearly 7 million passed through tsa checkpoints over the weekend with sunday's volume surpassing the same day in 2019. >> reporter: l.a.x. in los angeles expects this will be its busiest stretch since the pandemic message, get here early. >> we are ready to welcome back these passengers and ready for those crowds. >> reporter: with flights packed this weekend ever surging as much is 43% compared to last year, many flyers found better deals by moving up their travel plans. >> ticket prices affected my decision-making completely. >> i wanted to spend more time wih my family. >> reporter: the busiest day of the year comes under scrutiny after agents failed to detect a box cutter in the cincinnati airport earlier this month.
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>> passengers should not be concerned. that was a very rare circumstance. we have literally all hands on deck when that happens and try to figure out why, and then very quickly put measures in place to prevent it from happening again. >> the travel forecast looks good between now and thanksgiving. united air lines tell us they are seeing a surge in last- minute bookings, people telling us just now they want to travel for the holiday weekend. if you are driving wednesday and the sunday after thanksgiving it is likely to be very busy on the roads. police in new york city gave no details today about the arrest of two young men accused of plotting to attack a synagogue. they were arrested at a train station on saturday hours afte investigats say e suspects were armed with a gun, high- capacity magazines, not the style armband and military style knives. tonight, funeral services are being held for one of the four idaho college students brutally
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murdered a week ago. authorities have no suspects in state and federal investigators are combing the area for clues. we are learning more about the timeline from the night of the killings. >> reporter: police here say they have tracked nearly 700 tips and conducted 9000 interviews in the search for the person who murdered four idaho students. >> currently, there are no suspects in custody and we have not located a weapon. >> reporter: last seen in the studio, police say they have ruled out the man with the huddy along with the person who drove the two home that night. the timeline is now emerging with the two surviving housemates arriving home at one: a.m., south is at 1:40 time as the other victim. police say will multiple calls made to the victim's ex- boyfriend ending at 2:30 a.m. but they do not believe he was
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a suspect. the 911 call came nearly three hours later. >> the identity of the 911 color and the 911 call has not been released. >> reporter: we are now learning there were other friends in the house when police arrived. around town, there are flyers pleading for help posted everywhere as investiators combed the area, even searching dumpsters for clues. >> this person is not just flying under the radar with no friends, no family. i am sure they work somewhere. >> reporter: olivia stephenson, sister of kaylee, says there frustrated over the police response. >> if this individual is out there and they get this i want them to be scared and they should be cared scared because we will find them. >> reporter: police are still looking for the murder weapon, which they describe as a large military style knife. cbs news visited a local sporting goods store for people had been by asking about blade
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purchases, but in this part of the common country, that is not that uncommon. turning now to the kick up of the world's cup, the first ever in the middle east, the u.s. men's team had to settle for a tie to and hard-fought match against wales. >> reporter: cheering on the stars & stripes in the first world cup match in eight years, fans watched their team get a goal early before wales tried to square with a penalty kick. >> the energy was there and i think it is going to be a good run for us. >> reporter: but, politics are
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also playing a part in this tournament. before facing england today, i ran players stood silently during their national anthem, a sign of solidarity with antiregime protesters back home, and after warnings from fifa, soccer's world governing body, the captains of england and six other european teams ditch the rainbow and armbands they had worn in previous matches and supportive lgbtq rights. qatar's laws criminalizing same- sex relations and its treatment of workers that built the sparkling stadiums have casted out of controversy over those small muslim nation. on the eve of the games, thesis defense chairman criticized qatar. >> it is probably something that the government needs to deal with itself and we are here for the soccer. >> the tie here tonight means
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the u.s. teams next two games are all the more crucial for her to advance to the next round. it is set to play england on > fans of jay leno got there first look at the comedian as he went home from a burn unit. we will have that story coming up next. guys, it's time to stop treating your groins like junk. introducing the new intimate pubic hair trimmer from gillette. it's not junk, so treat it right with a gentle and easy shave from america's #1 trusted men's grooming brand. respect your pubic region with gillette intimate. ladies... welcome to my digestive system. when your gut and vaginal bacteria are off balance.
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you may feel it. but just one align women's probiotic daily helps soothe digestive upsets. and support vaginal health. welcome to an align gut. giving tuesday, giving tuesday, giving tuesday. giving tuesday is a global effort that encourages people to do good. this year, when you choose shriners hospitals for children, you're choosing kids like me, and me, and me. this year please support shriners hospitals for children, because when you do you're not just giving to a hospital. you're helping change the life of a kid like me and me and me. i give to shriners hospitals for children because i want to be a part of something amazing. i know my gift to shriners hospitals for children makes a difference in the lives of children. our support gives kids a bright future. when you support shriners hospitals for children you're joining thousands of other caring people like you who have helped kids like me,
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and over 1.4 million other kids do amazing things. when you call the number on your screen right now and give $19 a month, just $0.63 a day, you'll be making a life changing difference for a kid just like me. your support helps us do amazing thing, thank you. because of your support, we can say thank you by having the life we wouldn't have had without shriners hospitals for children. yay, shriners... yay shriners! with your monthly gift, we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue blanket as another way to say thank you. plus, it's your reminder of all the children who now have hope because of your support. go online right now to loveshriners.org to give your monthly support so more kids like me get the care we need to be kids.
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thank you for giving. please call right now to give. if operators are busy with other caring donors, please hold patiently or go to loveshriners.org. overseas tonight, indonesia's main island is reeling after getting hit by a powerful magnitude 5.6 earthquake. officials say more than 160 people are dead, and hundreds injured after homes and businesses collapsed. 13,000 people whose homes were heavily damaged were sent to evacuation centers. jay leno was released from a burn center in los angeles today. the 72-year-old thanks the dream that treated him for 10 days after he suffered serious burns to his face, chest, and hands while working on one of his classic cars.
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lentils doctor says the comedian is looking forward to spending thanksgiving with his family an and tonight's winning numbers are 18, 18 55, 39, 71, and 43 we won! yes! noooo... noooo... noooo... quick, the quicker picker upper! bounty picks up messes quicker and each sheet is 2x more absorbent, so you can use less. i'll hold onto that. bounty, the quicker picker upper. ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call
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years. orion, with three test dummies on board, fired up its engines and will orbit the moon before returning to
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we are grocery outlet and we are your bargain bliss market. what's bargain bliss? you know that feeling you get when you find the name brands you love, but for way, way less? that's bargain bliss. and with thanksgiving right around the corner, we want you to save big. that's why at grocery outlet, we are offering you $21 off your holiday turkey with in-store coupon. that's as low as .53 cents a pound. now, that's savings to be thankful for.
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so hurry in because this deal is only available while supplies last. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market ♪ finally, tonight, in this week of thanksgiving, some young adults in oklahoma city are getting a little help and a fresh start in life. >> reporter: this 20-year-old is getting most of her life in her childhood in oklahoma's foster care system. for the first time, she is living on her own thanks to an oklahoma nonprofit called pivot. >> i'm very appreciative of what i have right now, what i was provided with because they didn't have anything when i first got here. >> reporter: have it providing
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people with a little house to live in as they start their journey into adulthood. many of the residents were homeless like barry or aged out of the foster care system at 18. the project has 26 little houses paid for by private donations along with state and federal grants. residents initially pay $100 per month for a home of around 300 square feet with living space, a kitchen, and a bathroom. government data shows more than 200 homeless youth in oklahoma. barry is learning the basics and is now planning a big future from her little home. >> i would take this opportunity like anybody else would. i think this is the type of opportunity i don't think anybody should pass up. >> that is the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news
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continues. for others, check back later for cbs mornings and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbs news.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i am norah o'donnell. this is cbs news flash. troubles on the track. the u.s. is inching closer to a railroad strike after union members vote down the tentative labor contract. if a deal cannot be reached by next month, strike could follow, costing the economy $2 million per day. reality stars todd and julie were sentenced to federal prison after being convicted of defrauding banks to obtain $30 million in tax evasion, the couple presented themselves on tv as real estate moguls. these plump birds were off the menu this weekend.
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chocolate and chipper given the presidential pardon by president biden. the votes were in and there was no foul play. fournette more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. this is the cbs overnight news. >> tonight, we are learning new details about the latest mass shooting in america, this time in colorado springs at a nightclub on saturday night. five are dead. 17 more were shot and even more injured when they ran for their lives. the 22-year-old suspect is in the hospital facing murder and hate crime charges and tonight, police are hailing two heroes, thomas james and richard fierro, who saved countless lives by disarming the gunmen
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before officers arrived on the scene. fierro served 15 years in the army, including four tours in afghanistan and iraq and he told the new york times he went into combat mode and allegedly grabbed a pistol from the gunmen and hit him on the head quote, over and over. this bar was considered a safe space for the lgbtq community and the mayor of colorado springs tonight tell cbs news that the shooting certainly has the trappings of a hate crime. we have a lot of news to get to. we start off from colorado springs. >> reporter: it evening to you. we have new information about the shooting spree here at club q where people were gathering to pay tribute. we are also learning more about those who died, they are two employees, three customers ambushed during a night out. the suspect, 22-year-old anderson lee aldrich will face murder and hate crime charges. investigators say they will file formal charges soon.
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a man of the same name and age was arrested after a bomb threat near colorado springs last year, but charges were dismissed. this is doorbell video of the man surrendering to police. there is no record. police are family members tried to trigger colorado's red flag law that would allow police to seize any weapons the man may have had. the call came in late saturday night, a shooter firing on the crowd. now identifying the two heroes who stopped the suspect, richard fierro and thomas james. >> i have never encountered a person who had engaged in such heroic actions that was so humble. >> reporter: tonight, we know the names of those who lost their lives in the attack. club customers ashley paugh, raymond green vance and kelly loving and two bartenders daniel aston and derrick rump.
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the cell a bartender told me he was near his coworkers for the shooting started. >> i leaned down to talk to one of them and they were not very responsive, so i did not know what to do, so i just ran. >> reporter: the shooting comes amid a number of anti- lgbtq bills targeting transgender people for discrimination. today, u.s. transportation secretary pete buttigieg, the administration's highest- ranking openly man, tell cbs news he believes political rhetoric is providing fuel for violence. >> you cannot target a group to be feared and to be hated and then act surprised when a disturbed person or who knows goes out and follows that through with physical violence. >> reporter: joseph shelton says he found community in the club. >> everyone accepts and loves you is who you are and they give you that place to grow as who you are. >> reporter: for now, club q is closed indefinitely. when it reopens, the memories will be too much. >> could you walk back in there again? will you? >> i don't know. i don't know what the future of
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the club holds but i know i will not work there anymore. >> reporter: authorities have revised downward to the number of people hurt. 18. some of them 17, were shot. outside boston, investigators are looking into why an suv crashed through the glass wall of an apple store this morning, killing one person and injuring at least 17 others. some are now in critical condition. >> reporter: a fast-moving suv left this jagged gaping hole in úthe wall of glass along with a least one fatality and multiple injuries inside this apple store in the small town of hingham. >> i just heard glass shatter and everyone ran to the window because they thought it was a smash and grab. >> reporter: emergency crews raced to the wounded. some victims were treated by first responders on the sidewalk. others were trapped.
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>> it was people covered in blood. >> reporter: authorities say it appears the five passenger vehicle only stopped once it hit the back of the store. >> multiple injured outside of the store and in front of the store, including a few patients pinned against the wall by the vehicle. ú>> reporter: south sh hospital says it received 17 patients in 45 minutes. >> multiple patients with life- threatening and limb threatening injuries. >> reporter: within hours, district attorney tim cruz announced a criminal investigation, but withheld the name of the male driver. >> we are piecing together right now exactly what happened, but like i said, this was a terrible event and a terrible day. >> reporter: in a statement, apple says the 65-year-old who died was at the store working to support recent construction at the site, and the store itself had only been open less than an hour before this all unfolded.
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now to that historic and deadly winter storm that dumped more than six feet of snow in parts of new york state. today, president biden included an emergency declaration for 11 snowed in counties. >> reporter: homeowners in western new york are digging out from snow piles taller than they are in some places. >> it was just too much too soon. you would go out and plow and shovel and get up the next day and you got another eight or 10 or 12 inches. >> reporter: a lake effect storm pounded the area over the weekend, breaking records in a region all-too-familiar with heavy snowfall. >> reporter: this is not typical snow in the city of buffalo. 80 inches fell in the suburb of buffalo park, home to the bills. fans helped quarterback joseph allen dig out of the snow so he could get to sunday's game after it was moved to detroit.
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>> it was this high, and i am six foot three, and it was piled high because they pushed all of the snow right up against the driveway. >> reporter: snowfall wreaked havoc on roadways, causing mass gridlock along multiple interstates. governor kathy hochul has called in more than 100 members of the national guard to help with snow removal and some of the hardest hit areas. at least three people have died from cardiac events associated with shoveling. a plow driver from indiana was also killed when his plow slid off the pavement and rolled over. back in new york, the bowling lanes had been a staple in the village of hamburg for 80 years, but that all changed friday night when ceiling and walls buckled under several feet of snow. >> sadly, the building was condemned today and they are tearing it down asap. >> reporter: tonight, the driving ban for the entire buffalo area has been lifted,
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this is the cbs overnight news. thanksgiving is just two days away and with all the planning involved in the holiday feast, most of us give little thought to the people who raise the birds at the center of the meal. there are more than 2500 turkey farms across the country. some are small family enterprises and many are struggling under spiraling costs.
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>> reporter: kyle becker is like many of our nations small farmers. even with 98 acres on which he raises turkeys, cattle, chicken, and pigs, his second job as a veterinarian is essential. farming alone doesn't cut it for your family? does it come close? >> no, ma'am. as far as paying weekly, monthly bills for our family, it is not a business that yo re out to be productive. >> reporter: becker farms is a famiy operation. his wife, emily, keeps the books. the couple's five young children help, too. turkeys are the focus this time of year. these are the last of 6200 he produced for thanksgiving, a season where he raised prices $.60 per pound but will earn far less than in years past. >> reporter: you are charging
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more for turkeys this year? but your profits are down? >> yes, we cut our profit margin and half. because otherwise, i will be able to sell them. >> reporter: he says he is paying more for diesel fuel, labor, even packaging, but his biggest expenses feed, up 40% in one year. turkey prices this year compared to last year are -- >> prices are higher. we are up 25 to 35% across the different sizes and tom's versus hands. >> reporter: david anderson is an agricultural economist at texas a&m university who says there will be plenty of birds available despite bird flu wiping out 7 million nationwide. >> the turkeys will be there but they may cost a little more than last year. >> reporter: the average cost of a whole frozen board bird is $2.40 per pound up $.40 per
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pound, the plenty of stores offer bargain birds to get you in the door. back on becker farms it has been a tough year, but kyle says they're in it for the long haul. >> the reason we can continue to do business as last year we made good money. this year we will make quite a bit less, and after turkey season, we will re-evaluate. >> reporter: not all the news is foul. as these birds were headed out for processing, a last-minute reprieve. >> this one won't go for thanksgiving. this is our pardoned turkey. >>'s families here in the u.s. prepare for the holiday season, millions of people in ukraine are bracing for a winter without heat, electricity, or running water in many do not have windows. they were blown out by russian missile strikes. still, you have to eat, and úho the ukrainian specialty that survived despite the war. >> reporter: we first met dan
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in kyiv in february before his country went to war. he is ukraine's most famous chef, acclaimed for reviving old recipes from before the soviet era and serving them up to a fashionable crowd in his award-winning restaurant. his signature dish is borscht, the hearty vegetable soup enjoyed across eastern europe and russia, which he asserts originated in ukraine. ukrainians and russians have a lot of shared history. they've had some shared culture. in recent years, you have gone in very different directions. >> yes, we are running. we want to show to the world that we are ukrainian. we are not russian. >> reporter: but, even as we slept on our stoop, over 100,000
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russian troops amassed menacingly along ukraine's frontier. >> it's like they will never letus go. >> reporter: just nine days later, vladimir putin ordered his army across the border. part of putin's justification for the carnage was that ukraine did not really exist as a nation . the restaurant closed for just three days before reopening is a military canteen. by july, the restaurant was back in business. russia's army failed to capture key has. this past summer we found a strange piece in the ukrainian capital. life looked surprisingly normal.
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>> life can end in the second so you have to live your life and do it the best you can. >> reporter: he is just as frenetic as before, and he kept busy with another project. he succeeded in lobbying the united nations to list ukrainian borscht has an endangered cultural tradition. >> with this borscht it means we are fighting back. not the borscht of the russians. >> reporter: he gave us a lesson in how to make it, starting with blood red beets. >> you have to have passion. >> reporter: i have passion for eating. one of the great ironies of putin's invasion is that it has made many ukrainians more certain of their national identity, more adamant that they are not russian. and the war has made the 10 a
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roving cultural ambassador, traveling the world to promote ukrainian food including at the colliery fair in paris. it is not a role he aspired to before. he told us it is his way of defending his country. >>'s soldiers will come back for the war and here there will be nothing, for what are they fighting? they are fighting for the good life. >> reporter: you are fighting for your identity. >> yes, that is it. we are different, but we are strong. we have our music, we have our religion and we have our food and that means that we are and that means that we are ukraine. welcome to my digestive system. it's pretty calm in here with align probiotic. you see... your gut has good and bad bacteria. and when you get off balance, you may feel it. the bloating, the gas - but align helps me trust my gut again.
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unexpected ways. >> this is your office. >> yes, this is it. welcome. >> reporter: sprinting alongside men in major league soccer is a woman just as fast. how many miles do you run during the game? >> like three to four miles. >> watch my colleague racing to keep up with the referee of the year. >> reporter: assistant referees used to be called linesman and in that smile, you can see nesbitt is one of the women changing the game. the assistant referee who keeps an eye out for offsides made it all the way to the world cup. when did you find out? >> just on twitter. >> reporter: when you saw your name there, what was your reaction? >> honestly, this felt like something impossible that could never happen, so it was the most unreal feeling. >> each game, every official is
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evaluated and nesbitt got picked as one of six women who for the first time are joining more than 100 male officials at the world cup. >> such an honor that i get to do this and to represent female referees in this way and to represent my country in this way. >> reporter: the 34-year-old already rest at the 2019 women's world cup and spent decades preparing for the world stage. >> i got involved just by helping out at my brothers soccer games and eventually made it into something i could make money doing. >> reporter: when you're 14 and refereeing, did you ever think for a minute this could become a career? >> not at all. everybody asked why i stuck with it and i'm still not really sure sometimes. >> reporter: nesbitt stuck with it even while competing as a figure skater and then trying a different experiment. >> i started liking chemistry
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when i was in high school in my high school teacher blew something up and i was like well, this could work for me. >> reporter: nesbitt earned a phd studying the brain chemistry of traumatically injured patients and became a chemistry professor. >> i had two computers set up in my office. one so i could analyze my data and the other so i can have every single world cup game on. >> reporter: katie nesbitt, the chemist, the referee. >> reporter: there just two passions of mine, both things that i loved to do so i pushed the limits as much as i could in both areas. >> reporter: pushing the limits in soccer soon meant changing her field full-time to pursue refereeing. >> i was at a very high level in both areas and was really feeling the strain of not being able to put my best foot forward and one or the other. >> reporter: women have held the whistle in major men's sports for a while. violet palmer became the first woman to rest and nba game a
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quarter-century ago and earlier this year, sarah thomas made super bowl history, but nesbitt says she did not want to stand says shep. d not want to stand >> i chose to wear my hair in a bun and not in a ponytail because i wanted to be seen as just the same as every other referee. >> reporter: though, she admits, that did not always happen. have you ever faced sexism? >> is, of course. it was difficult in the moment, of course, but it also fuels the fire a little bit, too. watch me. i can honestly say i am living my dream and this was the biggest dream come true for me, so honestly, i am just enjoying it right now. >> reporter: in the world cup, there are rules for the refs, too. this but is not allowed to officiate any groups with team
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usa and only find out which games she is working the day or two in advance to avoid even the appearance of favoritism. the cbs overnight news will be right back.
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we are grocery outlet and we are your bargain bliss market. what's bargain bliss? you know that feeling you get when you find the name brands you love, but for way, way less? that's bargain bliss. and with thanksgiving right around the corner, we want you to save big. that's why at grocery outlet, we are offering you $21 off your holiday turkey with in-store coupon. that's as low as .53 cents a pound. now, that's savings to be thankful for.
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so hurry in because this deal is only available while supplies last. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market ♪ inflation is driving up the cost of the thanksgiving feast but it is also drying up donations to food pantries that help feed the less fortunate on the holiday. families across the country are putting the finishing touches on thanksgiving menus as food costs skyrocket, gobbling up more money and putting a heavy strain on the holiday budget. tracy collins is on a team that runs bread for the city, washington, d.c.'s largest food bank that helps food insecure families year round. this year, in addition to groceries for turkey day, volunteers are also including prepaid debit cards so households can spend the money on whatever they need.
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>> we have to be here to do this work. we are proud and privileged to be able to support our community members like this but we really wish we didn't have to be here. >> reporter: experts say inflation, global food challenges and supply chain issues have pushed the cost of the thanksgiving meal for 10 people up to $64 this year, almost $11 more than lastar an $2lynere an elevated level. food banks across the nation will tell you they are still seeing more families now than they did at the peak of the pandemic because of rising food prices. >> a lot of seniors are hungry. they won't tell you, but a lot of seniors are hungry. >> reporter: volunteers at bread for the city say their clients come from every corner of the nation's capital despite the growing need, those donating time, money and resources say they are thankful to dish out as much as possible
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to help ease the burden of feeding families this holiday season. that is the overnight news for this tuesday. reporting from the nation's capital. this is cbs news flash. i am dick brennan in new york. troubles on the track. the u.s. is inching closer to a railroad strike after union members vote down a tentative labor contract. if a deal cannot be reached by next month, a strike could follow, costing the economy $2 billion per day. reality stars todd and julie crisply resentenced to federal prison after being convicted of defrauding tanks to obtain more than $30 million in tax evasion. the couple presented themselves on tv as real estate moguls who lead opulent lifestyles. chocolate and chipper given the official white house pardoned by president biden.
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the president n there was no fo play. for more, download thco ted tv i amdick brenna s news new york. tonight, the new details in america's latest mass shooting that left five people dead and injured. no reporter spoke with bartender who says two heroes saved his life when they attacked the gunmen. holiday travel mayhem. the thanksgiving rush is on.
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>> huge lines for security, baggage claim, a lot of tempers starting to flare. parts of new york dig out from a historic snowstorm. new details in the idaho college murders. what we learned tonight about unanswered calls to a boyfriend after 2:00 a.m. in moscow, police are asking for the public's health. sharp increase in fentanyl- laced pills. concerning this tonight after a major drug bust. big hearts and tiny homes all changing lives. >> i didn't have anything when i first got here. i didn't have any clothes, i didn't have any food. >> this is the cbs overnight news. tonight we're learning new details about the latest mass shooting in america, this time in colorado springs at a nightclub on saturday night. five are dead, 17 more were shot and even more injured when
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they ran for their lives. the 22-year-old suspect is in the hospital facing murder and hate crime charges, and tonight, police are hailing two heroes, thomas james and richard fierro, who saved úcoun the gunmen before officers arrived on the scene. fierro served 15 years in the army, including four tours in afghanistan and iraq and he told the new york times that he went into combat mode and allegedly grabbed the pistol from the gunmen and hit him on the head quote, over and over. this bar was considered a safe space for the lgbtq community, and the mayor of colorado springs tonight tell cbs news that the shooting certainly has the trappings of a crime. we have a lot of news to get to. janet will start us off from colorado springs. >> reporter: tonight we have new information about the shooting spree here at club q where people are gathering to pay tribute. we are also learning more about those who died. there are two employees, three customers ambushed during a night out.
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the suspect, 22-year-old anderson lee aldrich will face murder and hate crime charges. investigators say they will file formal charges soon. a man of the same name and age was arrested after a bomb threat near colorado springs last year, but the charges were dismissed. this is doorbell video of the man surrende to police. there is no record police or family members tried to trigger colorado's red flag law that would have allowed police to seize any weapons the man may have had. the call came in late saturday night, a shooter firing on the crowd. no identifying the two heroes who stopped the suspect, richard fierro and thomas james. >> i have never encountered a person who engaged in such heroic actions who was so humble. >> reporter: club customers ashley paugh, kelly loving and
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bartenders daniel aston and derrick rump . >> i leaned down to talk to one of them and they were not very responsive so i did not know what to do so i just ran. >> reporter: the shooting comes amid a number of anti-lgbtq bills targeting transgender people for discrimination. today, u.s. transportation secretary pete buttigieg, the administration's highest- ranking openly man told cbs news he believes political rhetoric is providing fuel for violence. >> you cannot target a group to be feared and hated and then act surprised when a disturbed person or who knows goes out and follows that through with physical violence. >> reporter: joseph shelton says he found community in the club. >> everyone accepts and loves you for who you are and they
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give you that place to grow as who you are. >> reporter: for now, club q is closed indefinitely. when and if it reopens, michael anderson says for him, the memory will simply be too much. could you walk back in there again? will you? >> i don't know. i don't know what the future for the club holds but i know i will not work there anymore. >> reporter: authorities have now revised downward the number of people hurt to 18. 17 of them were shot, and a number of those are still in the hospital in a community shaken to its core. outside boston, investigators are looking into why an suv crashed through the glass wall of an apple store this morning killing one person and injuring at least 17 others. some are now in critical condition. >> reporter: a fast-moving suv left the jagged, gaping hole in a wall of glass along with at least one fatality and multiple injuries inside this apple store
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in the small town of hingham. >>i just heard glass shatter and everyone ran to the window because they thought it was a smash and grab. >> reporter: emergency crews raced to the wounded. some victims were treated by first responders on the sidewalk. others were trapped. authorities say it appears the five passenger vehicle only stopped once it hit the back of the store. >> multiple patients injured out in front of the store and in the store, including a few patients pinned against the wall by the vehicle. >> reporter: south shore hospital says it received 17 patients in 45 minutes. within hours, district attorney tim cruz announced a criminal investigation but without the name of the male driver. >> we are trying to piece together right now exactly what happened, but this was a terrible event. it is a terrible day.
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>> reporter: in a statement, apple says the 65-year-old who died was at the store working to support recent construction at the site, and the store itself had only been open less than an hour, before this all unfolded. law enforcement officials announced a major fentanyl drug bust today. investigators say they seized six pill presses that can stamp brand names onto these pills and one home and inglewood, california. weapons, bundles of cash and about 450 pounds of illegal drugs including thousands of fake prescription pills laced with fentanyl were also found. officials say the suspect made more than 4000 sales over the darknet and more conventional websites. drug enforcement officials and agents they among all the fentanyl-laced pills seized this year, about six in 10 contain a lethal dose of fentanyl. think about that. there is a lot more news ahead on the cbs overnight news.
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this is the cbs overnight news. a deadly and historic winter storm dumped six feet of snow in new york state. today president biden approved an emergency declaration for 11 snowed in counties. more from hard-hit buffalo. >> reporter: homeowners in western new york are digging out from snow piles taller than they are in some places. >> it was just too much too soon. go out and plow and shovel and
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you get up the next day and you got another eight or 10 or 12 inches. >> reporter: a lake effect storm pounded the area over the weekend, breaking records and region all-too-familiar with heavy snowfall. >> this is not a typical snow in the city of buffalo. >> reporter: 80 inches fell in the buffalo suburb of orchard park, home to the buffalo bills. fans helped quarterback josh allen dig out of the snow so he could get to sunday's game after it was moved to destroy. detroit. >> it was this high and i'm six foot three and it was piled high because they pushed all the snow right up against the driveway. >> reporter: snowfall wreak havoc on roadways causing mass gridlock along multiple interstates. governor kathy hochul has called in more than 100 members of the national guard to help with snow removal and some of the hardest hit areas. at least three people have died from cardiac events associated with shoveling. a plow driver in indiana was also killed when his plow slid off the pavement and rolled over. back in new york, gray millers
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village of hamburg for 80 years but that all changed friday night when the ceiling and walls buckled under several feet of snow. >> that building was to condemned today and they're tearing it down like asap. >> reporter: tonight, the driving ban for the entire buffalo area has been lifted but drivers are urged to stay off the roads unless there is an emergency. meanwhile, buffalo public schools will be closed again tomorrow, which means kids here will get at least another snow day. with just three days until thanksgiving, the holiday travel season is already underway for millions of americans. aaa says nearly 55 million will be hitting the roads in the airports this year, the third most on record. >> reporter: tonight, the turkey travel trott is turning into a thanksgiving rushes millions of flyers fell airports nationwide.
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nearly 7 million past for tsa checkpoints over the weekend surpassing the volume on the same day in 2019. l.a.x. in los angeles expects this will be its busiest stretch since the pandemic with at least 200,000 passengers per day pulling up cars. their message, get here early. >> we are ready to welcome back these passengers and ready for those crows. >> reporter: with flights packed this weekend airfares surging as much is 43% compared to last year, many flyers found better deals by moving up their útravel plans. >> ticket prices affected my decision making completely. >> i would have liked to spend more time with my family. >> reporter: the busiest year at tsa checkpoints, after the agency is under scrutiny when screeners failed to detect a box cutter in an airport earlier this month.
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>> passengers should not be concerned. that was a very rare circumstance. we have literally all hands on deck when that happens and we try to figure out why and very quickly put measures in place to prevent it from happening again. >> reporter: the travel forecast looks good between now and thanksgiving. united tells us they are seeing a surge in last-minute bookings, people deciding just now they want to travel for the holiday weekend. if you are driving wednesday and the sunday after thanksgiving it is likely to be very busy on the roads. police in new york city gave new details today about the arrest of two young men accused of plotting to attack a synagogue. they were arrested at a train station on saturday hours after jewish organizations tipped off police to the threat. investigators say the suspects were armed with a gun, high- capacity magazine, a armband and a military style knife. tonight, funeral services are being held for one of the four idaho college students brutally murdered more than one week
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ago. authorities still have no suspects is more than 100 state and federal investigators are combing the area for clues. we are learning more about the timeline on the night of the killings. >> reporter: police here say they have tracked nearly 700 tips and conducted more than 90 interviews in their search for the person who murdered four idaho students. >> currently there are no suspects in custody and we have not located a weapon. >> reporter: last seen in this video, roommates madison mogen and kaylee goncalves. police say they have questioned and rolled out the man in the white hoodie along with the person who drove the two home saturday night. the timeline is now emerging .
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police say there were multiple calls made to the cell phone of the victim's ex-boyfriend, and to get to: 52 a.m., but they do not believe he is a suspect. those calls put the murders afte 3:00 a.m. the 911 call came nearly nine hours later. we are now learning there were other friends in the house when police arrived. around town, there are flyers pleading for help posted everywhere as investigators combed the area, even searching dumpsters for clues. >> this person is not flying under the radar with no friends, no family. i am sure they work somewhere. the police just want everyone to be extra vigilant. >> if this individual is out there and they get this, i want them to be scared. and they should be scared because we will find them. >> reporter: there still looking for the murder weapon, which they describe as a large military style knife. cbs news visited the local
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sporting goods store where they told us investigators had been by asking about blade purchases but in this part of the country, that is just not uncommon. turning now to the kickoff for the world cup soccer tournament, the first ever in the middle east. the u.s. men's team had to settle for a tie today in a hard-fought match against wales. >> reporter: cheering on the strs & stripes in their first world cup match in eight years american fans watched their team get a goal early before wales tied the score with a penalty kick. >> the energy was there and i think it is going to be a good run for us. >> reporter: but, politics are also playing a part in this tournament. before facing england today, iran's players stood silently during their national anthem, a sign of solidarity with antiregime protesters back home.
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after warnings from fifa, soccer's world governing body, the captains of england and six other european teams ditched the rainbow armbands they had worn in previous matches in support of lgbtq rights. qatar's laws criminalizing same- sex relations and its treatment úof migrant workers who built the sparkling stadiums have cast a cloud of controversy over this small muslim nation. >> don't criticize guitar. >> reporter: on the eve of the game, thesis president criticized the critics. >> you want to stay home and hammer and criticize and say how bad they are, these arabs are these muslims or whatever. >> reporter: american fans we met say they are aware of the controversy. >> it is obviously something the qatar government needs to deal with itself and we are here for the soccer. >> reporter: the tie here tonight means the u.s. teams next two games are all the more crucial for it to advance to út
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play england on friday. fans of jay leno got there first look at the comedian as he went home from a burn unit. we will have that story coming up next.
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the capsule has come to the moon in 50 years. orion with three test dummies on board fired up its engines and will continueorbiting the moon before returning to earth on december 11th. and ok
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we are grocery outlet and we are your bargain bliss market. what's bargain bliss? you know that feeling you get when you find the name brands you love, but for way, way less? that's bargain bliss. and with thanksgiving right around the corner, we want you to save big. that's why at grocery outlet, we are offering you $21 off your holiday turkey with in-store coupon. that's as low as .53 cents a pound. now, that's savings to be thankful for.
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so hurry in because this deal is only available while supplies last. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market ♪ finally, tonight, in this week of thanksgiving, some young adults in oklahoma city are getting a little help and a fresh start in life.
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20-year-old dashiana barry is getting her life in order after spending most of her life in a calm's foster care system thanks to a nonprofit called pivot. >> i'm very appreciative of what i was provided with because when i first got here i didn't have any clothes, i didn't have any food. >> reporter: pivot provides young people with a little house to live in as they start their journey into adulthood. many of the residents were homeless or aged out of the foster care system at 18. the project has 26 little house is paid for with private donations along with state and federal grants. residents initially pay $100 per month for a home of around 300 square feet with a living space, a kitchen, and bathroom. government data shows more than 200 homeless youths in oklahoma. barry is learning the basics and is now planning a big future from her little home. >> i would take this opportunity like anyone else would. i think it's the time and type of opportunity that i don't think anybody should pass up. that is the overnight news for this tuesday.
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for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for cbs mornings and remember ú anytime at cbs news.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i am norah o'donnell. this is cbs news flash. troubles on the track. the u.s. is inching closer to a railroad strike after union members vote down a tentative labor contract. if a deal cannot be reached by next month, could follow, costing the economy $2 billion per day. reality stars todd and julie chrisley were sentenced to federal prison after being convicted of defrauding banks and tax evasion. the couple presented themselves on tv as real estate moguls who let opulent lifestyles. these plump birds are off the menu this thanksgiving.
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chocolate and chipper given the official white house pardone by president biden. the president joked the votes were in and ther it's tuesday, november 22nd, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." a hero's story. we're hearing from one of the people who helped take down a gunman to stop a mass shooting in colorado. the latest on the incident and the victims. apple store tragedy, a man is killed after a speeding suv rams through the front of an apple store in massachusetts. and world cup politics, the u.s. men's team plays its first match while social demonstrations and messages are grabbing headlines in qatar. good morning, i'm matt pieper in for anne-marie green. the man accused of killing five people and wounding 17 others at an lgbtq nightclub in colorado is facing

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