tv CBS Overnight News CBS May 9, 2023 3:12am-4:31am PDT
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but that emergency has ended. on a recent visit to the rio grande valley, homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas said the administration has prepared for the end of title 42, planning to stiffen penalties for illegal crossings and establishing additional legal avenues for asylum seekers. >> at the same time, we will deliver consequences for individuals who arrive at our southern border irregularly. >> reporter: but right now, some border cities and many of their shelters are overwhelmed, like this one in laredo, texas. >> these groups are for the ones who decided to launch themselves and decide they'd have better odds by coming before may 11th. >> reporter: the biden administration is sending 1,500 active-duty military personnel to the border, some arriving starting wednesday, to serve in a support cast, meaning they will not directly interact with migrants. norah. >> manuel bojorquez, thank you. outrage is intensifying over the death of a man who was
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homeless on a new york city subway. today lawyers for the family of jordan neely demanded that daniel penny, a 24-year-old marine veteran, be arrested for putting neely in a choke hold after witnesses say he was threatening other passengers. here's cbs's nancy chen. >> reporter: justice for jordan neely was the demand by more than 100 demonstrators, who stormed the manhattan subway station this weekend, leading to a dozen arrests. today marks a week since witnesses say neely was acting erratically on the train, screaming about being hungry and tired. the 30-year-old homeless man had a history of mental illness. video shows marine veteran daniel penny with neely in a choke hold for more than three minutes as at least one onlooker warns it could be fatal. neely was pronounced dead at the hospital. his death ruled a homicide.
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>> i think what happened is things got really out of control, and i think it really was a horrible, horrible accident. but horrible accidents sometimes can turn into a manslaughter. >> reporter: penny was questioned and released. lawyers for the 24-year-old new yorker say daniel never intended to harm mr. neely and could not have foreseen his untimely death. >> jordan was a loving person. >> reporter: a neely family attorney says penny needs to be held accountable. >> so justice immediately means an arrest and letting daniel penny have a day in court where he tries to prove that none of this is what we all know it to be, a murder. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news a grand jury could convene as early as this week to determine if penny should be criminally charged. police say they've increased patrols at this subway station, but mental health advocates are pushing for more resources as well. norah. >> nancy chen, thank you. back here in washington, the
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biden administration announced a new plan to have airlines compensate passengers for preventable flight disruptions. now, this includes delays and cancellations not caused by storms. and as cbs's nancy cordes reports, you could get cash. >> reporter: when a cancellation is the airline's fault, the president says they should have to pay up. >> you deserve to be fully compensated. your time matters. the impact on your life matters. >> reporter: today he vowed to roll out new rules by the end of the year requiring airlines to cover things like rebooking fees, hotel stays, ground transportation, and meal vouchers when weather is not to blame. transportation secretary pete buttigieg says the government may not stop there. >> is there a possibility you could require the airlines to give people cash? >> that's absolutely something that could happen under this proposed rule. >> reporter: he pointed to the european union, which now requires airlines to pay
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passengers between 250 euros and 600 euros for avoidable delays. >> these rules are unnecessary. >> reporter: u.s. carriers pushed back today, arguing they'll just have to pass those new costs on to customers. >> ticket prices will go up, plain and simple. that's what happened in europe. that's what will happen here. >> reporter: the ten largest airlines do now guarantee meals and free rebooking when delays are their fault. nine of them also cover hotel stays. airlines say they're already doing some of this voluntarily, that you don't need to make a rule. >> i guess i would say if they're already doing this, then they shouldn't mind us making a rule. >> reporter: one big question here is who exactly who determine when delays are the airline's fault. think back to december when the southwest airlines scheduling system melted down. 17,000 flights had to be canceled, but it was a winter storm that started that chain reaction. so these things can be tricky to parse, norah. >> nancy
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up at 2:00am again? tonight, try pure zzzs all night. unlike othther sleep a aids, our extended r release melelatonin s you sleep p longer. and longer. zzzquil pure zzzs all night. fall asleep.p. stay asleep. now to a new series called "moms in focus" leading up to mother's day. the racial disparities in maternal health continues to be a problem nationwide, and now one organization is trying to help. cbs's elise preston takes a look at a service in los angeles that's providing black women with a doula. that's a trained professional to guide them through the birthing process. >> breathe in, two, three.
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>> reporter: carrie ber nuns is counting down to when she and her partner, jeremy, welcome their first child, a baby boy. the healthy expectant mother feared she would have to deliver at just 24 weeks after having some early contractions, she says doctors misdiagnosed her with an open cervix. >> that was just, like, unnecessary, and it was just hard. >> reporter: bernuns, who felt her concerns over medication she was prescribed were being ignored, switched doctors and got a doula through frontline doulas, a community program that provides free access to care for black mothers in los angeles. >> i also wanted a black woman too. i wanted someone that can understand me, understand what i was going through, understand my body. >> reporter: according to the cdc, black women in the u.s. are nearly three times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than white women. contributing factors include health inequities, mistreatment, and underlying chronic conditions. doula felicia francis edwards
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fights to improve those outcomes by advocating for families and providing physical, emotional, and informational support. >> if i could tell you how many times women who sign up for the program said to me the reason they wanted to do the program is because they thought they were going to die. >> reporter: according to studies, mothers who use doulas are less likely to require a c-section or use pain medication, and their babies are less likely to have a low birth weight. but doula services can cost upwards of $5,000, and most aren't covered by insurance. >> how do you think you would feel if you did not have your doula? >> i don't want to think about that. i probably would feel a bit more lost for sure. >> reporter: ber nunz says now that she's found her doula, she's ready for delivery. elise preston, cbs news, los angeles. >> and we're going to continue our series "moms in focus" tomorrow with a story about a library system in virginia that's helping parents connect with their children in a new
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way, all ahead of mother's day. well, two weeks before the end of the school year, teachers in oakland remain on strike. we'll tell you what they're demanding aside from a raise. that's next. (tap, tatap) listen, yoyour deodorarant justst has to wowork. i ususe secret a aluminum frf. just swiwipe and itt lasts s all day. sesecret helpsps eliminatete , instead d of just mamasking i. and d hours lateter i i still smelell fresh. secret wororks. ohhh yesesss. ♪ ♪ a tiny p pinch of knknorr chicken bobouillon will save e you more g gas thanan driving d downhill. because e just one s sip of ts delelectable sililky chickeken ramen nonoodle soup wiwill put an n end to youor drivive-through h dinner ritit. itit's time toto bring outt the e cook in yoyou and tell h him to throrow ththat gloriouous powder in that t tasty silklky combo of delelightful cacarrots... (whispspered): yumummy ...l.luscious mumushrooms, anand a touch h of bok choh. (whisperered): good d call.
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knorr tastste combos.. itit's not fasast food, but itit's soooo g good. ♪ ♪ one prilososec otc each mornining blockss heartburn n all day and d all night.t. prilosecec otc reducuces excess acicid for 24 h ho, blockingng heartburnrn bebefore it ststarts. onone pill a d day. 24 houou. zezero heartbuburn. ♪ t today, my f friend you u d, you did d it, you didid it...♪ centrum sisilver is now clininically shohown to s support cogognitive heaeh in o older adultlts. it's one m more step t towars taking c charge of y your heal. so e every day, , you can sa, ♪ yououuu did it!t! ♪ with cenentrum silvever. want l luxury hairir repair thatat doesn't c cost $50? pantene's s pro-vitamimin formulula repairs s hair. as well l as the leaeading luy bonding trtreatment. for r softness a and resiliei, without t the price e tag. if y you know..... yoyou know it't's pantene.. more than 3,000 teachers and other workers in the oakland public school system have taken
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their labor strike into a second week. schools remain open with office staffers supervising the roughly 34,000 students. teachers are demanding not only better pay but more rights to advocate for the needs of students. there are only two weeks left in oakland's school year. swifties were singing in the rain. we'll take you to the epic storm-soaked sing-along next. ♪ never, ever, ever getting back together ♪
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lightning and rain couldn't stop taylor swift from giving 70,000 fans in nashville the show of their wildest dreams. her sunday night show was delayed by almost four hours so swifties were ready for it when the star took the stage. all fans had to do was stay to get a 45-song marathon sing-along that wrapped up at nearly 2:00 a.m. just incredible. king charles iii ormally
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you. finally tonight, the coronation of king charles iii was full of royal tradition and more than 1,000 years of history. cbs's holly williams reports there were also some modern-day touches. ♪
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>> reporter: king charles waited for this moment for 70 years. saint edward's crown, weighing nearly five pounds, was finally lowered onto his head. >> god save the king! >> reporter: the new heir to the throne, prince william, swore an oath of loyalty. >> so help me god. >> reporter: the king's younger son, prince harry, was also there, in the third row back along with the disgraced prince andrew. but harry's wife, meghan, stayed home in california. another royal bride, queen camilla, once despised in his country as the third person in charles and diana's marriage, was also crowned. some royal fans camped out for days to secure a view. the vast majority of people here support the monarchy. but a growing number want a republic. they held a protest during the coronation and controversially the police arrested some of them
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for breaching public order. but the coronation went off without a hitch. there's a new official portrait. and with some help from katy perry -- ♪ -- and lionel richie, the royal family celebrated with a concert at windsor castle. holly williams, cbs news, london. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. president biden will welcome congressional leaders to the white house today as they look
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for a deal to raise the debt ceiling. republicans are looking to tie the debt ceiling to cuts in federal spending, something the white house says is off the table. louisville police say that officer nickolas wilt, who was shot during april's bank shooting, is on a path to recovery. wilt is still in a medically-induced coma, but has been taken off a ventilator and all other life-sustaining equipment after steady improvement this week. and space tourism company virgin galactic says sub orbital commercial flights will begin in late june. the current ticket price is $450,000. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." we want to begin tonight
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with another community reeling from one of the nation's latest mass shootings. this time it was in the dallas suburb of allen, texas. the routine weekend activity of shopping out as a family shattered by a gunman's rampage. at least eight people were killed, including three children. seven others were injured. we want to take a moment to remember the victims. a 23-year-old mall security guard and a 26-year-old engineer from india. two parents and their 3-year-old child were killed while their 6-year-old was seriously hurt. and two elementary school sisters were killed while shopping with their mother, who was critically injured. investigators haven't revealed the motive, but the adl says that the 33-year-old shooter embraced anti-semitism, violent misogyny, and white supremacy. and tonight we're learning the shooter had heavy firepower, seven guns with him, two on him and five in his car. cbs's omar villafranca is at the scene and starts us off tonight from allen, texas. good evening, omar.
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>> reporter: good evening. despite the shooter's violent and racist views, investigators haven't said for sure if that was the motivation for the attack. we also talked to survivors, who described what it was like trying to save victims who were dying. we want to warn you what they told us was graphic, but they want people to hear it because it's the truth, and they want the mass shootings to stop. saturday, just after 3:30 p.m., a gray car drives up to the allen premium outlets mall. the door opens, and the shooter immediately starts firing dozens of rounds at shoppers from an ar-style rifle. >> we need an ambulance. >> reporter: the gunman only stops when a police officer, who happened to be at the mall, shoots and kills him. police have identified him as 33-year-old mauricio garcia. cbs news has learned he enlisted in the army in 2008 but did not finish basic training and was
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terminated after three months due to physical or mental conditions. garcia later worked as an armed and licensed security guard and passed a background check. this video shows the chaos and reality of a mass shooting for survivors. >> coming to you. >> thank you. >> it was a war zone there. there's no other way to describe it. >> reporter: army veteran steven spainhouer tried to help the victims and describes the gruesome scene. >> i did a quick compression on and he looked at me, and his eyes went straight fixed. >> reporter: joshua barnwell says volunteers grabbed anything to make tourniquets and stop the victims from bleeding. >> there was an atrocious amount of blood. that's when i noticed the first small child and was not 100% sure of her condition. >> reporter: tonight we're also learning more about those who were killed. christian lacour, a security officer at the mall. aishwarya thatikonda, an engineer from india.
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two young sisters, daniela and sofia mendoza. their mother was critically injured. and cindy kyu and their 3-year-old son, james cho. the only surviving member of the family is their 6-year-old son, william. the memorial for the victims behind me keeps growing as people come by to stop, mourn, and pray. there are two more vigils scheduled tomorrow for the victims. norah. >> omar villafranca, thank you. from one horrific tragedy in texas to another. this one in the border town of brownsville. police have charged the driver of an suv with multiple felonies including aggravated assault after he slammed into a group of migrants outside a shelter on sunday. cbs's nicole sganga reports eight people were killed and at least ten others injured. >> reporter: this was the moment an suv plowed into a crowd of migrants in brownsville, texas, turning this bus stop into a
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crime scene. the driver ran a red light and struck 18 people, killing 8. >> horrific. it was terrible. the bodies were all over the place. >> reporter: this video shows onlookers confronting the driver, 34-year-old george alvarez, after the incident. >> the driver of the vehicle attempted to flee the scene after impact but was held down by several individuals. >> reporter: police say the suspect is a brownsville resident with a long arrest record and seven convictions. today he was charged with 18 felony counts, including manslaughter. investigators are waiting on a toxicology report and trying to determine whether the crash was intentional. among the victims, venezuelan asylum seekers. >> the migrants that were there as well, some of them were paramedics. they responded. >> reporter: angel meza was on his way to reunite with his mother. [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: his cousin tells us they were planning to move to
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new york to start a life in america. back at the scene, a growing memorial to honor the lives lost. >> overall, there's a lot of people that are grieving, and we need to keep them in our thoughts. >> reporter: brownsville is a city on edge. police tell us a man wielding a gun outside the shelter was taken into custody late today. this is a developing story in a community already grieving. norah. >> nicole sganga, thank you. back here in washington, the biden administration announced a new plan to have airlines compensate passengers for preventable flight disruptions. now, this includes delays and cancellations not caused by storms. and as cbs's nancy cordes reports, you could get cash. >> reporter: when a cancellation is the airline's fault, the president says they should have to pay up.
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>> you deserve to be fully compensated. your time matters. the impact on your life matters. >> reporter: today he vowed to roll out new rules by the end of the year requiring airlines to cover things like rebooking fees, hotel stays, ground transportation, and meal vouchers when weather is not to blame. transportation secretary pete buttigieg says the government may not stop there. >> is there a possibility you could require the airlines to give people cash? >> that's absolutely something that could happen under this proposed rule. >> reporter: he pointed to the european union, which now requires airlines to pay passengers between 250 euros and 600 euros for avoidable delays. >> these rules are unnecessary. >> reporter: u.s. carriers pushed back today, arguing they'll just have to pass those new costs on to customers. >> ticket prices will go up, plain and simple. that's what happened in europe. that's what will happen here. >> reporter: the ten largest airlines do now guarantee meals and free rebooking when delays are their fault. nine of them also cover hotel stays.
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>> airlines say they're already doing some of this voluntarily, that you don't need to make a rule. >> i guess i would say if they're already doing this, then they shouldn't mind us making a rule. >> reporter: one big question here is who exactly would determine when delays are the airline's fault. think back to december when the southwest airlines scheduling system melted down. 17,000 flights had to be canceled, but it was a winter storm that started that chain reaction. so these things can be tricky to parse, norah. >> nancy cordes, thank you. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news." [♪♪] did you know, unless you treat dandruff regularly, it will keep coming back. try head & shoulders shampoo. dandruff is caused by irritation to a germ that lives on everyone's scalp. unlike regular shampoo, head & shoulders contains zinc pyrithione, which fights the dandruff-causing germ and helps prevent it from coming back.
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i'm sarah ewall-wice in washington. thanks for staying with us. president biden and house speaker kevin mccarthy begin their high-stakes negotiations over raising the nation's debt limit today. the treasury department says if they can't reach an agreement, the united states could begin defaulting on its debt by june 1st. and that's not the only deadline facing the president. the pandemic-era title 42 is set to expire thursday, and that could unleash a flood of migrants across the u.s. border. ed o'keefe has the latest. >> reporter: homeland security insists its ready for the end of those pandemic restrictions with 1,500 additional troops headed to the border and new asylum regulations to be finalized this week. but state and local officials are raising concerns they may not have the resources they need. >> i think we're going to see larger numbers at first. it's going to take our plan a while to really take hold. >> reporter: homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas
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asking for patience as officials are planning to deal with the increased number of border crossers expected after title 42 comes to an end on thursday. >> we've been preparing for this for quite some time. >> reporter: among other things, dhs is increasing the number of flights carrying migrants back to their home countries. and those 1,500 military troops that start arriving at the border wednesday will serve in support roles so customs and border patrol agents can keep focused on processing those trying to enter the u.s. but texas republican governor greg abbott says it's not enough. >> we need 15,000 or 150,000 to secure the border because of the open border policies of the biden administration. >> reporter: arizona's independent senator kyrsten sinema has introduced a bipartisan bill that could keep operations similar to title 42 in place for two more years. it would give washington time to sort out tricky issues like border security, work visas, and migrant processing. >> it will be a humanitarian crisis because we are not prepared. >> reporter: but mayorkas
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dismisses that proposal. >> what we need is our system fixed. >> right. >> not this band-aid solution. >> reporter: as washington fights over what to do, border cities are bearing the brunt. the mayor of laredo, texas, says his city doesn't have the money needed to help care for the number of people expected to cross soon. >> thousands of people. it's going to be very devastating. so that is our concern right now. >> reporter: one other thing dhs plans to do is expand appointments for migrants to apply for asylum through a mobile app they've set up. but you may recall recent reporting by "60 minutes" that documented real frustrations with limitations of the app and how long it takes to get an appointment. >> that was ed o'keefe at the white house, and this is the sometimemes, the lowows of b bipolar depepression feel d darkest befefore dawn. with c caplyta, therere's a chanance to lett the lighght shine ththrough. anand light totomorrow, wiwh the e hope from m today. this is s a chance to let i in the lytete. cacaplyta is a a once-daililyl that i is proven t to deliver signifificant relilief
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i ususe secret a aluminum frf. just swiwipe and itt lasts s all day. sesecret helpsps eliminatete , instead d of just mamasking i. and d hours lateter i i still smelell fresh. secret wororks. ohhh yesesss. pop superstar ed sheeran is on tour with his new album, subtract. he's also got a new docu-series streaming online and just wrapped up two copyright infringement cases, which he won. through all that, sheeran took time out for a chat with seth doane. ♪ >> reporter: pop star ed sheeran has been on a stage of a different sort, defending himself in court against a claim of plagiarism. >> i'm obviously very happy with the outcome of the case, and it looks like i'm not having to
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retire from my day job after all. >> reporter: the lawsuit alleged he's copied parts of marvin gaye's 1973 hit "let's get it on." ♪ i've been really trying, baby ♪ >> reporter: with his grammy-winning song, "thinking out loud." ♪ baby, my heart ♪ >> reporter: how is that as an artist, as a creator? >> i just think it comes with the territory. it's four chords that get used in pop songs. glen, obviously, it's fine. >> just off camera here. >> it's always really sweet here. >> reporter: when we spoke with sheeran before the trial near his home in england, his reps did not want him talking about the case. >> there's like four chords that get used in pop songs and if you just think mathematically, the likelihood of this song having the same chords as this song, there's multiple, multiple songs. it's all the same four chords. some of them are like a, b, c. i'm a musician. i can speak about this. you are going to get this with
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every single pop song from now on unless it just stops, which i don't think it does because it's a big money business to take things to court. but like you can only get caught out if you've done something wrong, and i have not done something wrong. i used four chords that have very common to use. >> are you cool? >> yeah. it riles me up, man. ♪ >> reporter: the verdict was not the only good news for sheeran this past week. critics are praising his new album, subtract, released friday. interestingly, it was not the reord the 32-year-old was planning to release. >> i have to kind of get my head around scrapping ten years of work to replace it with like a month's worth of work. >> explain that. you've written all of these songs. you've planned for a total different album, and then life happens, and you change course? >> pretty much, yeah. >> reporter: he chronicles the process in a new docu-series on
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disney+. >> if something really intense happens to him, he'll go and write a song. >> my wife had gone in for a checkup, and they found a tumor in her, and she was six months pregnant. and i then wrote a bunch of songs about that. ♪ now in the waiting room emotions running wild ♪ ♪ worried about my lover and i'm worried about her child ♪ >> then about a week later, my best friend died. so i wrote a bunch of songs about that. ♪ every song reminds me you're gone ♪ ♪ i feel the lump in my throat ♪ ♪ i'm here alone just dancing with my eyes closed ♪ >> at the same time, he was in the middle of an earlier copyright case, which he also won. >> then i went into this like really, really public high-profile court case, being called a liar and a thief and stuff. i'd written about, you know, the fear or depression or anxiety or all of these things that have been enkapss lated in that time are what the songs ended being
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about. ♪ they say that old scars heal but i know ♪ ♪ maybe i won't ♪ >> reporter: the result is a stripped-down return to ed sheeran's singer/songwriter roots. ♪ i feel the wind's harsh refrain ♪ ♪ like the clouds grip my face ♪ ♪ saying it's all right to run ♪ >> reporter: it's a departure from the string of polished pop hits that have made him one of the world's best-selling music artists. ♪ i love it when do you it like that ♪ >> at king's theater in brooklyn, about an hour before taking the stage for the sold-out debut of his new album, sheeran seemed decidedly relaxed. >> i'm quite, like, comfortable in my skin. i know who i am and what i do. >> the lyrics in some of these songs seem to paint another picture of not being so comfortable in your skin. >> yeah. but that's the human. you're talking to the artist right now. i'm like the artist who can stand onstage in front of
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110,000 people in melbourne is not the same person that has anxiety and insecurity and depression and -- yeah, it's not the same person. ♪ i'm on my way ♪ >> you put on a cape, i guess, and go, i can entertain you, and this is gone. if i was that offstage all the time, it's horrible. this egotistical maniac walking around. >> reporter: the british musician has been selling out stadiums on his mathematics tour which just started in the u.s. ♪ i had a bad week ♪ >> reporter: part of what makes the artist ed sheeran so successful is that he's willing to expose that human side. >> paint a picture of you as a kid. >> really small. i had red hair, these big pink glasses. i had a stutter. this is before i played music, so i didn't have any impressive that i could offer, and i was just weird, yeah. >> do you think of that kid? >> all the time, yeah. i find it bonkers. >> reporter: sheeran said he's
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never looked the part. >> i've always been -- i keep my weight in check now because i do a lot of exercise. but i've just always been a fat bloke. >> you're not fat. >> well, i know because i keep it in check. i did an hour and and a half's worth of exercise this morning and i'll be onstage for another two hours today. i exercise a lot, and i try to not binge as much. >> reporter: he's open about that struggle to a point. >> i just don't want to turn into like the poster boy for it, you know? i think what is important about speaking about it is letting people know that it is not a problem that is just for one gender. >> by it, you're talking about bulimia? >> yeah. ♪ everything's falling apart ♪ >> reporter: showing that kind of vulnerability can require a level of confidence that's apparent when sheeran takes the stage. >> this ego that a performer needs to have, where did it come
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from in your case? >> oddly no one caring. i guess i developed it from the age of 15, playing in rooms where i was largely ignored. i don't know. if you went to a bar and there was a kid being like, hey, guys, this song's good, listen to this. you'd be like, okay. ♪ bad habits lead to late night ♪ ♪ conversations with a stranger i bearly know ♪ >> his songs are good. if selling 150 million records is any measure. the single from his new album about his friend's death has topped charts, putting sheeran in third for the most number one hits in the uk, just behind elvis and the beatles. ♪ oh, i keep dancing with my eyes closed ♪ oh, i keep dancing with my ♪ >> wow. it's a really personal song for you. >> all my albums are super
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personal. they're all reflections of where i am at this time. but this is more uncomfortable, i think. >> sheeran refers to this uncomfortable period lyrically as the end of youth. ♪ i've been lost since the teens but pretend it's all all right ♪ >> is that auto biographical? >> totally, yeah. totally. but then this is like i'm comfortable talking about these things on interviews because you don't necessarily want the whole world to know everything that is going on in your mind the entire time. but then if you write songs about things and you're then releasing the songs, you should be giving context to them. >> reporter: music helps him process. and here at home on the english coast, he finds perspective. >> how much do you care about what's written, what's said about your work, about an album? >> i mean i used to care a lot. i used to care a lot because i spent my whole life trying to be successful. but you're not always going to be everything to everyone. i've never really been a critical darling, but i don't
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know. i think it's more challenging to write pop music than any other kind of music. ♪ when i saw you in that dress ♪ ♪ looking so beautiful ♪ >> reporter: critics' minds may change, but sheeran is unwavering when it comes to the value of a good pop song. >> it doesn't always have to be introspective and emotional. sometimes song writing can just be fun. shape of you was just a fun song. no one listens to shape of you and things deep and hard about their life. they're just like, i quite like that song. i quite like dancing to it. ♪ i'm love with the shape of you ♪ [ cheers and applaus
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(male) there are many voices in today's world. everyone is voicing their opinions about everything, and jesus is no exception to that. what if there was a clear voice telling you exactly who jesus is? (male announcer) join dr. david jeremiah as he teaches who jesus is and what that means for your life. tune in to dr. jeremiah's new series, "christ above all", on the next "turning point", right here on this station.
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female: my husband worked on a strip job for a a number of years, got black lung. a a little over three years ago he quickly started declining and starteted asking for my hel. since jerry got sick and i've taken on the extra work here it''s been w wonderful t to knot i i can still l hear the w worh a a message e and have s some r that i f feel connecected to inin my home w with me. ♪♪♪ 20-year-old ethan chapin was one of four university of idaho college students stabbed to death last november. his family and friends keep his memory alive in a tulip field outside seattle. lilia luciano reports.
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>> wow, look at that. >> reporter: as they stroll through this tulip farm in northern washington state, stacy and jim chapin remember their son, ethan, one of four university of idaho students murdered almost six months ago. >> everybody just wanted to be around him. >> he touched more lives in his 20 years than most people maybe touch in a lifetime. >> reporter: that welcoming presence led to lifelong friendships at tulip valley farms, where he worked along with his brother and sister, hunter and mazie. his friends decided to honor ethan's memory by creating a tulip mix in his name. they called it ethan's smile. >> ethan just had a great smile. he smiled all the time, you know, and kids love it. >> reporter: soon, the chapins say it seemed many touched by ethan's story -- >> keep the change. >> reporter: -- wanted ethan's smile. >> have a good day. >> we've gone from there and created a foundation. >> reporter: the ethan's smile foundation is now raising money
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for college scholarships for students in washington's skagit valley through sales of ethan's namesake tulips, bulbs, and other merchandise. >> i think there's been over 83,000 bulbs sold. >> reporter: the chapins say the support they're getting for ethan's smile is helping them cope with the pain of never seeing their son's smile again. >> now i'm crying. it was an amazing 20 years we had with him. >> reporter: for cbs mornings, i'm lilia luciano. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm sarah ewall-wice. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. president biden will welcome congressional leaders to the white house today as they look for a deal to raise the debt ceiling.
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republicans are looking to tie the debt ceiling to cuts in federal spending, something the white house says is off the table. louisville police say that officer nickolas wilt, who was shot during april's bank shooting, is on a path to recovery. wilt is still in a medically-induced coma, but has been taken off a ventilator and all other life-sustaining equipment after steady improvement this week. and space tourism company virgin galactic says suborbital commercial flights will begin in late june. the current ticket price is $450,000. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. tonight, the tragedies in texas, including a massacre at a crowded shopping mall. the new information tonight about the victims, the heroes
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who saved lives, and the gunman's possible neo-nazi beliefs. here's are tonight's headlines. a typical saturday at the mall turns to panic as we learn the shooter was terminated from the army for mental health issues. >> it was at least 50 to 100 rounds. it was nonstop. new charges after a man allegedly rams his suv over migrants at a bus stop. investigators looking into whether it was intentional. the transportation department is creating new rules requiring airlines to compensate passengers if they are stranded for reasons within the carrier's control. >> your time matters. the impact on your life matters. the beginning of our series "moms in focus." ahead of mother's day, how doulas are helping black women into motherhood. >> how do you think you would feel if you did not have your doula? >> a lot more concerned and a lot less, like, calm about what's going on.
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♪ meet me in the pouring rain. taylor swift performs until 2:00 a.m. for tens of thousands of fans. i come not to be served but to serve. >> and a king's coronation decades in the making. >> god save the king. >> god save the king! >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." we want to begin tonight with another community reeling from one of the nation's latest mass shootings. this time it was in the dallas suburb of allen, texas. the routine weekend activity of shopping out as a family shattered by a gunman's rampage. at least eight people were killed, including three children. seven others were injured. we want to take a moment to remember the victims. a 23-year-old mall security
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guard and a 26-year-old engineer from india. two parents and their 3-year-old child were killed while their 6-year-old was seriously hurt. and two elementary school sisters were killed while shopping with their mother, who was critically injured. investigators haven't revealed the motive, but the adl says that the 33-year-old shooter embraced anti-semitism, violent misogyny, and white supremacy. and tonight we're learning the shooter had heavy firepower, seven guns with him, two on him and five in his car. cbs's omar villafranca is at the scene and starts us off tonight from allen, texas. good evening, omar. >> reporter: good evening. despite the shooter's violent and racist views, investigators haven't said for sure if that was the motivation for the attack. we also talked to survivors, who described what it was like trying to save victims who were dying. we want to warn you what they told us was graphic, but they want people to hear it because it's the truth, and they want
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the mass shootings to stop. saturday, just after 3:30 p.m., a gray car drives up to the allen premium outlets mall. the door opens, and the shooter immediately starts firing dozens of rounds at shoppers from an ar-style rifle. >> we need an ambulance. >> reporter: the gunman only stops when a police officer, who happened to be at the mall, shoots and kills him. police have identified him as 33-year-old mauricio garcia. cbs news has learned he enlisted in the army in 2008 but did not finish basic training and was terminated after three months due to physical or mental conditions. garcia later worked as an armed and licensed security guard and passed a background check. this video shows the chaos and reality of a mass shooting for survivors. >> coming to you. >> thank you. >> it was a war zone there. there's no other way to describe it. >> reporter: army veteran steven spainhouer tried to help the
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victims and describes the gruesome scene. >> i did a quick compression on his chest, and he spit blood up. and then he looked at me, and his eyes just went straight fixed. >> reporter: navy veteran joshua barnwell says volunteers grabbed anything to make tourniquets and stop the victims from bleeding. >> there was an atrocious amount of blood. that's when i noticed the first small child and was not 100% sure of her condition. >> reporter: tonight we're also learning more about those who were killed. christian lacour, a security officer at the mall. aishwarya thatikonda, an engineer from india. two young sisters, daniela and sofia mendoza. their mother was critically injured. and cindy kyu and their 3-year-old son, james cho. the only surviving member of the family is their 6-year-old son, william. the memorial for the victims behind me keeps growing as people come by to stop, mourn, and pray. there are two more vigils scheduled tomorrow for the
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victims. norah. >> omar villafranca, thank you. from one horrific tragedy in texas to another. this one in the border town of brownsville. police have charged the driver of an suv with multiple felonies including aggravated assault after he slammed into a group of migrants outside a shelter on sunday. cbs's nicole sganga reports eight people were killed and at least ten others injured. >> reporter: this was the moment an suv plowed into a crowd of migrants in brownsville, texas, turning this bus stop into a crime scene. the driver ran a red light and struck 18 people, killing 8. >> horrific. it was terrible. the bodies were all over the place. >> reporter: this video shows onlookers confronting the driver, 34-year-old george alvarez, after the incident. >> the driver of the vehicle attempted to flee the scene after impact but was held down by several individuals. >> reporter: police say the
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suspect is a brownsville resident with a long arrest record and seven convictions. today he was charged with 18 felony counts, including manslaughter. investigators are waiting on a toxicology report and trying to determine whether the crash was intentional. among the victims, venezuelan asylum seekers. >> the migrants that were there as well, some of them were paramedics. they responded. >> reporter: angel meza was on his way to reunite with his mother. [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: his cousin tells us they were planning to move to new york to start a life in america. back at the scene, a growing memorial to honor the lives lost. >> overall, there's a lot of people that are grieving, and we need to keep them in our thoughts. >> reporter: brownsville is a city on edge. police tell us a man wielding a gun outside the shelter was taken into custody late today.
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this is a developing story in a community already grieving. norah. >> nicole sganga, thank you. jury deliberations begin tomorrow in the civil case brought by a former "elle" magazine columnist who says former president donald trump raped her in a department store dressing room nearly 30 years ago. in closing arguments today, e. jean carroll's attorney refuted trump's claim that she wasn't his type, telling the jury that the former cheerleader and miss indiana university was exactly his type. trump never showed up for the trial. his lawyer called the accusation a work of fiction. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news."
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tonight where the pandemic-era immigration policy known as title 42 ends this week. officials are warning of a surge of migrants. cbs's manuel bojorquez reports the wave of asylum seekers will put a further strain on many border cities. >> reporter: the influx of migrants is only expected to grow by the time title 42 ends on thursday. officials estimate 11,000 to 13,000 a day may arrive along the entire southern border. texas governor greg abbott deployed nearly 600 more national guard troops today. >> they will be deployed to hot spots along the border to intercept, to repel, and to turn back migrants who are trying to enter texas illegally. >> reporter: abbott and other top republicans have said ending title 42 will encourage illegal immigration. the covid-era policy allowed for the quick expulsion of most migrants on public health grounds. but that emergency has ended.
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on a recent visit to the rio grande valley, homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas said the administration has prepared for the end of title 42, planning to stiffen penalties for illegal crossings and establishing additional legal avenues for asylum seekers. >> at the same time, we will deliver consequences for individuals who arrive at our southern border irregularly. >> reporter: but right now, some border cities and many of their shelters are overwhelmed, like this one in laredo, texas. >> these groups are for the ones who decided to launch themselves and decide they'd have better odds by coming before may 11th. >> reporter: the biden administration is sending 1,500 active-duty military personnel to the border, some arriving starting wednesday, to serve in a support capacity, meaning they will not directly interact with migrants. norah. >> manuel bojorquez, thank you. outrage is intensifying over the death of a man who was homeless on a new york city
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subway. today lawyers for the family of jordan neely demanded that daniel penny, a 24-year-old marine veteran, be arrested for putting neely in a choke hold after witnesses say he was threatening other passengers. here's cbs's nancy chen. >> reporter: justice for jordan neely was the demand by more than 100 demonstrators, who stormed a manhattan subway station this weekend, leading to a dozen arrests. today marks a week since witnesses say neely was acting erratically on the train, screaming about being hungry and tired. the 30-year-old homeless man had a history of mental illness. video shows marine veteran daniel penny with neely in a choke hold for more than three minutes as at least one onlooker warns it could be fatal. neely was pronounced dead at the hospital. his death ruled a homicide.
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>> i think what happened is things got really out of control, and i think it really was a horrible, horrible accident. but horrible accidents sometimes can turn into a manslaughter. >> reporter: penny was questioned and released. lawyers for the 24-year-old new yorker say daniel never intended to harm mr. neely and could not have foreseen his untimely death. >> jordan was a loving person. >> reporter: a neely family attorney says penny needs to be held accountable. >> so justice immediately means an arrest and letting daniel penny have a day in court where he tries to prove that none of this is what we all know it to be, a murder. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news a grand jury could convene as early as this week to determine if penny should be criminally charged. police say they've increased patrols at this subway station, but mental health advocates are pushing for more resources as well. norah. >> nancy chen, thank you. back here in washington, the biden administration announced a
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new plan to have airlines compensate passengers for preventable flight disruptions. now, this includes delays and cancellations not caused by storms. and as cbs's nancy cordes reports, you could get cash. >> reporter: when a cancellation is the airline's fault, the president says they should have to pay up. >> you deserve to be fully compensated. your time matters. the impact on your life matters. >> reporter: today he vowed to roll out new rules by the end of the year requiring airlines to cover things like rebooking fees, hotel stays, ground transportation, and meal vouchers when weather is not to blame. transportation secretary pete buttigieg says the government may not stop there. >> is there a possibility you could require the airlines to give people cash? >> that's absolutely something that could happen under this proposed rule. >> reporter: he pointed to the european union, which now requires airlines to pay passengers between 250 euros and
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600 euros for avoidable delays. >> these rules are unnecessary. >> reporter: u.s. carriers pushed back today, arguing they'll just have to pass those new costs on to customers. >> ticket prices will go up, plain and simple. that's what happened in europe. that's what will happen here. >> reporter: the ten largest airlines do now guarantee meals and free rebooking when delays are their fault. nine of them also cover hotel stays. >> airlines say they're already doing some of this voluntarily, that you don't need to make a rule. >> i guess i would say if they're already doing this, then they shouldn't mind us making a rule. >> reporter: one big question here is who exactly would determine when delays are the airline's fault. think back to december when the southwest airlines scheduling system melted down. 17,000 flights had to be canceled, but it was a winter storm that started that chain reaction. so these things can be tricky to parse, norah. parse, norah. >> nancy cordes, thank you. ♪ today, , my friend d you did, you u did it, yoyou did it...♪ centrurum silver i is now w clinicallyly shown
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>> reporter: carrie bernans is counting down to when she and her partner, jeremy, welcome their first child, a baby boy. the healthy expectant mother feared she would have to deliver at just 24 weeks. after having some early contractions, she says doctors misdiagnosed her with an open cervix. >> that was just, like, unnecessary, and it was just hard. >> reporter: bernans, who felt her concerns over medication she was prescribed were being ignored, switched doctors and got a doula through frontline doulas, a community program that provides free access to care for black mothers in los angeles. >> i also wanted a black woman too. i wanted someone that can understand me, understand what i was going through, understand my body. >> reporter: according to the cdc, black women in the u.s. are nearly three times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than white women. contributing factors include health inequities, mistreatment, and underlying chronic conditions. doula felicia frances edwards
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fights to improve those outcomes by advocating for families and providing physical, emotional, and informational support. >> if i could tell you how many times women who sign up for the program said to me the reason they wanted to do the program is because they thought they were going to die. >> reporter: according to studies, mothers who use doulas are less likely to require a c-section or use pain medication, and their babies are less likely to have a low birth weight. but doula services can cost upwards of $5,000, and most aren't covered by insurance. >> how do you think you would feel if you did not have your doula? >> i don't want to think about that. i probably would feel a bit more lost for sure. >> reporter: bernans says now that she's found her doula, she's ready for delivery. elise preston, cbs news, los angeles. >> and we're going to continue our series "moms in focus" tomorrow with a story about a library system in virginia that's helping parents connect with their children in a new way, all ahead of mother's day.
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well, two weeks before the end of the school year, teachers in oakland remain on strike. we'll tell you what they're demanding aside from a raise. that's next. [♪♪] did you know, unless you treat dandruff regularly, it will keep coming back. try head & shoulders shampoo. dandruff is caused by irritation to a germ that lives on everyone's scalp. unlike regular shampoo, head & shoulders contains zinc pyrithione, which fights the dandruff-causing germ and helps prevent it from coming back. it's gentle on hair and provides up to 100% dandruff protection, clinically proven. try head & shoulders shampoo and conditioner. for best results, use with every wash. this has been medifacts for head & shoulders. ♪ ♪ a titiny pinch o of knorr chickeken bouillonon will s save you momore gas than driviving downhilill. becacause just o one sip of fs delectablele silky
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week. schools remain open with office staffers supervising the roughly 34,000 students. teachers are demanding not only better pay but more rights to advocate for the needs of students. there are only two weeks left in oakland's school year. swifties were singing in the rain. we'll take you to the epic storm-soaked sing-along next. ♪ never, ever, ever getting back together ♪
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lightning and rain couldn't stop taylor swift from giving 70,000 fans in nashville the show of their wildest dreams. her sunday night show was delayed by almost four hours so swifties were ready for it when the star took the stage. all fans had to do was stay to get a 45-song marathon sing-along that wrapped up at nearly 2:00 a.m. just incredible. king charles iii formally ascends to the throne with a
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>> reporter: king charles waited for this moment for 70 years. saint edward's crown, weighing nearly five pounds, was finally lowered onto his head. >> god save the king! >> reporter: the new heir to the throne, prince william, swore an oath of loyalty. >> so help me god. >> reporter: the king's younger son, prince harry, was also there, in the third row back along with the disgraced prince andrew. but harry's wife, meghan, stayed home in california. another royal bride, queen camilla, once despised in this country as the third person in charles and diana's marriage, was also crowned. some royal fans camped out for days to secure a view. the vast majority of people here support the monarchy, but a growing number want a republic. >> not my king! >> reporter: they held a protest
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during the coronation, and controversially, the police arrested some of them for breaching public order. but the coronation went off without a hitch. there's a new official portrait. ♪ i've got the eye of the tiger ♪ >> reporter: and with some help fom katy perry and lionel richie, the royal family celebrated with a concert at windsor castle. holly williams, cbs news, london. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. president biden will welcome congressional leaders to the white house today as they look for a deal to raise the debt
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ceiling. republicans are looking to tie the debt ceiling to cuts in federal spending, something the white house says is off the table. louisville police say that officer nickolas wilt, who was shot during april's bank shooting, is on a path to recovery. wilt is still in a medically-induced coma, but has been taken off a ventilator and all other life-sustaining equipment after steady improvement this week. and space tourism company virgin galactic says suborbital commercial flights will begin in late june. the current ticket price is $450,000. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. it's tuesday, may 9th, 2023, this is the "cbs morning news." search for a motive. we're learning more about a man police say shot
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