tv CBS Overnight News CBS May 12, 2023 3:12am-4:29am PDT
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>> reporter: trump said he'd pardon a large portion of the rioters. house speaker kevin mccarthy ignored questions about it, but a missouri republican senator weighed in. >> if you're asking me do i think he should pardon people who engaged in rioting behavior, i don't. >> reporter: president biden posted a video attacking trump for the remarks, tweeting, do you want four more years of that? on the war in ukraine, trump refused to say vladimir putin was a war criminal or whether he backed ukraine. >> do you want ukraine to win this war? >> uh, i don't think in terms of winning and losing. >> reporter: former new jersey republican governor chris christie said he was stunned. >> i think he's a coward, and i think he's a puppet of putin. i really do. >> reporter: leading new hampshire republican jason osborn said trump's turn benefited ron desantis. >> i think the opening was there and this kind of solidifies it. president trump is not changing his routine. he's not changing his rhetoric. >> reporter: sources close to the ongoing investigations of trump say the former president
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might have put himself in legal jeopardy due to the way he detailed last night his conduct related to january 6th, classified records, and his pressure campaign on election officials in georgia. norah. >> robert costa with all those new details, thank you so much. now a big development in the unsolved disappearance of american teenager natalie holloway in aruba 18 years ago. peru's government is allowing the prime suspect to be extradited to the u.s. on charges of trying to extort holloway's family. cbs's elaine quijano reports this brings the family a step closer to justice. >> reporter: it was in 2005 when 18-year-old nat lee holloway disappeared while on a trip to alou ba. she was last seen leaving a bar with vandersloot and two other man. no charges were ever filed in holloway's disappearance. her body has never been recovered. now vandersloot could be extradited to the united states.
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vandersloot is in peru, serving a 28-year sentence for the 2010 murder of peruvian student stephanie flores. >> how unusual is it, ricki, to have an extradition take place so many years after an indictment like this? >> many times it is the political situation that may have been cold about extradition that suddenly much later becomes warm. >> reporter: vandersloot is accused of trying to extort a quarter of a million dollars from holloway's family, allegedly promising he would lead them to her body. prosecutors say vandersloot collected $25,000 in cash and then lied about where she was buried. holloway's disappearance generated intense media coverage that some criticized, accusing the media of ignoring other missing women. >> what made this story stand out was this public plea on the part of the mother, and it was also the fact that aruba was a very popular destination for
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american tourists. there was a concerted public relations campaign to get her back. >> reporter: it's not clear when the extradition would take place. vandersloot's attorney plans to fight it. in a statement, natalie holloway's mother thanked u.s. officials and the president of peru, and she noted her daughter would have been 36 years old now. she said she was blessed to have had natalee in her life for 18 years. norah. >> difficult to hear that. elaine quijano, thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. sometimes, the lows of bipolar depression feel darkest before dawn. with caplyta, there's a chance to let in the lyte. caplyta is proven to deliver significant relief across bipolar depression.
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if you know... you know it's pantene. ♪♪ open talenti and raise the jar to gelato made from scratch. raise the jar to flavors from the world's finest ingredients. and now, from jars to bars. new talenti gelato and sorbetto mini bars. ♪♪ today officially marks the end of the covid public health emergency in the u.s., and it comes with significant changes. covid tests will no longer be paid for by the government. the cost shifts to insurers and patients. about 15 million people who gained access to medicaid during the pandemic are now at risk of losing that coverage. and with the change, the cdc will only track covid hospitalizations and not cases or transmission rates. health officials are still warning that while the emergency is over, covid is still a
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serious disease. this week, noaa scientists announced that much of the western u.s. is no longer under extreme drought conditions, but the record amounts of snow and in ts ek's america," cbs's jonathan vigliotti shows us the dramatic impact on flood-ravaged central california. >> reporter: california's central valley produces a quarter of the nation's food, but a brutal winter, a parade of violent storms scientists link to climate change has led to this. acre after acre, more than 150,000 in all, swamped. for so many crops, a total loss. >> it's going to hurt. it's a lot of money. >> reporter: nater mali can is a pistachio farmer. 99% of the nation's supply is grown here. what's the value on that pain? >> $15 million probably right here. >> 15 million? >> yeah, that we've lost on 1,200 acres.
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>> reporter: the estimated damage from the floodeds, $1 billion so far. remarkably, an even greater danger awaits. tulare lake, which was drained a century ago and didn't even exist a few months ago, has returned with a vengeance. perched just outside corcoran, it looks like an ocean. and in the mountains above, one of california's largest snowpacks on record is starting to melt. forecasters say rising temperatures in the coming weeks could prove catastrophic. >> you kind of get an overwhelming sense of doom in a way. how do you stop this? >> reporter: with a lot of dirt, says farmer brandon goodhart at lake shore derry. >> you are looking at what we've come to call the great wall of stratford, and we've got 15 feet of dirt piled up. >> reporter: fema agents are on the ground assisting, but farmers say they are footing the bill to reinforce and add on to a nearly 15 mile long levee so it can hold back the rising tide. there's nowhere safe enough.
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>> this is where we house the milk cows. >> reporter: or large enough to move his barn of cows. >> is it possible where we're standing right now could be flooded out? >> yes. >> reporter: kings county supervisor doug ver bundesliga says crews will finish the levee before the next major melt, but there's no guarantee it will hold. >> mother nature is in control. we're just, you know, trying to put our finger in the dike as we go. >> reporter: tonight all hands are on deck while their hearts are sinking. >> we're a family farm. the family's been doing this for generations, and i'd hate to be the one that's at the wheel and we lose it all. >> reporter: for yt eye on america," jonathan vigliotti, corcoran, california. >> we're thinking about our farmers. well, there's important news for parents of young children with peanut allergies. with peanut allergies. when it comes to your hair, ingredients matter. that's why herbal essences is packed with naturally derived plant ingredients you love, and none of the stuff you don't.
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bugs hate it. ♪♪ to gelo made from sc. raise the jar to flavors from the world's finest ingredients. and now, from jars to bars. new talenti gelato and sorbetto mini bars. ♪♪ in tonight's health watch, encouraging news for parents of young children with peanut allergies. researchers say a new experimental patch called vie skin showed promise in clinical trials. 67% of toddlers who wore the patch for a year were able to tolerate up to four peanuts with researchers seeing fewer severe reactions. the fda has asks the company to provide more safety data before considering approval. peloton recalls more than 2 million exercise bikes. why? that's next.
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all this week, we've been putting moms in focus ahead of mother's day. to finish out our special series, we asked you to tell us about the wonderful moms, grandmas, and caregivers in your lives. we got hundreds of submissions, and we loved reading every one of them. this story of a close-knit family gave us a chance to honor two dedicated moms across generations. >> so here's mom when she was a nurse. >> carol kemper, the oldest of five siblings, had no idea she was nominated by her little sister, beth husser, who described carol as the mother of all mothers. >> beth, what qualities in carol do you admire? >> she's the most selfless person you would ever meet. >> that selflessness turned her
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passion for fitness into a successful personal training career, focused on senior citizens and now parkinson's disease. >> all your weight on one side. >> reporter: it's a cause close to her heart. carol's brother-in-law was diagnosed with the disease in 2019. >> it sounds like love and dedication runs deep in your family. >> we watched our parents be devout catholics and dedicated to their families. it's just a natural response that we care for each other and are very close and loving with each other. >> reporter: so close, in fact, that carol is also the primary caretaker for her mom. >> the amount of work it is physically and mentally, my sister does that as well as everything else going on in her life. >> our mother's been through so much and carried through all of that with such grit and toughness and just handles everything with such grace, and i think that's -- that's carried down to us. >> reporter: the whole family demonstrating what we know mom
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stands for, dedicated and pele like that deserve to b celebrated. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. friday's planned negotiations on the debt ceiling between president biden and congressional leaders have been postponed until next week. house speaker kevin mccarthy said there hasn't been enough progress to prompt another meeting. discussions will continue between staff. a federal judge ruled that a ban on selling handguns to 18 to 20-year-olds is unconstitutional, citing a supreme court ruling from last year on second amendment rights. the decision is expected to be appealed. and a survey from the conference board says 62% of workers were satisfied with their jobs in 2022. idork a tet lo t highest rat a.
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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 begin tonight with a crisis at the southern border. the clock is ticking as the pandemic-era rule known as title 42 is set to expire in a matter of hours. the border patrol chief telling cbs news tonight 60,000 migrants are waiting near the u.s./mexico border in hopes of seeking asylum once the deadline passes. u.s. customs and border protection say they are beyond capacity from california to texas and are currently holding around 25,000 migrants at its facilities. and we've just learned from an administration official that thousands of migrants were
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expelled today, some flown out of the u.s. we have team coverage of this fast-moving story, which has significant impact on not only border states but the entire country. cbs's manuel bojorquez will start us off tonight from el paso, texas. good evening, manuel. >> reporter: good evening, norah. behind me is one spot along the border where migrants, some of them, have managed to make their way to the northern side and turn themselves in to border patrol agents. as you mentioned, the border patrol chief told us he's aware of 60,000 migrants on the other side in northern mexico, but he says they're prepared for whatever decisions they might make. tonight, with just hours to go before the official end of title 42, border authorities are preparing for an influx of migrants. since monday, roughly 30,000 migrants have been apprehended. ndny 're going to be ready. >>oe escalation.>> i thereimpression out theratoplere goi to sh the
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>> i don't expect that to happen. you can still prosecute. you can still repatriate. >> reporter: the biden administration has proposed new immigration policies, such as restricting migrants from seeking asylum in the u.s. if they haven't applied for it in another country like mexico. penalties including banishment for up to five years for those who try to go outside the asylum process. those who are allowed to seek asylum here would be tracked by gps and have home curfews. >> people who cross our border unlawfully and without a legal basis to remain will be promptly processed and removed. >> reporter: still, republican critics say the administration's immigration plans are not enough. >> president biden and his administration have laid out the welcome mat, and that's why there has been absolutely no deterrence. >> reporter: along other stretches of the texas border, those processed continue their journey into the u.s. cbs's nicole sganga is there. >> reporter: here in brownsville, migrants are dropped off by u.s. border
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patrol officials after screening. they're processed at this city welcome center, given a meal, some clothing, and limited instructions.eson. >> does she have money to buy a ticket? >> reporter: the debate goes well beyond the southern border. >> reporter: i'm adriana diaz in chicago. shelters are so overwhelmed here that migrants are sleeping in police stations, even families with small children. we spoke to one mother who's here with her husband and 3-year-old daughter. >> how long were you in new york for? [ speaking non-english ] >> seven months, and you didn't find any work? >> reporter: back along the southern border, a new reality without title 42 is about to begin. and today customs and border protection -- or actually i.c.e., immigration and customs enforcement -- announced they would begin to send some deported migrants all the way back to southern mexico instead of just letting them across to the other side of the border.
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and the agency said that yesterday it deported thousands to cuba, colombia, honduras, and guatemala. norah. >> a crucial week. manny bojorquez, thank you so much. well, now to some breaking news on that choke hold death on a new york city subway. late this afternoon, the manhattan district attorney announced that 24-year-old daniel penny will be arrested on a charge of manslaughter in the second degree. this video shows penny holding 30-year-old jordan neely in a choke hold for more than three minutes. the marine veteran says he never intended to harm neely, who was homeless and had a history of mental illness, and he only acted in self-defense after neely was verbally threatening passengers on the train. tonight, both republicans and democrats are reacting to cnn's town hall with former president donald trump. the prime-time special saw the gop's leading candidate repeat lies about the 2020 election, dodge questions about an ghts, and refuse to say if he backed ukraine in the war with
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russia. cbs's robert costa is in manchester, new hampshire, tonight. >> reporter: reverberations today in new hampshire and across american politics in the wake of former president donald trump's incendiary statements at wednesday night's town hall. republican senator todd young, who supported trump in 2020, was asked if the performance concerned him. >> of course it does. that's why i don't intend to support him for the republican nomination. >> reporter: new hampshire resident kristen berg said she wouldn't vote for trump again. >> i just think there was too much -- too much havoc that went on while he was in the presidency, and i think it was too much for the country. >> reporter: in front of a trump-friendly crowd, he rehashed false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. >> it was a rigged election. >> reporter: and lashed out at accuser e. jean carroll one day after a civil jury found trump had sexually abused her. >> she's a whack job. >> reporter: that didn't sit well with new hampshire independent voter melanie morton. >> i think it's amazing that he continues to shame and put her
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down. >> reporter: trump also called january 6th a beautiful day. >> they were there with love in their hearts. >> reporter: but the assault was deadly with more than 140 police officers injured. >> it was chaos. >> we were fighting for our life. >> reporter: trump said he'd pardon a large portion of the rioters. >> any thought on trump -- >> reporter: house speaker kevin mccarthy ignored questions about it, but a missouri republican senator weighed in. >> if you're asking me do i think he should pardon people who engaged in rioting behavior, i don't. >> reporter: president biden posted a video attacking trump for the remarks, tweeting, do you want four more years of that? on the war in ukraine, trump refused to say vladimir putin was a war criminal or whether he backed ukraine. >> do you want ukraine to win this war? >> uh, i don't think in terms of winning and losing. >> reporter: former new jersey republican governor chris christie said he was stunned. >> i think he's a coward, and i think he's a puppet of putin. i really do. >> reporter: leading new hampshire republican jason osborn said trump's turn
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benefited potential challenger ron desantis, whom he supports. >> i think the opening was there, and this just kind of solidifies it. president trump is not changing he's not changins rhetoric. >> reporter: sources close to the ongoing investigations of trump say the former president might have put himself in legal jeopardy due to the way he detailed last night his conduct related to january 6th, classified records, and his pressure campaign on election officials in georgia. norah. >> robert costa with all those new details, thank you so much. well, tonight officials are investigating yet another derailment of a norfolk southern freight train. this one happened late wednesday night in western pennsylvania. no one was hurt, and the train was not carrying hazardous materials. repairs to the bridge and tracks could take weeks. norfolk southern has had several derailments in recent months, including one that spilled those toxic chemicals in east palestine, ohio. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight ews."
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." i'm major garrett in washington. we thank you for staying with us. great britain has agreed to send long-range missiles to ukraine, which is loading up for an anticipated counteroffensive against russian forces. the u.s. and other allied nations have so far denied ukraine such weapons, fearing they could be used to strike inside russia. britain's storm shadow missile has a range of more than 150 miles and could strike russian targets far from the front lines. ukrainian president zelenskyy says his troops are not quite ready to launch an offensive. but for people living in the
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battle zone, munitions like these can't come soon enough. charlie d'agata reports. >> reporter: he bears all the scars of a battleground town c sitting squarely on the front line. above ground, a ghost town of shattered glass and destroyed buildings. but below, we find the deputy mayor keeping herself and her community together. >> how often does this town get hit? "every day." she said" every day we get strikes, missiles, even phosphorus bombs." she told us it's been getting much worse and much bigger. "we can't hear the launch," she said. "only the strike. so it's very scary for people who don't have enough time to seek cover." she takes us to a school that's been turned into part bomb
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shelter, part community center. the last children left this town three weeks ago. it became too dangerous. from a population of around 14,000, there are now roughly 1,400 people left. we're told this town comes understand attack day and night, including targeting this very school. ukraine's government calls shelters like this a point of invincibility, and that defiant title is absolutely intentional. it's manned by volunteers, all residents here, serving those who decided to stay despite the risks. >> what happened when you hear the explosions? [ speaking non-english ] "fear, of course. every time there's an explosion, very scared to hear that our people may have died." as if on cue, she calmly
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explains, "that was ours, outgoing." there are hundreds of places like this where residents facing anything from power outages to daily bombardment can meet to get warm, get fed, grab a hot shower, get their laundry done, even get a haircut from a hairdresser who comes once a week. >> this is like a little village inside a village. "you know, it's not even a village," she says. "it's more like civilization within all the devastation." valentina told us her house no longer exists after being bombed. but she's not leaving her hometown. >> aren't you worried about your safety being so close? [ speaking non-english ] "i'm not so worried," she said. "i'm more worried about my children. my son is fighting, and my grandchildren are in zaporizhzhia." t s h drink and each other's company.
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they're united in defiance and hope that the war will end soon an families will once again be reunited. now, even though that town is directly on the firing line, residents there tell us they can't wait for that counteroffensive to begin, to push russians back far enough so they're no longer interested in randomly bombing their neighborhoods. >> that was charlie d'agata in ukraine. closer to home, there was a bit of good news for the economy. inflation slowed last month, and michael george goes behind the numbers. >> reporter: prices at the grocery store remain high, but there are signs of easing. ground beef is actually down 2%, and bacon has fallen almost 9%. on the other hand, americans are paying more for necessities like rent and electricity. a new report shows overall inflation rose 4.9% in april, continuing a slowdown since june of last year when price hikes hit a peak of 9.1%. >> i would say that this report
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is showing slow birst three weeks of april. aaa says the national average is down about 15 cents a gallon since mid-april. that's good news for rideshare driver endra. >> if the price goes down, that is a good thing for us because we are driving every day eight hours, almost eight hours. >> reporter: inflation slowed as the federal reserve raised interest rates ten different times in the past year. but cbs news business analyst jill schlesinger says the board might be ready to pause hikes. >> probably wait to see if more additional information proves that prices are coming down more substantially in the future. >> reporter: the fed's goal is to see inflation drop to 2%, a level it says is good for the economy and consumers. michael george, cbs news, new york. >> the federal reserve's effort to rein in inflation is having at least one unintended consequence, and you can see it
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in the growing number of vacant storefronts across the country. higher interest rates have led to hard times for the commercial real estate market. some analysts say the worst is yet to come. carter evansxpean when you look you say this is where dwloog should be, facebook should be. >> reporter: chris rising's commercial real estate c spent $35 million remodeling this historic los angeles building into an epic office space, and it's nearly empty. >> the building is about 300,000 feet, and we've leased two floors of the 11. >> reporter: nationwide, there's an epidemic of empty office buildings in los angeles, new york, and san francisco, less than half the office space is occupied, and much of it is financed with short-term bank loans. >> i see a tsunami of loans coming due that can't be -- can't be refinanced. >> reporter: about $1.5 trillion due by the end of 2025. >> i think you're going to see a lot of defaults on office buildings. >> reporter: patrick carroll
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manages a real estate portfolio worth more than $7 billion. >> unfortunately, it's really the perfect storm. these buildings are worth less than they were when they were originally financed, and interest rates being up, valuations down, they're not going to be able to refinance these buildings. >> reporter: companies like apple, starbucks, and amazon are now requiring employees to come in three days a week. same thing with credit karma, where it's not business as usual. >> aren't you supposed to be at work? >> we are at work. >> reporter: senior manager lupe romo is working on his pool game. >> how is this not a waste of time? >> these are partners of mine. this is an investment in people. >> reporter: exactly what ceo ken lynn wants to see after three years working from home. >> we think there is more energy. there's more creativity. people work better together. >> reporter: to encourage collaboration, there's a game room, a music studio, and yoga, all free including the coffee bar. >> you've got a long line here. >> it's by design, right? we actually want interaction. >> reporter: but nationwide, efforts to get employees back to
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the office are meeting resistance. a recent pew survey suggests that about a third of workers in the u.s. who can work from home now do so all the time. >> do you think the commercial real estate market and what's happening now could cause more banks to fail? >> i mean absolutely. you could see a run on all small regional banks, and that could put us right back to where we were with the financial crisis of '08. >> it's a beautiful building, tough investment. >> reporter: i'm carter evans in los angeles. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. hey, i just got a text from my sister. you remember rick, her neighbor? sure, he's the 76-year-old guy who still runs marathons, right? sadly, not anymore. wow.
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♪♪ open talenti and raise the jar to gelato made from scratch. raise the jar to flavors from the world's finest ingredients. and now, from jars to bars. new talenti gelato anand sorbro♪♪jars to bars. the biggest international music competition you've probably never heard of is filling the airwaves overseas. it's called the eurovision song contest. the final is this weekend in liverpool, england. last year's contest was won by a group from ukraine, and ramy inocencio has the story. ♪ >> reporter: be it abba for the baby boomers. ♪
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2023 grammy nominated maneskin. eurovision, the world's biggest song competition, has been a touchstone through televised time that most americans have still never heard of. >> to americans who have never heard of eurovision, how do you describe it? >> i used to say it's like "american idol" meets the it i son, but better. europe. hedoing?>> rorter:ci milichel i eurovision youtuber in washington, d.c. >> the scale is just so grand. the fact that you might not be watching is it crazy. ♪ >> reporter: crazy is also what a lot of people have called this contest. over 67 years and 1,500 songs, it's gone from the wacky and tacky to the lusty and the thrusty. ♪ with a liberal dose of diversity
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and inclusion. ♪ drawing 180 million viewers worldwide, a larger audience than the super bowl. >> going through to the final -- >> reporter: and politics has become a part. participating countries traditionally vote favorably for their neighbors and allies. >> norway! ♪ >> reporter: and last year, ukraine's entry, ca lush orchestra, won with a landslide popular vote following russia's invasion. ♪ this year, they're represented by producer andre hut sewell yak and nigerian born front man jeffrey kenny, who formed the pop duo, tvorchi. we met them in kyiv. >> it's importnt to represent our country the best possible way, and we hope our son can inspire people all around the planet to be stronger and no matter how bad it is, just hold a good attitude and move forward with a smile. >> reporter: their song, heart of steel, is a message of
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defiance inspired by ukrainian soldiers who fought to defend the besieged city of mariupol. >> i've got to ask, can you sing it for me. ♪ sometimes got to know when stick your middle finger up in the air ♪ ♪ i cannot explain, telling you how i feel ♪ ♪ life is just a game ♪ >> liverpool, are you ready? >> reporter: with the war still raging this year's wl liool, england, on ukraine's behalf. 37 countries hope to follow the footsteps of past winners who shot in 1988 for switzerland. ♪ and even interval acts like el riverdance in 1994. ♪ >> i think this year, a lot of people are coming, you know, with the heat. so they knew we won last year, ad i'm sure they didn't want us to win this year.
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so it's going to be definitely hard. ♪ >> reporter: victory could propel this year's winner to stardom, so they'll ing any when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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(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.
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tune in to dr. jeremiah's new series, "christ above all", on the next "turning point", right here on this station. a new study has found that about a third of the people who can work from home do so every day. but as you can imagine, that can be a challenge for working moms juggling a job and child care duties in the same room often at the same time. jan crawford has found an oasis of calm in an unlikely place. >> reporter: for keeping your concentration, it's hard to beat the library. >> hello. >> reporter: especially when you have to keep your eye on your little one. >> at home, it's impossible. here i can just get things done. >> reporter: here at the fairfield area public library near richmond, virginia, there's a special space for children and their parents, like kindergarten teacher takiyah woodson. >> with the crib center, it's much, much easier, and they're close enough where i can just
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reach over, but i can still do what i need to do on the computer. >> reporter: it's called the work and play station, designed and created by two workin moms. >> i would see moms and parents and caregivers struggling, and i thought there's got to be a better way to do this. >> reporter: when the library opened four years ago, photos quickly went viral. >> all of the public libraries that i'm working on right now, every librarian is asking to have one. >> this started with you thinking, there has to be a better way. >> it touches me. it really does. it visibly shows people that we care. >> reporter: and as working moms, they knew there was a better way. jan crawford, cbs news, henrico county, virginia. that is the overnight news for this friday. be sure to check back later for "cbs mornings" and follow us online at cbsnews.com. that's where you'll find my podcast "the takeout." my guest this week is arizona's democratic governor katie hobbs.
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i spoke to her at the mccain institute's sedona forum. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm major garrett. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. friday's planned negotiations on the debt ceiling between president biden and congressional leaders have been postponed until next week. house speaker kevin mccarthy said there hasn't been enough progress to prompt another meeting. discussions will continue between staff. a federal judge ruled that a ban on selling handguns to 18 to 20-year-olds is unconstitutional, citing a supreme court ruling from last year on second amendment rights. the decision is expected to be appealed. and a survey from the conference board says 62% of workers were satisfied with their jobs in 2022. hybrid work and a tight labor market led to the highest rate in 36 years.
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for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shelle kaul, cbs news, new york. tonight, the end of title 42, that pandemic-era rule restricting immigration. how border officials are preparing for the sharp increase of migrants trying to come to america illegally. here are tonight's headlines. more than 10,000 migrants arriving each day ahead of the midnight deadline. some sent by bus to new york, washington, d.c. how the biden administration is addressing the growing crisis. >> law enforcement has fanned out to cover border hot spots. breaking news. a manslaughter charge in that subway choke hold case. former president donald trump's return to the prime-time tv spotlight. trump repeated the lie that the
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2020 election was rigged. flooding and reported tornadoes as the south braces for dangerous weather. >> multiple rounds of severe and heavy rain. new developments in the case of natalee holloway. joran van der sloot is being extra dieted to the u.s. nearly 20 years after the high school girl went missing in aruba. tens of thousands of acres of farmland here in central california are flooded. what this means for farmers and for your next trip to the supermarket. >> what's the value on that pain? >> $15 million. an experimental skin patch may help people with peanut allergies via a skin peanut patch holds 1/1 thousand of a peanut to help build tolerance. and our "moms in focus" series. we celebrate a family of dedicated mothers and honor all of yours. >> it's just a natural response that we care for each other and are very close and loving with each other.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." we begin tonight with a crisis at the southern border. the clock is ticking as the pandemic-era rule known as title 42 is set to expire in a matter of hours. the border patrol chief telling cbs news tonight 60,000 migrants are waiting near the u.s./mexico border in hopes of seeking asylum once the deadline passes. u.s. customs and border protection say they are beyond capacity from california to texas and are currently holding around 25,000 migrants at its facilities. and we've just learned from an administration official that thousands of migrants were expelled today, some flown out of the u.s. we have team coverage of this fast-moving story, which has significant impact on not only border states but the entire country. cbs's manuel bojorquez will start us off tonight from el paso, texas.
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good evening, manuel. >> reporter: good evening, norah. behind me is one spot along the border where migrants, some of them, have managed to make their way to the northern side and turn themselves in to border patrol agents. as you mentioned, the border patrol chief told us he's aware of 60,000 migrants on the other side in northern mexico, but he says they're prepared for whatever decisions they might make. tonight, with just hours to go before the official end of title 42, border authorities are preparing for an influx of migrants. since monday, roughly 30,000 migrants have been apprehended. >> we're going to be ready. >> reporter: raul ortiz is the border patrol chief. he says his officers are prepared to handle any escalation. >> i think there's an impression out there that come midnight, people are going to rush the border. >> i don't expect that to happen. you can still prosecute. you can still repatriate. >> reporter: the biden administration has proposed new immigration policies, such as restricting migrants from seeking asylum in the u.s. if t
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another country like mexico. penalties including banishment for up to five years for those who try to go outside the asylum process. those who are allowed to seek asylum here would be tracked by gps and have home curfews. >> people who cross our border unlawfully and without a legal basis to remain will be promptly processed and removed. >> reporter: still, republican critics say the administration's immigration plans are not enough. >> president biden and his administration have laid out the welcome mat, and that's why there has been absolutely no deterrence. >> reporter: along other stretches of the texas border, those processed continue their journey into the u.s. cbs's nicole sganga is there. >> reporter: here in brownsville, migrants are dropped off by u.s. border patrol officials after screening. they're processed at this city welcome center, given a meal, some clothing, and limited instructions. still, many of them penniless and without a ticket to their cket
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>> reporter: the debate goes well beyond the southern border. >> reporter: i'm adriana diaz in chicago. shelters are so overwhelmed here that migrants are sleeping in police stations, even families with small children. we spoke to one mother who's here with her husband and 3-year-old daughter. >> how long were you in new york for? [ speaking non-english ] >> seven months, and you didn't find any work? >> reporter: back along the southern border, a new reality without title 42 is about to begin. and today customs and border protection -- or actually i.c.e., immigration and customs enforcement -- announced they would begin to send some deported migrants all the way back to southern mexico instead of just letting them across to the other side of the border. and the agency said that yesterday it deported thousands to cuba, colombia, honduras, and guatemala. norah. >> a crucial week. manny bojorquez, thank you so much. well, now to some breaking
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news on that choke hold death on a new york city subway. late this afternoon, the manhattan district attorney announced that 24-year-old daniel penny will be arrested on a charge of manslaughter in the second degree. this video shows penny holding 30-year-old jordan neely in a choke hold for more than three minutes. the marine veteran s intended to harm neely, who was homeless and had a history of mental illness, and he only acted in self-defense after neely was verbally threatening passengers on the train. severe weather threats are moving across the south tonight. a confirmed ef-1 twister touched down this afternoon in desoto parish, louisiana. that's about 40 miles south of shreveport. and downpours in eastern texas have caused some flash flooding, closing several roadways in the area. for more, let's bring in meteorologist mike bettes from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, mike. >> norah, good evening. severe thunderstorms and tornadoes will be a risk right through the evening. watching not only for tornadoes but a chance for straight-line wind gusts to 70 miles an hour,
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hail that could be as big as softballs, not to mention some flooding rain. here's how it pans out for us. right into the middle of the country, an area that we're worried about, especially highlighted in redthenre. e yinghe hig resolution radar, and you can see plenty of storms right through the night tonight. some of those storms go well past dark tonight and then eventually push their way eastbound as we go through the night and then the day tomorrow. for some of us, a couple of areas to watch down through texas, then back across the midwest as we head through friday. on friday and then saturday and then sunday, a chance for flooding, especially highlighted, norah, in texas. this is an area to watch right through mother's day. >> mike, thank you. well, tonight officials are investigating yet another derailment of a norfolk southern freight train. this one happened late wednesday night in western pennsylvania. no one was hurt, and the train was not carrying hazardous materials. repairs to the bridge and tracks could take weeks. norfolk southern has had several derailments in recent months, including one that spilled those toxic chemicals in east palestine, ohio.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." tonight, both republicans and democrats are reacting to cnn's town hall with former president donald trump. the prime-time special saw the gop's leading candidate repeat lies about the 2020 election, dodge questions about abortion rights, and refuse to say if he backed ukraine in the war with russia. cbs's robert costa is in manchester, new hampshire, tonight. >> reporter: reverberations today in new hampshire and across american politics in the wake of former president donald trump's incendiary statements at wednesday night's town hall. republican senator todd young, who supported trump in 2020, was
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asked if the performance concerned him. >> of course it does. that's why i don't intend to support him for the republican nomination. >> reporter: new hampshire resident kristen berg said she wouldn't vote for trump again. >> i just think there was too much -- too much havoc that went on while he was in the presidency, and i think it was too much trump-friendly crowd, he rehashed false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. >> it was a rigged election. >> reporter: and lashed out at accuser e. jean carroll one day after a civil jury found trump had sexually abused her. >> she's a wack job. >> reporter: that didn't sit well with new hampshire independent voter melanie morton. >> i think it's amazing that he continues to shame and put her down. >> reporter: trump also called january 6th a beautiful day. >> they were there with love in their hearts. >> reporter: but the assault was deadly with more than 140 police officers injured. >> it was chaos. >> we were fighting for our life. >> reporter: trump said he'd
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pardon a large portion of the rioters. >> any thought on trump? >> reporter: house speaker kevin mccarthy ignored questions about it, but a missouri republican senator weighed in. >> if you're asking me do i think he should pardon people who engaged in rioting behavior, i don't. >> reporter: president biden posted a video attacking trump for the remarks, tweting, do you want four more years of that? on the war in ukraine, trump refused to say vladimir putin was a war criminal or whether he backed ukraine. >> do you want ukraine to win this war? >> uh, i don't think in terms of winning and losing. >> reporter: former new jersey republican governor chris christie said he was stunned. >> i think he's a coward, and i think he's a puppet of putin. i really do. >> reporter: leading new hampshire republican jason osborne said trump's turn benefited potential challenger ron desantis, whom he supports. >> i think the opening was there and this just kind of solidifies it. president trump is not changing his routine. he's not changing his rhetoric. >> reporter: sources close to the ongoing investigations of trump say the former president
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might have put himself in legal jeopardy due to the way he detailed last night his conduct related to january 6th, classified records, and his pressure campaign on election officials in georgia. norah. >> robert costa with all those new details, thank you so much. now a big development in the unsolved disappearance of american teenager natalee holloway in aruba 18 years ago. peru's government is allowing the prime suspect to be extradited to the u.s. on charges of trying to extort holloway's family. cbs's elaine quijano reports this brings the family a step closer to justice. >> reporter: it was in 2005 when 18-year-old natalee holloway disappeared while on a high school class trip to aruba. holloway was last seen leaving a bar with joran van der sloot and two other men. no charges were ever filed in holloway's disappearance. her body has never been recovered. now van der sloot could be
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extradited to the united states. van der sloot is in peru, serving a 28-year sentence for the 2010 murder of peruvian student stephanie flores. >> how unusual is it, rikki, to have an extradition take place so many years after an indictment like this? >> many times it is the political situation that may have been cold about extradition that suddenly much later becomes warm. >> reporter: van der sloot is accused of trying to extort a quarter of a million dollars from holloway's family, allegedly promising he would lead them to her body. prosecutors say van der sloot riedected $25,00 gerateintee meco that some criticized, accusing the media of ignoring other missing women. >> what made this story stand out was this public plea on the part of the mother, and it was also the fact that aruba was a very popular destination for
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american tourists. there was a concerted public relations campaign to get her back. >> reporter: it's not clear when the extradition would take place. van der sloot's attorney plans to fight it. in a statement, natalee holloway's mother thanked u.s. officials and the president of peru, and she noted her daughter would have been 36 years old now. she said she was blessed to have had natalee in her life for 18 years. norah. >> difficult to hear that. elaine quijano, thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. dove men invited dermatologists to test new advanced care body washes that start solving skin issues in the shower. it's a very great way to control your breakouts. for my clients with dry skin, i absolutely recommend this product.
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new dove men advanced care body washes. (peaceful music) - time to get up, sweetie! (kissing) - [child voiceover] most people might not think much about all the little things you do every day, but for me, just being able to do those little things is the best part of my day. - ready, mom! - [child voiceover] it hasn't been easy, but sometimes the hardest things in life have the best rewards. (inspirational music) and it's all because of my amazing friends at the shriners hospitals for children and people like you who support them every month. when you call the number on your screen and just give $19 a month, you'll be helping other kids like me do the amazing things that make up the best part of our day.
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- because shriners hospital is more than just a hospital. it's... - where my back gets better! - where my legs get stronger. - where i get to be a kid. - where it's the best part of my day! - with your gift of just $19 a month, only 63 cents a day, we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue blanket as a thank you. - [child voiceover] please go online to loveshriners.org right now on your phone or computer to send your love to the rescue today. - will you send your love to the rescue today? - thank you. - thank you. - thank you for giving. , going to tosis like going to see family! it really is the best part of my day. please call or go online right now to give. if operators are busy, please wait patiently, or go to loveshriners.org right away. your gift will help kids just like me have the best part of our day.
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♪♪ open talenti and raise the jar to gelato made from scratch. raise the jar to flavors from the world's finest ingredients. and now, from jars to bars. new talenti gelato and sorbetto mini bars. ♪♪ today officially marks the end of the covid public health emergency in the u.s., and it comes with significant changes. covid tests will no longer be paid for by the government. the cost shifts to insurers and patients. about 15 million people who gained access to medicaid during the pandemic are now at risk of losing that coverage. and with the change, the cdc will only track covid hospitalizations and not cases or transmission rates. health officials are still warning that while the emergency is over, covid is still a serious disease.
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this week, noaa scientists announced that much of the western u.s. is no longer under extreme drought conditions, but the record amounts of snow and rain this winter is not without consequences. in this week's "eye on america," cbs's jonathan vigliotti shows us the dramatic impact on flood-ravaged central california. >> reporter: california's central valley produces a quarter of the nation's food, but a brutal winter, a parade of violent storms scientists link to climate change has led to this.anpe for so many crops, a total loss. >> it's going to hurt. it's a lot of money. >> reporter: nader malakan is a pistachio farmer. 99% of the nation's supply is grown here. what's the value on that pain? >> $15 million probably right here. >> 15 million? >> yeah, that we've lost on 1,200 acres. >> reporter: the estimated
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damage from the floods, $1 billion so far. remarkably, an even greater danger awaits. tulare lake, which was drained a century ago and didn't even exist a few months ago, has returned with a vengeance. perched just outside corcoran, it looks like an ocean. and in the mountains above, one of california's largest snowpacks on record is starting to melt. forecasters say rising temperatures in the coming weeks could prove catastrophic. >> you kind of get an overwhelming sense of doom in a way. how do you stop this? >> reporter: with a lot of dirt, says farmer brenton goodhart at lakeshore dairy. >> you are looking at what we've come to call the great wall of stratford, and we've got 15 feet of dirt piled up. >> reporter: fema agents are on the ground assisting, but farmers say they are footing the bill to reinforce and add on to a nearly 15 mile long levee so it can hold back the rising tide. there's nowhere safe enough. >> this is where we house the
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milk cows. >> reporter: or large enough to move his barn of cows. >> is it possible where we're standing right now could be flooded out? >> yes. >> reporter: kings county supervisor doug verboon says crews will finish the levee before the next major melt, but there's no guarantee it will hold. >> mother nature is in control. we're just, you know, trying to put our finger in the dike as we go. >> reporter: tonight all hands are on deck while their hearts are sinking. >> we're a family farm. the family's been doing this for generations, and i'd hate to be the one that's at the wheel and we lose it all. >> reporter: for "eye on america," jonathan vigliotti, corcoran, california. >> we're thinking about our farmers. well, there's important news for parents of young children with peanut allergies. we're going to tell you about a when you really need to sleep. you reach for the really good stuff. zzzquil ultra helps you sleep better and longer when you need it most. its non-habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil.
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♪♪ open talenti and raise the jar to gelato made from scratch. raise the jar to flavors from the world's finest ingredients. and now, from jars to bars. new talenti gelato and sorbetto mini bars. ♪♪ want luxury hair repair that doesn't cost $50? pantene's pro-vitamin formula repairs hair. as well as the leading luxury bonding treatment. for softness and resilience, without the price tag. if you know... you know it's pantene. bug spray works best... when your family actually wears it. ♪♪ get odor-free eight hour protection from mosquitoes and ticks without the ick. zevo on-body repellent. people love it. bugs hate it. ♪♪ allergies don't have to be scary. (screaming) defeat allergy headaches fast with new flonase headache and allergy relief! two pills relieve allergy headache pain? and the congestion that causes it! flonase headache and allergy relief.
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psst! psst! all good! ♪♪ open talenti and raise the jar to gelato made from scratch. raise the jar to flavors from the world's finest ingredients. and now, from jars to bars. new talenti gelato and sorbetto mini bars. ♪♪ in tonight's "health watch," encouraging news for parents of young children with peanut allergies. researchers say a new experimental patch called viaskin showed promise in clinical trials. 67% of toddlers who wore the patch for a year were able to tolerate up to four peanuts with researchers seeing fewer severe reactions. the fda has asked the company to provide more safety data before considering approval. peloton recalls more than 2 million exercise bikes. why? that's next.
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now to an important consumer alert. peloton is recalling more than 2 million exercise bikes because the seat post can break, causing injuries. the recall impacts bikes with model numbers pl01. the company says at least 13 people reported cuts, bruises and even a fractured wrist after falling from the bike.
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all this week, we've been putting moms in focus ahead of mother's day. to finish out our special series, we asked you to tell us about the wonderful moms, grandmas, and caregivers in your lives. we got hundreds of submissions, and we loved reading every one of them. this story of a close-knit family gave us a chance to honor two dedicated moms across generations. >> so here's mom when she was a nurse. >> reporter: carol kemper, the oldest of five siblings, had no idea she was nominated by her little sister, beth hussar, who described carol as the mother of all mothers. >> beth, what qualities in carol do you admire? hess peonould emeet. >>pumping.
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>> reporter: that selflessness turned her passion for fitness into a successful personal training career focused on senior citizens and now parkinson's disease. >> all your weight on one side. >> reporter: it's a cause close to her heart. carol's brother-in-law was diagnosed with the disease in 2019. >> it sounds like love and dedication runs deep in your family. >> we watched our parents be devout catholics and dedicated to their families. it's just a natural response that we care for each other and are very close and loving with each other. >> reporter: so close, in fact, that carol is also the primary caretaker for her mom. >> the amount of work it is physically and mentally, my sister does that as well as everything else going on in her life. >> our mother's been through so much and carried through all of that with such grit and toughness and just handles everything with such grace, and i think that's -- that's carried down to us. >> reporter: the whole family de
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stands for, dedicated and ring. people like that deserve to be celebrated. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. friday's planned negotiations on the debt ceiling between president biden and congressional leaders have been postponed until next week. house speaker kevin mccarthy said there hasn't been enough progress to prompt another meeting. discussions will continue between staff. a federal judge ruled that a ban on selling handguns to 18 to 20-year-olds is unconstitutional, citing a supreme court ruling from last year on second amendment rights. the decision is expected to be appealed. and a survey from the conference board says 62% of workers were satisfied with their jobs in 2022. hybrid work and a tight labor market led to the highest rate in 36 years.
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for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. it's friday, may 12th, 2023. this is the "cbs morning news." bracing for chaos. overnight the pandemic-era border policy title 42 officially expired. we'll take you to el paso where migrants are lining up at the border. under arrest. a marine veteran expected to surrender today after putting a man in a choke hold on a subway train. the charges he's facing in the man's death. breaking overnight, powerful storms slam the central plains. twisters carving a path of destruction. the latest from hard-hit oklahoma. good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. tens of thousands ofig
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