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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 26, 2023 3:12am-4:31am PDT

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done. but i think the fact that elon and twitter were involved, for conservatives, that's meaningful. >> reporter: desantis planned to highlight his candidate in a live conversation with twitter ceo elon musk on the social media platform. but that roll-out staggered, leading to an apparent exodus of listeners by the time he announced. >> all right. i think we're broadcasting. man, i think we melted the internet there. governor desantis, are you there? can you hear us? >> i'm here. >> i know. i think you broke the internet there. >> reporter: although some desantis allies tell cbs news they were frustrated by the spectacle, others are brushing it off, looking ahead to desantis hitting the campaign trail to talk policy and take on the former president. >> i don't know what happened to donald trump. this is a different guy today than when he was running in 2015 and 2016, and i think the direction that he's going with his campaign is the wrong direction. >> reporter: trump called the campaign kickoff a disaster, and
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sound confident about his campaign while hitting the links at his virginia golf course. >> i guess the polls are very nice. >> top national republicans tell me they do not expect these technical issues to leave a permanent mark on the desantis campaign because he has enormous fundraising and field operations behind him. as he heads next week to iowa and then to new hampshire. norah? >> robert costa in miami for us, thank you so much. well, tonight an investigation is under way after an 11-year-old mississippi boy was shot by a police officer during a domestic disturbance call last weekend. the family of aderrien murry is calling on the officer to be fired and charged. cbs' omar villafranca reports community members want the police body cam foj to be released. >> reporter: he sought of the hospital, but 11-year-old aderrien murry still has bandages where he was shot in the chest by an indianola mississippi police officer last
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week. his mother, nakala murry, remembers the chaos and confusion while holding her bleeding son. >> he started singing gospel. he started praying. we started praying. we're very religious. >> reporter: did you think your son was going to die? >> at that moment, i didn't know. ♪ >> reporter: the murry family staged a sit-in today at indianola city hall, demanding police release body cam footage of the incident. >> that's my child, y'all. >> reporter: murry says her son called 911 after an irate ex-boyfriend showed up to her house. when officers arrived, family attorney carlos moore said indianola police banged on the door and ordered everyone inside the house out. >> he went out of his room and went towards the living room, and as soon as he got to the living room, he got shot by the same officer that told him to come out. >> reporter: he didn't have anything in his hands or arms?
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>> no, nothing. >> reporter: the officer identified as officer greg capers, who once received the officer of the year award. the murry family says they're not going anywhere until justice is served. >> the family deserves answers, and they deserve it sooner than later you. had an 11-year-old boy come within an inch of losing his life. >> reporter: we tried to reach capers, but couldn't get in contact with him. we also reached out to the indianola police chief, but he did not want to talk to us. and the police department said they're not releasing that body cam video because it is part of an active investigation. norah? >> omar villafranca, thank you. tonight, a 22-year-old connecticut woman is recovering from a shark attack. she lost her foot yesterday while snorkeling off the turks & caicos islands. the woman was reportedly a marathon runner, and on vacation celebrating her graduation from yale. it is not clear what type of shark bit her. officials on the islands say shark encounters there are rare. well, as we get into the
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summer season, people are spending more time in the ocean, and beneath the surface in some areas are great white sharks. researchers are now on the verge of learning more about the mysterious creatures in this week's "eye on america," cbs' carter evans joins a group of scientists on a research ship in the atlantic ocean as they zero in on the apex predators. >> reporter: 12 miles off the carolina coast, researchers are tracking great white sharks. >> one big mature aninimal w wo be a home run y yorz chrisis ha been studying these sharks off the east coast. >> we're seeing an ocean teeming with life like we haven't seen since the '40s or 50s. >> reporter: and he's said it's led to an increase in great white sharks. cbs news was there when oseart tagged its first one in 2012. they have now studied more than 90, tracking migration patterns online. >> we know almost everything
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expect where they mate. we believe that mating is likely going on somewhere in this region about now. >> reporter: with bait in the water, the sharks emerge. at this point we are literally surrounded by sharks. >> 15 footish. best guess is female. >> reporter: they're working like a nascar pit crew out here fast, trying to get these satellite tags installed. they brow blood samples and perform an ultrasound, all while the shark is awake. >> oh, my gosh. i've never been this close to such a massive animal before. >> reporter: seawater is pumped through her gills to keep her breathing. can i touch one of her teeth? >> yeah, you can. >> reporter: within minutes, samples are collected for 24 different scientific studies, including one testing hormone levels to see if she is mating. >> estimate the weight based on a formula. >> reporter: chief scientist says a healthy shark population is better for the entire planet. >> as we bring them back, then
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we set the ocean back into balance and reset the system so that we have the best health for not only for the sharks, but for ourselves. >> reporter: and now that there are more of these predators swimming among us -- >> we actually have to retrain ourselves on how to play and enjoy a more island abundant ocean. you don't want to walk into game fish because sharks are going to be on it. certainly if you saw a mountain lion putting a stalk on to a herd of elk, you wouldn't walk out. we need to approach the water the same way we approach the land. >> reporter: for "eye on america," i'm carter evans off the coast of the banks of north carolina. >> it's pretty cool. you can get a lot of information about each one of the sharks they have tracked. there was a security scare there was a security scare at the dove 0% with coconut and jasmine is aluminum free and kind to skin.
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♪ dove 0% with coconut and jasmine is aluminum free and gives you 48 hour odor protection. with a scent that goes strong all day long. and we're kinder to skin too. nobody's coconuts work harder. tonight president biden announced what he hopes will be a historic change of the guard at the highest rank of the u.s. mil military. the president named general charles q brown. we interviewed the general just last week. and if confirmed brown, now the air force chief of staff, would replace general mark milley, whose term ends in september. he would be the first african american to hold the top
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military post in 30 years since general colin powell. tonight a man is under arrest after driving his car into the geetates of downing stt in central london. that's where the british prime minister's home and offices are located. prime minister rishi sunak was in his office at the time. no one was hurt. graduates at an american university got a surprise commencement address from a famous world leader. that's next.
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importance of not wasting time and the ideals of freedom and democracy. they'll never forget that. alpine skiing legend mikaela shiffrin shares her secrets to breaking barriers and records in our latest person to person. we have a preview, next.
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female: mymy husband w worked a strip p job for a a number ofof years, gogot black lulu. 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. ♪♪♪ - life is uncertain. everyday pressures can feel overwhelming it's okay to feel stressed, anxious, worried, or frustrated. it's normal. with calhope's free and secure mental health resources, it's easy to get the help you and your loved ones need when you need it the most.
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call our warm line at (833) 317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today. finally tonight, an inspiring story of triumph. mikaela shiffrin became the most successful alpine skier earlier this year, winning her 88th world cup. that is more than any woman or man has ever won.
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in tonight's person to person, we sat down with shiffririn to didiscuss whatat it takes s to the highghest peak.. >> repeporter: mikaela shiffrin sailed into the history books, shattering a three decade long record set by sweden's's ingema ststenmark too become the best alpine skier in the world. you have broken more records in alpine skiing, not just for women, but for men too. >> it was a record resetting season. it's actually hard to put a definition on that, what it meanans or h how i reaeally feet i,i, but it's s pretty susurrea guess. >> repeporter: butut her journe the summit of the skiing world came with its challenges. how have you faced setbacks on the slope? >> not every day in life is going to be peperfect, andnd mo peopople strugglgle more than t win. and even with meme, we talkk a aboutt the records a and everytg ththat i achchieved thrhrough m career. and it's easy to think that it's all been good. but i've raised far more races than i've won. farr more races havave b been
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disappoiointing thrhroughout m entirere cacareer. >> repororter: but shiffrinn ha tuturned her strugglgles to suc, a mesessage she hopes inspires e next generation of ski racers. >> the records that i reset this season, they're not untouchable. somebody is going to reset those agagain. and thehe only way thehey're go do t that iss withh a support sm and with motivavation, worork e, and their ability to explore themselves through skiing and make the sport their own. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and remember, you can follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the national oceanic and atmospheric administration predicts a near normal hurricane
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season this year with 12 to 17 named storms expected to form. of those, five to nine could become hurricanes. the supreme court ruled on thursday to narrow the epa's authority to regulate certain wetlands under the clean air act. the court also ruled last june to limit the agency's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. and the nba and nhl finals are not set just yet. the boston celtics and dallas stars each won thursday to hold off elimination. they play next on saturday night. 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 the
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first in a wave of sentencings of the ten people convicted of seditious conspiracy for their role in the pro-trump january 6th assault on the capitol. well, today a federal judge handed down the most severe prison sentence to date to the eye-patched founder of the oath keepers. stewart rhodes, the 58-year-old leader of the far right and anti-government militia was sentenced to 18 years in prison for his crimes. rhodes remained defiant, declaring himself a political prisoner, while prior to the sentence, the judge had harsh words for rhodes, saying he led his followers during the insurrection in what amounted to domestic terrorism. the judge also told rhodes that he presents, quote, an ongoing threat and a peril to this country, to the republic, and to the very fabric of our democracy. cbs' scott macfarlane was inside the court. he is going to start us off tonight from outside the courthouse. good evening, scott. nega negative. >> norah, good evening. the judge said january 6th imperiled american democracy,
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and that stewart rhodes was a critical part of it. then the judge issued a sobering warning about the risks that lie ahead. stewart rhodes is a yale law grad, a former service member and founder of t the oath keepe who o was convicteted of conspi to mobobilize his own fighting force at the capitol january 6th, planning weeks in advance to raise money, prepare gear and to ready a team if then president trump invoked the insurrection act, which rhodes urged in a letter to trump. rhodes, who lost an eye in a firearms incident years ago, was also accused of leading a plot to stage guns as near the capitol as possible january 6th. federal judge amite mehta called rhodes an ongoing threat to america, then handed down a sentence that will keep rhodes in prison until nearly 2040. >> it's not only the longest sentence by a good amount, but it was backed up by the court saying, "you, sir, present a threat to the fabric of democracy." >> reporter: rhodes argued at sentencing that he is a political prisoner, that he and other trump supporters are being targeted by a regime, and he claimed the oath keepers were quiet professionals january 6th.
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in your opinion, this may have been targeted for the prospect of a future pardon? >> yes, that's the only practical sense i can make of it. now it's possible he really believes it and that he is completely deluded. >> reporter: judge mehta warned rhodes is undermining democracy, and said "we all now hold our collective breaths with an election approaching. will we have come january 6th? that remains to be seen." in court it was revealed rhodes continues to rile his followers in jailhouse calls. is he going to continue to try to galvanize people around the country? >> only rhodes knows that. >> reporter: late today also convicted of seditious conspiracy, kelly meggs was sentenced to 12 years in prison. norah, that marks several more oath keepers and proud boys facing sentencing for seditious conspiracy in the days, weeks and months. >> that's right.
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justice served there. all right, scott macfarlane, thank you. the holiday weekend got off to a rough start in florida where this funnel cloud was spotted over south miami this afternoon as a low-pressure system moves across the southeast. now that system could bring with it some heavy rains, strong winds, and possible flooding. so for more, let's bring in meteorologist alex wilson from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, alex. >> norah, it's going to be a very tough holiday weekend for folks in the southeast coastline. unfortunately, a low-pressure system going to bring us rain, gusty winds, and then very dangerous conditions in the water. rip currents, rough seas, small craft advisories are in effect. we've got those winds gusting at times 30 to even 40 miles an hour. rain lingers in the southeast through much of the weekend, but especially soggy saturday. other parts of the country beautiful start to the weekend. boston 75 on saturday. we stay dry on sunday across the midwest. cooler across sections of the west. even memorial day temperatures only in the low 60s. hurricane season begins a week from today, expecting a near average season. but again, norah, have to
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prepare now. it only takes one. >> alex, thank you. rain or shine, the unofficial start of the summer travel season is here with more than 42 million americans hitting the road, the rails, and the airports for the long holiday weekend. today is the busiest day for air travel, with more than 51,000 flights taking to the skies. cbs' kris van cleave reports on how airlines are hoping to avoid a repeat of last year's turbulence. >> reporter: jammed freeways and long lines a the airport. the memorial day travel rush is taking off. >> there is a lot of people. i'm from a really small place so, this is a little bit overwhelming. >> reporter: since saturday, tsa has screened over 12.1 million people, nearly 700,000 more than 2019. airlines added thousands of employees since last summer, when more than 45,000 flights were canceled. >> the biggest issue we have is weather and air traffic control delays. that's what we need to focus on.
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>> reporter: faa staffing issues prompted airlines to reduce flying and caused delays at the denver airport last weekend. you were very hard on the airlines about their staffing issues. a year later, atc is still having its own staffing issues. why hasn't that gotten fixed? >> well, look, we're going to own anything that's under our control. we're talking about 5% of the issue. we're hiring up, staffing up. meanwhile, the airlines, which are responsible for a much greater share of the delays and cancellations have made improvements since we really put that pressure on them a year ago. >> reporter: here at chicago o'hare, the airport expected today would be its busiest. nationally the tsa expects to screen even more people at airports tomorrow. if you're driving, aaa is projecting the peak of the peak rush to get out of town to be tomorrow between 3:00 and 6:00 p.m. norah? >> that's good information. kris van cleave, thank you so much. florida governor ron desantis is feeling the heat
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today following his glitch-filled launch of his presidential campaign. when his announcement was set to begin on twitter spaces, it had nearly 700,000 listeners. but after a disastrous set of technical difficulties, that number dropped to about 100,000 once it finally began. here is cbs' robert costa. >> and freedom is worth fighting for. >> reporter: florida governor ron desantis fending off critics and scrutiny after his presidential roll-out on twitter faced technical difficulties. >> i was just kind of waiting for it to happen that it did, and then we went on and got it done. but i think the fact that elon and twitter were involved, for conservatives, that's meaningful. >> reporter: desantis planned to highlight his candidate in a in a live conversation with twitter ceo elon musk on the social media platform. but that roll-out staggered, leading to an apparent exodus of listeners by the time he announced. >> all right. i think we're broadcasting. man, i think we melted the internet there. governor desantis, are you there? can you hear us? >> i'm here. >> i know.
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i think you broke the internet there. >> reporter: although some desantis allies tell cbs news they were frustrated by the spectacle, others are brushing it off, looking ahead to desantis hitting the campaign trail to talk policy and take on the former president. >> i don't know what happened to donald trump. this is a different guy today than when he was running in 2015 and 2016, and i think the direction that he's going with his campaign is the wrong direction. >> top officials tell me they do not expect it to leave a permanent mark on his campaign because he has enormous resources behind him as he heads next week to iowa and then new hampshire. hampshire. >> robert costa in miami dove 0% with coconut and jasmine is aluminum free and kind to skin. it dries instantly, with no visible residue. with 48 hour odor protection, nobody's coconuts work harder. want luxuxury hair r repair that d doesn't cosost $50?
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♪♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news."
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>> i'm jeff pegues in washington. thanks for staying with us. summer travel season kicks off in just a few short hours with the start of the memorial day weekend. 42 million americans are going to be traveling at least 50 miles over the next few days. and if you're one of them, you probably already know the price of everything is up. kris van cleave reports. >> reporter: kelsey elizondo and isaiah wright hoped their prememorial day vacation would be a money-saver. but heading home to salt lake from atlanta, they're feeling the pinch of vacation inflation. >> how expensive it is to fly. now it's crazy. we've traveled a lot prior to kids, and we felt like we could go anywhere, even on a budget. >> reporter: but with their 1-year-old and 4-year-old in tow, the costs added up fast. how much more did you spend, do you think? >> i'd say almost double. >> yeah, i'd say probably another -- probably another $2,000 more than we thought.
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>> reporter: in april, airfare jumped 2.7% from march, while it's down slightly from last summer, it's nearly 10% higher than it was before the pandemic. hotels are up 3.5% from last year, and up 15% from 2019. car rentals will likely be cheap their summer, down 11% from last year, but remain 51% higher than four years ago. >> vacation inflation is huge this summer. we're seeing high demand in travel, and with that, we're seeing high prices. >> reporter: sally french tracks vacation inflation for nerd wallet. >> so people should expect to pay more for their travel than they have in even the past several years. >> reporter: 35% said they opted to drive instead of fly to save money with gas prices more than a dollar lower on average than last year. we met jacob rash filling up this rv at a bucky's in georgia for $2.85 a gallon.
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>> i didn't gas would be that much of an issue, but i spent like a thousand dollars and we dent go more than 200 miles. it's crazy. >> reporter: and the cost to do things on vacation, that's up too. food away from home jumped nearly 9% from last year. 24% from 2019. movies and concerts will cost you about 7% more than last year. >> what we went in thinking we were going to spend versus what we actually spent was crazy. >> that was kris van cleave reporting. turning now to the race to space. in the next few months, two start-ups plan to launch the first of what they hope will be a fleet of lunar landers. so far only three countries have managed to land on the moon, and now private companies are racing to make a business out of it. here is mark strassmann. >> reporter: when intuitive machines went public in february, nasdaq's bell also rang as a reminder that space is now big business. >> this is mission control.
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>> it's circular. it's smaller. >> we designed this to be like the bridge of the starship enterprise. >> reporter: steve altimis intends to deliver cargo to the moon. he is founder and ceo of intuitive machines in houston. >> we're delivering scientific pay loads, engineering pay loads but not the humans themselves. >> reporter: you believe the moon is the next economic frontier? >> for space, the moon is certainly that next step for space exploration. it's within our grasp. let's go get it. >> ten miles to go. >> reporter: nothing american-made has touched lunar dust since apollo 17 more than a half century ogg oregon. >> okay, has landed! >> reporter: but nasa intends to return astronauts there in a program called artemis, and altimis envisions a major lunar market with scientists and companies. >> this is it.
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>> reporter: his company building a fleet of lunar landers. its goal, annual launches to delivery addresses a quarter million miles away. the first, called nova-c aims to carry cargo to the moon's south pole later this summer. >> lunar services. that's about $100 billion market. and so it was enough for us to say we're all in. >> reporter: if intuitive machines is the fed ex or ups of the space delivery market, think of astrobotic in pittsburgh as dhl. >> this is the lander. >> reporter: john thornton is ceo. he gave us a peak at the company's first lander called peregrine. we watched them attach the final major piece, the propulsion system. >> it's a little bit of a jigsaw puzzle. it's like a moving van. >> it is a jigsaw puzzle indeed. we're trying to maximize the performance of the vehicle. >> reporter: its first mission will carry 21 payloads to the lunar surface, including this
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small student-built rover for carnegie mellon university, and five instruments for nasa. >> right now nasa is the primary customer. over time, we see commercial coming online in a bigger way, and right now we actually can sell directly to consumers who want to send things to the surface of the moon. >> reporter: peregrine can carry roughly 100 pounds of cargo. griffin, its second lander, much bigger, can carry ten times that, delivering this water hunting nasa rover. but remember, space is unforgiving. >> attempting to reestablish communication with our lander. >> reporter: a japanese spacecraft crash landed on the moon in april. in 2019, both indian and israeli lunar missions ended the same way. thornton tells his customers delivery is absolutely positively not guaranteed. >> all we can promise our customers is we are putting everything we possibly can into these missions to make them as safe and successful as they can be. >> reporter: just land softly. that's the key.
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>> bouncing doesn't help anyone. >> reporter: if you're bouncing and you stay upright, that might be okay. >> but if you bounce and topple? >> reporter: that's no good. for a successful touchdown, the lunar's engine has to perform. from behind a blast wall, we watched intuite tutsitive machines test fire. >> three, two, one. >> reporter: on descent, the main engine needs to fire for eight straight minutes and throttle down for a soft landing. wow. that's quite impressive. >> yeah. >> reporter: nasa plans to spend $2.6 billion over the next decade buying delivery services. in all, 14 different american companies are building lunar landers. >> right now we have routine regular access to the skies. i think by decades' end, we'll have routine regular access to the moon. >> reporter: high risk, high reward for any company creating space in this emerging market. mark strassmann in houston.
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nobody's coconuts work harder. whenen you realllly need to o . you reacach for thee reallyly good stufuff. zzzquiuil ultra hehelps you u sleep betttter and d longer whehen you u need it momost. its non-hahabit formining and popowered by t the makers s of . want a a worry-freree way y to kill bubugs? zevovo traps usese light to attractct and trapp flyingng insects w with no odr and d no mess. they work k continuoususly, soso you don''t have t to. zevo. . people-fririendly. bug-g-deadly. tears and tributes continue to flow after the passing of the queen of rock 'n roll, tina turner. she died peacefully tuesday at her home in switzerland. turner was more than an icon, she was an inspiration to millions of people. she was awarded 12 grammys and
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inducted into the rock & roll hall of fame twice. her stirring life story inspired an acclaimed movie and a hit broadway musical. fans are paying their respects at the tina turner museum near her hometown in tennessee, as well as her adopted country as switzerland, where she quietly spent her later years. anthony mason looks back on her life and an amazing legacy. >> reporter: for a sense of just how influential tina was, look at the tributes that have poured in from the music industry and beyond. rolling stone's front man mick jagger remembered her as inspiring, warm, funny, and generous. dionne warwick called her an eternal ball of energy. and angela bassett, who earned an oscar nomination for her 1993 porl trail of the singer said her porl trail showed others who live in fear what a future filled with love, compassion and field should look like.
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♪ better than all the rest ♪ >> reporter: tina turner was simply the best. an electric perform were a booming soulful voice that made you hang on every word she said. ♪ you're the best ♪ born anna mae bullock in nutbush, tennessee in 1939, she planned on becoming a nurse, until musician ike turner discovered her as an 18-year-old and later married her. it was ike who changed her name to tina. ♪ >> reporter: in the 1960s and '70s, the ike and tina turner review became hugely successful, with hits like "river deep, mountain high" and the grammy winning "proud mary." ♪ rolling, rolling, rolling down the river ♪ >> reporter: but ike was notoriously abusive, something
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turner spoke about with gayle king in a 2018 sunday morning interview. >> he didn't like that he had to depend on me, and i didn't want to start a fight because always a black eye, a broken nose, a busted lip. >> reporter: she left the marriage in 1976, with less than $1 to her name, which she went to court to keep. ♪ and your private dancer, dancer for money, do what you want me to do ♪ >> reporter: it wasn't until years later that turner made her comeback with the release of her 1984 album private dancer. the recording academy would recognize her as a solo artist for that work. ♪ oh, what's love got to do, got to do with it ♪ >> reporter: awarding turner three grammy, two of them including record of the year for her chart-topping hit "what's love got to do with it." ♪ who needs a heart when a heart
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can be broken ♪ >> reporter: a song she told gayle that didn't impress her at first. >> the day of recording, from what roger said, tina, i think this song is going to hit. i said okay, i can sing it, but i don't like it, rog. so i went in the studio and applied my voice compared to the girls. >> you tinaed it up. >> i tinaed it up, yes. >> reporter: to teen it up meant to infuse her own style and flare, including that incomparable voice, and beautiful wigs that turner made herself, sparkling outfits, and those high octane dance moves. ♪ but turner dazzled even when all of that was stripped away. ♪ ♪ let's stay together ♪ >> reporter: as in this 1996 appearance on "60 minutes."
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♪ whether times are good or bad, happy or sad ♪ >> reporter: turner spent the last years of her life in switzerland with her husband, ervin bach, who she met when she was 46. she said as far as she was concerned, that was her first marriage. >> i had a very hard life, but i didn't put blame on any thing or anyone. i got through it, i lived through it with no blame. >> here's to you. >> and i'm a happy person. >> here's to you. you earned it. >> cheers. >> and her music lives on. (male) there are many voices in today's world. everyone is voicing their opinions about everything,
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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. - life is uncertain. everyday pressures can feel overwhelming it's okay to feel stressed, anxious, worried, or frustrated. it's normal. with calhope's free and secure mental health resources, it's easy to get the help you and your loved ones need when you need it the most.
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call our warm line at (833) 317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today. 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. ready or not, the metaverse is coming to a classroom near you. ian lee has the story from london. >> reporter: putting your thinking cap on in this classroom means strapping on a virtual headset, a window into
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the digital world where anything can happen. . that is way too big. it needs to come back down, please. >> reporter: from exploring the planet to visiting world renowned museums. >> there is a deeper understanding because they can manipulate an object. they can see it from all sides. they can see how it works. >> reporter: these british students log into their metaverse school, connecting them with classmates around the world. >> the metaverse school is a digital twin, a copy of this building in virtuality that brings people from all around the world to be taught invirtuality. so 84 different schools in 24 different countries. >> reporter: using vr, not the magic school bus, they can shrink down to investigate the human body. >> up close to you. >> it was really cool how i got to put the heart in a different place. because if you were in a normal classroom, you can't do that. >> some of the most impressive things we can do are science experiments that would otherwise be impossible or too dangerous to do in a classroom.
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>> reporter: the technology can also help the past come alive. >> we've used it in history to go back in time, experience things like world war ii from the ground. >> reporter: by bringing lessons to life, teachers say students learn more, while literally reaching for the stars. ian lee, cbs news, london. that is the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and you can always follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm jeff pegues. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the national oceanic and atmospheric administration predicts a near normal hurricane season this year with 12 to 17
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named storms expected to form. of those, five to nine could become hurricanes. the supreme court ruled on thursday to narrow the epa's authity to regulate certain wetlands under the clean air water act. the court also ruled last june to limit the agency's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. and the nba and nhl finals are not set just yet. the boston celtics and dallas stars each won t rsday to hold off elimination. they play next on saturday night. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. york. tonight, the founder of the far right group the oath keepers sentenced to 18 years in prison for seditious conspiracy and other crimes, the longest sentence for charges related to the january 6th attack on the capitol.
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>> here are tonight's headlines. >> 18 years will keep stewart rhodes in prison up to the 2040s. >> the strong message from the judge, calling rhodes an ongoing threat to this country and its democracy. >> rhodes is not going to be quiet. rhodes has an opinion. debt ceiling negotiations remain at a stand still just one week from a possible default. >> america should always pay our bills. a botched announcement, the twitter meltdown during ron desantis' much anticipated run for president, and on day one, the florida governor attacks donald trump. >> i don't know what happened to donald trump. this is a different guy today than when he was running in 2015. the shocking story of an 11-year-old boy shot by a police officer in mississippi. >> aderrien murry was shot in the chest this weekend when officers responded to a domestic call at his home. >> his first words to me was,
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"why did he shoot me? what did i do?" traveling for the holiday weekend? we'll have the weather and travel forecast. it's a 13-foot great white shark. they're thriving off the east coast right now, and we'll explain why. and we go person to person with olympian mikaela shiffrin. how she turns struggles into success. >> to be here now is pretty surreal. ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> we begin tonight with the first in a wave of sentencings of the ten people convicted of seditious conspiracy for their role in the pro-trump january 6th assault on the capitol. well, today a federal judge handed down the most severe prison sentence to date to the
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eye-patched founder of the oath keepers. stewart rhodes, the 58-year-old leader of the far right and anti-government militia was sentenced to 18 years in prison for his crimes. rhodes remained defiant, declaring himself a political prisoner, while prior to the sentence, the judge had harsh words for rhodes, saying he led his followers during the insurrection in what amounted to domestic terrorism. the judge also told rhodes that he presents, quote, an ongoing threat and a peril to this country, to the republic, and to the very fabric of our democracy. cbs' scott macfarlane was inside the court. he is going to start us off tonight from outside the courthouse. good evening, scott. >> norah, good evening. the judge said january 6th imperiled american democracy, and that stewart rhodes was a critical part of it. then the judge issued a sobering warning about the risks that lie ahead. stewart rhodes is a yale law grad, a former service member and founder of the oath keeper, who was convnvicted of cononspi to mobililize his own n fightin force at the capitol january 6th, planning weeks in advance
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to raise money, prepare gear and to ready a team if then president trump invoked the insurrection act, which rhodes urged in a letter to trump. rhodes, who lost an eye in a firearms incident years ago, was also accused of leading a plot to stage guns as near the capitol as possible january 6th. federal judge amit mehta called roads an ongoing threat to america, then handed down a sentence that will keep rhodes in prison until nearly 2040. >> it's not only the longest sentence by a good amount, but it was backed up by the court saying, "you, sir, present a threat to the fabric of democracy." >> reporter: rhodes argued at sentencing that he is a political prisoner, that he and other trump supporters are being targeted by a regime, and he claimed the oath keepers were quiet professionals january 6th. in your opinion, this may have been targeted for the prospect of a future pardon? >> yes, that's the only practical sense i can make of it. now it's possible he really believes it and that he is
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completely deluded. >> reporter: judge mehta warned rhodes is undermining democracy, and said "we all now hold our collective breaths with an election approaching. will we have come january 6th? that remains to be seen." >> in court it was revealed rhodes continues to rile his followers in jailhouse calls. is he going to continue to try to galvanize people around the country? >> only rhodes knows that. >> late today another oath keeper convicted of seditious conspiracy. kelly meggs sentenced to 12 years in prison. that in keeping with several oath keepers and proud boys facing sentencing for seditious conspiracy in the days and weeks and months. >> that's right. justice served there. all right, scott macfarlane, thank you. the holiday weekend got off to a rough start in florida where this funnel cloud was spotted over south miami this afternoon as a low-pressure system moves across the southeast. now that system could bring with it some heavy rains, strong winds, and possible flooding. so for more, let's bring in
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meteorologist alex wilson from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, alex. >> norah, it's going to be a very tough holiday weekend for folks in the southeast coastline. unfortunately, a low-pressure system going to bring us rain, gusty winds, and then very dangerous conditions in the water. rip currents, rough seas, small craft advisories are in effect. we've got those winds gusting at times 30 to even 40 miles an hour. rain lingers in the southeast through much of the weekend, but especially soggy saturday. other parts of the country beautiful start to the weekend. boston 75 on saturday. we stay dry on sunday across the midwest. cooler across sections of the west. even memorial day temperatures only in the low 60s. hurricane season begins a week from today, expecting a near average season. but again, norah, have to prepare now. it only takes one. >> alex, thank you. rain or shine, the unofficial start of the summer travel season is here with more than 42 million americans hitting the road, the rails, and the airports for the long holiday weekend.
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today is the busiest day for air travel, with more than 51,000 flights taking to the skies. cbs' kris van cleave reports on how airlines are hoping to avoid a repeat of last year's turbulence. >> reporter: jammed freeways and long lines a the airport. the memorial day travel rush is taking off. >> there is a lot of people. i'm from a really small place so, this is a little bit overwhelming. >> reporter: since saturday, tsa has screened over 12.1 million people, nearly 700,000 more than 2019. airlines added thousands of employees since last summer, when more than 45,000 flights were canceled. >> the biggest issue we have is weather and air traffic control delays. that's what we need to focus on. >> reporter: faa staffing issues prompted airlines to reduce flying and caused delays at the denver airport last weekend. you were very hard on the airlines about their staffing issues. a year later, atc is still having its own staffing issues. why hasn't that gotten fixed?
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>> well, look, we're going to own anything that's under our control. we're talking about 5% of the issue. we're hiring up, staffing up. meanwhile, the airlines, which are responsible for a much greater share of the delays and cancellations have made improvements since we really put that pressure on them a year ago. >> reporter: here at chicago o'hare, the airport expected today would be its busiest. nationally the tsa expects to screen even more people at airports tomorrow. if you're driving, aaa is projecting the peak of the peak rush to get out of town to be tomorrow between 3:00 and 6:00 p.m. norah? >> that's good information. kris van cleave, thank you so much. there is a lot more ahead on the "cbs overn
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♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." now to congress. house lawmakers are heading out
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of town tonight over the long holiday weekend without a deal in place to raise the debt ceiling. the treasury department says the government is at risk of an unprecedented debt default as early as next week. cbs news has learned the latest proposal from the white house includes extending the debt limit past the 2024 presidential election and capping spending for two years. florida governor ron desantis is feeling the heat today following his glitch-filled launch of his presidential campaign. when his announcement was set to begin on twitter spaces, it had nearly 700,000 listeners. but after a disastrous set of technical difficulties, that number dropped to about 100,000 once it finally began. here is cbs' robert costa. >> and freedom is worth fighting for. >> reporter: florida governor ron desantis fending off critics and scrutiny after his presidential roll-out on twitter faced technical difficulties. >> i was just kind of waiting for it to happen that it did, and then we went on and got it done. but i think the fact that elon and twitter were involved, for
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conservatives, that's meaningful. >> reporter: desantis planned to highlight his candidate in a candidacy in a live conversation with twitter ceo elon musk on the social media platform. but that roll-out staggered, leading to an apparent exodus of listeners by the time he announced. >> all right. i think we're broadcasting. man, i think we melted the internet there. governor desantis, are you there? can you hear us? >> i'm here. >> i know. i think you broke the internet there. >> reporter: although some desantis allies tell cbs news they were frustrated by the spectacle, others are brushing it off, looking ahead to desantis hitting the campaign trail to talk policy and take on the former president. >> i don't know what happened to donald trump. this is a different guy today than when he was running in 2015 and 2016, and i think the direction that he's going with his campaign is the wrong direction. >> reporter: trump called the campaign kickoff a disaster, and
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sounded confident about his campaign while hitting the links at his virginia golf course. >> i guess the polls are very nice. >> top national republicans tell me they do not expect these technical issues to leave a permanent mark on the desantis campaign because he has enormous fundraising and field operations behind him, as he heads next week to iowa and then to new hampshire. norah? >> robert costa in miami for us, thank you so much. well, tonight an investigation is under way after an 11-year-old mississippi boy was shot by a police officer during a domestic disturbance call last weekend. the family of aderrien murry is calling on the officer to be fired and charged. cbs' omar villafranca reports community members want the police body cam footage to be released. >> reporter: he is out of the hospital, but 11-year-old aderrien murry still has bandages where he was shot in the chest by an indianola, mississippi police officer last week.
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his mother, nakala murry, remembers the chaos and confusion while holding her bleeding son. >> he started singing gospel. he started praying. we started praying. we're very religious. >> reporter: did you think your son was going to die? >> at that moment, i didn't know. ♪ >> reporter: the murry family staged a sit-in today at indianola city hall, demanding police release body cam footage of the incident. >> that's my child, y'all. i held him while he bled. >> reporter: murry says her son called 911 after an irate ex-boyfriend showed up to her house. when officers arrived, family attorney carlos moore said indianola police banged on the door and ordered everyone inside the house out. >> he went out of his room and went towards the living room, and as soon as he got to the living room, he got shot by the same officer that told him to come out. >> reporter: he didn't have anything in his hands or arms? >> nothing. he had nothing.
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>> reporter: moore and local media have identified the man who shot murry as officer greg capers, who once received the officer of the year award. the murry family says they're not going anywhere until justice is served. >> the family deserves answers, and they deserve it sooner than later you. you had an 11-year-old boy come within an inch of losing his life. >> reporter: we tried to reach capers, but couldn't get in contact with him. we also reached out to the indianola police chief, but he did not want to talk to us. and the police department said they're not releasing that body cam video because it is part of an active investigation. norah? >> omar villafranca, thank you. tonight, a 22-year-old connecticut woman is recovering from a shark attack. she lost her foot yesterday while snorkeling off the turks & caicos islands. the woman was reportedly a marathon runner, and on vacation celebrating her graduation from yale. it is not clear what type of shark bit her. officials on the islands say shark encounters there are rare. well, as we get into the summer season, people are
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spending more time in the ocean, and beneath the surface in some areas are great white sharks. researchers are now on the verge of learning more about the mysterious creatures in this week's "eye on america," cbs' carter evans joins a group of scientists on a research ship in the atlantic ocean as they zero in on the apex predators. >> reporter: 12 miles off the carolina coast, researchers are tracking great white sharks. >> one big mature animal would be a home run. >> reporter: chris fisher's ocearch has been studying these sharks off the coast for the last decade. >> we're seeing an ocean teeming with life like we haven't seen since the '40s or 50s. >> reporter: and he's said it's led to an increase in the number of white sharks. cbs news was there when ocearch tagged its first one in 2012. they have now studied more than 90, tracking migration patterns online. >> we know almost everything except proving where they mate.
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>> reporter: so this location is the key area? >> yes. we believe that mating is likely going on somewhere in this region about now. >> reporter: with bait in the water, the sharks emerge. at this point we are literally surrounded by sharks. >> 15 footish. best guess is female. >> reporter: they're working like a nascar pit crew out here fast, trying to get these satellite tags installed. they brow blood samples and perform an ultrasound, all while the shark is awake. >> oh, my gosh. i mean, i've never been this close to such a massive animal before. >> reporter: seawater is pumped through her gills to keep her breathing. can i touch one of her teeth? >> yeah, you can. >> reporter: within minutes, samples are collected for 24 different scientific studies, including one testing hormone levels to see if she is mating. >> estimate the weight based on a formula. >> reporter: chief scientist dr. bob putter says a healthy shark population is better for the entire planet.
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>> as we bring them back, then we set the ocean back into balance and reset the system so that we have the best health for not only for the sharks, but for ourselves. >> reporter: and now that there are more of these predators swimming among us -- >> we actually need to retrain ourselves on how to play and enjoy a more wild, abundant ocean. you don't want to walk into game fish because sharks are going to be on it. certainly if you saw a mountain lion putting a stalk on to a herd of elk, you wouldn't walk out into the middle of the elk herd. we need to approach the water the same way we approach the land. >> reporter: for "eye on america," i'm carter evans off the coast of the banks of north carolina. >> and you can actually see where sharks are with ocearch's tracker. it's pretty cool. i have this on my phone. you can get a lot of information about each one of the sharks they have tracked. there was a security scare at the home of britain's prime minister today when a car minister today when a car crashed into the gates. ♪ ♪
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general colin powell. tonight a man is under arrest after driving his car into the gates of downing street in central london. that's where the british prime minister's home and offices are located. prime minister rishi sunak was in his office at the time. no one was hurt. graduates at an american university got a surprise commencement address from a famous world leader. that's next.
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nobody's coconuts work harder. graduates of johns hopkins university got a big surprise today when they learned ukraine's leader president zelenskyy was delivering their commencement address. zelenskyy spoke to the crowd in baltimore through a live video feed from ukraine. he received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree. and in his speech, all in english, he focused on the importance of not wasting time and the ideals of freedom and democracy.
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they'll never forget that. alpine skiing legend mikaela shiffrin shares her secrets to breaking barriers and records in our latest person to person. we have a preview, next. - life is uncertain. everyday pressures can feel overwhelming
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it's okay to feel stressed, anxious, worried, or frustrated. it's normal. with calhope's free and secure mental health resources, it's easy to get the help you and your loved ones need when you need it the most. call our warm line at (833) 317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today.
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finally tonight, an inspiring story of triumph. mikaela shiffrin became the most successful alpine skier earlier this year, winning her 88th world cup. that is more than any woman or man has ever won. in tonight's person to person,
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we sat down with shiffrin to discuss what it takes to reach the highest peak. >> reporteter: mikaelala shiffr saililed into ththe history y b shattering a three decade long record set by sweden's ingemar stenmark to become the best alpine skier in the world. you have broken more records in alpine skiing, not just for women, but for men too. >> it was a record resetting season. it's actually hard to put a definition on that, what it means or how i really feel about it, but it's pretty surreal, i guesess. >> reporter: but herer journey the susummit of ththe skiing w came with its challenges. how have you faced setbacks on the slope? >> not every day in life is going to be perfect, and most people struggle more than they win.n. and even w with me, wewe talk a about the records and eveverythg that i i achieved d through my career.. and itit's easy toto think thahs alall been gooood. but i've raised far more races than i've won. far more races have been disappointing g throughoutut my entire c career.
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> reporter:r: but shiffffrin turneded her struggles t to suc, a memessage she e hopes inspspie nenext generatation of skiki ra. >> the records that i reset this season, they're not untouchable. somebody is going to reset those again. and the only way they're going do that isis with a susupport sm and withth motivatioion, work e, and their abilility to expxplor themselves through skiing and make the sport their own. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and remember, you can follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the national oceanic and atmospheric administration predicts a near normal hurricane season this year with 12 to 17
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named storms expected to form. of those, five to nine could become hurricanes. the supreme court ruled on thursday to narrow the epa's authority to regulate certain wetlands under the clean air water act. the court also ruled last june to limit the agency's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. and the nba and nhl finals are not set just yet. the boston celtics and dallas stars each won thursday to hold off elimination. they play next on saturday night. 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 26th, 2023, this is the cbs morning news. inching closer, after another

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