tv CBS Overnight News CBS August 25, 2023 3:12am-4:31am PDT
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>> i said, can you come get you? she said, no, don't come anywhere near here. i'm going to find a way out. she was terrified. >> reporter: she also text herd boyfriend? >> shoot, e.r., help, help. >> if something happens to me, know that i'm thinking about you. >> reporter: another patron at the bar took this video. >> oh, my god. marie. >> marie snowling had been severely wounded. marie's estranged husband, an ex-cop, identified as the shooter. >> we do not believe that there was any argument that ensued. he drew a weapon. she was struck once. >> reporter: john snowling allegedly killed three and wounded six others before being killed in an exchange of gunfire with deputies. snowling worked nearly three decades with the city of ventura police department, retiring in 2014 as a sergeant. now as investigators piece together what happened -- >> what was going through your mind? >> i was going to die. i was going to get shot. innocent people were being
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killed. >> reporter: now, the six survivors were all rushed to the hospital with gunshot wounds. two are in critical condition, including the suspect's estranged wife. the other four are stable. now, this bar behind me, it's been a landmark here in southern california for more than a century. now it's known as the scene of the nation's latest mass shooting. norah. >> carter everans, thank you. turning now to politics, sparks were flying last night during the first presidential debate of the 2024 election. with gop front-runner donald trump not in attendance, eight other republican candidates went after each other as they tried to stand out from the crowded field of contenders. and cbs's robert costa was there. >> reporter: republican presidential candidates pushed ahead today in the wake of a contentious debate where the front-runner was a no-show. >> it didn't matter to me last night in the end that he wasn't there. >> reporter: political newcomer vivek ramaswamy won attention. >> do you want a super pac
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puppet, or do you want a patriot who speaks the truth? >> reporter: and he also drew attacks. >> now is not the time for on the job training. we don't need to bring in a rookie. >> i've had enough already tonight of a guy who sounds like chatgpt. >> reporter: but the difference is on the big issues were also front and center. on ukraine, a stark divide over whether the u.s. should continue to support that embattled nation as it fends off a russian invasion and whether allies should do more. >> i will have europe to pull their weight. right now they're not doing that. >> ukraine is not a priority for the united states of america. >> you have no foreign policy experience, and it shows. >> and you know what? >> it shows. >> anybody that thinks we can't solve the problems here in the united states and be the leader of the free world has a pretty small view of the greatest nation on earth. >> reporter: on former president donald trump, whose interview with tucker carlson posted just before the debate, there were sharp words over his four
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indictments and efforts to overturn the 2020 election. >> someone's got to stop normalizing this conduct, okay? >> he asked me to put him over the constitution, and i chose the constitution. >> reporter: but many onstage said they'd still back trump as the nominee even if he's convicted. >> please raise your hand if you would. [ cheers and applause ] >> reporter: on abortion rights, there were standoffs over possible restrictions. >> we must have a president of the united states who will advocate and fight for, at the minimum, a 15-week limit. >> would you sign a six-week ban federally? >> i'm going to stand on the side of life. >> can't we all agree that we are not going to put a woman in jail or give her the death penalty if she gets an abortion? >> reporter: and inside the desantis campaign, there is confidence tonight that he largely avoided becoming a target onstage. behind the scenes, his donors tell me they believe desantis
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solidified his standing after a tough summer. but strategists for other contendsers tell me the road ahead for rivals is tricky, especially as trump supporters echo his grievances about these latest indictments. norah. >> robert costa, thank you very much. the trial of quadruple murder suspect bryan kohberger has been indefinitely delayed. kohberger, who waived his right to a speedy trial, is charged with the brutal stabbing of four university of idaho students last november. his attorneys requested the delay, saying they need more time to prepare their defense. kohberger has pleaded not guilty.
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and hellllo amazing g fresh. febreze aiair mist. tonight, the county of maui filed a lawsuit against the hawaiian electric company alleging the utility's neglect caused the deadliest wildfire in the u.s. in more than a century. meanwhile, cbs's ben tracy reports the search for victims now includes both the burnt-out ruins and the sea where many tried to escape. >> reporter: divers are scouring a four-mile stretch of water off lahaina, searching for any human remains. scores of people jumped into the water to escape the fast-moving fifire on augusust 8th. not eveveryone made i it out. back onshore, the painstakingly grim search for the dead continues. >> the amount of fire destruction that's happened here makes everything blend together. >> r reporter: m mike pruetett t of fema's search team, now
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focused on combing through the town's multistory and commercial properties. hundreds of emergency personnel and k-9 units are part of the search. >> why is it taking so long to get through the entire town? >> it takes inch by inch, meticulous looking through every bit of ash, looking for anything that might resemble remains. >> reporter: the fbi is analyzing cell data to try to identify who might be among the missing, and maui officials plan to soon release a list of more than 1,000 still unaccounted for. >> this isn't fair. i feel like i was used. i feel like crap on the ground. >> reporter: meanwhile, residents who have lost nearly everything vented their understandable anger over the government's response to the fire, demanding accountability. >> they failed here. they failed. the government failed. >> reporter: there is hope here in lahaina that when they release that list of the
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unaccounted for, that many of the people on the list will actually be alive and just not know they were on that list. wildfire destroyed the town of paradise, california, back in 2018, and they released a similar list. that had 1,300 people on it, and norah, they were able to whittle that down to less than 12. >> good perspective. >> good perspective. let't's hop america, k klondike® wants s to know whatat your homemetown wowould do foror a klondikik. let's see e what's upp with h hilldale. [cheheering and d applause]] ♪ some luxurury creams just sitit on top ofof skin. but olay g goes 1010 surface l layers deepe. ouour clinicalally provoven hydratition beats ththe $500 creream. toto strengthehen my skinn for smoothther, brbrighter resesults. your b best skin y yet. olay.
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nuclear plant disaster into the pacific. japan says the water is safe, and a u.n. watchdog agrees. the first batch could fill three olympic-sized swimming pools. 31,000 tons of water will be released by next march. critics charge the long-range impact is unclear. in tonight's "eye on america," a closer look at the icon of the american west, the bison. 60 million bison once roamed north america. cbs's adam yamaguchi reports on the enormous efforts to reintroduce this majestic animal to native american territitory. >> reporter: at the fort pick indian r reservationon in montna bisoson calf jusust a fewew hou is thehe n newest membersrs of the firsrst herdsds too roam th lalands inn more than a a cecen >> this musust be realllly spec for yoyou. >> my generatioion nevever goto grow u up aroundd buffalo.o. now my c children a and my grandcdchildren are ablble to witntness themm being on our homelandnds. >> robby mananages thehe fisish gameme departmement, oversesee bisoson herd statarte morore th yearss ago t that has now groro
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800. >> lolook. >> wowow. > she's reaeady to move. >> thahat was fastst. >> that't's mother r nanature'so get thehem movining rigight quq >> repororter: the f fort peckk buffalalo programam is part of project to r reintroducece biso tribal lands throughout the country using animals from yellowstonone nationanal parkrk. the herdrd at yelellowstone i i its s regulatedd capacityty, an to brucucellosis, a bacterial disease thahat can leavave stil bibirths in cattttle, bisonon a protecected outsidide the papar. thee only w way they're able to leave y yellowstonene is comple a ququarantine t that culmimina ththe testiting facilityy i in peckck. > cororralling 76 head o of bubuffalo. >> unwiwilling buffffalo. >> c come on. fofollow me. wewe're goingng t to take t the here. comeme on, comee on,, m move it! yoyou canan't givive them time think. >> ninice. ththere youou go.
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wow. >> this way.y. got t it! >> r reporter: t the q quaranti prograram has protetected h hun of animalsls from s slaughter a reintrtroduced bisonon to 24 tr acacross 12 stateses. but adadvocates s say it i is unnecessssary sincece cattltle never cocontracted b brucellosi from w wild bison. > i f feel sad when there ar animalals in a system a and buffaloeoes stress o out v very. butt in o order to savee your l i g got to do this. and thenn i don't feeeel so bad. i knknow what i'i'm doing i is to b be for the g greater good >> thehen after today,y, it's s morere months, one moree test,, then - -- > thenn t they're done. . >> freeeedom. >> right.t. > reporter:r: for
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shoulder. his family rushed him to the hospital. the good news, he has been released. subway, the giant sandwich chain, is about to be sold. the price tag, nearly $10 billion. that's according to "the wall street journal." the buyer, roark capital, a private equity firm that owns fast food outlets like dunkin' and arby's. subway has some 30,000 stores in 100 countries. the new owner plans to update and expand the menu. i ate there a lot in high school. all right. amazing pictures from a historic moon landing. those images next. finally tonight, some incredible images that are truly out of this world. take a look at this historic touchdown of india's robotic
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lander on the surface of the moon. india joins the united states, the former soviet union, and china as the only countries to achieve this milestone. but they did one better. the indian spacecraft was the first to land near the lunar south pole, thought to be home to frozen water deposits scientists believe these water deposits could be converted into drinking water or rocket fuel for future missions. 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 anytime 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. former president donald trump was booked at the fulton county jail in georgia on charges
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related to interference in the 2020 election. fulton county d.a. fani willis has asked for the trial to start on october 23rd. severe storms in michigan wednesday night. authorities say a suspected tornado moved through the town of williamston, downing power lines andnd overturnining cars. there were also reports it led to a collapsed roof at an assisted living facility. and the hollywood actors strike is delaying yet another big-budget film. warner bros. said it is now pushing back the release of "done part 2" and other movies because the actors won't be able to promote them. 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."
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we begin with breaking news. former president donald trump just surrendered at the notorious fulton county jail in atlanta. trump booked, processed on 13 charges including conspiracy and racketeering related to attempts to overturn the 2020 election. like all other people who walk through the doors of that jail, the former president was fingerprinted, had his weight and height recorded, and a mug shot was taken. the seriousness of this cannot be overstated because for the first time in american history, there is a mug shot of someone who was once the leader of the free world. trump joins 11 of his co-defendants in turning himself in. just hours ago, former white house chief of staff mark meadows surrendered at at same jail. the remaining seven have until noon tomorrow to do the same. we have a lot of news to get to tonight, and cbs's nikole killion will start us off tonight from atlanta. good evening, nikole. >> reporter: good evening, norah. this area was completely locked down as former president trump turned himself in, accompanied
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by a new lawyer that he hired just hours before his surrender. tonight former president trump joined 11 of his fellow co-defendants, booked, fingerprinted, and photographed. >> we did nothing wrong at all, and we have every right, every single right, to challenge an election that we think is dishonest. >> reporter: the former president was processed in less than an hour and treated just like any other criminal defendant at the fulton county jail, which is under investigation by the department of justice for poor conditions. outside the jail, protesters stood by their man. >> he can run this country from jail. i wouldn't care. we'd still vote for him. >> you'd be okay with that? >> for sure. >> absolutely. >> reporter: trump's bond was set at $200,000. he's charged with 13 counts, including racketeering, criminal conspiracy, and making false statements for his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election in georgia, stemming from this call with secretary of state brad raffensperger. >> i just want to find 11,780
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votes. >> reporter: the former president called it a perfect phone call and continued to deny any wrongdoing in a pre-taped interview with tucker carlson. >> i got indicted four times, all trivia, nonsense, bull [ bleep ]. >> reporter: former white house chief of staff mark meadows, who was also on that 2021 call with trump and raffensperger, finally turned himself in after his efforts to delay his surrender were rejected by a federal judge. district attorney fani willis has set a noon deadline friday for all defendants to turn themselves in. today she proposed a new trial date for october 23rd, this year, several months earlier than expected. the district attorney pushed up the date from march 4th next year after one of the defendants asked for a speedy trial. trump's new legal team opposed the move and said it wants his case handled separately. norah. >> nikole killion with all those new details, thank you.
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tonight the pentagon for the first time saying it believes russian warlord yevgeny prigozhin is dead. u.s. intelligence indicates the plane that the mercenary was on was brought down by an explosion on board. cbs's debora patta reports from southern ukraine. >> reporter: this is what residents in a russian village north of moscow saw and heard. the plane was flying, said an stacia, and then, boom, it exploded. flight data shows it reached an altitude of 28,000 feet before spiraling to thehe ground witht missing wing and bursting into flames in a nearby field. a u.s. official has told cbs news the most likely explanation is an explosion on board the jet, possibly caused by a bomb. all ten bodies have been recovered and taken for identification. the man who once said the only thing he could not forgive was betrayal acknowledged today that yevgeny prigozhin was probably
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on that doomed flight. "he had a complicated fate," president vladimir putin said, "and he made some serious mistakes." the most serious, that audacious mutiny and the moment prigozhin in all likelihood signed his death warrant. the consensus from western intelligence is that the crash is most likely a cold slice of revenge dished up by putin. prigozhin's fighters laid flowers and lit candles outside wagner's headquarters today. "it feels like losing a father," said this soldier. "he was everything for us." and without prigozhin, it's feared wagner poses an even bigger threat under putin. here in ukraine, which celebrated its independence day today, president zelenskyy said kyiv had nothing to do with the plane crash, but everyone is
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aware who's involved. norah. >> quite a story. debora patta, thank you. back here at home, police have identified the suspect responsible for a mass shooting last night at a popular biker bar just south of los angeles. witnesses say retired police officer john snowling killed three people and wounded six others, including his estranged wife, who he was believed to be targeting. cbs's carter evans reports the gunman was fatally shot by deputies. [ siren ] >> reporter: another community enduring moments of sheer terror. as more than a dozen deputies descend on the cook's corner bar, the sound of constant gunfire. [ sound of gunfire ] >> i was so scared that the gunman was chasing me. that's how loud the gunshots were. >> reporter: as jacqueline bass ran for her life -- >> i immediately called my daughter first. >> what did you tell her?
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>> i don't really remember. i just said "shooter. there's a shooter." >> i said, can i come get you? she said, no, don't come anywhere near here. i'm going to find a way out. she was just -- she was terrified. >> reporter: she also texted her boyfriend. >> "shoot, e.r., help, help." >> "if something happens to me, know that i'm thinking about you." >> reporter: another patron at the bar took this video. >> oh, my god. marie. >> marie snowling had been severely wounded. marie's estranged husband, an ex-cop, identified as the shooter. >> we do not believe that there was any argument that ensued. he drew a weapon. she was struck once. >> reporter: john snowling allegedly killed three and wounded six others before being killed in an exchange of gunfire with deputies. snowling worked nearly three decades with the city of ventura police department, retiring in 2014 as a sergeant. now as investigators piece together what happened -- >> what was going through your mind?
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>> i was going to die. i was going to get shot. innocent people were being killed. >> reporter: now, the six survivors were all rushed to the hospital with gunshot wounds. two are in critical condition, including the suspect's estranged wife. the other four are stable. now, this bar behind me, it's been a landmark here in southern california for more than a century. now it's known as the scene of the nation's latest mass shooting. norah. >> carter evans, thank you. there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news." i'm patriotic kenny. and, hi, i'm amanda on tiktok. my scoototer broke d down. i wewent into a a depression. how w do you feeeel about tht? prpretty sad.. and d i posted i it to showw that k kenny's s not alwaysys . within 24 4 hours peopople had donateted over $5,5,000. no, yoyou're kididding.
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i'm jan crawford in washington. thanks for staying with us. outrage and protests in japan, where the government has begun releasing water from the destroyed fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea. the water was exposed to radiation as part of the cleanup from the disaster will slowly flush back into the ocean over the course of decades. the water is said to be safe, but the economc fallout could be devastating. china, the biggest market for japanese seafood, has banned all imports. elizabeth palmer reports. >> reporter: experts for tepco, the company in charge, explain they've collected so much radioactive water from rain and runoff over the years, they kept having to add tanks to contain it. now these tanks are almost full of water. more than a million tons of it, and tepco says the only solution is to start getting rid of it by piping it into the sea next to the plant. for haru ono, who's been fishing
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this ocean all his life, that is an outrage. "it's not a garbage dump," he tells me. "they say it's safe, but the consequences could be 50 years down the road." there will be no consequences, says tepco, because its technology removes all radioactive compounds from the water except one, tritium, which stays in but is diluted to meet international standards. so even when the water is piped back into the sea, tepco says fish from fukushima will be safe to eat. the international atomic energy agency broadly backs the tritium-laced water release, but will consumers actually eat the fish? unlikely, said haru ono, who is now looking at the end of his livelihood. i'm elizabeth palmer in fukushima, japan. russian president vladimir putin has sent a glowing condolence letter to the family of the late mercenary leader
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yevgeny prigozhin. he and his top associates were reportedly aboard a private jet that fell out of the sky under mysterious circumstances. most analysts believe putin was behind the wreck. debora patta has the story from ukraine. >> reporter: caught on camera, unverified footage of the plane tumbling from the sky with a missing wing, then bursting into flames north of moscowow. with unususual speed, russian aviation authorities announced the mercenary boss was among the ten people who died in that crash. wagner's social media channels claim the jet was shot down. there's been no official word from the kremlin, but president biden said he was not surprised. >> there's not much that happens in russia that putin's not behind. >> reporter: some wonder if this was the moment prigozhin signed his death warrant. that audacious mutiny, an
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unprecedented challenge to vladimir putin. the former convict had a meteoric rise from kremlin chef to warlord, spreading russia's influence in syria and africa. as a close putin confidant, he appeared untouchable, even laughing about his inevitable death. "we'll all go to hell, but in hell, we'll be the best," he jokes. prigozhin has made his billions plundering natural resources on the african continent. and last year, he came to putin's rescue in ukraine, throwing convicted murderers and thieves into the bloody battle for bakhmut. now, one of the most striking images of prigozhin's short-lived mutiny was his forces shooting down a russian military plane, raising the question that surely putin would never let this go unpunished. >> that was debora patta in
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and motionless. but if you look close enough, what might look like a corpse offers a slow glimpse of life. those turtles all washed up in massachusetts this past december on the windy beaches of cape cod bay. they were nearly frozen to death. >> the turtles, especially today, 38 degrees f that turtle sits out for two, three hours, i mean it's going to die. it's just -- it's just not going to recover from that kind of shock, from the cold. >> reporter: the problem, though, isn't so much the cold as it is our ever-warming oceans. >> this has been the hottest spot for turtles, too. >> reporter: biologist bob prescott, director emeritus of the massachusetts audubon wildlife sanctuary in wellfleet, says the gulf of maine, which includes cape cod bay, is now one of the fastest-warming bodies of ocean water in the world. now, turtles like warm water,
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but they're staying up here too long. by mid-november, the temperatures start to drop too fast for these cold-blooded reptiles to handle. and volunteers are finding more and more of them washed ashore. >> seeing the movement in their flipper. >> reporter: in a hypothermic state like this -- >> how is he doing? >> this time of year you can't tell. >> reporter: it's called cold stunning. >> they may come in looking dead. they revive. they go to the aquarium, and a couple days later, they crash. we'll put them in the box, and that will start to get them stabilized. >> reporter: all sea turtles are in real trouble, but by far the worst are these, the most critically endangered sea turtle in the world. since the '70s, they've been washing ashore, about a few dozen per year. >> the first turtle i found was 1974. >> reporter: but these days, prescott says -- >> now, you know, we're up over 750, 760 turtles, and it started a month ago.
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>> reporter: they've traveled a long way, unwittingly into danger. their nesting grounds are thousands of miles to the south along the warm beaches of the gulf of mexico. >> what we're looking for is the tracks left in the sand. >> reporter: where donna schaffer has spent her life trying to help the species rebound. >> we don't help save this species, we lose a piece that enriches us. >> how big are the eggs themselves? >> the eggs are about the size of ping pong. >> reporter: she's the head of the turtle rescue group at padre island national seashore in texas. >> there's a whole variety of things that can harm them from oil spills to boat strikes to red tides, entanglement in debris, ingestion of debris, all those. >> reporter: which is why all that urgent care they're getting back up north -- >> all right, little buddy. >> reporter: -- is more important than ever. >> let's get your picture taken. >> reporter: most have at least some degree of pneumonia. >> there's definitely a little bit of fluid in the lungs here.
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>> reporter: some are so bad, they have to be put on ventilators just to breathe. but they're also suffering from a lot of other things -- fractured bones and dehydration, for example. >> he's okay. he came in yesterday, so he's still pretty early in the treatment process. >> reporter: this is the animal care center for the new england aquarium, a state of the art facility just outside boston that specializes in treating cold-stunned sea turtles from massachusetts to maine. they have an 80% success rate at bringing these turtles back from the brink. >> it's moving a little, huh? >> reporter: this one came in with barely one heartbeat a minute. but biologist adam kennedy says for such a small marine turtle, they are remarkably resilient. >> because of this, they will likely give another round of epinephrine, probably atropine as well. >> reporter: treatment can last
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up to two years, but kennedy can really only manage between 40 and 80 turtles long-term. and with the warming waters, hundreds are getting trapped every year, and that's too many patients for any one rehab to oversee. it's basically a mass casualty event. they need other hospitals to help. but that left bob prescott with a question. >> how do you get a turtle from here to there? >> reporter: the answer? give turtles a ticket to fly. >> a happy reptile makes for a good passenger. >> reporter: ken andrews is vice president of a unique nonprofit called turtles fly too. >> this is like a life flight. >> it's a med avac flight, absolutely. >> reporter: turtles may not be meant to have their heads in the clouds, but there really is no other option. >> there's no agency. there's no staffing. there's no funding. there's nothing there to make this mission happen, and these turtles will die if somebody like turtles fly too doesn't
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jump in to help. >> reporter: it could never happen unless hundreds of pilots were willing to volunteer their time, their planes, and their fuel to rush the rescued turtles to willing rehab facilities all around the country. >> where do you guys get your funding? >> what funding? i wish. we desperately need it. our pilots that are flying these missions are pulling a million dollars out of their pocket to fly these missions every year for us. >> reporter: on this particular mission, ken, with his dad as co-pilot, will fly more than 2,000 miles from boston to atlanta, then on to gulfport and finally dallas, dropping off 44 sick sea turtles along the way in hopes that one day, they'll be well enough to be released. >> i've got some temps for you guys. >> reporter: 90% of the turtles that we've moved to rehab have ended up back in the ocean. >> wow. >> overall, everything looks good. all right, buddy, get out of here. >> reporter: these lucky passengers landed at the texas
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sea life center in corpus christi, texas, back in 2021, courtesy of turtles fly too. them? >> we could not do this without their help. no question. >> you're ready to go, huh? i think so, yeah. >> reporter: veterinarian tim tristan, the director here, says it took a while, but with good care and the help of volunteers, these turtles are now finally ready to go home again. >> if they can make it through our front door, we have a pretty good success rate of getting them turned around and back out to the wild where they belong. >> have you seen a sea turtle before? >> reporter: a crowd gathered at the beach of padre island. most never get to see a kemps ridley turtle, there are far too few. >> everybody wants to see some turtles released, right? >> reporter: this day there were a few more. biologist donna shaver says this release is modern conservation in action. >> they take with me their hopes, hopes for the next generation. >> reporter: there are few
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privileges that i have ever been offered -- >> look at this. >> reporter: -- quite like this one. >> how cool. look, bud by, you're going home. >> reporter: we humans have not always been kind to the sea and those who dwell in it. >> all right, buddy. go home, bud. >> reporter: but on this day, it was humans. certainly not me, but the hundreds of veterinarians, biologists, volunteers, and, yes, pilots, who all came together to give these critically endangered sea turtles what they rarely get. [ applause ] a second chance. who says you can't go
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you. oh ms. flores, what would we do without you?
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leaderer of many,, anand pet wranangler too.. you reportrt to your b bos, everery afternoooon. so beaeautiful. so becomoming a stududent agn mimight seem i impossible.. hehello, mi amamor. bubut what if f a school coululd be therere for all o o? carereer, familyly, financnces and menental heal. wellll, it can.. national u university.y. suppororting the w whole y. climate change has european wine makers looking north for
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new vineyards, and that's touched off a vino revolution in sweden. ian lee reports. >> reporter: rows and rows of vines can conjure images of europe's famous wine regions. but this is sweden. these two french winemakers moved to the scandinavian country to uncork its potential. she says the weather is more stable and predictable, unlike france which has long hot periods with no rain and big hail storms. >> we want this house and this production is going to be for the future. >> reporter: felix artburg sees potential to put sweden on the winemaking map. with warmer and longer growing seasons and none of the extreme weather, new varieties of grapes round out the country's sprouting industry. >> so one of the best vintages for champagne the last hundred years was 1996. and from a climate perspective, that would be 2021 in sweden. so it's really going our way. >> reporter: as drought and
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rising heat force traditional wine-growing regions like france, italy, and spain to reassess their methods, sweden is toasting its success. >> and this is the frontier. >> reporter: a frontier exploring a whole new territory in the world of wine. ian lee, cbs news. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm jan crawford. this is "cbs news flash." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. former president donald trump
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was booked at the fulton county jail in georgia on charges related to interference in the 2020 election. fulton county d.a. fani willis has asked for the trial to start on october 23rd. severe storms in michigan wednesday night. authorities say a suspected tornado moved through the town of williamston, downing power lines and overturning g cars. there were also reports it led to a collapsed roof at an assisted living facility. and the hollywood actors strike is delaying yet another big-budget film. warner bros. said it is now pushing ck the release of "dune: part two" and other movies because the actors won't be able to promote them. for more, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or . i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. breaking news. donald trump becomes the first former american president to surrender, walking through the doors of a jail as a defendant. tonight the new details as he's booked on 13 felony charges.
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here are tonight's headlines. trump turns himself in. the historic moment. what's happening inside the jail just hours after his former chief of staff surrendered. and when could a trial start? stay the [ bleep ] away from cook's corner. there's a shooting going on. >> at least four people are dead and at least six others injured following the country's latest mass shooting. among the dead is the alleged gunman. new details about the plane crash that killed wagner leader yevgeny prigozhin. >> it's likely prigozhin was killed. nothing to indicate there was a surface-to-air missile. >> "he had a complicated fate," president vladimir putin said, "and he made some serious mistakes." it was a heated night in milwaukee for the first republican primary debate. >> eight gop candidates were onstage. >> do you want a super pac puppet, or do you want a patriot who speaks the truth? >> if you want something said,
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ask a man. if you want something done, ask a woman. subway is being sold to a private equity firm, roark capital, the same company behind several other large restaurant chains, including arby's, buffalo wild wings, carvel, and sonic. "eyeye on americica." inside the efforts to let bison roam free on america's tribal lands. >> myy geneneration nevever got growow up aroundnd buffalo.. now my children and my grandchildren are able to witness them being on our homeland. ♪ and the new out of this world pictures from india's lunar landing. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." we begin with breaking news.
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former president donald trump just surrendered at the notorious fulton county jail in atlanta. trump booked, processed on 13 charges including conspiracy and racketeering related to attempts to overturn the 2020 election. like all other people who walk through the doors of that jail, the former president was fingerprinted, had his weight and height recorded, and a mug shot was taken. the seriousness of this cannot be overstated because for the first time in american history, there is a mug shot of someone who was once the leader of the free world. trump joins 11 of his co-defendants in turning himself in. just hours ago, former white house chief of staff mark meadows surrendered at the same jail. the remaining seven have until noon tomorrow to do the same. we have a lot of news to get to tonight, and cbs's nikole killion will start us off tonight from atlanta. good evening, nikole. >> reporter: good evening, norah. this area was completely locked down as former president trump turned himself in, accompanied by a new lawyer that he hired
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just hours before his surrender. tonight former president trump joined 11 of his fellow co-defendants, booked, fingerprinted, and photographed. >> we did nothing wrong at all, and we have every right, every single right, to challenge an election that we think is dishonest. >> reporter: the former president was processed in less than an hour and treated just like any other criminal defendant at the fulton county jail, which is under investigation by the department of justice for poor conditions. outside the jail, protesters stood by their man. >> he can run this country from jail. i wouldn't care. we'd still vote for him. >> you'd be okay with that? >> for sure. >> absolutely. >> reporter: trump's bond was set at $200,000. he's charged with 13 counts, including racketeering, criminal conspiracy, and making false statements for his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election in georgia, stemming from this call with secretary of state brad raffensperger. >> i just want to find 11,780
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votes. >> reporter: the former president called it a perfect phone call and continued to deny any wrongdoing in a pre-taped interview with tucker carlson. >> i got indicted four times, all trivia, nonsense, bull [ bleep ]. >> reporter: former white house chief of staff mark meadows, who was also on that 2021 call with trump and raffensperger, finally turned himself in after his efforts to delay his surrender were rejected by a federal judge. district attorney fani willis has set a noon deadline friday for all defendants to turn themselves in. today she proposed a new trial date for october 23rd, this year, several months earlier than expected. the district attorney pushed up the date from march 4th next year after one of the defendants asked for a speedy trial. trump's new legal team opposed the move and said it wants his case handled separately. norah. >> nikole killion with all those new details, thank you. tonight the pentagon for the first time saying it believes
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russian warlord yevgeny prigozhin is dead. u.s. intelligence indicates the plane that the mercenary was on was brought down by an explosion on board. cbs's debora patta reports from southern ukraine. >> reporter: this is what residents in a russian village north of moscow saw and heard. the plane was flying, said anastasia, and then, boom, it exploded. flight data shows it reached an altitude of 28,000 feet before spiraling to the ground with a missing wing and bursting into flames in a nearby field. a u.s. official has told cbs news the most likely explanation is an explosion on board the jet, possibly caused by a bomb. all ten bodies have been recovered and taken for identification. the man who once said the only thing he could not forgive was betrayal acknowledged today that yevgeny prigozhin was probably
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on that doomed flight. "he had a complicated fate," president vladimir putin said, "and he made some serious mistakes." the most serious, that audacious mutiny and the moment prigozhin in all likelihood signed his death warrant. the consensus from western intelligence is that the crash is most likely a cold slice of revenge dished up by putin. prigozhin's fighters laid flowers and lit candles outside wagner's headquarters today. "it feels like losing a father," said this soldier. "he was everything for us." and without prigozhin, it's feared wagner poses an even bigger threat under putin. here in ukraine, which celebrated its independence day today, president zelenskyy said kyiv had nothing to do with the plane crash, but everyone is aware who's involved.
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have identified the suspect responsible for a mass shooting last night at a popular biker bar just south of los angeles. witnesses say retired police officer john snowling killed three people and wounded six others, including his estranged wife, who he was believed to be targeting. cbs's carter evans reports the gunman was fatally shot by deputies. [ siren ] >> reporter: another community enduring moments of sheer terror. as more than a dozen deputies descend on the cook's corner bar, the sound of constant gunfire. [ sound of gunfire ] >> i was so scared that the gunman was chasing me. that's how loud the gunshots were. >> reporter: as jacqueline bass ran for her life -- >> i immediately called my daughter first. >> what did you tell her? >> i don't really remember. i just said "shooter. there's a shooter."
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>> i said, can i come get you? she said, no, don't come anywhere near here. i'm going to find a way out. she was just -- she was terrified. >> reporter: she also texted her boyfriend. >> "shoot, e.r., help, help." >> "if something happens to me, know that i'm thinking about you." >> reporter: another patron at the bar took this video. >> oh, my god. marie. >> marie snowling had been severely wounded. marie's estranged husband, an ex-cop, identified as the shooter. >> we do not believe that there was any argument that ensued. he drew a weapon. she was struck once. >> reporter: john snowling allegedly killed three and wounded six others before being killed in an exchange of gunfire with deputies. snowling worked nearly three decades with the city of ventura police department, retiring in 2014 as a sergeant. now as investigators piece together what happened -- >> what was going through your mind? >> i was going to die. i was going to get shot. innocent people were being killed.
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>> reporter: now, the six survivors were all rushed to the hospital with gunshot wounds. two are in critical condition, including the suspect's estranged wife. the other four are stable. now, this bar behind me, it's been a landmark here in southern california for more than a century. now it's known as the scene of the nation's latest mass shooting. norah. >> carter evans, thank you. turning now to politics, sparks were flying last night during the first presidential debate of the 2024 election. with gop front-runner donald trump not in attendance, eight other republican candidates went after each other as they tried to stand out from the crowded field of contenders. and cbs's robert costa was there. >> reporter: republican presidential candidates pushed ahead today in the wake of a contentious debate where the front-runner was a no-show. >> it didn't matter to me last night in the end that he wasn't there. >> reporter: political newcomer vivek ramaswamy won attention. >> do you want a super pac puppet, or do you want a patriot who speaks the truth?
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>> reporter: and he also drew attacks. >> now is not the time for on the job training. we don't need to bring in a rookie. >> i've had enough already tonight of a guy who sounds like chatgpt. >> reporter: but the differences on the big issues were also front and center. on ukraine, a stark divide over whether the u.s. should continue to support that embattled nation as it fends off a russian invasion and whether allies should do more. >> i will have europe to pull their weight. right now they're not doing that. >> ukraine is not a priority for the united states of america. >> you have no foreign policy experience, and it shows. >> and you know what? >> it shows. >> anybody that thinks we can't solve the problems here in the united states and be the leader of the free world has a pretty small view of the greatest nation on earth. >> reporter: on former president donald trump, whose interview with tucker carlson posted just before the debate, there were sharp words over his four
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indictments and efforts to overturn the 2020 election. >> someone's got to stop normalizing this conduct, okay? >> he asked me to put him over the constitution, and i chose the constitution. >> reporter: but many onstage said they'd still back trump as the nominee even if he's convicted. >> please raise your hand if you would. [ cheers and applause ] >> reporter: on abortion rights, there were standoffs over possible restrictions. >> we must have a president of the united states who will advocate and fight for, at the minimum, a 15-week limit. >> would you sign a six-week ban federally? >> i'm going to stand on the side of life. >> can't we all agree that we are not going to put a woman in jail or give her the death penalty if she gets an abortion? >> reporter: and inside the desantis campaign, there is confidence tonight that he largely avoided becoming a target onstage. behind the scenes, his donors tell me they believe desantis solidified his standing after a tough summer.
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but strategists for other contenders tell me the road ahead for rivals is tricky, especially as trump supporters echo his grievances about these latest indictments. norah. >> that's interesting to watch. robert costa, thank you very much. the trial of quadruple murder suspect bryan kohberger has been indefinitely delayed. kohberger, who waived his right to a speedy trial, is charged with the brutal stabbing of four university of idaho students last november. his attorneys requested the delay, saying they need more time to prepare their defense. kohberger has pleaded not guilty. guilty. the "cbs overnight news" 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. (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,
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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. - 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!
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- 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. - because at shriners hospitals for children, going to the hospital is 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. i used t to wait to o run mymy dishwasher 'til it was super full. now— i r run it dailily. weekekdays— w weekends— you mimight thinkk that's's wasteful,l, but it's . even half f loads use e 80% leless water t than handwawas.
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savingng $130 on u utilities. cacascade. darare to dishh differerently. tonight, the county of maui filed a lawsuit against the hawaiian electric company alleging the utility's neglect caused the deadliest wildfire in the u.s. in more than a century. meanwhile, cbs's ben tracy reports the search for victims now includes both the burnt-out ruins and the sea where many tried to escape. >> reporter: divers are scouring a four-mile stretch of water off lahaina, searching for any human remains. scores of people jumped into the water to escape the fast-moving fire on august 8th. not everyoyone made itit out. backck onshore, , the painststa grim search for the dead continues. >> the amount of fire destruction that's happened here makes everything blend together. > reporter:r: mike pruiuitt t of f fema's seararch team, n no focused onon combing t through
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town's multistory and commercial properties. hundreds of emergency personnel and 50 k-9 units are part of the search. >> why is it taking so long to get through the entire town? >> it takes inch by inch, meticulous looking through every bit of ash, looking for anything that might resemble remains. >> reporter: the fbi is analyzing cell data to try to identify who might be among the missing, and maui officials plan to soon release a list of more than 1,000 still unaccounted for. >> this isn't fair. i feel like i was used. i feel like crap on the ground. >> reporter: meanwhile, residents who have lost nearly everything vented their understandable anger over the government's response to the fire, demanding accountability. >> they failed here. they failed. the government failed. >> reporter: there is hope here in lahaina that when they release that list of the unaccounted for, that many of
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the people on the list will actually be alive and just not know they were on that list. a wildfire destroyed the town of paradise, california, back in 2018, and they released a similar list. that had 1,300 people on it, and norah, they were able to whittle that down to less than 12. >> good perspective. try killining bugs the woworry-free w way. nonot the otheher way. zezevo traps u use light to a attract andnd trap flyingng insects with no o odor and n no m. they worork continuouously, so you donon't hahave to.
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zevo. people-f-friendly. bubug-deadly.. new dodove men bododywash gives youu 24 hoursrs of nourisishing mimicromoisturure. ththat meansns your skinin still l feels healalthy and d smooth nowow... now..... ...andnd now too.. get healalthier, smoother f feeling skikin all . (psst psst) ahhhh... with flonase, allergies don't have to be scary spraying flonase daily gives you long-lasting, non-drowsy relief. (psst psst) flonase. all good. mr. clclean magic c eraser pows throrough tough h messes. so it mamakes it looook like i spenent hours clcleaning, and d you know i i didn't. itit makes my y running shse look like e new! it's amazing.g. it's so good.d. it makes i it look likie i have magagical powerers. mamagic eraserer and sheets make c cleaning lolook e. today japan started releasing treated radioactive wastewater from the fukushima nuclear plant disaster into the pacific.
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japan says the water is safe, and a u.n. watchdog agrees. the first batch could fill three olympic-sized swimming pools. 31,000 tons of water will be released by next march. critics charge the long-range impact is unclear. in tonight's "eye on america," a closer look at the icon of the american west, the bison. 60 million bison once roamed north america. cbs's adam yamaguchi reports on the enormous efforts to reintroduce this majestic animal to native american territory. >> reporter: at the e fort peck indidian reservavation in momona bison cacalf just a a few hours is t the newest t member of f o the fifirst herds s to roam tht lalands in morore than a c cent >> this s must be rereally spec for you. >> my geneneration nevever got grow up p around bufuffalo. nonow my childldren and mymy grandchildldren are abable to witntness them b being on ouour homemelands. >> robbibie magnan m manages th fort p peck reservatation's fisd game dedepartment,, overseseein bison h herd s started m more t years a ago that hahas now grow
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800.0. >> see, l look. she's readady to move.e. >> that wawas fast. >> thahat's motherer nature's so get themem moving riright quick >> repororter: the f fort peck buffalalo program is part of a project to reintroduce bison to tribal lands throughout the country using g animals frfrom yellowstonone nationalal park. the herd a at yellowststone is its s regulated d capacity, , a to brurucellosis, , a bacteriai diseasase that canan infect andd toto stillbirths in cattle, bis are not prprotected ououtside t parkrk. thee only w way b bison are a a leleave yellowswstone is by compmpleting upp t to a a three quararantine thahat cululminate testing fafacility inn fort pep. >> soo cororralling 76 headad o bubuffalo. >> unwnwilling bufuffalo. > come on.. follow m me. wewe're going g to take ththem herere. come on,n, come on, , move it! you can'n't give thehem time to think. >> n nice. there you u go. wow.
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>> this s way. got t it! >> r reporter: t the quarantine program hahas protecteted hundr ofof animals f from slaughghter reintrtroduced bisison to 24 t acroross 12 statates. but advocacates say itit is unnenecessary sisince cattlele nenever contraracted brucecello from w wild bison.n. >> i feel l sad when t there ar animalals in n a cororral syste buffffaloes streress out verery. but t in order t to save youour i got to d do this. and ththen i don't't feel so b . i knknow what i'i'm doing isis to be for r the greateter good. >> thehen after totoday, it's s morere months, o one more tetes then -- >> then n they're dodone. >> freedomom. > right. >> r reporter: f for "eye onon america," " adam y
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in your life right when you became a gigillionaire?! he''s a gig-g-digger, momom! he''s using g you for your at&t t fiber. nonow that it t has hyhyper-gig spspeeds. he spends s half day s shirtle, playining vr gameses. kids. . why do youou think i becacame a gigilillionaire in the f first placece? yes, i i am yiorgogos. we knonow. live l like a gigigillionaie withth at&t fiber, now with speeds up to 5 gigs. limited availability. ♪ a 9-year-old boy was bitten by a shark in the waters off oak island, north carolina. the boy was playing in water just two to three feet deep. his family noticed a fish jumping near him just before a small shark bit him in the
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shoulder. his family rushed him to the hospital. the good news, he has been released. subway, the giant sandwich chain, is about to be sold. the price tag, nearly $10 billion. that's according to "the wall street journal." the buyer, roark capital, a private equity firm that owns fast food outlets like dunkin' and arby's. subway has some 37,000 stores in 100 countries. the new owner plans to update and expand the menu. i ate there a lot in high school. all right. amazing pictures from a historic moon landing. those images next. finally tonight, some incredible images that are truly out of this world. take a look at this historic touchdown of india's robotic
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lander on the surface of the moon. india joins the united states, the former soviet union, and china as the only countries to achieve this milestone. but they did one better. the indian spacecraft was the first ever to land near the lunar south pole, thought to be home to frozen water deposits. scientists believe these water deposits could be converted into drinking water or rocket fuel for future missions. 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 anytime 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. former president donald trump was booked at the fulton county jail in georgia on charges related to interference in the
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2020 election. fulton county d.a. fani willis has asked for the trial to start on october 23rd. severe storms in michigan wednesday night. authorities say a suspected tornado moved through the town of williamston, downing power linenes and overerturning cacar. there werere also reports it le to a collapsed roof at an assisted living facility. and the hollywood actors strike is delaying yet another big-budget film. warner bros. said it is now pushing back the release of "dune: part two" and other movies because the actors won't be able to promote them. 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, august 25th, 2003. -- 2023. this is the "cbs morning news." trump booked. the former president surrenders
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