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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  September 11, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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because he is really out of it. but her vice presidential pick says abortion in the ninth month is absolutely fine. he also says execution after birth, it's execution, no longer abortion because the baby is born, is okay. and that's not okay with me. >> donald trump hand-selected three members of the united states supreme court with the intention that they would undo the protections of roe v. wade, and they did exactly as he intended. and now in over 20 states, there are trump abortion bans, which make it criminal for a doctor or nurse to provide health care. in one state it provides prison for life. trump abortion bans that make no exception even for rape and incest, which understand what that means. a survivor of a crime of violation to their body does not have the body to make a decision about what happens to their body next. that is immoral.
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and one does not have to abandon their faith or deeply held beliefs to agree the government and donald trump certainly should not be telling a woman what to do with her body. the united states congress, including some of the most conservative members of the united states senate, came up with the border security bill which i supported. and that bill would have put 1500 more border agents on the border to help those folks who are working there right now overtime, trying to do their job. it would have allowed us to stem the flow of fentanyl coming into the united states. i know there are so many families watching tonight who have been personally affected by the surge of fentanyl in our country. that bill would have put more resources to allow us to prosecute transnational criminal organizations for trafficking in guns, drugs, and human beings. but you know what happened to that bill? donald trump got on the phone, called up some folks in
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congress, and said kill the bill. and you know why? because he preferred to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem. >> what they have done to our country by allowing these millions and millions of people to come into our country and look at what's happening to the towns all over the united states. a lot of towns don't want to talk about it. it's not going to be aurora or springfield. a lot of towns don't want to talk about it because they're so embarrassed about it. in springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in. they're eating the cats. they're eating the pets of the people that live there. and this is what's happening in our country. crime in this country is through the roof. and we have a new form of crime. it's called migrant crime, and it's happening at levels that nobody thought possible. >> president trump, as you know the fbi says overall violent crime is actually coming down in this country. >> excuse me, the fbi -- they were defrauding statements. they didn't include the worst cities. they didn't include the cities with the worst crime.
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it was a fraud, just like 818,000 jobs they said they created turned out to be a fraud. >> president trump, thank you. i'll let you respond, vice president harris. >> i think this is so rich coming from someone who has been prosecuted for national security crimes, economic crimes, election interference, has been found liable for sexual assault and his next big court appearance is in november at his own criminal sentencing. and let's be clear where each person stands on the issue of what is important about respect for the rule of law and respect for law enforcement. the former vice president called for defunding federal law enforcement 45,000 agents, get this, on the day after he was arraigned on 34 felony counts. >> that was vice president kamala harris and former president donald trump on stage in philadelphia. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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using these type of cleansers could be damaging and stripping your skin. i use new olay cleansing melts every day. just soak, activate and wash. to clean, tone and refresh. that's a 3x better clean. olay. can your pad flex with you without shifting? always flexfoam can. it's the only pad made with a flexible foam core with wings that fit securely for up to zero bunching and zero leaks. can your pad do that? see what foam can do for you. well, one of the most contentious topics in the presidential debate was, you guessed it, immigration. with the federal government seemingly paralyzed by the issue, many states are taking it upon themselves to deal with undocumented workers. one of those states is florida, where new laws there may spell big trouble for the agriculture industry.
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martha teichner has more. >> my heart is on this farm and the people that work on it. >> reporter: david register's family has been farming this land in pearson, florida for more than a century. he grows ferns. >> we take and mix all the different types of greenery under one bundle. >> reporter: the kind florists use to fill out bouquets. in the summer, it can be triple-digit hot under the mesh protecting the plants. but registers' workers, most of them immigrants he says are legal and loyal. sabino, his crew boss, has worked here for more than 40 years. >> the difficulty comes when you're trying to recruit new people outside of that. and as people age out, trying to get younger people in here is pretty difficult. >> reporter: what happens if you put out a help wanted sign? >> nobody really shows up. >> reporter: are there enough legal immigrants who have documentation of some kind to do the agricultural work in the state.
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>> there is not at this time. >> reporter: in florida, agriculture is just one industry where the politics of immigration is meeting its labor shortage head-on, with consequences. >> this is the strongest legislation against illegal immigration anywhere in the country. >> reporter: florida's governor and both houses of its legislature republican. among the harshest of florida's new laws, sb-1718. >> a lot of these businesses that were employing illegal immigrants are now starting to think twice about it. >> reporter: state senator republican blaise ingoglia was its sponsor. >> we have a broken legal immigration system which is fostering illegal immigrants coming over the border. if we get a bunch of states together and start cracking down on illegal immigrants in our states, maybe we will force the federal government to fix the legal immigration system. >> reporter: just some of the
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provisions of sb 1718, employers with 25 or more employees have to verify job applicant's immigration status against a federal database, or risk thousand dollars a day fines. showing a false id to get a job, a felony. also a felony, driving anyone undocumented across state lines into florida, although that provision has been put on hold by a federal judge. >> the anti-immigrant rhetoric certainly created chaos amongst our communities, created a lot of fear. >> reporter: mariana blanco was director of operations at the guatemalan maya center in lake worth, florida, which provides social services for migrant workers. >> about 40% of our families left, just to put it in perspective. in one day, one of our local elementary schools had ten children that were withdrawn from their school.
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>> reporter: olga, guatemalan, undocumented herself, helps run the guatemalan maya center's food bank, and here is what the people who need the food are saying. >> they say you can't work anymore. it's very hard, very sad. >> reporter: does it bother you that it seems as if americans don't want you here? >> yeah, because we work for them. >> reporter: what did you think when the state passed those laws? >> translator: we really thought, well, it was racism, she says. philippa cruz makes 48 cents a bunch before taxes, cutting ferns for a grower who employs undocumented workers. she got her work permit only last month, but for 20 years she was undocumented too. now if an employer treats her
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badly -- "i have the opportunity to say no and go somewhere else." according to the florida department of health, between 150 and 200,000 farm workers pick crops in florida each year. at last count, nearly half of them were believed to be undocumented, with fewer and fewer legal farm workers and florida's crackdown on illegal immigration under way, who's left to work in the fields? isn't florida cutting off its nose to spite its face? you need the labor, but you don't want the immigrants? >> no. we didn't skip a beat. we're showing people that you can actually have the role of law, crackdown on illegal immigration, and still have a booming economy. >> and i understand the idea that at a state level, you're going politically go ahead and send a message to washington. in the meantime, craps are going
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to rot. crops won't be planted. farmers will suffer. >> reporter: john esforms is ceo of sun ripe certified. a giant multi-state tomato operators his family started in 1920. his view is a lot gloomier. >> it's h-a, we're out of business. >> reporter: roughly 800 of his 1200 employees are migrant workers in the u.s. on r will have 2a visas, available for seasonal agriculture. but bringing them here, housing and feeding them adds significantly to the cost of a tomato. >> florida cannot continue to produce the food that it has historically produced with the labor that's available, either domestically or through the h-2a program. >> reporter: last year florida
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had more than 89,000 h-2a workers, the highest in the nation, more than triple the figure of 2015. year-round agriculture such as ferns has no such program. but just as big a need that the federal government still isn't addressing. and florida's new anti-illegal immigration laws could exacerbate. they've only just begun to roll out. >> before long, if we keep going down this path, there won't be a tomato. there won't be a bell pepper. there won't be a cucumber, a grapefruit or an orange that's grown in the united states because it will all be imported. >> that was martha t
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well, there is shock and outrage at a museum in israel. a 4-year-old boy slipped away from his parents and somehow got into a display case that was holding several ancient jars dating back 3500 years. a a the father said his son was curious and tipped one back to take a better look inside. that's when he knocked the vase off its pedestal and it shattered on the floor. now instead of calling the cops, museum officials called a repair crew and even invited the boy a back to watch it get fixed. tina kraus explains. >> reporter: anna geller has a good grip on her 4-year-old son's hand as they return to the same museum in israel they visited just days ago.
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ariel looks curious, but careful. after all, last time didn't go so well. >> it's my fault. i should have given him a hand. but it was just the destruction of a second. >> reporter: that second led to the destruction of a 3500-year-old jar from the bronze age, one of the only containers of its size discovered completely intact. >> and the next thing i know, a big boom. >> reporter: ever since that boom, restoration expert roeisha fehr also been trying to piece the piece back together, while keeping a surprising sense of humor. >> the child wasn't supposed to be in the exhibition and touch the vessels, but they touch and they break it. i can cure it. it's okay. >> reporter: the museum's director calls it a teachable moment. >> i wanted to make some closure. >> reporter: she invited ariel and his entire family back to show how workers are using 3d technology to restore the rare jar. and ariel tried a repair of his
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own, although museum staff chose a cheap jar they didn't mind breaking. a not so painful lesson that when something falls apart, the right attitude can fix it. tina kraus, cbs news, london. >> the museum says the jar will be back on display shortly with an updated insurance plan. good thinking on that. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪
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hello and thank you so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are the top stories on "cbs news roundup." vice president kamala harris and former president donald trump face off in philadelphia in their first presidential debate. we'll have complete analysis and break it all down for you with our very own cbs news political director. and a powerful hurricane is taking aim at the gulf coast where it's expected to slam into louisiana and mississippi. it was a long-awaited showdown with so much at stake. the presidential debate between vice president kamala harris and former president donald trump, both candidates sparred over some of the biggest concerns of americans today, including the economy, immigration, and abortion. it was a chance for voters to get perhaps their most detailed look at the intentions of both
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cbs' natalie brand has more. >> reporter: vice president kamala harris and former president donald trump took the debate stage in philadelphia in their first ever meeting face-to-face. >> i pledge to you to be a president for all americans. >> i created one of the greatest economies in the history of our country. i'll do it again. >> reporter: with polls showing a razor-tight race just eight weeks until election day, they tackled issues top of mind for voters, including the economy and inflation. >> we have inflation like very few people have ever seen before. >> my plan is to give a $50,000 tax deduction to start-up small businesses. >> reporter: to two went head to head on abortion. >> this is an issue that has torn our country apart for 52 years. >> the government and trump certainly should not be telling a woman what to do with her body. >> reporter: they sparred over immigration. >> we have millions of people pouring into our country from prisons and jails, from mental
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institutions, and insane asylums. >> what we have from the former president is someone who would prefer to run on a problem rather than fixing a problem. >> reporter: trump said a claim about migrants eating pets in ohio. they is no evidence. >> they're eating the dogs, the people that came in. they're eating the cats. >> talk about extreme. >> reporter: this was trump's seventh presidential debate, harris' first, an opportunity for her to define herself and explain her policy positions to voters. as cbs news poll found, roughly four in ten voters in several battleground states said they didn't know what harris stood for in stark contrast to trump. >> i am actually the only person on this stage who has a plan that is about lifting up the middle class and working people of work. >> she becomes president, this country doesn't have a chance. >> reporter: this is currently the only debate scheduled between the two candidates, though both sides have signaled they're open to one more. natalie brand, cbs news,
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philadelphia. >> and for more on this, we're joined now by cbs news political director fin gomez. fin, great to see you. let's talk about the performance here. who came out on top? was there a clear winner? >> shanelle, going into the debate, there was this expectation that donald trump would be on the offensive, going after vice president harris. instead, harris flipped the script, and donald trump was on his heels for a lot of the night. he was on the fence on several key issues, including afghanistan, our foreign policy on health care. so speaking to those in the room tonight on the democratic side, they feel that harris had the stronger debate. >> and fin, what are we hearing from the campaigns this hour? how are they responding? and could we see another debate? >> shanelle, going into the debate, prior to debate, there was an uncertainty if there would be a second debate between
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harris and trump. however, speaking to the harris campaign, some of the senior advisers put out a statement also feeling so confident about her performance, they have indicated that they would like another debate showing again a confident about harris' performance here in pennsylvania. >> and what about next steps, fin? >> next steps, we are just a little under two months away to the november 5th election. and both candidates were hitting the key battleground states that could decide this election. we're going see them going across the country. and again, this election could be decided by small margins in these swing states. shanelle? >> okay, fin gomez, thank you so much. in other news this hour, people on the louisiana and mississippi coastlines are protecting their homes and preparing for the arrival of
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francine, a powerful hurricane in the gulf of mexico. francine is now strengthened into a category 1 with winds of up to 95 miles per hour and is expected to make landfall on wednesday. warnings are already into effect along the gulf coast from texas to alabama, with threats of severe storm surges, flooding, and damaging winds. cbs' janet shamlian reports from lafayette, louisiana. >> reporter: as francine heads their way, residents in morgan city, louisiana, are piling sandbags and boarding up storefronts. a state of emergency has been declared in portions of the baton rouge area. the powerful storm expected to make landfall on wednesday. across the state, people are filling their gas tanks and stock up on essentials. >> we got the generator. we got the gas. we're ready to go. >> sandwich meat and water and stuff like that. something quick. >> i am new in the area.
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so i'm taking my precautions. >> reporter: on tuesday, heavy rain brought flash flooding to parts of coastal texas. governor greg abbott warning texans to brace for possible power outages and dangerous storm surge. >> be careful when you're on the road. you may stall your vehicle out. you could be swept away. there is a simple saying that is always true, and that is turn around, don't drown. >> reporter: as it barrels toward the louisiana coast, francine is already pounding northern mexico. it is the sixth named storm of the atlantic hurricane season, and chances are it won't be the last. janet shamlian, cbs news, lafayette, louisiana. delta airlines says it is working with federal agencies to investigate a terrifying moment atlanta's hartfield jackson international airport when two delta passenger jets collided while waiting to take off. you can see right here the tail section of that smaller jet was
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n knocked completely over because of the impact. no injuries or deaths are reported, and maintenance crews are evaluating both planes for damage. at least ten wildfires are burning across california fed by hot temperatures and dry conditions. one of the biggest, a fast-moving blaze tearing through orange county, exploded in size on tuesday, consuming around 20,000 acres and is now threatening more than 9,000 homes. around a thousand firefighters are battling the blaze before it reaches homes. two firefighters are recovering from heat-related injuries, and one civilian suffered smoke inhalation. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup," it is two months to election day, and the people in charge of the vote say they're facing harassment and threats. i debate all day, it's what i do. but there are some things that are undebatable, like your mental health. i was in dark place when my brother passed away in a car accident. i was depressed, in ways i never imagined. i reached out and my sisters came,
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the presidential candidates head back on to the campaign trail after their first and perhaps only debate of this election season. vice president kamala harris will join president joe biden marking 23 years since the terrorist attacks of 9/11. the pair will visit all three sites of the attacks, ground zero in new york city, the pentagon, and shanksville, pennsylvania. former president donald trump, meantime, has a rally scheduled thursday in the battleground state of arizona. it's one of the state's gearing up for a contentious election day. major garrett spoke to election officials who are under some growing pressure. >> reporter: election officials from several battleground states convened in atlanta last week. >> speeding everywhere. >> reporter: we met four of them. one democrat -- >> jocelyn benson, and my title is michigan straight secretary of state. >> reporter: and three republicans. >> seth bluestein, commissioner of philadelphia.
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>> bill gates, member of the maricopa board of supervisors. i represent district 3. >> gabriel sterling, chief operating officer of the state of georgia. thinking year's election fills you with -- >> joy. >> hope. >> excitement. >> i feel should it be joy, but there is some angst. >> reporter: why? >> the biggest thing i worry about is the possibility of violence. >> we're daily receiving threats, whether it's through voice mails, email, social media or in person. >> reporter: you personally? >> oh, yes. and it's escalating. and they're all rooted in lies and misinformation which is always very disappointing and sad. but at the same time, it's real. >> this is unfortunately become a way of life. >> reporter: bill gates has spoken openly about his need for therapy in the face of hostility driven by election denialism. >> we've invested as a board in metal detectors, in fencing, in cameras. i wish we didn't have to do this, but we do. >> reporter: how you doing? >> i'm well. i've gone and i've gotten the
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support i need and i'm feeling great. >> reporter: georgia now gives every poll supervisor a direct line to report trouble to authorities. >> whether it's somebody yelling at people in the parking lot or somebody with a gun. >> reporter: voters say i'm afraid all these illegals are going to vote. >> i understand the fear, but it's an unfounded fear. >> we're not seeing it in any real numbers. >> this is a boogie man. this is not something that people should be concerned about. >> reporter: if you could with a magic wand dispel one piece of election-related disinformation, what would that be? >> that there are magical ballot drops in the middle of the night. that window of time, from when the polls close until the networks are able to call the race is really where that window of misinformation can spread. >> for me it would be the conspiracy theory that our tabulation machines are connected to the internet. they're not. >> it's all gone too far. >> reporter: after the 2020 election, gabriel sterling
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chastised fellow republicans for inciting unrest with election-denying rhetoric. >> i think that threat remains viable. for 200 years, the loser accepting the outcome and come back to fight again in two to four years is the way the system works, and we all accepted it. we have to get back to that being the normal way of dealing with elections. >> we've now endured four years of that rhetoric, and i think that's why all of us do feel a heightened state of anxiety going to the cycle, that we could see that rhetoric transform into the violent acts in the weeks ahead, and we all have to brace ourselves for that. >> i continue to be disappointed by many people in the republican party, elected officials who continue to be silent in the face of these threats. we cannot normalize threats of violence against anyone, but particularly those people who are literally running our democracy. >> reporter: a sadly necessary >> reporter: a sadly necessary plea for a nation to return to (♪♪) “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like life was moving on without me.
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and powerful vicks vapors to vaporize sore throat pain. vicks vapocool drops. vaporize sore throat pain. using these type of cleansers could be damaging and stripping your skin. i use new olay cleansing melts every day. just soak, activate and wash. to clean, tone and refresh. that's a 3x better clean. olay. about five million americans retire each year, and many more would if they could afford it. 40% of households have to get used to a lower standard of living in retirement, and others have to go back to work. j jill schlesinger has this cautionary tale. >> reporter: this is not part of larry's retirement plan. the 77-year-old electrician by
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trade leaves at 5:30 a.m. and heads for his part-time job, unloading trailers at a local supermarket in st. petersburg for $14.75 an hour. his wife joyce, 66, prepares for her work day, making $14 an hour as a full time legal administrator. it's not really a requirement. >> reporter: what is it? >> it's working every day. >> reporter: they came out of retirement not because they wanted to, but because they had to, and are among the 11 million americans, one in five over 65 who are still working. >> it's hard at 77 still busting my butt. >> so i call it the work, retire, repeat syndrome. >> reporter: labor economist teresa says work is the new retirement. >> more than half of the people who are retired right now do not have enough money to be retired. >> reporter: who is blame for all of this? >> i blame policymakers who
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experimented with our retirement system 40 years ago and they are not saying the experiment failed. >> reporter: that experiment is what we know today as the 401(k), named after a part of a 1978 law that offered companies an alternative to the traditional pension plan. >> the thought was that americans just needed a little bit of financial literacy, and they could save on their own. >> reporter: but in fact many of today's older workers were never taught enough about saving and investing for retirement. >> i grew up on a farm. nobody there instructed any of us to put money aside and make your own way later on down the road. >> reporter: whether you're past 65 like the gessiks or almost their ages, there are a few rules of the road to keep in mind. basically, everyone needs a plan. first, figure out when it's best to claim social security. next, fund an emergency reserve.
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still working? set aside 6 to 12 months worth of living expenses. already retired? make it one to two years' worth, and keep that reserve in a safe, easily accessible interest-bearing account. like many working americans, the gessiks were more doers than savers. they drained their 401(k)s. >> i think to us it felt more like a savings account than to focus on i need to have this piled up to actually live on. >> reporter: they have a mortgage, a car loan, and are paying down about $12,000 in other debt. but even with social security, some old pension funds, and their paychecks, money is tight. >> all these expenses and the debt paydown leaves you with very little money every month, right? >> yes. >> reporter: how much is that? >> $50. >> reporter: had the gessiks waited to age 70 to claim social security, they would be collecting more. can you look at a time where you feel like you can breathe a little more easily? or are you still under stress?
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>> yeah, it's stressful now. but i think we can see the light at the end of the tunnel. >> reporter: getting there won't be easy. for eye (granddaughter laughing) when pain freezes you in your tracks... ...vapofreeze your pain away. penetrating pain relief... ...with vicks vapors. (granddaughter laughing) vapofreeze your pain away. now at walmart. everybody wants super straight, super white teeth. they want that hollywood white smile. new sensodyne clinical white provides 2 shades whiter teeth
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defeat the jacksonville jaguars. police, though, have now released the body camera footage of the encounter and placed one officer on administrative leave. cbs' jericka duncan has more. >> move forward. >> reporter: the newly released footage shows a miami-dade police officer order dolphins wide receiver tyreek hill to pull over just outside hard rock stadium sunday. >> don't knock on my window like that. >> why don't you your seat belt on? >> don't knock on my window like that, no. >> reporter: after handing the officer his license -- >> give me my ticket, bro, so i can go. i'm going to be late. do what you got to do. >> reporter: hill then rolled hiss window back up when officers demanded he keep it down. >> keep your window down. i'm going get you out of the car. >> reporter: then at least one officer swings open hill's car door as at least two others force him to the ground.
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>> get out! >> damn i'm getting arrested, drew. >> reporter: as he lies face down, one officer appears to have one knee on his back as he is handcuffed. >> do what you got to do. >> reporter: the officers then bring hill to the sidewalk and order him to sit. but hill resists, citing an injured knee, prompting one of the officers to come up behind hill, wrapping an arm around his chest and forcing him to the ground. >> on my knee, bro. i had surgery on my knee, i had surgery on your ears when we told you to put your window down? >> reporter: moments later, two of his teammates pulled up to the scene, including smith and calaisias candle who would also eventually be handcuffed. both were released in time for the matchup against the jacksonville jaguars. >> it was a lack of cooperation from mr. hill. >> reporter: rodney harrison, a former police commissioner on
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long island believes officers acted fairly. >> it unfortunately led to a point where he had to be pulled out of the vehicle, handcuffed and put on the sidewalk while a lot of different vehicles were driving by and probably turned into a little bit of an embarrassment moment for him. >> reporter: hill recounted that moment in a cnn interview monday night. >> i wasn't moving fast because i got injuries, you feel me? i got things that i go through. i guess the officers, they feel like i wasn't doing it on they time, but i was doing it. but, you know, i'm still kind of shellshocked from it, man. i'm embarrassed. >> reporter: i'm jericka duncan. there is a lot more just ahead on "cbs news roundup." stay with us.
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tina zimmerman: five years ago, i reconnected with my estranged father, and that's just something i never ever thought could happen. but when he became a believer, he just had this insatiable appetite to learn the bible, and he began to watch dr. stanley. dr. stanley: god always blesses obedience without an exception. tina: he teaches in a way that it just makes sense, and i feel like that's the way our heavenly father would teach us.
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it's wednesday, september 11th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." faceoff. the gloves come off as kamala is

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