tv CBS Evening News CBS February 10, 2025 4:00pm-4:31pm PST
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then it will stretch your glutes and release the piriformis muscle, helping you manage sciatica pain. if you lean against a wall and raise your toes up to your knees like this, then it can help strengthen the muscles around your knee, allowing you to manage your knee pain and prevent shin splints. if you put your hand on your head and twist up, then it will improve mobility in your thoracic spine, helping you reduce shoulder tightness. if you sit on the floor and raise your foot over an object like this, it can help activate and strengthen your hips, helping you reduce lower back pain. drew: thank you so much. as always, we make this show for you, so take it with you. [audio logo] [audio logo] ♪ ♪ >> announcer from cbs news headquarters in new york, this is the cbs evening news.
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>> john: good evening, i'm john dickerson. >> maurice: i maurice dubois. president trump today began the fourth week of his second term and in a new cbs news poll, more than half of americans, 53% approve of the job he is doing and at 70% of whether they agree with him or not say he is doing exactly what he promised to do. that includes cutting spending. >> john: but how he's doing it is another matter. the president made elon musk a kind of sheriff of doge. the department of government of, to downsized us about everything. our poll found americans evenly split over how much influence if any musk and doge should have
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over government operations and spending and the federal judge has blocked their access to a treasury be a row that among oher things sends out government payments including social security. >> maurice: what is this little-known bureau and what is the musk team looking for? questions major garrett is about to answer. >> reporter: good evening, it's called the bureau of fiscal service and what they are looking for is what people in washington have been looking for for decades. waste, fraud, and abuse. this quest is not new. the methods however, are. >> come here, elon! >> reporter: president trump has given the world's richest man a temporary white house job and an ambitious order -- audit to the federal government agency by agency. expose waste and fraud to. if you have to infiltrate sensitive government databases, do it to. >> the way to think about the bureau of fiscal service is almost like the accounts payable department for the federal government. >> reporter: nat natasha sarin worked for the agency during the biden administration, the bureau fiscal service disturbance $1.3 billion annually. things like social security sets, medical reimbursements and federal grants. >> i think fraud and fraud in the federal government is a worthwhile cause to try to combat.
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the challenge is that it has literally nothing to do with what the bureau of fiscal service does or what this treasury payments ecosystem does. >> reporter: if you're on the hunt for that, you don't go here. >> that doesn't sit at the bureau fiscal service that sits at the agency's. >> reporter: the treasury department has told congress musk's associates can't change any payments, they have had read-only access to the database. but those assurances have not been independently verified's prickle is also a question about data security. i file my taxes electronically, does that put me inside this database? >> it sure does enter a bank account information that's how you get your refund electronically. >> reporter: not just william, what i live. >> how much you are paid how much your refund is. >> reporter: all of that is in there? >> absolutely. the most private sensitive data about american citizens all sits in the bureau of fiscal service in the treasury the treasury payments ecosystem.
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>> reporter: musk's top treasury deputy tech executive had access until a monday court ruling. those first not in federalist data security code open systems to hacking. >> this is the most sensitive information about them that the federal government has historically held in the hands of very few career civil servants who are trained and these data and ecosystems. with- there are real security questions at play. >> reporter: there might be some who watch this conversation who say i trust president trump and he trusts elon musk. i don't know anything about this agency i don't know anything about these civil servants, but i trust them, i'm okay with that. >> i don't want to be hyperbolic and i understand and really respect the fact that democracies churn and the people voted to end made a donald trump of the president of the united states for a second time.
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that said, i think we should all be wary and concerned about the fact that some of the actions that might be taken are actions that make us less safe and less secure. >> reporter: security is one issue, transparency another. so far the white house is not revealed who was doing this work and what they found and what they plan to do with it. >> john: major, this work outside of the bureau of fiscal service one of the kinds of department's might be getting the same treatment? >> reporter: you heard a reference of the real matter resides within each agency. 16 agencies have been touched by one manner or another by those investigators under the doge umbrella. fema, department of energy, department of labor, cdc, epa. you don't see the department of education of the department of defense. president trump says they are next. >> maurice: the white house is claiming fraud and waste and abuse, have actually proven t
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that? report back president trump has had corruption and kickbacks, in one case for the u.s. agency of international develop a federal judge said to bring me the evidence of this so i can understand why you leave it's imperative to shut usaid down rapidly. the department of justice did not provide any evidence of kickbacks or corruption. >> john: a question i get a lot from people -- most of them didn't vote for donald trump. can elon musk do this? >> reporter: the legal challenges are on two fronts. a 1974 privacy act law that says you cannot provide information about government payments to outsiders. this may be in violation of that. there is also what 2002 cybersecurity law that says any outsider brought into the federal databases has to pass their own cybersecurity protocols. we have no information whether anyone from doge has passed those protocols. >> john: major garrett force in washington, thank you. >> maurice: some of the top stories from around the world into my tv news roundup.
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president trump is raising the stakes in his global trade war he put a 25% import tax today on the steel and aluminum, including from america's top trade partners canada and mexico. >> john with the eagles super bowl victory over the kansas city chiefs, wide receiver devonta smith joins an elite group of nfl stars, he's now the fifth player in league history to win a heisman trophy, a national football college championship and a super bowl ring. >> maurice: the president believes making pennies doesn't make sense. he has ordered the u.s. treasury to stop. 17 years ago today on "60 minutes," morley safer talked to the director of the u.s. meant about the pennies future. edmund moy said back then there was a potential downside to scrapping it. >> we have taken a look at studies of countries who have gotten rid of their lost denomination calling. there's always at least a one-time inflationary inflationary hit upwards. >> prices have a habit of doing that, don't they? >> people are in the business of
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trying to make money. >> maurice: money watch correspondent kelly o'grady is here now. why do we think president trump is going after the penny in the first place? >> to save money. you've heard that saying it costs money to make money. this literally applies here at the costs over $0.03 to manufacture a penny and if you think that's bad it costs more for a nickel, close to $0.14. the math doesn't add up here. >> maurice: that is astounding when you think about it. here is the government doing this over time this has got to add up to a big number. >> reporter: last year alone the government lost $103 million manufacturing these two coins. it's not a trillion dollars if you're trying to trim the budget but every penny does add up. i will know if there is a gray area of president trump can do this. congress sets the currency specification but i did talk to a number of legal analysts today that said he might be able to legally stop from minting new coins. remember president obama was
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supportive of this as well. >> maurice: right. of the penny costs all of this to make these are no numbers to the government why is this going on year after year? >> reporter: lobby and, potentially. a penny is made up of 97% zinc. the company that makes that zinc that goes into the penny spent $160,000 lobbying the government last year. this also fear among consumers if you get rid of the penny, a seller could round up like they do in canada, they round up or rounded down to the nearest $0.05 and the others nostalgia. who doesn't love a lucky penny? >> maurice: i would be sad to see the penny go. still ahead on the cbs evening news lonnie quinn with back-to-back winter storms midwest to match the east and we will have these stories as well. >> reporter: i'm jonathan vigliotti with a story from a connell, washington where inflation is hitting the community in unexpected ways. that's tonight's eye on america. >> reporter: i'm jason allen in dallas. how much are americans paying for the strategy to use military jets to move migrants out of the
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country? that's next on the cbs evening news. some things should stand the test of time. long-lasting eylea hd could significantly improve your vision. more people on eylea hd had no fluid in the retina compared to those on eylea at 4 months. eylea hd is the only wet amd therapy that helped 8 out of 10 people go up to 4 months between injections after 3 initial monthly treatments. if you have an eye infection, eye pain or redness, or allergies to eylea hd, don't use. eye injections like eylea hd may cause eye infection, separation of the retina, or rare but severe swelling of blood vessels in the eye. an increase in eye pressure has been seen. there is an uncommon risk of heart attack or stroke associated with blood clots. the most common side effects were blurred vision, cataract, corneal injury, and eye floaters. and there's still so much to see. if you are on eylea or a similar type of treatment, ask your retina specialist about eylea hd today for the potential for fewer injections.
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eliminate wasteful spending in the federal government to. that may be at odds with what he's doing to keep another campaign promise. >> maurice: jason allen has been investigating what it's costing them taxpayers to deport immigrants in the country illegally. >> reporter: we shot this video from a dirt ridge outside fort bliss in el paso, texas. we could see about 80 men, women, and the children, recent arrivals in the u.s. stepping off buses and the stepping on to military transport jets. this group was going to ecuador. two days later border patrol and the army allowed us onto the base for a closer look at another full flight go this time going to guatemala. some of the migrants on board traveled for months to get to the u.s., they would return to central america in five hours. it's a move former acting immigration and customs enforcement director told us was unprecedented to. >> we never used a military aircraft. isis funded by congress up to a
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billion dollars annually for transportation. >> reporter: cbs news found a singles flight on the c17 could run more than $28,000 per hour, that's more than three times what ice pays on average for the normal charter flights on regular passenger aircraft. the flight we saw headed to guatemala cost nearly $300,000. one of at least 15 military flights so far landed in india with a round trip cost of more than $1 million. military planes are also carrying migrants to migrants to guantanamo bay. the first flight on se 17 which can carry as many as 134 passengers had about ten detainees on board, average cost of more than $20,000 per person. the u.s. military is also expanding a migrant operation center there to hold as many as 30,000 people. in 1,994,140,000 migrants sheltered at guantanamo and panama government estimates put the cost at nearly half a billion dollars, equivalent to more than a billion dollars
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today. >> ice is well-funded when it comes to transportation, it's certainly something we never needed to. we are in an unprecedented era were immigration enforcement has been elevated to the highest levels of u.s. foreign policy and national security. >> john: jason joins us from dallas. the administration and that the president's supporters would say maybe these are big numbers it's expensive but there is a justification for this, right? >> writes. that is the cost of keeping some of those migrants here. our own analysis found it's a couple hundred dollars for a single mail for a day, it's double that for a family. we know the cities and put the cost in the billions to house and feed some of these migrants, that is what this is being weighed against. >> maurice: all of this begs a question, could this be done less expensively? >> reporter: it could be if you were using some of those charter flights that we talked about but that does have a limited capacity. you look again, could you put
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some more people on some of these flights? especially these early flights to guantanamo bay that have had 15 people on them. a dozen people, we know the administration does want to make those daily flights in the near future. >> john: the use of military planes sends a deterrence message. how does this compare to the obama years and the deportations that were high during his term? >> reporter: a good question. we did get some new numbers today from the administration, that's the number of nice arrests since the president has been office, now up to 11,000. we can compare that to the by the administration which is doing about 300 per day. this works out to a an average of about 500 ice arrests per day now. >> maurice: jason allen on the story tonight in dallas, thank you, jason. >> john: winter is being winter in the midwest and the east. >> maurice: lonnie quinn with back-to-back storms in february. >> back-to-back-to-back-to-back.
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what you got it right here, this is sioux falls, south dakota. they picked up 3.2 inches of snow, not a big storm, right? the fact that this is kicking things off, the first amended come -- that storm pushes over to the northeast it's going to be tapping into some both moisture as well. they do combine, what's interesting this time it's not the farther north you go to find the bigger totals, some places well self will pick up the bigger numbers. new york city a paltry inch or two. philadelphia sees vocal inches, dcc's 6 inches in right behind that we've got another system that makes its way in wednesday night to thursday. this storm follows a similar path but this one has a lot more moisture, i mean a lot more moisture. chicago picks up maybe 8 inches of snow but it's at moisture it's going to play a big role in this storm and when you look at all of the storms i'm referring to, let's pull them up i put they all originate out west. they scoop up golf moisture, north of those lines. south of those lines it's rain.
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>> john: we talked a lot about the people who were hit by hurricane helene, how is this what are going to affect them? >> reporter: this is a terrible slap in the face, they have not recovered yet and we are talking portions of that area, north carolina into portions of the tennessee valley, half a foot of rain and they haven't recovered just yet. it's all yours. >> john: lonnie quinn, thank you so much. >> maurice: the egg has become the number one symbol of inflation in this country but in at least one town it's the potato. >> john: we will take you there next in eye on america. ♪...to me♪ ♪control is everything to me♪ and now... ...i'm back in the picture. feel significant symptom relief at... ...4 weeks with skyrizi. skyrizi is proven to help deliver remission... ...and help visibly improve damage.... ...of the intestinal lining at 12 weeks and 1 year.
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they were and that can have a big impact on a small town. when that town is dependent on a single major employer. jonathan vigliotti has tonight eye on america from connell, washington. >> reporter: for half a century, connell, washington's economy depended on frenc french fries. up until september this plant processed at 300 million pounds of potatoes into fries every year. adam kunkel moved his family here to a town about 3,000 in 2013 so he could work at the factory. his wife katrina opened a coffee shop. >> we finally bought a house to go years ago. being first-time home buyers we were so excited and we thought this was going to be great to. >> reporter: rate until the fall in the factory laid off all of its workers. the parent company pointed to a national decrease in fast food visits which drove down french fight sales. they say caused by inflation.
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this fall, one of their customers, mcdonald's, reported sales were down 1.5%, up to help devastate this local economy. >> i think french fries will be around forever and livelihoods will be stable. >> i've worked there for over 11 years, i was like one of my going to do now to support my family? >> reporter: if you're a town who was just lost your lifeline, what do you do next? >> this is the reality of these events hitting these small-town communities, there's not an immediate solution to help them. >> reporter: ryan herzog is a professor of economics at gonzaga university. >> donald trump campaign on bringing prices down on everyday goods, do you see that happening? >> i don't know how. when you talk labor costs and you talk tariffs, all of these things are going to ultimaely put some price pressure in pl place. >> reporter: inflation impact so much of what we buy. everything from bread to eggs to
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potatoes. nearly half of all americans say they feel worse off today than they did four years ago. inflation drove many people to the polls and in towns like this it might be driving them out to. >> we had people, generations of families that worked here. >> reporter: connell mayor lee barrow said the plant's closure already led to the collateral damage, a 10% cut to the budget due in part to lost tax revenue. what kind of effect could that have on the community? >> it absently could affect retail, it could affect enrollment in our schools. >> reporter: it doesn't end they are. spending less has led to a scaled down on the dollars made from pizza sales. kanwardeep singh is the owner of pappa ray's how busy was it when the factory was in operation? >> somewhere around 3,000 a day. now it's sometimes 600 end. >> reporter: closer to the
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kunkel home, coffee. >> we've cut back our hours to try to save money to keep all of our people on board. the cost of milk, the cost of coffee beans, everything goes up. >> reporter: the town of connell now faces a fork in the road, struggling to hold on while searching for new ways to bring prosperity back to its table. for eye on america, i'm jonathan vigliotti in connell, washington. >> john: as for the kunkels, jonathan tells us adam has had a number of interviews but he hasn't found a job. katrina is still running the coffee shop but business is down 15% since the potato factory closed. in tomorrow's eye on america, a security threat at our ports, is the country that makes these giant cranes using them to spy on us? maurice and i will be back with some good news for viewers who can't get enough of the evening news. >> this portion of the cbs evening news is sponsored by
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which may be life-threatening or uncontrolled muscle movements which may be permanent. high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, weight gain and high cholesterol may occur. difficulty moving, tremors, slow or uncontrolled body movements, restlessness and feeling like you need to move, nausea, constipation, insomnia, dizziness, increased appetite, and fatigue are common. side effects may not appear for several weeks. visit vraylar.com to see additional side effects. i didn't have to change my treatment. i just gave it a lift. ask about vraylar. abbvie could help you save. >> john: this broadcast has been a pioneer in electronic journalism. it started nearly 77 years ago as a 15 minute program called the cbs television news. television was the new medium so it seemed important to get it into the title. >> maurice: in 1963 it was the first network evening newscasts to expand to a half hour and became the cbs evening news. tonight we begin a new chapter
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with a second half hour we call cbs evening news plus, an extra 30 minutes to put the news and context. >> john: tonight we look at the dangers of artificial intelligence, could it one day outsmart humans? and as measles makes a comeback we will talk to parents opting out of vaccines for their kids. >> maurice: cbs evening news plus streams on cbs evening news 24/7, once again a pioneer in news program. that is the cbs evening news for tonight, i'm maurice dubois, thanks for joining us. >> john: i'm john dickerson, i will see you again soon on cbs evening news plus. >> maurice: have a good night. ♪ ♪
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