tv CBS Evening News CBS March 9, 2025 5:30pm-6:00pm PDT
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yourself with people that are in the same situation, it is a safe zone. >> reporter: and the zone that has become especially meaningful to members like diane reyes, says it has transformed her outlook on life. >> nice. that's it for us at 5:00. we'll see you back here at 6:00 for an hour of news. local news continues streaming on cbs news bay area. >> yeah, darren will be here with the forecast. there is some rain in the forecast for this week, and we will have more big time storms coming in. we have a possible strike that's going to be happening in the south bay. we will let you know what's the latest on that coming up tonight at 6:00. >> so we'll see you in 30 minutes. ♪ tonight, new recession fears as tariffs begin to bite. president trump refusing to
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rule it out. >> i hate to predict things like that. >> tariff turbulence and possibility of higher prices rattling markets. >> i'm nikole killion in west palm beach where president trump acknowledges his tariff strategy could produce some pain before payoff. why he's urging patience. also tonight, breaking news. canada's ruling liberals pick a new leader. >> canada strong. >> stand up to trump. >> i'm ed o'keefe in ottawa where the tariff war coincides with the canadian transfer of power. justin trudeau is out. president trump gets a new adversary. under attack. russia takes aim at ukraine with u.s. military aid cut off. >> i'm holly williams in lviv. nearly ten days after that explosive meeting in washington president volodymyr zelenskyy says ukraine's fully committed to constructive dialogue. carmax rampage. >> i'm andres gutierrez in inglewood where an angry driver plowed through this dealership,
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mowing down customers and employees. plus, it's not just clocks springing forward. 30 states set for a big warm-up this week. and later, meeting her match. why this old dog got a cloned counterpart. >> does she feel like an extension of stella? >> yeah. that much is for sure. >> announcer: this is the "cbs weekend news" from new york. good evening. i'm jericka duncan. thanks for joining us on this sunday. tonight, president trump is defending his aggressive tariff policies, but he declined to rule out that they could plunge the country into a recession. the president also downplayed the dropping stock market, insisting the economic turbulence caused by his agenda would drive future prosperity. cbs's nikole killion joins us tonight from west palm beach with all the details. good evening, nikole. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. president trump is pulling back
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most tariffs for now and plans to resume them next month. however, he warned more disruptions could be ahead. in a lengthy interview with fox news's maria bart rome o. president trump stopped short of saying whether the u.s. economy would ko fall into a recession later this year. >> i hate to predict things like that. there is a period of transition because what we're doing is very big. >> i would never bet on recession. no chance. >> reporter: even as his commerce secretary sought to downplay the risk, the president also didn't rule out the possibility of inflation. >> but you may get it again with these tariffs, right? >> you may get it. >> once you said to me my input costs have already started to go up i'm going to have to raise prices. >> the in meantime guess what? interest rates are down. >> reporter: the president stood firm on his tariff strategy after a week of whiplash on wall street. vowing to move ahead with reciprocal tariff against mexico and canada on april 2nd. >> the tariffs could go up as time goes by and they may go up and, you know, i don't know if
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it's predictability. i think -- >> so that's not clarity. >> no, i think they say that. it sounds good to say. but for years the globalists, the big globalists have been ripping off the united states. >> reporter: but patience may be wearing thin. >> most of us aren't against tariffs full stop, right? i think tariffs are an important tool in the cooltoolkit. i think the way he's handling tariffs is the way he's handling everything else right now. >> reporter: adding to the potential economic uncertainty, whether there could be a government shutdown this week with a friday deadline looming, the president is backing a republican bill to extend funding through the end of the year. a vote is expected tuesday, but it's unclear if there's enough support. jericka? >> nikole killion, thank you. to canada now and a changing of the guard. tonight the ruling liberal party elected mark carney as its new leader and the country's prime minister. carney is a political outsider. he has never held political
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office before. cbs news senior white house correspondent ed o'keefe is in ottawa tonight tracking it all. a lot of excitement in that room, ed. >> reporter: that's right, jericka. you know, president trump's threats of on-again, off-again tariffs have shaken stock markets around the world, and now they're rattling the race to lead canada. late last week he threatened punishing new tariffs on canadian dairy and lumber. >> canada has been ripping us off for years on tariffs for lumber and for dairy products. >> reporter: but today president trump's commerce secretary said those tariffs aren't happening yet. >> you know the president's going to respond to it, but he's agreed not to respond until april 2nd. >> reporter: the back and forth is infuriating canadians. >> uncertainty cannot become the new certainty. >> reporter: francois philippe champagne is the canadian official negotiating with commerce secretary howard lutnick. >> i think you've seen a side of canadians that americans have never seen. you know, these canadians can bite. and you've seen it.
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and stand up. and for good reason because we're standing up for what we believe is right. >> reporter: his comments come as the canadian prime minister justin trudeau today steps down, saying good-bye to his party and hitting back hard at trump. >> we will continue to be in a trade war that was launched by the united states for the foreseeable future. the canadians should continue to buy canadian, continue to staund for each other. trudeau is being succeeded by mark carney, an explicit who's set to take power in the coming days and inherit a tariff war involving h war. it's angering the residents up north. >> they're getting a little frustrated with that kind of rhetoric. but importantly canadians are frust frustrated with our neighbors, the country we feel closest to,
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the country that's been partners, allies. >> reporter: for months polls show the opposition conservative party with a double-digit lead over the ruling party but now with those threatened tariffs and president trump's calls for canada to become the 51st state the new prime minister mark carney and his party might hold on to power after all. jericka? >> ed o'keefe in canada, thank you. tonight secretary of state marco rubio heads to saudi arabia, where he'll meet with ukrainian officials for high-stakes talks about the country's future. this as russia steps up its attacks on the country. cbs's holly williams is in ukraine for us tonight. holly. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. ukraine's president volodymyr zelenskyy says his country is fully committed to constructive dialogue with the u.s. and saudi arabia. and just over three years after vladimir putin started this war by invading ukraine zelenskyy said in a social media post yesterday that his country has been seeking peace from the very
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beginning. here in ukraine the war has caused hundreds of thousands of casualties and forced millions from their homes. in the last week alone zelenskyy says russia has launched over 1,200 guided munitions, missiles and close to 900 drones at his country. in the small city of dobropillya on friday night there was the kind of attack we've seen over and over again. ukraine says russian forces launched two ballistic missiles as well as drones, hitting nine residential buildings and killing 11, including a rescue worker. among those reported injured were seven children. it's been over a week since president zelenskyy's very public and very contentious meeting with president trump in washington. trump told the wartime leader, "you don't have the cards right now." and since then the u.s. has suspended military aid and intelligence sharing with ukraine. but jericka, we still don't know the full impact of that along
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ukraine's 700-mile-long front line. >> all right, holly williams, thank you so much. tonight, federal investigators are at the site of a plane crash in pennsylvania. it happened just after takeoff. the aircraft plunging into the parking lot of a retirement community near the airport. all five people on board the beechcraft banta survived. no one on the ground was hurt. to washington, d.c. now, where secret service agents shot a man who they say was waving a gun near the white house. it happened early this morning. police say the man may have been suicidal. he was taken to the hospital. his condition is unknown. no agents were injured. president trump was in florida at the time. today thousands of people gathered in selma, alabama marking 60 years since bloody sunday. they marched across the edmund pettus bridge amid-new fears of a rollback in voting and civil rights. in 1965 the televised brutal beating of voting rights
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advocates shocked the nation, galvanizing support for the voting rights act. tonight an arrest in california after a crime caught on camera. it happened at the showroom of a carmax dealership. eight people hurt, two of them critically. cbs's andres gutierrez is in inglewood, california with all the details. andres. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. police have yet to release the identity of the suspect, who remains in custody tonight. authorities say he became angry at the dealership and then turned his suv into a weapon. chaos as an angry driver plows through the crowded carmax showroom outside los angeles. >> go that way. >> reporter: at least eight people including customers and employees were injured in saturday's rampage. >> it probably felt like ten seconds to be honest. that's how quick it felt to me. >> reporter: miguel hernandez shot this video. he was shopping for a car, and when he heard screaming he ran to the showroom. >> the noises was just a bunch
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of glass breaking, screeching. you know, metal hitting the door frames and just a bunch of noises you wouldn't hear. >> reporter: the dealership says the suspect had been getting his car appraised. witnesses saw him yelling at staff. >> and i see him arguing. then he backed up, came this way, made a big u-turn and rammed it. not once but twice. >> reporter: the suspect drove off but turned himself in to police a short time later. >> how crazy is this? on the scale of 1 to 10 it would have to be like 13. >> reporter: and this dealership did not open for business today as authorities continued to gather evidence in their investigation. jericka? >> andres gutierrez, thank you. tonight, authorities in the dominican republic are searching for a missing university of pittsburgh student. sudiksha konanki disappeared while on a spring break trip to punta cana. the 20-year-old was last seen thursday. she traveled there with a group of six other students. turning now to the weather, more than 80 million americans
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will start to see signs of spring with above-average temperatures expected this week. let's turn now to cbs news meteorologist andrew kozak. he's in philadelphia. andrew. >> yes, jericka, good evening, so many people warming up in the week ahead. we're going to talk about very warm temperatures, very windy conditions but i want to start tonight with florida where we have some very rainy conditions. in fact, excessive rain for the panhandle. this is along a system, by the way, that gave snow to the panhandles of texas and oklahoma yesterday. now severe weather possible for the remainder of your sunday night. and into early monday where we could in the next 24 hours see as much as three additional inches of rain for areas like panama city, one to two inches for areas like jacksonville before that ships out across the atlantic. now, to the fire danger and the wind. for the midwest and the northern plains. it's along southwest breezes between 35 miles per hour for areas like kansas city, bismarck, north dakota 65-mile-per-hour winds as we head into monday. that will, however, bring us to our third top story when it
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comes to weather, and that's going to be the very warm temperatures. tomorrow many of us in the 70s. 30 degrees above where we should be. and that starts to push across the east coast as we head into your tuesday. jericka? >> good running weather. thank you. straight ahead on the "cbs weekend news," how egg farmers in alabama are recovering from losing their flocks. skiing superstar mikaela shiffrin sets yet another record. and the great lengths one pet owner went to for his best friend. it's a bit of a dinosaur. albuterol only treats your symptoms, not inflammation— a cause of asthma attacks. treating symptoms and inflammation with rescue is supported by asthma experts. finally, there's a modern way to treat symptoms and asthma attacks. airsupra is the first and only dual-action asthma rescue inhaler fda-approved to treat symptoms and help prevent asthma attacks. airsupra should not be used as a maintenance treatment
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♪ the department of agriculture says eggs are about double the price from january of 2024. an ongoing bird flu outbreak is blamed as the main culprit. cbs's kati weis visited a farm in alabama, one of the few with plenty of eggs. >> 900 laying here. 700 broiler chickens. >> reporter: this northern alabama farm has been in keith southard's family for five generations. his business is booming because he has eggs, a commodity many farms just can't produce right now. >> never had this many phone calls. >> reporter: last year he had to kill his flock after they got sick with a bacterial infection. >> similar symptoms to the avian flu. there really wasn't any answer but to just cull the flock and start over. >> reporter: because his birds were not infected with the highly pathogenic disease like the bird flu he didn't qualify
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for a u.s. department of agriculture program that reimburses farmers to replace their flocks. >> beared through it and kept going. >> reporter: a cbs news analysis of federal data found since 2020 the u is sda paid $1.1 billion to hundreds of egg producers forced to kill their flocks to prevent the spread of the bird flu. despite the public investment to help farms get back on track egg supply issues remain and prices hiked more than 15% in january. >> definitely a question there about when usda should get involved. >> to try to stop the rise of egg prices the usda plans to spend 1 billion more tax dollars to fight the bird flu, including $400 million to farmers to buy new chickens. >> we have to be diligent. >> reporter: frank singleton with wayne sanderson farms is glad the usda is helping. the usda paid them $600,000 over the last two years after culling three bird flu-exposed flocks. >> do you think that that's a
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fair use of taxpayer money? >> well, it's a partnership with the farmers and the consumer to make sure we can continue to feed america. >> reporter: with bird flu fallout expected at least another year, southard says it's important to protect small farms. >> it takes away the big consolidation that's happened and spreads out the risk. >> reporter: kati weis, cbs news, madison, alabama. still ahead on the "cbs weekend news," an icy rescue with a heartwarming ending. stay with us. h us. i was excited when i first heard of pronamel clinical enamel strength. this is a product that has our best enamel science yet. pronamel clinical enamel strength has 3 times better enamel protection, as well as repairs 66 percent of microdamage. i recommend pronamel clinical enamel strength. (vo) struggling with moderate to severe crohn's disease i recor ulcerative colitis? pronamel clinical talk to your doctor about #1 prescribed entyvio, offering two maintenance options, including the entyvio pen. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection,
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tonight in sweden a new milestone for american skiing sensation mikaela shiffrin. she set an all-time world record with her 156th podium finish. she finished third in the race. shiffrin also holds the record for all-time world cup wins at 100 victories. an update tonight on the man who illegally climbed london's elizabeth tower, which houses big ben saturday. he was carrying a palestinian flag. police arrested him today after more than 16 hours on the tower's ledge.
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nearby traffic came to a standstill as authorities used a crane to reach him. a massachusetts kayaker is being hailed as a hero after an icy river rescue. the man pulled two black labs out of the freezing water, returning them to their grateful owner. he said the dogs fell through thin ice while chasing geese. next on the "cbs weekend news," it's a match made by science. but first a look back at this day in history. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> into the ship that has led the way time and time again, we say farewell "discovery."
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science. in tonight's "weekend journal" cbs's itay hod introduces us to a california winery owner who found a way to keep his dog around a little longer. >> reporter: in the world of wine there is one ingredient you can't bottle. >> most wineries have dogs. >> reporter: arthur murray is the president of flambeaux, a picture perfect sonoma vineyard where a rainbow graced the vines the day we were there, as did its most famous ambassador. stella. >> welcome to flambeaux. >> reporter: stella is what's known as a winery dog. and she does more than just charm visitors. she guards the grapes and keeps unwanted invaders at bay. she's so good at her job she even made the wine dog calendar as miss july. >> come on. >> reporter: but after a decade on duty stella was slowing down. >> look at the fish. >> reporter: murray couldn't bear the thought of her not being here. >> she's a part of the family. she's a part of the wine. and i want that to continue.
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>> reporter: he thought he'd have to get another dog. but then someone half jokingly suggested he clone her. >> down. >> reporter: enter mella, stella's genetic twin and the world's first cloned winery dog. >> come on. >> reporter: it cost about $50,000. the best part, stella gets to train her mini me. in the 30 years since a sheep named dolly made headlines as the first mammal to be cloned, the practice has become a booming business. but not everyone is toasting the idea. robert klitzman, a physician and bioethicist at columbia university, says pet cloeng involves potential stress and health risks for both surrogates and clones. he also points to a lack of transparency within the industry. >> these are not benign procedures, and people should realize the costs involved. not just the economic costs but the cost in terms of suffering of dogs. >> reporter: not to mention it's not a carbon copy. like twins they have different
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personalities. stella is a serious dog, while mella is all about play. but for murray it's close enough. >> does she feel like an extension of stella? >> yeah. that much is for sure. to me it's like immediately i fell in love with her-s and it's because i was just like looking at stella. >> reporter: well, not exactly. but arthur murray is obviously a glass half full kind of guy. >> roll. >> reporter: itay hod, cbs news, healdsburg, california. and that is the "cbs weekend news" for this sunday. i'm jericka duncan in new york. thanks for watching. have a good night. in new york. th thanks for watching. have a
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i have things i have to do. i don't have a vehicle. and plus san francisco's slow recovery is hurting small business. it is really scary. i have to dip into all my savings. they're all gone. >> one business owner says it is the worst he's seen in over 30 years. and healdsburg wants to remain the small quaint town that it is. >> when you're local with the big guys coming in, it will start changing the feeling of it. but we're going to begin tonight by talking about the fact we're on the eve of a fairly large stripe by the vta in the south bay. something that will affect
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