tv CBS Morning News CBS August 26, 2014 4:00am-4:31am EDT
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striking isis. the united states begins laying the groundwork for possible attacks on the islamic extremist group inside syria's borders. i don't know how long the vindication for peace. i don't know how long for peace. but i know how this story's going to end. >> demand for justice and calls for peace at the funeral of michael brown whose death sparked days of protest in a st. louis suburb. >> michael brown's blood is crying for justice. detecting danger, renewed calls for an early earthquake warning system in the wake of the strongest quake to strike northern california in 25 years.
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and remembering robin. a heartfelt tribute at the emmys from one of robin williams' closest hollywood friends. >> it's very hard to talk about him in the past because he was so present in all of our lives. >> this is the "cbs morning news" for tuesday, august 26th, >> this is the "cbs morning news" for tuesday, august 26th, 2014. captioning funded by cbs good morning. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. the united states is preparing to expand its fight against isis militants. it's been reported this morning that the u.s. has begun reconnaissance over syria. president obama approved the operations that may lead the way for air strikes in syria. the president has not approved military action against isis yet and the syrian government is warning that air strikes without permission from damascus would be considered an act of
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aggression. susan mcginnis is in washington. susan, good morning. >> anne-marie, good morning. the president so far has resisted any assistance in syria militarily, but it may be soon now that isis has murdered james foley. >> reporter: u.s. officials tell the associated press president obama approved and the pentagon has begun surveillance flights over syria. the flyings are meant to gather reliable intelligence has the pentagon gathers military to help disrupt operations. the u.s. has launched air strikes against isis forces in iraq to protect personnel, quell humanitarian crisis there. the president met monday with secretary of defense chuck hagel and other advisers to discuss military options in syria, including air strikes. white house press secretary josh earnest said monday the president believes the terror group say threat to the united
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states. >> isil has demonstrated in violence their willingness to perpetrate terrible actions against american citizens. >> reporter: plans have come together as isis had worked to kill james foley. the top pentagon officials have said the only way to fully eliminate the threat from isis militants is to go after them in syria as well, anne-marie. >> all right, susan mcginnis in washington, thank you, susan. israel is further escalating its attack in the gaza strip. early this morning, two gaza city high-rise buildings were attacked one building collapsed, the other was severely damaged. both buildings were evacuated after warnings about the coming attack. since saturday, five towers and shopping complexes. and now to the weather and
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two hurricanes to report on. first in the atlanta, hurricane cristobal. at least five people were killed as cristobal moved through the caribbean. the storm is about 350 miles southwest of bermuda this morning. the storm is expected to move away from the bahamas today and head northeast. but it's not expected to pose a threat to the u.s. coast. and in the pacific, hurricane marie weakened to indicate gore 3 storm with sustained winds of 150 miles per hour. marie is caution heavy surf along mexico's pacific coast and may do the same in southern california. the storm is located about 500 wests southwest of baja california and moving away from land. in california napa county officials estimate that damage could reach $1 billion. but officials say despite significant damage, recovery efforts are moving quickly. worst damage was in downtown
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napa where 150 homes and businesses are designated as unsafe to occupy. sunday's quake has renewed calls for an early warning system. carter evans has more on that. >> earthquake hit and it fell right around the gap. >> reporter: sunday's earthquake woke up lee norland. a few seconds' warning would have been welcomed. >> i'm racing around the bed and the bed moved toward me and we met. >> that's how you got the shiner? >> that's how i got the shiner. >> reporter: but uc berkeley did predict it in ten seconds. >> in ten seconds you can move away from things falling on you and stuff like that. if you're having surgery, you would like that eye surgeon to pull that scalpel back. >> reporter: richard irwin. and it sounded the alarm. it detects preliminary
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vibrations that occur seconds before an earthquake. the seismic wave that follows travels at the speed of sound but the system's sensors can sent an alert at the speefd light. a similar system is already used in japan and mexico. 40 to 60 seconds of warning could provide enough time to ground elevators or slow down trains. the burkillely team says $80 million is required to add more sensors and develop an alert to instantly warn people on their cell phones. >> there's a sense of frustration. nobody is getting it and that's because we don't have the necessary investment. >> reporter: tests are already under way with san francisco's rapid transit. it has the ability to automatically slow down trains during an earthquake. the signals went out on sunday, but it happened at the time when the trains weren't running. carter evans, cbs news, napa, california. it was quiet overnight in ferguson, missouri, where
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residents respected the wishes of michael brown's family. they had asked for a day of peace as they buried their son. brown, a black teenager, was killed by a white police officer. thousands attended his funeral yesterday and as vladimir duthiers reports there was a call for change. >> reporter: 2500 people were in the church for service, it was part memorial, part call for action. reverend al sharpton gave the juliy. >> michael brown must be remembered for more than disturbance. he must be remembered for this is when they started changing what was going on. >> reporter: but brown's uncle charles ewing wants more. >> michael brown's blood is crying from the ground. crying for vengeance. crying for justice. >> reporter: brown was shot six times by darren wilson, a white
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police officer who stopped him for walking in the middle of the street. brown was unarmed, but police say the 18-year-old hit the officer and tried to take his gun. three witnesses say brown was surrendering. >> no community in america would tolerate an 18-year-old boy laying in the street 4 1/2 hours. and we're not going to tolerate it either. whatever happened to value this boy's life must be answereded by somebody. >> when you look at your two sons and you see what happened to michael brown, are you afraid for them? >> absolutely. >> reporter: we met casey smith and her son damian outside the church. she doesn't know the brown family but feels the connection. >> once he's 16, 17 years old, being an african-american male, running around, doing what teenagers are supposed to do, will he be mistaken?
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>> reporter: more than $250,000 has been donate to the brown family. there were some demonstrators this weekend, offering him support. michael brown was laid to rest at st. peter's cemetery not far from where he went to high school. officer darren wilson hasn't publicly spoken about the incident. the grand jury reviewing the case meets against on wednesday. vad year duthiers. st. louis, missouri. coming up on the "morning news," gadget fight. look how the fight for leg work got passengers off a plane. and these stop the action at the u.s. open. this is the "cbs morning news." "i'm 16 and just got my first car" feeling. presenting the buypower card from capital one. redeem earnings toward part or even all of a new chevrolet, buick, gmc or cadillac - with no limits. so every time you use it, you're not just shopping for goods. you're shopping for something great.
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friskies grillers. white was the new black here in new york city. nearly 3,000 people turned out for last night's fourth annual dinner in white party. it was held in lower manhattan at a park right on the hudson river. the location was kept secret until the very last minute. and not only did everyone have to wear white, they had to bring their own tables and chairs which also had to be white. on the "cbs moneywatch" amazon gambles big on video games. an in-flight fight over leg room. jill wagner's at the new york stock exchange with that and more. good morning, jill. >> good morning, anne-marie. amazon is making the move to dominate internet video games the e-commerce company plans to
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by twit for nearly $1 billion. twit had 25 million visitors in july. companies paid for ads more on twit than any other video sites. here on wall street, another record day for the s&p. it added 10 points to close at a new high under the 2,000 milestone. the dow added 17 points while the nasdaq added 18. the markets went up but new home sales went down. they slid almost 2 1/2 points in july. that is the slowest pace in four months. the annual rate is over 400,000 new homes. normally, it would be twice that much. analysts say buyers are aiming towards cheaper, previously owned homes. and two passengers got kicked off a newark flight sunday. a man was using a device which prevents the passenger from reclining back. the woman asked him to remove
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it, but he refused it. so she doused him with water. and anne-marie, they were sitting in economy which has more leg room. >> those seats are pretty tight. i can see people getting heated. one of the few times i'm happy i'm short. jill wagner at the new york stock exchange. thanks a lot, jill. straight ahead, causing a racket. two players at the u.s. open pause their match to do battle with bees. and later comedian billy crystal honors longtime friends at last night's emmys. me too... we're practically twins!
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as the little league team returned to chicago with fire trucks soaking their plane with water cannons. and hundreds of fans cheering them on. the squad fell to south korea in sunday's final but won the u.s. championship and inspired their hometown all summer long. dana kozlov of our chicago station wbbm reports. >> reporter: a crush of people greeted the young jackie robinson west players the second their bus doors opened. at the team's home park. back home for the first time in four weeks, as u.s. little league champs greeted by mayor rahm emanuel. enthusiasm usually reserved for professional players then followed them to heir home field. >> this a little too much? >> reporter: some players speechless. parents and grandparents proud. >> you know what, i feel like i'm having an out of body experience. i'm sorry, it's overwhelming. it's just an honor. i'm going to tear up, i'm
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emotional. >> reporter: she was so proud of you she started crying. >> yeah, she gets a little emotional sometimes. it's nothing knew to me. >> reporter: so there is crying in baseball, at least for these boys who have now come to terms with being heroes here. >> i think it's great. people love us here. >> this is real big. it was unexpected, too. >> reporter: a big parade may be ahead, but for now, the first thing you're going to do when you get home? >> go to sleep maybe. >> reporter: for a couple days? >> yeah. >> reporter: until the parade? >> yeah. >> that was wbbm's dana kozlov reporting. as for the parade it is scheduled for tomorrow. now, it's day two of the u.s. open here in new york city. on monday venus williams and kimiko date-krumm swatted the insects. when williams was dogged by one.
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she spent more than a minute trying to shoo the bee away. williams would win the match, though in three sets. when we return, remembering robin williams. good friend billy crystal delivers a heartfelt tribute at the emmys. only just for men has airactiv. the only technology that uses oxygen in the air to get rid of gray while leaving the natural variations in your hair. no ammonia. no peroxide. no overcoloring. just air... just you... and the look you want. just for men. thank ythank you for defendiyour sacrifice. and thank you for your bravery. thank you colonel. thank you daddy. military families are uniquely thankful for many things, the legacy of usaa auto insurance can be one of them.
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here's a look at today's forecast in some cities around the country. the annual burning manifest value is extremely soggy this year. heavy rain forced oggers to close the event month which is health in the desert 90 miles north of reno, nevada. it could reopen today, weather permitting. last year, 68,000 people turned out for the week-long counterculture event. and the emmy awards were handed out in las vegas.
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breaking bad" won for best drama. and "modern family." cbs won big. "the big bang theory" and jewian that margulies took home best actress. allison janney from "mom" won the best supporting actress in a comedy. and stephen colbert won an outstanding variety series. a somber note, though, an emotional billy crystal paid tribute to his good friend robin williams. >> it's very hard to talk about him in the past because he was so present in all of our lives. to almost 40 years, he was the brightest star in the comedy galaxy. >> williams died two weeks ago in an apparent suicide. and coming up after your local news on "cbs this morning," more of billy
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crystal's tribute to robin williams. i'm anne-marie green. this is the "cbs morning news." to you... they're more than just a pet so protect them, with k9 advantix ll it's broad spectrum protection kills fleas, ticks and mosquitoes too. k9 advantix ll for the love of dog is building up layer, upon layer, upon layer of bacteria. and to destroy those layers? you need listerine®. its unique formula penetrates these layers deeper than other mouthwashes, killing bacteria all the way down to the bottom layer. so for a cleaner, healthier mouth, go with #1 dentist recommended listerine®. power to your mouth. also try listerine® pocket paks to kill bad breath germs on the go. losing your chex mix too easily? deploy the boring potato chip decoy bag. with a variety of tastes and textures,
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as investigations continue into the shooting death of the teenager michael brown, a young man in denver is recalling his own experience with police violence. alex randall said his parents never had the talk with him on how to deal with police. manuel bojorquez has his story. >> i could see the metal, i could see the officer's handg p handgriping it. that's when i expected to be shot. >> reporter: alex recalled the night. when a traffic stop ended with an officer's gun at his head. what's it like to be back here. >> you know, it's really emotional. >> reporter: police found marijuana on his passenger who was white and began searching
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the car. landau said when asked if he had a warrant, one of three officers who was a female started beating him. were you doing something that threatened them? were you fighting back. >> i heard an officer shout out he's reaching for his gun. he's reaching for his gun. all i thought was no, i'm not reaching for anything. >> reporter: did you expect to die? >> i expected to die that evening. >> reporter: it left him with a traumatic brain injury. >> i was beat down here from a police radio. >> reporter: landau says the only thing worse than the beating hearing the screams of his mother patsy hathaway when she saw him. >> i still cry. i get angry out of nowhere. people don't understand. a beating like this traumatizes a family for years. >> reporter: hathaway and her
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now ex-husband adopted alex and his sister maya when they were babies. >> i was terribly uneducated about all of this. the problem was racism. >> reporter: none the officers was prosecuted or disciplined in the landau case. however, landau did receive $800,000 from the city of denver. two of the officers were later fired about lying about other beat. this one captured on videotape. hathaway quit her job as a teacher to join her son's fight about racial profiling. >> i never intended to spend this part of my life studying police brutality but that's what happened. >> reporter: with ferguson, missouri, fresh on many minds it's one that millions of mothers and sons have every day. manuel bojorquez, cbs news,
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denver. coming up on "cbs this morning" for more possible plans on air strikes in syria. david martin has more. and more and more charging additional fees. and they're making billions of dollar. peter greenberg tell us how to avoid paying them. and norah sits down with tennis champ serena williams. i'm anne-marie green. have a great day.
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. >> from the cbs-3 broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". today is tuesday, august 26, good morning, i'm ukee washington. >> i'm erika von tiehl. too close for comfort, near tragedy when stray bullet narrowly miss as sleeping three year old. now the hunt is on for those responsible. we're live. definitely not what authorities have in minds what they tell people to drink responsibly. a local man accused of letting his eight year old nephew do the designated driving. >> with no leads and no where tolls turn, a mother now pleading for help after her son is run down on the side of the road. that story and more coming up. first, your forecast with katie. i feel like we're on this mountain climb. >> on our way, like the price is
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