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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  November 23, 2015 3:08am-4:01am EST

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admission is free, so seating is extremely limited. so make your reservation and gain the knowledge you need to gain the knowledge you need to be successful today.
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all: cbs cares! french president francois hollande is visiting several world leaders this week, including president obama at the white house on tuesday. back in paris, a return to normalcy has been elusive. elizabeth palmer is there. >> reporter: if you're young enough, paris feels as enchanted as ever. the big department stores have decked out their windows, and a christmas market stretches down the champs elysees. closed for four days right after the attacks, the stall owners have lost a lot of business. and now they're open again, says margo, sales are slow. there are not as many people walking? >> many people walking, yes. but so many people walking here and so many people don't pay. >> reporter: nobody's spending
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the way they usually do. >> very difficult. >> reporter: business is down all over. by a third in the restaurants and cafes. and the chamber of commerce says hotel revenues are down by half, as tourists cancel their plans. lily carvallo and ken eisner bucked the trend. but. >> there is like a black cloud around it. >> reporter: reinforced by the sight of heavily armed soldiers all over the city. >> this constant awareness that you don't know what is going to be hit next or it will, or if there is any place safe. >> reporter: since the attacks the french have rallied around national symbols. and that's been good news for the cogniaume family who make flags in what's not normally a flag-waving country says enzo. >> when you have a french flag on yourself or in your house, it's an act of patriotism.
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>> reporter: and a declaration that terrorism will not defeat the values of the french republic. of course economies do bounce back after terrorist attacks. but in this case this is the second one in less than a year. and jeff, the french government has warned that there may be more of them. >> liz palmer, thank you. the security team for pope francis nearly doubled in size last week just before his visit to africa, which begins wednesday. and as allen pizzey reports, the extra security was evident today at the vatican. >> reporter: the ramped-up security was in place long before the faithful even began to arrive. armed police from italy's numerous forces were on every corner. everyone who arrived for the pope's weekly angeles was checked, bags opened, random pat-downs. and that was just to get into the street in front of st. peter's basilica. the line stretched for several blocks for those wanting to enter the square itself. that involved another layer including metal detectors.
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the security wasn't just a reaction to the paris attacks. some months ago the cover of the isis online magazine had a photoshop of their flag flying from the obelisk in the center of the square. the implied threat didn't worry ernest and joanne morelli from st. petersburg, florida, however. >> we feel like the carabinieri are doing a pretty good job. they're all over the place. we don't feel as if anything could happen at this point. i mean, obviously it always could. but we feel fairly safe. >> reporter: pope francis is known to be indifferent to his own security. but aides say he is deeply concerned for those who flock to see him. the only way to ensure complete security in a place like this is to stop the terrorists well before they reach the target. but as both sides know only too well, the police have to get it right every time. the terrorists only have to get lucky once. allen pizzey, cbs news, rome. the city of chicago is on edge just before the release of a video showing a white police officer shooting and killing a black teen.
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jericka duncan has more on this. >> reporter: 17-year-old laquan mcdonald was shot 16 times in october of last year. his family's attorney, jeff meslin, has seen the police dash cam video. >> first shot or two seemed to spin him to the ground. he falls down. he's down on the ground. and then for the next 30 seconds or so in this video the officer just continues to shoot. >> reporter: a judge ordered the video be made public by wednesday after the city rejected several freedom of information requests. police superintendent gary mccarthy says they are prepared for possible violent protests. >> we will facilitate people's first amendment right to free speech. we will facilitate protest, quite frankly. but we will be intolerant of criminal behavior. >> reporter: community activists are calling for calm. but reverend jesse jackson acknowledges people are frustrated. >> people are disgusted and many are angry. most are angry. the question becomes when will the cup runneth over?
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>> reporter: the night mcdonald was shot authorities say he had a four-inch folding knife and pcp in his system. officer jason van dyke's attorney dan herbert says mcdonald's behavior was erratic. >> he firmly believed he was in fear for his life and he was concerned about the life of his fellow officers. >> reporter: the mcdonald family reached a $5 million settlement. jeff, the attorneys for the mcdonalds say the family has no interest in seeing that dash cam video. >> jericka duncan, thank you very much. still ahead here, police identify a suspect after a stunning shooting of a medical student in new orleans. and the growing threat of the approaching el nino. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. so i switched to tide pods. they're super concentrated so i get a better clean. 15% cleaning ingredients or 90%. don't pay for water, pay for clean. that's my tide.
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in southern california this weekend it still feels like summer, with temps in the mid 80s in l.a. but that may not be true for long as the focus turns to winter and what could be an historic el nino. here's ben tracy. >> reporter: it's already a winter wonderland in california's mountains, and they're expecting a lot more snow. scientists say a massive el nino in the pacific is still getting stronger. these warm ocean waters near the equator forced the jet stream that usually dumps rain on central america north, bringing a conveyor belt of storms to
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california and the southern u.s. >> this current el nino has now surpassed the 1997-98 el nino, which was the biggest on record. so it's huge. >> reporter: josh willis is a climate scientist with nasa. he says el ninos typically impact southern california. but this one is so big it will hit the entire state. why is it important that a lot of these storms hit northern california? >> our water supply is tied to northern california, and it's been in a drought for more than a decade. >> reporter: california's largest reservoirs are in northern california, and they are at historic lows. but el nino comes at a cost. those storms in the winter of '97-98 caused half a billion dollars in damage and killed 17 people in california. still, after four years of intense drought, the state needs all the rain and snow it can get. ben tracy, cbs news, los angeles. police in new orleans tonight are looking for a suspect following a dramatic
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shooting. surveillance footage shows the victim, peter gold, a tulane medical student, being shot as he tried to stop a gunman who was dragging a woman into an suv. the suspect tried to shoot gold again in the head, but the gun jammed. gold is expected to survive. the suspect is 21-year-old euric cain, whose criminal record includes weapons charges. up next, the boots that are back. big-time.
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winter weather means a busy time for fashion brands, always trying to stay ahead of the latest trend. but as one old school retailer is discovering, sometimes the best way to keep current is to remain the same.
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here's don dahler. >> reporter: they're rubber-bottomed, terminally unsexy, and virtually unchanged for over 100 years. and yet, l.l. bean cannot make its signature duck boot fast enough. >> we've hired well over 100 people and are in various stages of training. >> hey, bobby. >> reporter: according to manufacturing chief royce haines, back orders are reaching 60,000. >> we're doing everything we can do to build boots. we build them one pair at a time. >> reporter: the reason for the rush is a mystery. inexplicably, the boots have hit the catwalk and have been spotted on the fashionable feet of actress kerry washington. duck boots have inspired designer tommy hilfiger. and kanye west recently launched his yeezy duck boot. all that buzz has not hurt bean. sales have tripled in three years and are projected to hit half a million this year. and now women have surpassed men
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as the primary customers. >> it's a trend. it's a fashion thing. it's a desire. you're asking me to figure out why a woman does what she does. it's the wrong question to ask. >> reporter: the bean boot was the very first product designed in 1912 by outdoorsman leon leonwood bean. >> and he came back from a hunting trip with wet soggy feet wearing footwear that was available, most likely all leather. >> reporter: bean came one his shoe with a rubber bottom creating the classic bean boot, still sold today. tricked out a bit for new customers, but traditional tan and brown for the diehard fans. >> i've heard it said that the boot is like an old friend. those that have bought boots, we see boots that are 30, 40 years old and they send them back to be rebuilt because they don't want to get rid of them. >> reporter: with three shifts and more workers, bean is hand-producing 50,000 pairs a month and bracing for the holiday rush. don dahler, cbs news, new york. still ahead here, no joke.
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we close tonight inside a class for clowns, where volunteers get a crash course for the macy's thanksgiving day parade. here's contessa brewer. >> reporter: college is not all fun and games. >> whoo! >> reporter: even for a bunch of clowns. at clown u there are tough lessons. >> one, two, three.
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>> reporter: and rules to follow. no cell phones, no smoking, no drinking. >> drinking drinking. >> you mean water. >> you mentioned going to the bathroom? that's not easy. >> reporter: karen mccarty's a true professional with the big apple circus in new york. as a professor she's seen a lot of freshman jitters. >> a lot of times they're imagining being in front of that many people. >> reporter: but they get over it fast. and if you think it's crazy to get a whip/nae nae lesson in a lecture hall, wait till you get a load of the lab. >> whoever has an itch turn to someone in the audience. >> reporter: in class it's all about funny business. >> as you're walking away look over your shoulder. you'll see people scratching. >> reporter: where assignments for the thanksgiving day parade include pinwheeling, interpretive dance, and of course horsing around. >> to be a clown is to be as human as possible and to project that. exaggeratedly human. >> i'm going to do a swoosh motion. >> reporter: at clown u you don't have to be born a clown.
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you can learn it. like returning volunteer john plotsky. >> do you remember the lessons when you're actually out there on the parade route? >> yeah. it helps. it gets you focused as a team and a group and gets in the spirit of the holiday. >> reporter: this may be the only school where landing at the top of the class is a piece of cake. contessa brewer, cbs news, new york. that is the overnight news for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm jeff glor. president obama is back at the white house this morning following an overseas trip that was supposed to focus on economics but was quickly dominated by talk of the terror attacks in paris. margaret brennan was traveling with the president in asia. >> that's the primary power that these terrorists have over us. the most powerful tool we have to fight isil is to say that we're not afraid. >> reporter: the president said actions like attempts to block refugees from settling in the u.s., an idea that's being advocated by some republicans, is a betrayal of american values. and he downplayed isis's
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strength. yet the president still called on other countries to join in the military coalition and said he directly appealed to russia's vladimir putin to start air strikes against isis rather than the u.s.-backed rebels in syria. >> it would be helpful if russia directs its focus on isil. and i do think that as a consequence of isil claiming responsibility for bringing down their plane there is an increasing awareness on the part of president putin that isil poses a greater threat to them than anything else in the region. >> reporter: but that is an unlikely alliance because the two countries back competing sides in the syrian civil war. on tuesday president obama will meet with the president of france, a country that has intensified its role in the air strikes. president obama's plan to resettle 10,000 syrian refugees
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in the u.s. became more controversial last week, both on capitol hill and on the campaign trail. julianna goldman reports. >> reporter: donald trump called for a database to monitor syrian refugees. >> i do want a database for those people coming in. >> reporter: an attempt to clarify where he stands amid an uproar ovelast week's seeming endorsement of a mandatory registry for muslims living in the u.s. >> so here's the story. just to set it clear. i want surveillance of these people. >> reporter: several of trump's rivals have said the idea of a national database to track muslims was a bridge too far. but since the paris attacks many gop presidential hopefuls have contributed to the anti-refugee fervor like john kasich, new hampshire. >> i don't want syrian refugees to come here now because we don't know who they are. >> reporter: that rhetoric has been widely criticized by faith-based groups who lead efforts to resettle refugees, and evangelicals are a key demographic in republican primaries. >> there is panic that's being fed for political reasons.
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>> reporter: linda hartke is the ceo of the lutheran immigration and refugee service. >> i again certainly think those who imagine and would say we should just suspend the arrival of any syrians into this country or any muslims into this country is really over the top. >> reporter: but a recent survey from the public religion research institute showed 73% of white evangelical protestants feel that the values of islam are at odds with american values. a sentiment about muslims shared by this self-described christian at today's trump rally. >> i have to stop and think about our home country because they have been so vocal to say they want to be the sole people on this earth and it's their way or no way really. >> reporter: that survey was conducted before the paris attacks, but it helps explain why republican presidential hopefuls are taking a harder line on the refugee issue. we also know that several
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religious organizations resettling refugees around the country have been threatened in the last week. julianna goldman, cbs news, washington. senator rand paul introduced legislation that would impose a moratorium on resettling any refugees from 34 high-risk countries. that includes syria. john dickerson spoke to paul on "face the nation." >> you had some efforts this week to block syrian refugees and people from other countries that you thought were dangerous. but in the conversation today the worry seems to be from experts is more about the visa waivers, which is to say people who could come in through europe, these countries where you don't need the kind of screening that you would have with refugees. why isn't that the bigger problem? >> well, i think it's all of the above. my bill would have addressed refugees, students, visitors, and those who want to immigrate from countries that have significant jihadist movements. but even just isolating on the refugee thing for a moment, we had two iraqi refugees come to my home town, bowling green, kentucky, and then proceeded to want to buy stinger missiles.
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turns out one of them had fingerprints in our database system because he had his fingerprints on a bomb fragment from iraq, and yet we didn't catch him. so this was just a couple years ago. we were not vetting refugees adequately. the boston bombers also came here as refugees and became radicalized. so i think that for the president to say there's no danger is incorrect. but i do agree with those who say the visa waiver program is a problem. there are many french citizens who want to attack their government and want to attack us, and we have no program for screening them. i say they should all come in through global entry, sort of a frequent flyer program where you have to get a background check or they have to wait 30 days. right now we have nothing in place and i think we are at a great deal of risk from a variety of sources, refugees but also visa waiver nations. >> you have consistently been cautioning your party about overseas military involvements, and you've said on these issues be strong in the homeland, keep them from coming in. but has the paris -- has the growth of isis changed your mindset in terms of this
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argument that you've got to go get them there, you've got to fight isis in iraq and syria, degrade them in their operating space so that they don't even get a chance to come to america? >> i think the first thing we have to do is learn from our history. in the past several decades if there's one true thing in the middle east, it's that when we've toppled secular dictators we've gotten chaos and the rise of radical islam. so by toppling saddam hussein we're still suffering that chaos. by toppling gadhafi in libya we got chaos, a failed state. and a third of libya now pledges allegiance to isis. by pouring weapons into the syrian civil war on the side of islamic rebels who are actually allied with al qaeda and some of whom became isis, that was a mistake. so the ultimate solution, if we want a long-lasting victory and a lasting -- a long-lasting peace, what we're going to have to do is the boots on the ground are going to have to be arab and you're going to have to have sunni muslims defeating tsunami muslims. because even the shiite muslims
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can't occupy these sunni cities. >> you've been very careful about stopping overreach in terms of u.s. surveillance. we've had some talk this morning about encryption being the big back door the way these terrorists can communicate. what's your sense of -- how much do you worry that there will be an overreach in terms of additional surveillance operations? >> i'm very worried about that because i think when you have a fearful time or an angry time that people are coaxed into giving up their liberty. already many in the intelligence community are saying oh, if we only had the bulk phone collection program back. what they're not telling you and what they're being dishonest about is we still have the phone collection program in the united states. all phone records are still being collected all the time. and we still had the attack. and realize that in france they have bulk collection or surveillance of their citizens a thousandfold greater than what we have with very little privacy
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ññññññ terror attacks in paris and elsewhere have some in law enforcement rethinking how they respond to active shooter situations. anderson cooper reports for "60 minutes." >> reporter: new york police commissioner bill bratton says the nypd has been preparing for that kind of attack ever since the 2008 terror strike in mumbai, india that killed 173 people and shut down a city of more than 18 million for three days. what did you learn from mumbai? >> the idea of the multiple shooters consciously going in a lot of different directions -- >> multiple shooters, multiple locations. >> bombs in taxicabs, railway station, the hotel. we also learned that these people are going to take hostages only for the purpose of media attention. they're going to kill them. they're not interested in
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negotiating to surrender. they're negotiating just to extend the span of time that you in the media are going to cover what they're doing. so that's a very significant change where we normally try to rescue the hostages through negotiation. >> after mumbai you fully anticipated we're going to see that here in the united states. >> that's correct. >> and you still believe that. >> still believe it. and that's why we prepare for it. >> reporter: the new york police department is so concerned about a paris and mumbai-type attack they're retraining all 35,000 police officers in the city. >> the weapon is now loaded. finger off the trigger. >> reporter: they allowed us to watch some of what they're doing. detective raymond mcpartland is the lead trainer with the nypd counterterrorism division and says it's critical police move in quickly to stop an active shooter. >> the big piece i always tell people is time is an issue for both ends. the shooter wants more time inside because that's more victims. we need to cut his time inside if not minimize it completely by getting there quickly. that's a complete shift, a
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paradigm change for law enforcement across the board. >> reporter: getting in there quickly means overcoming chaotic and confusing situations in pursuit of the gunmen. >> now you've got shots. now that changes what we're doing here because we're going to go that direction. >> reporter: in this drill a team of four officers has to stop an active shooter in a classroom full of students, some of whom are already wounded. [ gunfire ] responding officers are told to focus on finding the gunman before they try to treat any casualties. >> it's also got to be tough because you have hysterical people in a classroom. they're going to be screaming, "help this person, help this person." >> sure. and just think of the psychological aspect. you're going to a school shooting and you see children. this is something anybody's going to want to bend over and do whatever they could to stop that. but what we try to instill in them is that we need to stop the killing further. >> reporter: in another training scenario we watch the police respond to a simulated attack by two terrorists with rifles loosely based on what happened in mumbai. they immediately engage in a gun battle with the first shooter, who's surrounded himself with
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civilians. >> the issue becomes now you've got a crowded hallway. so this is how they're going to have to deal with it. >> you have clothing on the floor. >> if you notice on the floor there's a bag. at the very least we should start thinking ied, explosive device, is there something we're concerned about? >> reporter: for the first officers on the scene information is limited and often contradictory. with every second that passes more people could be dying. the adrenaline is pumping so much that it changes the way you think, it changes your -- >> sure. it's a survival instinct. there's a man with a gun that's in that room and he's trying to kill other people. under stress the idea of stress science is fascinating when it comes to our world because your vision goes down to about 17% under stress. >> if i said long guns, if i said tactical gear, and i said terrorism, what's the one thing you should also be thinking about? >> ieds. >> ieds. thinking about bombs. >> reporter: afterward detective mcpartland reviews the exercise with the officers and asks them about the bag that was left in the hallway. >> i noticed the bag. >> if you had noted that that
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was an ied in that bag, do you still keep going for the shooter? >> unfortunately, yeah. if we had to stop for every bag we found then obviously we'd have a problem because we would never get to that guy. >> reporter: a number of american cities have been retraining their police in a similar way. washington, d.c. police chief kathy lanier says their preparations have taken on new urgency since isis made a threat this week to launch attacks in rome and washington. >> people say what is it that keeps you awake at night? it's not all the things that we train for and we know about. it's the one thing that we haven't yet thought about. what is it that we're missing? >> we've now seen a number of people who are just ideologically motivated, who say they support isis but may have no actual direct connection with a group like isis but just they've watched some videos and they decide to -- >> even scarier. >> that's even scarier. >> less tripwires. less opportunity for us to intercept. i don't think you're going to stop the shootings. i think that a person who's committed to carrying out an act
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of violence like this is going to carry that act out. how successful they are and how many people they kill, we can try and intervene on. >> making our approach to the high school now. >> reporter: police departments started to take a serious look to how they respond to active shooters after the attacks at columbine high school in 1999. columbine was a real turning point in terms of reassessing strategy in active shooter situations. >> yes, it was. huge. so we based a lot of our training for active shooter response at the local law enforcement level, we based a lot of training on columbine. >> reporter: in columbine two troubled teenagers freely roamed the school, killing 12 students and a teacher while outside hundreds of law enforcement personnel set up a perimeter and waited for 45 minutes before going in. >> and i very distinctly remember a parent being interviewed said what were they waiting for? they have guns. my kids don't -- none of our kids had guns. >> reporter: in the recent paris attack here at the bataclan concert hall, police waited 35
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minutes outside for the tactical team to prepare before going in. a u.s. law enforcement source described that as a familiar old american model that's been abandoned. columbine taught police they have to get in fast despite fact a s.w.a.t. team might not be there. >> this is a homicide in progress. you can't wait for backup. you can't wait for the s.w.a.t. team. you are the only thing that can stop that shooting. you have to get in there and do it. >> reporter: that's what washington, d.c. police did in 2013 at the navy yard, when a mentally ill employee began shooting his co-workers. >> we have an active shooter. a male with a shotgun. multiple shots fired. multiple people down. >> our first call to 911 came in one minute and 36 seconds after the first shots fired. we already had multiple people that were shot at that point. >> reporter: chief lanier learned a number of lessons from the police response at the navy yard shootings. some of the rifles police had were too big for the narrow corridors the shooter was moving through.
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and the sound of fire alarms made it difficult to determine where shots were being fired from. >> the flashes you see are the fire alarm. the fire alarm's been pulled. the fire alarm's going off. it's loud. and they've got gunshots being fired. and they're trying to narrow down where the gunman is so they can get to the gunman and stop the shooting. >> reporter: it took police an hour and nine minutes to kill the shooter. >> and of the 12 people who were killed the first 10 were killed how quickly? >> six minutes. >> that fast. >> that fast. >> reporter: according to the fbi, 60% of active shooter attacks are over before police ever arrive. so now law enforcement agencies throughout the country are trying to educate the public on how to survive on their own. >> your options are run, hide, or fight. >> that's what you tell people they should do. >> yes. what we tell them is the facts of the matter is that most active shooters kill most of the victims in ten minutes or less. and the best police department in the country is going to be about a five to seven-minute response. i always say if you can get out, getting out's your first option, your best option. if you're in a position to try and take the gunman out, take
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the gunman out, it's the best option for saving lives before police can get there. and that's kind of counterintuitive, what cops always tell people, right? we always tell people don't take action, call 911, don't intervene in the robbery. you know, we've never told people take action. it's a different -- this is a different scenario. >> you're telling them that now, though. >> we are. >> reporter: it's important to remember that as tragic and scary as these active shooter attacks are, it's highly unlikely you'll ever be caught up in one. >> you have a very low chance of being the victim of a incident like this. but what we try to do is encourage awareness. the idea is to have an awareness without creating a fear. >> a person's chance of actually having some sort of encounter with an active shooter is 1 in 2 million. a chance of being hit by lightning is 1 in 700,000. do you worry about an overreaction, people getting too scared, fearful of something which in all likelihood they will never encounter? >> you can be prepared, and you
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can have a society that is resilient and alert and conscientious and safer without scaring people. >> you don't want people to be afraid. >> that works against you. if you educate people on actions they can take to reduce their risk, then you can save some lives. and i think it's irresponsible for us not to do that. >> you can see anderson cooper's full report on our website, cbsnews.com. the overnight news will be right back.
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adele's new album "25" came out friday and it's already setting records. but the album will not be available on streaming services. anthony mason reports. >> adele's album is expected to be one of the biggest-selling records in a decade. but it comes with an old-fashioned catch. if you want to hear it, you're going to have to buy it. adele's new album is finally here. ♪ hello from the other side on the first day the single "hello" was released the video was watched more than 1.6 million times an hour, a youtube record. ♪ for everything that i've done ♪ >> the anticipation factor on this is big. >> reporter: joe levy is a contributing editor at "rolling stone." >> what adle has done by keeping the marketing of this record simple and song-based. ♪ everybody here is watching
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you ♪ and basically doing nothing but releasing music is she's driven up anticipation of the record and she's created a more authentic experience for the fans. ♪ let me photograph you >> reporter: adele has also decided to keep her new album off streaming services like spotify and apple music. so fans who want to hear it will need to buy it one way or another. the move comes at a time when cd sales have declined 80% in the past decade. and digital streaming accounts for 32% of annual revenue for record labels. last year taylor swift famously denied spotify access to her album "1989." ♪ now we got bad blood and in june swift also held her album from apple's new streaming service until the company agreed to pay artists during the free trial period. ♪ it was just like a movie adele's reasons for refusing to stream "25" are unknown. but because of her
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cross-generational appeal, levy says album sales are expected to reach unprecedented heights. ♪ never mind, i'll find someone like you ♪ her last album, "21," sold over 30 million copies worldwide. ♪ for you >> they always say in the music industry, that's the key to that kind of megamillions success, when you get a record that kids will buy for their parents and parents will buy for their kids. but if you add in one of the grandparents might buy for their grandchildren, wow. you could sell a lot of freaking records. ♪ that i've tried ♪ to tell you >> yes, you can. this morning spotify released a statement to cbs news about adele's decision saying, "we love and respect adele, as do her 24 million fans on spotify. we hope that she will give those
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fans the opportunity to enjoy 25 on spotify alongside 19 and 21 very soon." >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. fj when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well.
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no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, (franklin d. roosevelt) thprivileges of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources... ...and inspired as it should be to make those resources and opportunities available for the enjoyment of all... ...we approach reemployment with real hope of finding a better answer than we have now. narrator: donate to goodwill where your donations help fund job placement and training for people in your community.
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the terror attacks in paris and around the world are putting some parents in a tough position, trying to explain it to their kids. steve hartman was put on the spot in his own home. >> reporter: so far my two boys, 7-year-old george and 5-year-old emmitt, have grown up inside a protective bubble of my creation. so far my wife and i have shielded them from the paris attacks and just about every other bit of bad news on the planet. the goal was to keep them as carefree as possible for as long as possible. but this week i started wondering if that was the right approach. so to find out what's best for my kids i consulted some experts. my kids. a lot of parents are wondering if they should tell their kids when bad things happen in the world. >> it might be really interesting to some kids. >> would you want to know?
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>> no. not really. >> reporter: seems there is a bit of ostrich in all of us. but i learned the biggest bird brains are parents like me, who think we can just gloss over terror with a white lie. >> you guys know that nothing could ever happen to you, right? >> it could, but it's really rare. i can never get you to understand that. because it's really unlikely but it still has a chance. >> reporter: what do you say to that? other than you're right. >> yeah. >> reporter: i went on to tell them a little bit about paris. >> did the people who got shot die? >> yeah. >> reporter: but in the end my kids didn't need a talk as much as i needed to listen. they told me in the future i should be more honest about world events but only the ones that really matter. >> like if there's a war and the united states lost the war, i'd really want to know about that. >> reporter: and that's how we left it. we finished the night with a book i always turn to after weeks like this one. dr. seuss's allegory about the rise and fall of hitler. >> silence. >> reporter: i read it mostly
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for myself as a reminder that evil may take up a page or two but it never gets the last one. >> and the turtles of course, all the turtles are free. as turtles and maybe all creatures should be. >> reporter: steve hartman, on the road. >> the end. >> reporter: at home. >> that is the overnight news for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor.
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suspect it's monday, november 22nd, 2015. suspectcaptioning funded by cb it's monday, november 22nd, 2015. this is the "cbs morning news." millions in the united states prepare for a busy travel week with concerns of an attack at home. more than a dozen are wounded when a shoot-out erupts where hundreds of people will gathered. a tribute in music by celine dion for the victims of the paris attacks. ♪ good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york.

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