tv CBS Overnight News CBS January 13, 2017 3:07am-4:01am EST
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well, with his last day in office a week from tomorrow, president obama sat down with steve kroft of "60 minutes." >> reporter: you didn't change washington. >> i changed those things that were in direct-- my direct control. i mean, look, i'm proud of the fact with two weeks to go, we're probably the first administration in modern history that hasn't had a major scandal in the white house. in that sense, we changed some things. i would have liked to have gotten that one last supreme court justice in there. i'd like the supreme court to take a look. >> reporter: couldn't even get a hearing. >> but we couldn't even get a hearing. trying to get the other side of the aisle to work with us on issues, in some cases that they professed originally an interest in and saying to them, "hold on a second. you guys used to think this was a good idea. now just because i'm supporting it, you can't change your mind."
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but they did. and what that did i think made me appreciate-- i have said this before but it's worth repeating because this is on me -- part of the job description is also shaping public opinion. and we were very effective-- and i was very effective-- in shaping public opinion around my campaigns. but there were big stretches while governing where even though we were doing the right thing, we weren't able to mobilize public opinion firmly enough behind us to weaken the resolve of the republicans to stop opposing us or to cooperate with us. there were times during my presidency where i lost the p.r. battle. >> pelley: steve kroft's interview with president obama this sunday on "60 minutes."
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today, the senate voted to fast track the repeal of obamacare, but republicans have yet to offer a replacement. millions of americans who depend on obamacare are now wondering what happens next. here's don dahler. >> how we doing with this. >> reporter: small business owner julie mansfield has a clear vision of what a lack of health insurance would mean to her. >> that would mean going blind. that would literally mean going blind. >> reporter: the 49-year-old restaurateur has a very rare autoimmune disease that attacks her retinas. she says the specialists and drugs that maintain her sight cost more than she can afford. but under obamacare, she only pays a $10 co-pay over her $400 a month premium. >> when the a.c.a. came around it was a blessing. >> reporter: but others are not so happy with the affordable care act. some small business owners say insuring their employees is financially crippling. and when 59-year-old kevin mccarthy of thousand oaks, california who owns a specialty flooring company signed up in 2014, his premiums increased. >> when we signed up with the new health care act, not only
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did it cost us 50% more in monthly premiums, but as it turns out, we were also getting 50% less. >> reporter: this year premiums increased an average of 25% but americans continued to sign up. at least 22 million formerly uninsured are now covered, up nearly 300,000 for 2017, compared to last year. 83% of them receive tax credits. mansfield worries about talk of repealing the a.c.a. without a plan to replace it. if you could talk to congress and explain to them why whatever replaces the a.c.a. has to be at least as good as the a.c.a., what would you say to them? >> my health is not about politics. my health is about my life and my livelihood, and it's not to be played with. it's not to be a political pawn. >> reporter: one question many are pondering is whether the replacement would keep some of the more popular aspects of the a.c.a.-- coverage of preexisting conditions, for example, or adult children being allowed to stay on their parents' policy.
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scott, the deadline for signing up for 2017 coverage is this sunday, but no one knows if obamacare will survive the year. >> pelley: don dahler for us tonight. don, thank you. well, today, vice president joe biden never saw it coming. he was speaking at an event when he was surprised by president obama who had an even bigger surprise in mind. here's david martin. >> reporter: president obama liked to joke that he and his vice president made up for each other's shortcomings. >> our styles are so different, as well as our experience. and so when he asked me to join him, i asked him why, and he said, "i want you to help me govern because you know the system." >> reporter: they were a generation apart in age. where the president came across as cool, even aloof, joe biden played politics as a contact sport. the president sometimes complained joe talks too much. early on in the administration,
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his loose lips upstaged the unveiling of the president's health care reform when a mic caught his whispered comments. >> this is a big (bleep) deal. >> reporter: a moment the president recalled today. >> all told, that's a pretty remarkable legacy, an amazing career in public service. it is, as joe once said a big deal. ( laughter ) >> reporter: over eight years, the bond between them seemed to grow stronger. >> this also gives the internet one last chance to talk about our bromance. ( laughter ) >> reporter: the president grieved with him when biden's son, beau, died of cancer. >> to know joe and the rest of the biden family is to understand why beau lived the life he did. >> reporter: biden often said he and the president had each other's back, but today, the president pulled a fast one on him with an unexpected honor. >> the presidential medal of freedom. >> reporter: that's the highest award a president can give a civilian. >> i don't deserve this, but i know it came from the president's heart.
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i'm indebted to you. i'm indebted to your friendship. >> reporter: joe biden never made it to the nation's highest office, but today, at least, that was all right by him. >> i just hope that the asterisk in history that is attached to my name when they talk about this presidency is that i can say i was part of, part of the journey of a remarkable man who did remarkable things for this country. ( applause ) >> reporter: david martin, cbs news, washington. >> pelley: still to come on the cbs evening news, the most comprehensive report ever on the effects of marijuana. and later, a big change under the big top.
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our chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook went through the 400 pages today. jon, what stood out? >> reporter: scott in terms of treatment, there's pretty solid evidence that cannabis is effective in relieving chronic pain in adults, nausea from chemotherapy, and muscle tightness and spasm in multiple sclerosis. now the report found more research is needed to see if it helps in hosts of other conditions like epilepsy, p.t.s.d., and anxiety. >> pelley: what did the report say about recreational use? >> reporter: i spoke to two of the authors and they said it's really difficult to make definitive conclusions. a lot of the literature is based on self-reporting with no standardization of exactly what they're getting. there are more than 150 cannabinoid chemicals in cannabis, and so many different wales of using it. but the report did say there's evidence of increased risk of abuse of cannabis when use begins in adolescence. schizophrenia, and other psychoses, especially among the heaviest users, but that's unclear whether it's cause and effect and car accidents. now, scott, there's no roadside
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equivalent for cannabis of the breathalyzer test for alcohol. bottom line here is we need a lot more research into the potential medical benefits, and the possible risks. >> pelley: dr. jon lapook for us tonight. thank you, doctor. coming up, another n.f.l. team bolting for los angeles. with toothpaste or plain water.an their dentures and even though their dentures look clean, in reality they're not. if a denture were to be put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria
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fire. they were between nine months and 11 years old. their mother, who works for congressman elijah cummings, made it out with three other children. her father was working overnight at a restaurant. the cause of the fire unknown. today, baltimore's police department signed an agreement with the u.s. justice department to overhaul everything from how officers stop people on the street, to how they are trained and disciplined. this follows the death in 2015 of freddie gray, who was fatally injured while riding in a police van. for two decades, los angeles had no n.f.l. team. now it has two. today, the chargers said they're moving up the coast from san diego to join the rams. some fans cried. others dumped their chargers gear in front of the stadium and even set some of the stuff on fire. we'll be right back.
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start. you know, this show is older than major league baseball. but, scott, there have been fewer u.s. presidents than there have been ringling brothers ring masters. that's why it's a big deal that the new master is a woman. >> the very first female ringmaster in our history. >> reporter: kristen michelle wilson outperformed hundreds of candidates for the top spot under the big top. >> it's a huge deal. >> reporter: why? >> i'm the very first female ringmaster in 146 years. >> reporter: tonight, the florida native will lead 110 performers with 49 animals, guiding the audience through high-flying acts and those death-defying stunts. >> the more that i've held on to the title and i've talked to women and i've talked to my grandmother and her reaction, it really lets me understand the responsibility of being the first. and it makes me want to be loud and proud and hold the banner high. >> reporter: the 35-year-old first saw it as a little girl and dreamed of being on a big stage. but before putting on her tophat and tails, wilson worked in dinner theater, did voice-overs and was the lead singer of a cover band. dancing and singing
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>> it's really amazing because all of these different experiences that i've had the opportunity to have in my life have really blended together in an amazing way to prepare me to lead the biggest show on earth. we're blasting off, we're on our way >> reporter: how many of these have you watched? >> first one. >> reporter: that's kristen's mother, jean, watching the final dress rehearsal. you said she's the only one in the family with the chutzpah to do this. >> she is. and she's always had it, you know. i don't know. she loves being out in front of the crowds, and making memories for people. >> reporter: making memories and history as a new star shines over the greatest show on earth. from the snow to the heat david begnaud, cbs news, orlando. >> pelley: and that's the cbs overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues, for others check back with us. from the broadcast center in new
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york city, i'm scott pelley. this is "the cbs overnight news." >> hi everyone, and welcome to the overnight news, i'm demarco morgan. the controversy swirling around last year's presidential election is apparently far from over. the justice department's inspector general says he is opening an investigation of fbi director james comey, specifically the decision regarding hillary clinton's e-mails being reopened. clinton claims it cost her the white house. >> reporter: the inspector-general's probe goes to the heart of the investigation into secretary clinton's private e-mail server. it will examine allegations that policies and procedures were not
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followed by fbi director james comey. it will also look at whether certain officials should have recused themselves and whether or not public information was inappropriately given to the media. comey broke with fbi protocol when he publicly announced in july that secretary clinton would not face charges. >> we did not find clear evidence that secretary clinton or her colleagues intended to violate laws. >> reporter: then, 12 days before the election, the director wrote to congress that he had reopened the investigation after agents discovered e-mails on a laptop used by clinton aide, huma abedin that appeared to be pertinent. but just two days before the election, he sent another letter once again clearing clinton and closing the probe. >> correct, especially in a public forum. >> reporter: at a senate hearing tuesday, comey declined to discuss any potential investigations into president-elect donald trump or his associates.
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prompting this response from maine senator angus king. >> the irony of you making that statement here i cannot avoid. >> comey says that he will cooperate with the investigation. scott, in a closed door meeting on capitol hill today he was grilled by some democratic senators who blame the fbi director in part for secretary clinton's loss. >> washington is still abuzz with the war of words between president-elect donald trump and the u.s. intelligence committee. at issue, the unsubstantiated report that russia had collected a dossier on mr. trump to be used as blackmail at a later date. the president-elect calls it fake news and blames the release on america's spy agencies. major garrett has the latest. >> reporter: cbs news has confirmed that christopher steele, seen in this photo, produced the memo claiming unsubstantiated claims that russia had personal and financial information about president-elect donald trump.
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steele is a former british intelligence officer who works for orbis intelligence, a private investigator firm in london. orbis was originally hired by fusion, hired by an unknown clima client. mr. trump said the memo was phoney. >> i think it was disgraceful that the intelligence agencies allowed any information that turned out to be so false and fake out. and that is something that nazi germany would have done and did do. >> reporter: director of national intelligence james clapper phoned mr. trump last night. in a statement, clapper said he expressed his profound dismay at the leaks and emphasized the unverified document is not a u.s. intelligence product.
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president obama and vice president joe biden received the memo. on msnbc, the vice president was asked if the documents were appropriate. >> so that it didn't come out of the blue -- have any impact on -- on the conduct of our foreign policy. >> reporter: house speaker paul ryan told cbs news he understands mr. trump's frustration, calling the leaks and the subsequent media frenzy unfair, but scott, he said he would not have used the nazi tactics in this or any other matter. >> reporter: you can probably see the kremlin through the snow behind me, they have just had their regular press conference, press briefing. and top of the agenda, no surprise, u.s.-russia relations, first off, the spokesperson said
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that the u.s. military build-up in poland threatens russia's national interests. just a few days ago all the hardware of a u.s. combat brigade is now rolling towards poland. 4,000 u.s. troops will hook up with it and then take part in an extensive multi-national nato exercises all through the summer. this amounts to the first build-up of u.s. troops since the cold war and the russians clearly don't like it. peskoh also singled out rex tillerson's comments that the annexation was death. certainly they mention the kremlin's denial that they have no material that they could use to blackmail donald trump, but what is taking up equal space in
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the media landscape today is donald trump's chaotic press conference yesterday. his dust-up with some members of the media. and also barack obama's good-bye speech, you can see the big photograph on the front page today of president obama wiping away a tear. >> it turns out that volkswagen was not the only automaker using software to get around diesel control for their vehicles. now it's chrysler. >> reporter: the cheating allegedly spanis years, the documents allege that the ram model pickups from 2014, 15 and 16 has illegal levels of greenhouse gases. the epa notified that failing to
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disclose the software could result in the harmful pollution that we breathe. >> why these are there, what they do, and why they have to be designed the way they are. >> reporter: david clegen issued a similar warning to the automaker today. >> they didn't disclose them to the regulatory agencies certifying the vehicles, secondly, when they are activated they put out more emissions than the law allows. >> reporter: the allegations are similar at volkswagen, yesterday, the german automaker agreed to plead guilty to three counts regarding emissions. one executive has been arrested, and it has cost them $4 billion. in a teleconference with reporters, the fiat-chrysler ceo angrily denied charges and says
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if you're headed to the movies tonight you may want to check out the film "patriots day" the movie about the 2013 bombing in boston and the hunt. patriots day has been in production for a while. cbs cameras were on hand for one important scene. dana jacobson reports. >> reporter: in the heart of boston, standing on hallowed ground that is forever a part of the city's soul, red sox slugger david ortiz. >> you're the best, god bless you, thank you. >> reporter: and actor mark wahlberg prepare to shoot a pivotal scene in patriots day. fan-favored big papi is used to spending his days at fenway.
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his majestic home runs cemented his status among the legends. >> all right, boston. >> reporter: just five days after the marathon bombing, big papi stood on the pitcher's mound at fenway. his delivery, perfect. not only speaking to boston but for it. >> this jersey that we wear today it doesn't say red sox. it says boston. i speak from my heart. it was not something i ever planned, or wrote it. i was speaking just like i know the citizens that were suffering. >> reporter: wahlberg, a boston native, and the film's director, remember the speech well. >> what did you remember when you saw the speech happen? >> chills, i got chills, overwhelmed with emotion, i could tell upset he was, he knows how resilient the people of boston are and that boston strong is something now that the world got to see. >> reporter: we tuck in behind the crew as cameras roll in a
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tunnel leading to the real fenway park. from there, ortiz walks out to give his now famous 54-word speech. >> this jersey. >> reporter: instead of trying to recreate the moment the movie cuts to actual game footage. >> this is our city. >> reporter: the filmmakers did not want the movie to just be about the bombing. they also wanted to show hope. >> and nobody is going to take our freedom. stand strong. >> he really summed it up better than anybody when he talked about how the city was feeling, about what happened. and this movie is about good overpowering evil and love being stronger than hate. >> oh, man, i thought it was an unbelievable opportunity. i was more than happy to do it. i would do anything for this town. >> reporter: boston strong, boston family it sounds like. >> right now boston is working against us, right now, in this city, when it comes to terrorism everybody wants to talk.
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>> i take where i come from very seriously and i know that i would be held accountable if i did not get it right. >> what is the biggest challenge of doing the movie? >> staying in the moment, i get so overwhelmed with emotion when i think about all the families and victims. in my script, i have pictures of everybody and just reminds me of the responsibility that i carry. >> reporter: director peter berg is aware of the criticism they face from locals who don't want hollywood to profit off tragedy or feel it is too soon to dramatize. >> and to people who feel it is too soon, what do you say? >> we were talking about it, mark said i think it may be too late. it can't be too soon. >> good versus evil, love versus hate. >> how can it be too soon to showcase the spirit and love that this city responded with,
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particular laeshl when particularly when you look at what is happening every month now it seems, people say why can't we stop it? i don't have the answer to that, but we do see regardless of what happens and what they do to us, love seems to triumph. and i don't think it's too soon for that. >> a college freshman in colorado has a new idea about a so-called smart gun that can only be fired by its owner, people have been working on the technology for years, but the technology is blocked. >> reporter: every firearm sold comes with a locking device like this. and gun rights advocates say these devices should be credited with keeping accidental gunshots at historic lows. yet, every hour somebody dies from gunshot wounds and at least once a week that victim is a child.
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now a 19-year-old says he has a solution, the very first gun that locks and unlocks. >> reporter: this weapon fires like any other weapon, but watch what happens when i give it a try. that clicking sound? cloudy signal a revolution in gun safety. the first firearm with the same built-in security as many smartphones. if the gun is picked by an authorized user this sensor recognizes the fingerprint and? >> it will fire. it will fire. >> reporter: good luck with that. >> reporter: guns that only work for their owners used to be the stuff of movies. but klepfer thinks he has the technology to make them a reality. >> i think this could be huge, it could really be the future of firearms. >> reporter: he is a founder of bio-fire, a start-up still in
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his basement at his parents' house. >> there would be days i sat down, i would be sitting there 14 hours. >> reporter: he realized he could not stop mass shootings but thought he could still save lives. after all in one year alone, nearly 600 people died in firearms accidents. there were thousands more suicides, many committed with guns that do not belong to the victim. >> why did it take four and a half years to put a fingerprint reader on the side of a gun? >> well, it's not as simple a process as you may imagine, it's not really something that has ever been done before. >> his weapon not only locks like a smartphone but charges like one. and the invention has won him some deep-pocketed allies. >> ki is the mark zuckerberg of guns. >> reporter: this man is putting his money behind ki's smart gun.
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>> what ki has done is use all the latest technology available to us to innovative a truly authenticated gun. you could not do this five years ago. >> reporter: but a push for similar guns misfired memorably in the late-'90s. a cold prototype test failed, and the company was nearly bankrupt. >> what changed to make it possible to make a smart gun like the one you're working on. >> good intentions don't necessarily make good inventions. >> reporter: steve inceneti is president of the foundation that makes and sells guns, he expressed the concern about the reliability of any firearm that depends on battery power. >> the firearm has to work, and the firearm is not the same as a cell phone. the consequences of a cell phone not working are inconvenience,
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the consequence of a gun not working could be somebody's life. >> how reliable is it? >> almost completely. >> i know every time i use it it functions almost every single time. >> but not every time, the prototype failed that we had seen. >> shorted it. >> reporter: still, he thinks an ultrafast and reliable final weapon is not far off. >> i'm now to the point where i'm able to you know start raising money, building a team, really transitioning this to a real company, a real start-up instead of just a kid in his garage working on a science fair project. rise above joint discomfort with move free ultra's triple action joint support for improved mobility and flexibility,
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choose degree ultraclear black + white. it won't let you down. climate change has reached towards every corner of the globe. that includes glacier national shot. >> like every photographer, he is concerned with getting the perfect shot. hiking 12 miles together up steep mountain passes, across icy streams. all to photograph a small slice of montana's glacier national park. visitors take snapshots of the views. but when he looks through his lens he sees something different. he is trying to take a picture of what is not there.
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the tons and tons of ice that have disappeared. >> oh, my gosh. none of that is there. >> none of that is there. >> he is an ecologist with the u.s. geological survey. using material from the archives, they have been rephotographing. >> re-photography is interesting, it's a bit of a detective story. you're trying to find the exact spot the photographer stood decades before and compare the two pictures. >> in a short amount of time the change has been dramatic. >> so 50 years ago, what would we have been looking at? >> well, 50 years ago we would have been under ice right here. >> right here? >> under a lot of ice. >> the sign says glacier national park, but some models suggested that these montana mountains will lose most if not
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all of these glaciers by 2030. soon, there will not be any ice left to photograph. >> you know like a lot of people, i really like the glaciers in glacier park. and while i'll be sad to see them go personally, i think my role as a scientist seems to make sure that everybody understands the pace at which they're disappearing and the reasons for that, and how it could be helpful to society. >> the reason, scientists explain, is climate change. i have experienced it firsthand, in alaska, they will survive longer than those in montana, but they're still shrinking. walking into the park there were signs where there was once ice. 1921, all the way up to 2005. markers of where this glacier used to be.
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last year, president obama paid a visit to the fjords to talk about ice. in 2016, this glacier has already retreated over 250 feet. that is a new record. >> the thing that lets us know this is climate change is the rate of increase has decreased dramatically. >> at the park, the ranger uses photos to illustrate before and after. >> so this one is 1992. >> so wow, this used to cover the whole grain area. >> from alaska to montana, photos that were originally taken to publicize the natural wonders are now being used to publicize how they're disappearing. >> photos are extremely visual, and you hear about a photo being
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a british monarchy may have been unearthed in new york city. the tapestry is believed to be a work of art dating back to the reign of king henry viii, how it ended up in the big apple is anybody's guess. >> it all started with a google search, it really did, a cambridge professor was just looking for a replica to use in a lecture, but may have stumbled on the real thing. >> reporter: the scholars are on the trail of history. >> is that king henry's wine stain? >> you put your finger up. that is exactly right. >> reporter: in the high end but hidden away new york city rug gallery they believe they may be
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looking at a treasure that once hung here, in the palace of king henry viii. >> the tapestry could have been the witness to history. >> reporter: each of the tapestries showed the life of juli julius ceasar. none of the ten had been seen in hundreds of years. >> i think it's absolutely clear that what we have here is something really very significant. >> reporter: roger and alexi say the tapestry is the right size and age to match king henry's. now they plan to test the authenticity as part of the institute of digital archeology. a group that uses digital technology to drill into the past. >> what we have to do is essentially take its fingerprints. >> reporter: they joined the case after getting an e-mail from mary beard, a classics
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professor. >> when this cambridge scholar said i found something on the internet. >> google is the new dust-brush that folks look to, to uncover lost treasures. >> reporter: in the centuries following their disappearance, the tapestries were reproduced. this is one of those replicas, she told cbs news she never thought it was an original henry viii tapestry. nobody knows how they were lost, but this persian shop picked up two of them. >> we have been with them for a while. but now? >> had no idea what you had. >> we were sitting on a treasure. >> they're out there somewhere. >> you believe they're out there somewhere. >> one could be sitting right behind you. >> well, that is the overnight news, for some the news
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continues, for others, check w captioning funded by cbs it's friday, january 13th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." donald trump becomes our 45th president one week from today but it's his opponent who's back in the headlines. >> fbi director james comey faces new criticism over his handling of hillary clinton's e-mail investigation. mr. trump's break from his soon-to-be boss and his right-hand man in a ceremony that left the honoree emotional. >> for
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