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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  June 7, 2017 3:10am-3:58am EDT

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learn how you can help at girlup.org. well, our homeland security correspondent jeff pegues has more about that leaked document and how it fits in to the investigation of russian meddling in the election. >> reporter: u.s. intelligence is still gathering new evidence of russian cyberattacks before election day. the leaked top-secret n.s.a. report was only recently completed. it details how, a week before november 8, hackers connected to russian military intelligence sent emails laced with malware to 122 local officials controlling voter registration systems. the brazen scheme came just weeks after then-president obama personally told russian president vladimir putin to stop the attacks. >> i felt that the most effective way to ensure that that didn't happen was to talk to him directly and tell him to
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cut it out. >> reporter: law enforcement source say voter databases nationwide were targeted by russian hackers over a six-month period ahead of the election. so you think the worst-case scenario was that they were actually trying to affect the vote total? >> i think that was their hope. >> reporter: jim lewis advises the u.s. government on cyber-security: >> i think that they were expecting to be able to manipulate votes in some way, maybe discredit the electoral system, which they came closer to doing. >> reporter: u.s. officials still believe the vote total was not affected. >> there is nothing more fundamental to our democracy than voting. >> reporter: today, homeland security secretary john kelly said his department wants to help states secure their voting systems, but that some are wary of federal intrusion. >> do you see us as partners and helpers in this, to help make sure that your systems are protected?
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>> reporter: today, the kremlin again denied interfering in the election. scott, late last year, an obama administration official said that we would never expect russia to come out with their hands up-- they don't do that. >> pelley: jeff pegues in the washington newsroom. cbs news has learned this evening that russian hackers are suspected of interfering with a news site in the gulf state of qatar. and they may have put out fake information. the f.b.i. is assisting in the investigation. meanwhile, qatar is at the center of a crisis. a number of arab nations have cut diplomatic and commercial ties, and here's margaret brennan. >> reporter: president trump appeared to take credit for sparking the diplomatic crisis. in a series of tweets, the president said his recent visit to saudi arabia was "paying off," as the kingdom and nine other countries severed relations with qatar for allegedly funding radical ideology.
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but the president made no mention of that last month when he met with the qatari instead, offering to sell him weapons. >> lots of beautiful military equipment. >> reporter: during that trip, the president vowed to unify the muslim world against terrorism and iran. but tensions spiked in the past 24 hours, with countries in the region closing their air space to qatari planes, blocking trade, and cutting diplomatic ties, sparking qataris to stockpile food. the u.s. launches air strikes against isis and syria in iraq from a base in qatar. the tiny gulf emirate hosts around 10,000 u.s. troops. that's one reason secretary of state rex tillerson has tried to de-escalate the crisis. >> we certainly would encourage the parties to sit down together and address these differences. >> reporter: and yesterday, u.s. ambassador dana smith praised qatar's great partnership in countering terrorist financing. smith has broken with the president before, lamenting last
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month on twitter that it is increasingly difficult to spend the day explaining our democracy and institutions. today, state department spokesperson heather nauert tried to soften the president's comments on qatar. >> they have made progress, but they still have work to do. more work needs to be done. >> reporter: smith is not the only frustrated long-term diplomat. but, scott, while president trump wants his own nominees in place, he's only appointed 11 ambassadors to fill 188 empty state department slots. >> pelley: margaret brennan at the state department, thanks. in paris today, a man attacked a police officer with a hammer outside notre dame cathedral, shouting, "this is for syria." fellow officers shot and wound the man, who carried an i.d. indicating that he was from algeria. the officer who was attacked was not seriously hurt. about 600 tourists were locked inside the cathedral as police secured the scene.
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today, british police identified the third of the london bridge attackers who killed seven and wounded nearly 50 on saturday night. youssef zaghba, 22 years old, of italian and moroccan heritage, was identified today. he and khuram butt were known to the police, leading some to wonder whether the attack might have been prevented. the truth is, the police in britain are overwhelmed, and mark phillips has more on that. >> reporter: after the carnage, the questions: what can be learned from this attack to prevent more of them? police here say they're already monitoring 500 suspects, have 3,000 other people of interest on their radar, and know of 20,000 other potential surveillance targets beyond that. >> the volume issue has become a major challenge for the police intelligence agencies.
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>> reporter: richard walton used to run london's anti-terror unit, and says it can take dozens of officers to watch just one suspect. >> the police can only be devoted to the top, you know, three, four, 5% of those individuals-- >> reporter: and how do you pick who they are? >> and how do you pick who they are? you can't monitor 3,000 individuals all of the time, 24 hours a day. >> reporter: the so-called new normal keeps changing, especially as pressure on isis continues to build in syria and iraq. the london attacks are the sting in the isis tail. >> this is a death cult. this is an entity that realizes it's losing territory in iraq and syria and wants to take out as many people as it can. >> reporter: sajjan gohel advises governments and police on terrorism, and says trying to counter isis propaganda doesn't work when, like the london attacks, some are just too far gone. >> there are bad people out there that have violent tendencies. they have no hesitation to kill
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children, to mow people down. countering violent extremisms may work to some degree, but it doesn't stop the zea zealous. reporter: what works is fast and lethal police action, but that, as we've seen, scott, only limits the damage. they've started putting up these concrete barriers on some of london's bridges. protection, they hope, against vehicle attacks on pedestrians. closing the barn door, perhaps, after the horse has bolted, and also while they try to figure out what to do next. >> pelley: mark phillips, thanks. coming up next on the "cbs evening news," bill cosby's accuser tells her story to a jury. and later, living stronger with whatever floats your boat.
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so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption. so we got our new he washing machine but it took forever turns out it wasn't the machine, it was our detergent. so we switched to tide turbo clean. now we get way cleaner clothes way faster he turbo clean. 6x the cleaning power in 1/2 the time pelley: today, bill cosby's accuser told her story in public for the first time, at his sexual assault trial. demarco morgan. in norristown, pennsylvania. >> reporter: andrea constand, a former employee at temple university, cosby's alma mater, testified in graphic detail about the evening she alleges cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her in 2004. constand told the court, cosby invited her to his home in philadelphia and offered her
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three blue pills he called a natural remedy to ease her stress and a glass of wine. in court today, constand called cosby "a temple friend, somebody that i trusted, a friend, a mentor, somewhat of an older figure to me" and she said she wasn't scared of him. constand testified she remembers having blurred vision, saying, "i could see two of him." her legs were, "rubbery," and cosby fondled her. but she admitted to staying in contact with cosby after the alleged incident. inside the courtroom, cosby sat looking at the accuser, frowning and shaking his head at times. the defense has questioned constand's credibility. during cross-examination today, defense attorneys pointed to constand's phone records after the incident, showing she called cosby the same morning she did an online search for and contacted philadelphia-area defense attorneys. hours later, attorneys general say she called cosby again, and after being unable to reach him, it was only then that she filed a police report.
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at least 60 women have accused cosby of sexual assault, but constand's case is the only one that resulted in criminal charges, scott. charges that could send the man formerly known as "america's tv dad," to prison for ten years if convicted. >> pelley: demarco morgan, thanks. and when we come back, men overboard at the america's cup. brain, and eyes. , and is absorbed by your body three times better. so one megared has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. new megared advanced triple absorption.
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fired more than 20 employees after an investigation of sexual harassment, bullying, and discrimination. the ride-sharing company has also hired former attorney general eric holder and his law firm to investigate uber's corporate culture. dish network was hit today with the biggest fine ever for telemarketing violations. an illinois judge ordered the satellite tv company to pay $280 million for making millions of calls to people on the "do not call" registries. it was a rough day for sailing off burmuda during the america's cup semi finals today. winds gusted to 57 miles an hour. and look at that, team new zealand's catamaran capsized. some of the crew flew into the water, others hung on to the sides, as rescue teams sprang into action. but, everybody got out safely, to sail another day. up next, rowing older.
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>> pelley: now our special series, "living stronger:" folks sharing their secrets for a longer, better life. for the woman you're about to meet, it's all about using her skull. here's don dahler. >> reporter: few sports are as physically and mentally grueling as competitive rowing. it takes strength, stamina, and perfect tempo. 76-year-old maxine shepatin has been rowing for 15 years. she's the oldest member of her team, the blood street skulls. >> the whole idea is to literally row as one so that the boat moves together. >> reporter: as a 26-year breast cancer survivor, shepatin was looking for a new challenge and took up the sport on a lark.
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>> that's me. >> reporter: during one of her first races, she didn't believe the coxswain, the man steering the boat. they were actually in the lead. >> and the coxswain is saying, "guys, keep it up. you're in first place!" none of us believed him. we thought, "okay, dave--." you're just saying that. >> reporter: his constant job is to motivate you. >> right. >> reporter: turns out they won that race, and many others. she has a table full of medals. how many do you think you have? >> i don't know. i didn't count them. a couple thousand, maybe, 3,000. it's not for the medals. i just enjoy being able to do it. >> reporter: being able to do it means four days a week on the river, and up to five days in the gym. she says her key to living stronger is preparation. she doesn't want to let her younger teammates down. >> there's no senior citizen discount on an effort. >> reporter: so you better be physically ready. >> you better be prepared, right. and it's not fair if you don't bring your "a" game, whatever that "a" game may be.
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>> reporter: teammate kristy dorsey: >> when i was in elementary school, i was on a swim team with her kids, so i knew her as "mrs. shepatin," and now we're teammates, so that, i think, is kind of cool. >> reporter: shepatin took up another challenge when she was in her 60s and became a black belt in kick boxing. what do their grandchildren call you? >> when they were younger, they called me "ninja grandma." >> reporter: there are those who avoid difficulties, who dread life's turbulent waters, and those like maxine shepatin, who face them head on. don dahler, cbs news, old lyme, connecticut. and that's the overnight news for this wednesday, for jeffers some of you the news continues, for others check back with us this morning. i'm scott pelley.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the overnight news. for nearly the start of his administration, president trump has been complaining about leaks. major garrett has that story. >> reporter: late last month, president trump described leaks of classified information as a grave threat to our national security. mr. trump's justice department has now charged 25-year-old reality leigh winner, a national security agency contract employee with leaking a top secret report on russian election hacking.
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winner, whose social media postings sharply criticized president trump faces up to ten years in prison. winner's stepfather, gary davis. >> she is dedicated you know to trying to make the world a better place. >> reporter: the charge was filed less than two hours after the on-line publication "the intercept" posted the court documents. according to the report, winner was one of six who mailed that report, and reports show she was also a part of the leaked publication. short after taking office president trump lashed out what he calls "low-life leakers". >> i have actually called the justice department to look into the leaks. they're criminal leaks. >> reporter: leaks are rarely prosecute his, but during the obama administration, they prosecuted eight cases of
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national security leaks, more than double all previous administrations combined. the winner case comes as the president's faith in his attorney general may be waning. press secretary sean spicer. >> how would you describe his confidence level for jeff sessions? >> i have not had a conversation about that. >> the leak shows that they were not simply content to influence the election, they allegedly tried to break into the voting system as well. jeff pegues has more. >> reporter: u.s. intelligence is still gathering new evidence of russian cyber attacks before the election. the cyber attack report was only recently completed, detailing how hackers connected to military intelligence sent e-mails laced with mallware to 122 officials controlling voter registration systems. the brazen scheme came just weeks after then-president obama
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personally told president vladimir putin to stop the attacks. >> i felt that the most effective way to ensure that did not happen was to talk to him directly. and tell him to cut it out. >> reporter: law enforcement sources say voter databases nationwide were targeted by russian hackers over a six-month period ahead of the election. so you think the worse-case scenario was they were actually trying to affect the vote total. >> i think that was their hope. >> reporter: jim louis advises the u.s. got on cyber security. >> i think they hoped to influence the votes, maybe discredit the electoral system which they came closer to doing. >> reporter: u.s. officials still believe the vote total was not affected. >> there is nothing more fundamental to our democracy than voting. >> reporter: today, homeland security secretary john kelly said his department wants to help states secure their voting
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systems but that some are wary of federal intrusion. >> do you see this as a way to help make sure they are protected? there is a firestorm in the middle east, threatening security in the area and beyond. >> reporter: president trump appeared to take credit for sparking the diplomatic crisis. in a series of tweets the president said his recent visit to saudi arabia was paying off as the kingdom and nine other countries cut relations with qatar, for allegedly funding radical ideology. but the president made no mention of that last month when he met with the amir, when he offered to sell him weapons. during that trip, the president vowed to unify the muslim world against terrorism and iran. but the tension sparked in the past 24 hours, with countries
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cutting their access to airports, and sparking the people there to stockpile food. the u.s. launches airstrikes qa that i secretary of state john kerry has de-escalate the crisis we certainly would encourage the parties to sit downogher and address these differs.yeste. ambassador dan the events, smitham it is very explaining our democracy and today, state department spokespersoneather nauert tried to soften the president's st needs to be done. , but they a new homeless people
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on the san francisco. >> what did you expect when got here? >> reporter: this 18-year- the n ple to live. he found how hard has it been for job, ig number of young people between the ages o are homeless and alone without thea guardian. many of them ran away from abusive family. drake hudson sai after arguing several times with his parent d like? >> i just and that is pretty much it. >> reporter: some studies report
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that there re1.8 million youth that are homeless across the country, but no one knows for sure, so this department is focusing on getting an accurate count. >> how long were you homeless? >> about two months. >> reporter: volunteer hopeople who were homeless before, are working to get them help. >> often times what homeless youth will do is sleep on a friend's couch for a couple of nights. then under an underpass for a night. they don't want it to be associated with homelessness, they do everything they can to appear to be just a normal 20-year-old, because they are a normal 20-year-old. >> reporter: advocates say the results will mean more federal funding for programs aimed at helping these young people. hud's goal is to end the homelessness by 2020, garner
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hopes it is sooner. >> there just needs to be more people >> reporter: cbs news. and is absorbed by your body three times better. so one megared has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. new megared advanced triple absorption. 60% of women are wearing the w...experience leaks. introducing always my fit. find the number that's right for your flow and panty size on the top of any always pack. the better the fit, the better it protects. always. two kids barfed in class today. it was so gross. lysol disinfectant spray kills 99.9% of bacteria,
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the grueling race to alaska gets under way in townsend, washington, a 750-mile ocean marathon, and the rules are simple. you can't use a motor. luke burbank covered the race last year and has a preview. >> reporter: it's a wednesday afternoon in port townsend, washington, just hours before the annual race gets started. and sailors like matt johnson are nervously making adjustments. >> if yeou're here for the swap meet you're in the wrong place. >> reporter: while crew members get a briefing of sorts. >> if you're here to create a challenge and make it a story to make it yours forever you are in
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the right place, yeah! >> reporter: and what a challenge it is. the race to alaska is one of the more unusual, more punishing events in american sports. a gruel 750-mile boat race from port townsend, to ketchikan, alaska, with just one rule, no motors. >> so it's a gnarly piece of coast, truly one of the last wild places on earth. >> reporter: and this is the guy behind the race, jake beady. >> the tide is really high, and the winds can be incredibly dangerous. >> reporter: last year, some 200 sailors entered the race. some in row boats and paddle boats, others in high tech carbon fiber catamarans. not to mention homemade dinghys, made with sails, and others went
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it alone. >> the good thing is when you're alone, you win the arguments, you don't know which 11s the arguments but one will win it. >> reporter: one big challenge is figuring out how to sleep while out on the water. of rac i think i have gotten about seven hours of sleep, i'm on my third day of seven sleep. >> reporter: food is another elfsoo , lugging it along, and eat it. >> we're really shoveling the food down, which is surprisingly not that easy, t enjoyment of food is a ritual, and just sort of disappeared. >> reporter: and maybe the toughest strugofall, at least for the sail boats is what to do when the wind is not , yo trip andt ten hours of rowing
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we have been doing about 16 hours a day. >> reporter: race founder, jake beady. >> removing the ability for you to depend on a little button that starts a motor it changes your relationship to the water when there is no get out of jail free card. >> rte for matt johnson, who may have made the biggest sacrifice of the entire race, before it even >> this is all of your wine and beer money? >> this is all of my wine and beer money, yes. >> it really paid off. >> reporter: jonhnson, a competitive cyclist, redirected that money to worked on for months in his garage. >> reporter: so you don't expect to win this race? >> i don't expect toit. >> reporter: then some may ask why you do it. >> because i want to see how far or fast i can do. >> reporter: and as it turned out not that far, johpontoon ju
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race and had to turn back, but he was not alone. >> we're going a huge 1.2 miles. >> reporter: almost half the team never made it to alaska, and those that did enjoyed pungent weeks at sea. >> the stench is moving us along. >> reporter: but there are moments of beauty out there with the dolphins and the whales. this crew, team mad dog, didn't have time to take in all the scenery, though, they sailed day and night for four straight days, sleeping in 20 minute shifts and winning in record time. their prize? $10,000, barely enough to tow the boat home from alaska. second prize?
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and we're not kidding here. is a set of steak knives. >> to reach ketchikan you have to build your own little victory every hour of every day. >> reporter: despite the dangers, no one has died in the race yet. but limits have been and will be pushed. and then broken. which is just how race founder jake beady likes it. >> i have never met a more powerful teacher than the sea and i'm excited to have people have those teachable moments out on the water. no motors. and nasa, as well as several private companies are intent on sending men and women to mars. if and when they get there the astronauts will have to get around somehow. and our own omar villafranca is
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there with the team. >> reporter: with the distinctive wheels at the alien design, tourists at the complex have no idea who to make of this ext extraterrestrial. this is the rover concept vehicle, standing 13 feet wide. what takes longer? your design or you putting it together? >> reporter: the giant rover is the brain child of the parker brothers, shannon and mark. the two made their names in hollywood, designing and building movie props, most notab notab notable, the futuristic movie tron.
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shannon designed the rover, mark and his team did the dirty work, putting it together in at least five months. >> there was nothing in this that was not done in our shop, nothing was ordered out of a catalogue, we built the body, the chassis, the wheels, suspension, frame, interior, seats, glass, everythin hadg o completely from sctcas just for design you know, just f other things i thought you know this is kind of important t have. >> i'm being very delicate with would end up going on mars. rover seats four and drives like also a mock lab in possibly conduct experiments. some of the features were designed with exploration ineed a lot of he rock to climb over surface area so when we gote sa
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but it also had the really deep grooves in it, could go through >> reporter: the brother s consulted with astronauts when building the machine, but this vehicle will not go to mars, insteaens and learning about the red planet. the u.s. astronaut john mcbrimi he said we're closer than we think. >> these guy news ts in the thi fourth, fifth grade, are there. >> reporter: and others hope this will be help for when it lands on mars. omar florida, at the kennedy space center.
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noall fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fishe oil pills.etter. megared advanced triple absorption. rn nati andon. both megan they live within blocks goomorn here? >> pleas e. out ten miles away, acrossfr and both facestrating traffic obstacle,
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maze. interstates converge at the end of the bridge, creating a bottleneck that delays drivers for sometimes an hour, for many years, this agreement has been something called casual car pool. >> this is it. >> somebody just pulls up? >> yes, you just get in the car. >> hi, good morning. how are you? >> how are you. >> reporter: at more than 20 locations scattered throughout the east bay region, people who need a ride into san francisco line up each weekday morning and jump into the next car that pulls up. >> it's like ad hoc car pooling. >> reporter: typically, the ride iris expected to chip in a dollar. >> oh, thank you. >> you're welcome. >> reporter: but the real draw for solo drivers like christianson helps get them to areains like this, a restricted
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car pool area on the bridge. >> so we save 35 minutes, something like that? >> probably that, yeah. >> about 6,000 people are doing this daily. >> reporter: the university of california berkeley researcher is one of the few social scientists who studied this 40-year-old phenomenon that was born during a crippling 1979 public transit strike. >> we found that the median wait time for a driver was just two minutes and they were doing this long before lift and uber. >> reporter: the casual car pooling is done without an app and just works. >> it's completely organic. >> reporter: here we are in high tech, and this low-tech system has been thriving and has been for years. >> you don't need an app to do everything. there are ways to live your life without that. >> reporter: while some casual car poolers are doing this
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easily, many worried about the fears getting into a stranger's car. >> the tech world makes us more trusting to people around us, we hop in the car all the time with uber drivers. >> if you can rent a room and sleep there comfortably, you can get a ride in the city with a stranger. >> reporter: all right, well, thanks for the ride. >> thank you. >> reporter: in an age where uber claims more than a million have taken the uber pool rides and boasts millions on its feature, casual car pool is the transit system that pre-dates
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miss hoffman gets us to there safe every time. te mrs. migliaccio teaches us all about fractions - and haikus - and the erie canal! usound amazing. and miss santoro always takes time to see how we're doing.
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miss simpkins keeps our school looking great. and mrs. mccarthy always has tons of good books to read. ood day at school. ♪ for years, the veteran's administration has been more to find housing for homeless vets. well, there is a new program in california that gets these
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former warriors off the evans >> i'm serving your country, you know you just do what re that is all you can do. >> reporter: dale dollar was just 22 when h marines, but he then found himself out ofomess for 14 years, until he moved in to potter's lane. >> this place, theyonit they walk the walk and talk the talk. >> reporter: the entire apartment complex was built for homeless veterans but that is not what makes it unique. it's the multi-family building put together entirely of recycled shipping containers. most of the 1200 dollar a month rent is subsidized, by the group behind the project. >> in orange county on any given night there are between 400 and 450 homeless veterans which for us is a national crime. there should be no homeless veterans. >> reporter: it took about six
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months to convert the 48 shipping containers that had been used previously for dry goods into 16 studio apartments that are each about 500 square feet. and while the containers are strong enough to be stacked ten stories high, organizers kept it small for a reason. >> when you deal with people who have been homeless, and you wrou warehouse them in 300 units you're not creating a safety net for people or a human connection. the concept here is home first, find a home like here for them, then you surround them with social services. >> reporter: curt carson also served in the marines and like dale he lived along the santa ana river bed for six years. >> if you can't get mail or you can't go somewhere to clean up, and you don't have any place where you -- you don't have a phone number, then how do you think somebody is going to re-integrate into society? it's not going to happen. >> reporter: after more than ten
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years without a roof over his head, dale dollar is finally able to cook a warm meal in his kitchen. >> it's quite a place, you know you have been sleeping in a in the tent and on dirt and rocks, and to be in a place like this? i have been blessed more than i should have been. it's wonderful. >> reporter: for him, it's not just a new apartment. it's a new lease on life. carter evans, cbs news, midway city, california. and that is the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back a little bit later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from captioning funded by cbs
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it's wednesday, june 7th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." a day ahead of james comey's testimony, we know more about the ousted fbi director will and won't say about his conversations with the president. bill cosby's accuser takes the stand in his sexual assault trial. describing the momenting alone with cosby. severe storms leave parts of south florida flooded. >> nothing we can about that. i mean we have to pump all the water out. tough

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