Skip to main content

tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  June 23, 2017 3:10am-4:00am EDT

3:10 am
learn how you can help at girlup.org. this is the cbs overnight news. >> president trump says he's very supportive of the health care plan senate republicans rolled out today. it's their alternative to obamacare chand to the plan approved by the house. >> within hours the bill went from being a secret to a lightning rod. >> four senate conservatives quickly announced their opposition including kentucky's rand paul. >> we cannot support the current bill we're open to negotiation we want it to be more like a bill. >> the 142-page bill eliminates obamacare's insurance mandates and its new taxes on the wealthy.
3:11 am
but it retains a good chunk of obamacare's tax redits to help lower income americans buy insurance. >> i'm going to go back and read the bill. >> reporter: many senate republicans said that's an improvement on the house version, which president trump recently described as mean. south carolina's lindsay graham: >> it leaves pre-existing illnesses alone, so you'll never be denied coverage because you're sick. that's a pretty good place to start. i have to run it by south carolina and see how it affects us on the medicaid side. >> reporter: the senate bill would roll back obamacare's expansion of medicaid. >> no cuts to medicaid! >> reporter: that drew dozens of disabled protesters to senate leader mitch mcconnell's office today, and it's a sticking point for several moderate republicans. >> i have a lot of concerns. >> reporter: so republican leaders must now find ways to appease both wings of their party, in the face of universal opposition from democrats like oregon's ron wyden.
3:12 am
>> senate republicans are going to keep telling americans they're fixing their health care, right up until the second when it gets taken away. >> reporter: on facebook, former president obama call the g.o.p. plan "a massive transfer of wealth from middle-class and poor families to the richest people in america." "simply put," he wrote, "if there's a chance you might get sick, get old, or start a family, this bill will do you harm." the survival of his signature achievement now depends on the ability of republicans to work out their differences. they can only afford to lose two senate republicans, anthony, and as you can see, there are far more holdouts than that right now. >> mason: nancy cordes on capitol hill. thanks. inspectors are checking buildings all over britain for external panels that burn quickly and produce poisonous fumes. the panels may have played a role in the high-rise fire last week that killed 79 people.
3:13 am
jonathan vigliotti is in london. >> reporter: investigators suspect the plastic core of the exterior cladding of grenfell tower was the reason the fire spread so rapidly, engulfing the 24-story building in less than an hour. british authorities are now rushing to test the cladding on at least 600 other high rises. known in the trade as "aluminum composite material," or a.c.m., the cladding encases a polyethylene core that is flammable. it is banned in the united states and parts of europe on any building over 40 feet that firefighters can't reach with ladders. but britain has not followed suit. residents booed prime minister theresa may over the government's handling of the fire. today, she announced that seven other high-rise towers have been found to have this same cladding. >> shortly before i came to the chamber, i was informed that a
3:14 am
number of these tests have come back as combustible. >> reporter: when it burns it produced cyanide fumes and three survivors at kings college hospital were given a cyanide antedote. >> reporter: the cladding manufacturer, new york-based arconic, said today it fully supports the british investigation. its own brochure says this type of cladding never should have been used on any building more than 32 feet high. anthony, police are now looking at how it came to be installed in this high-rise building. >> mason: jonathan vigliotti, thanks. the pentagon put out photos today of what it calls an unsafe intercept of a u.s. spy plane over the baltic sea this week. a russian fighter jet came within five feet of the american plane's wing tip, then flew under the spy plane and came up on the other side. the russians insist the u.s. is to blame for making a provocative move. an apparent case of road
3:15 am
rage triggered a frightening crash yesterday on a southern california freeway. jamie yuccas has the cell phone video, which plays like a scene from an action movie. >> reporter: in this video, you see a motorcyclist kick the driver-side door of a nissan sedan. the sedan then swerved and hit a cement divider, bounced out into traffic, and slammed into a pickup truck, causing it to flip over on this busy southern california freeway. >> i have a gouge up in my head somewhere. >> reporter: the driver of that truck, 75-year-old carlos benavidez, was rushed to the hospital. >> i saw my world coming to an end, to be honest with you. when i felt the impact, and my truck spun out from beside me, and i started to roll. i saw nothing but asphalt and-- and sky. >> reporter: you thought you were going to die. >> i honestly did. >> reporter: we reached chris traber, the man who shot the video from the passenger seat of another car by phone today. he says he began recording when he saw the freeway fight over a
3:16 am
lane change suddenly shift into high gear. >> yeah, it was like, what the heck is going on with these people. i don't know if the driver of the car got scared or freaked out, like, "what am i supposed to do now?" or intentionally try to run him off the road. >> reporter: according to the latest figures from the national highway transportation safety administration, fatalities from aggressive drive having increased 60% since 2011. about two-thirds of highway deaths are caused by aggressive driving. joshua greengard is with the california highway patrol. >> whatever they did for this incident to occur doesn't warrant them fighting in the middle of the freeway. >> reporter: officers are trying to track down the motorcyclist who could face a felony if he's charged with a hit-and-run for what happened on this california freeway. as for carlos, he's already survived cancer, heart disease, and now this crash. anthony, after rewatching the video, he really can't believe he walked away. >> mason: maybe he should buy a lottery ticket. jamie yuccas, thanks very much. coming up next disconnect between women and
3:17 am
their doctors about the risk of heart disease. and later, riding the waves in the moonlight. two kids barfed in class today. it was so gross. lysol disinfectant spray kills 99.9% of bacteria,
3:18 am
even those that cause stomach bugs. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. first you start with this. these guys. a place like shhh! no. found it! and definitely lipton ice tea. lots of it. a lipton meal is what you bring to it. and the refreshing taste of lipton iced tea. it says you apply the blue one ok, letto me. this. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. do you often wake up with chest congestion or suffer excess mucus? left untreated mucus can build up causing further problems.
3:19 am
treat mucus buildup early with #1 doctor recommended mucinex 12 hour. the bi-layer tablet immediately releases to thin and loosen excess mucus and lasts for 12 hours. learn more at mucinex.com treat excess mucus with mucinex 12 hour and enjoy living well. because your carpet there's resolve carpet care. it lifts more dirt and pet hair versus vacuuming alone. resolve carpet care with five times benefits
3:20 am
>> heart disease kills more american women than cancer. yet, many don't discuss the dangers with their doctors. in a new study, 74% of women reported having at least one risk factor for heart disease, but just 16% were told by their doctor that they were at risk. mireya villarreal has more. >> reporter: when casey maurer was hit by a sudden pain in her chest and shortness of breath, she waited hours before deciding to go to the hospital. >> it felt like somebody had taken their knuckle and rapped me in the center of my chest. >> reporter: at 40 years old, did you think this is a heart attack? >> no, absolutely not. i didn't have, you know, the classic tv or movie heart attack symptoms. >> reporter: turns out, it was a heart attack. heart disease is the leading cause of death for women in the united states, and yet maurer's first cardiologist couldn't
3:21 am
figure out how to make things better. >> he said, "i don't know what to do with you. most of my patients are geriatric and male. you're young and female, and i don't know how to help you." >> reporter: a new report by the women's heart alliance pinpoints a communications gap between women and their doctors. while most women got a routine physical, just 40% received a heart-risk assessment from their physicians, and almost half said they canceled or postponed a doctor's visit until they lost a few pounds. >> and that's a very dangerous thing. >> reporter: dr. holly andersen directs education and outreach at new york's ronald o. perelman heart institute. >> women all too often wait, if they think there's a problem with their heart. and all too often, they could die waiting, because sometimes the first symptom of heart disease is sudden death, and that's why prevention is so important. >> reporter: maurer now takes prevention to heart, focusing on sleep, healthy eating, and exercise. she's lost more than 50 pounds, and has gone on to run three marathons. this new report also identified a knowledge gap when it comes to heart disease in women. a majority of the women surveyed
3:22 am
said they never discussed the topic with their doctors because they figured if it was that important, their doctors would bring it up. anthony? >> mireya, thanks. still ahead, robocalls that look like they come from your area code. no matter who was in there last. protection.
3:23 am
new lysol power & fresh 6 goes to work flush after flush for a just-cleaned feeling that lasts up to 4 weeks. lysol. what it takes to protect. what does life look like during your period? with tampax pearl. you get ultimate protection on your heaviest days and smooth removal for your lightest. tampax pearl and pocket pearl for on the go. ♪ new lysol kitchen pro eliminates 99.9% of bacteria without any harsh chemical residue. lysol. what it takes to protect. there were cheers for
3:24 am
u.s. capitol police officer crystal griner last night, as she threw the ceremonial first pitch at the congressional women's softball game in washington. griner was shot in the ankle defending congressional republicans who were attacked during a baseball practice. she's expected to make a full recovery. house majority whip steve scalise remains in fair condition. call on line 1 for adrian abramovich-- it's the f.c.c. the commission said today it wants to fine the miami man a record $120 million for tricking people into buying vacation packages. the f.c.c. said his company's made nearly 97 million robocalls late last year, faked to appear as if they came from local area codes so folks were more likely to pick up. up next, something new under the moon. ♪ >> this portion is sponsored by --
3:25 am
3:26 am
3:27 am
>> we end tonight with carter evans working the night shift at our surf city bureau. >> reporter: when the sun sets over malibu, there's a peaceful calm to the breaking surf. but when the moon is full, a different breed of surfers hit the water. >> when you take off, you can see just the reflection of the water and the moon on it. you kind of get a rhythm. it's like dancing on the water. >> reporter: in his 50 years of surfing, helmut igle has seen the sport explode in popularity.
3:28 am
now with an estimated 35 million surfers worldwide, crowded waves are common. but not at night, as i found out on my first surf session after dark. if it were light out here, there would be 100 guys out there. >> 100 guys, and everybody running into each other, but here it's like-- >> reporter: we had the whole places to ourselves. >> yeah. >> reporter: although we may not have been entirely alone in the water, a concern not lost on j.p. pereat. >> there have been a tremendous number of shark sightings down south this year. do you think about that at all? >> at night, i do. i like to keep my feet up and out of the water. >> reporter: at night, though, you're not going to see it coming. >> maybe that's the whole thing. i don't want to see it coming! >> reporter: night surfing isn't entirely new, but new technology is making waves. sean johnson rides a board with built-in l.e.d.s. >> the lights really help you get into that other world of just having a blast out there and feeling the wave. >> reporter: get a few surfers
3:29 am
in the water and it becomes a tapestry of light, not just to signal their positions to others, but to make an impression back on shore. >> it's like a painting out there. >> reporter: it's like the ocean is your canvas. >> oh, absolutely. >> reporter: still, helmut igle prefers to keep it old school. >> i feel like i'm at halloween or something. it's a little bit disco, but i think i'll stick with my glow stick, and the moon if it's out. >> reporter: either way, sport or art, when the night falls, the surf is still up. >> ya-hoo! >> reporter: carter evans, cbs news, malibu. >> and that's the overnight news for this friday for some of you the news continues for others check back a little bit later for the morning news and cbs this morning. forever the broadcast center in new york city i'm anthony mason.
3:30 am
this is the cbs overnight news. welcome to the overnight news. >> the long awaited senate plan to replace and repeal act landed on capitol hill with a thud. the bill was crafted in secret and senate majority leader mitch mcconnell said to get it past in a week but at least others won't vote for it as written. nancier >> within hours the bill went from being a secret to a lightning rod. >> this current draft doesn't get the job done. >> four senate conservatives quickly announced their
3:31 am
opposition including kentucky's rand paul. >> we cannot support the current bill. we're open to negotiation but we want the bill to look more like a repeal. >> the 142-page bill eliminates obamacare's insurance mandates and its new taxes on the wealthy. but it retains a good chunk of obamacare's tax credits to help lower income americans buy insurance. >> i'm going to go back and read the bill. >> reporter: many senate republicans said that's an improvement on the house version, which president trump recently described as mean. south carolina's lindsay graham: >> it leaves pre-existing illnesses alone, so you'll never be denied coverage because you're sick. that's a pretty good place to start. i have to run it by south carolina and see how it will fix us on the medicaid side. >> reporter: the senate bill would roll back obamacare's expansion of medicaid. >> no cuts to medicaid! >> reporter: that drew dozens of disabled protesters to senate leader mitch mcconnell's office today, and it's a sticking point for several moderate republicans.
3:32 am
>> i have a lot of concerns. >> reporter: so republican leaders must now find ways to appease both wings of their party, in the face of universal opposition from democrats like oregon's ron wyden. >> senate republicans are going to keep telling americans they're fixing their health care, right up until the second when it gets taken away. >> reporter: on facebook, president obama call the g.o.p. plan "a massive transfer of wealth from middle-class and poor families to the richest people in america." "simply put," he said "if there's a chance you might get sick, get old, or start a family, this bill will do you harm." the survival of his signature achievement now depends on the ability of republicans to work out their differences. they can only afford to lose two senate republicans, anthony, and as you can see, there are far more holdouts than that right now.
3:33 am
>> after keeping the country guessing for more than a month president trump said he did not make tapes of conversations with fired fbi director james comey. the president and mr. comey have told very different stories all tied to the russian investigation. >> president trump started where he started the controversy twitter. writing i have no idea if there's conversations with james comey but i do not have any. this coming after his tweet better hope there's no conversations before he started leaking to the press >> lordy, i hope there are tapes. >> reporter: the president's tweet set off a chain reaction. comey told congress it led him to leak memos he wrote about his conversations with the president. >> because i thought that might prompt the appointment of a special counsel, so i asked a close friend of mine to do it. >> reporter: comey's gamble
3:34 am
worked. now special counsel robert mueller is heading the russia investigation, which likely includes whether the president obstructed justice by interfering in the probe. >> well, you're going to be very disappointed when you hear the answer. don't worry. >> reporter: president trump and his team stonewalled reporters and members of congress for weeks over whether any recordings existed. >> so when he's ready to make that announcement, we'll let you know. >> well, i'll tell you about that maybe sometime in the very near future. >> he's not waiting for anything. when he's ready to discuss it further, he will. >> reporter: at today's white house briefing, where cameras were not allowed, spokeswoman sarah huckabee sanders said today's tweet was extremely clear but still did not explain the first place. >> did the president intend to threaten james comey with that tweet? >> not that i'm aware of. i don't think so. >> later she explained. >> it was more about raising the question of doubt in general. >> the timing of the announcement was in response to a request from the house
3:35 am
intelligence committee where republicans and democrats say they still want a official statement not a tweet. >> the remnants of tropical cin cindy with power outages but the agriculture prices are going through the roof crop has increased, tree after tree, acre after acre coming up on "cbs this morning." people shopping for summer fruits may notice peaches are selling for higher prices. a double whammy of unexpected weather destroyed most of the peach crops in the southeast. last month whole sale prices for thousands of acres produced 8 million pounds this year crop
3:36 am
two million pounds. dickey says his peaches should be the size of a golf ball. >> you would hope to have peaches of that size on the tree. >> what do you have? >> really don't have any this tree has zero peaches. >> reporter: here's why. whacky winter weather confused and then killed the crop. first unseasonably warm temperatures deprived the crop of needed chill hours followed by freezing temperatures in mid-march that stretched across the southeast. >> when you have a freeze, you know within a couple of days what's alive and what's dead. >> the dickey family's loss could top $5 million. georgia's agriculture commissioner gary black told us the state could lose 80% of this year's crop. >> it's representative of hundreds of millions of dollars in georgia's economy.
3:37 am
i >> i really think you're going to see a drop-off after the fourth of july and that will mean we're preparing for 2018. >> 2018. justin dixon customers want to order his peach salad this summer. the execute chef at a restaurant the shed in atlanta has become a hoarder. we're a peach state. we have to have them. >> you grabbed a many as you can? >> yeah. yeah. you stockpile them before they're gone. >> george's prime peach season typically runs june to mid-august but by early this year dickey expects to have nothing left to ship. for consumers, that could mean. a summer that will taste a little less tweet. georgia farmers have it bad, but in south carolina, which actually grows more peaches, have it worse, there is some s 0
3:38 am
it worse, 90% of that crop was destroyed. there is some good news, california had a great crop this year. if you are looking for a southern peach, may have to settle for water melon. [sound of wrench] [intricate guitar riff] [engine starts] [guitar continues] not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption.
3:39 am
clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but will it stop this teen from being embarassed by her parents? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. 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.
3:40 am
3:41 am
south korea picking up over 90%
3:42 am
of the bill. we landed near >> we're doing a p.a.c. 3 missile. >> we saw them. shooting down incoming ballistic missiles from north korea >> reporter: how accurate is it? >> it's very accurate. very, very accurate. >> in the gulf war the patriot missile had 90% success rate but he says it's now a key piece of protection. >> we're truly the first line of defense. we buy decision space for the president and for the coc commander general brooks to make decisions on how to potentially de-escalate or escalate the conflict. as necessary. >> reporter: in the face of international condemnation north korea has conducted ten missile tests this year. two of them involved solid fuel missiles which the north can launch with less warning. >> why do these solid fuel
3:43 am
rockets make it harder? >> because it doesn't require as much preparation for them to take a missile and prepare it and get it ready for launch. >> colonel rick wright took us inside an engagement control station where the pressure would be on to shoot down any incoming threat. >> this is where they would push the button to launch it. >> this is where they can execute the air battle. >> we routinely exercise that from the phone call to actually moving them on the road to putting a missile up in the air. >> how quickly can you do that? >> i can do that pretty fast. >> you practice that? >> we practice it very routinely. >> while she was in south korea she interviewed the country's new president who will be visiting the united states last week. we also got to see her old neighborhood. turns out she grew up on an old army base in seoul. >> more than 21,000 people are
3:44 am
stationed at this army base, about a third are residents, including american service members and their families. >> this is right in the center of seoul. >> almost geographically, right on the edge of the river near the center. >> more than 30 years ago my family lived here for two years. my father u.s. army commander over saw the fifth preventative medicine unit. >> i can't believe we found it. >> yes, ma'am this is it. >> it has not changed at all. it's virtually the same. >> colonel scott peterson helped us find my old house. >> this whole housing area hasn't changed in like 32 years >> >> not much. not much. the residents are pretty much the same. a lot of maintenance has gone on inside the homes but in terms of laying out the location, yeah, not a lot changed. >> my best friend lived there. this is the duplex i lived in. with my parents and three siblings.
3:45 am
i can remember doing easter egg hunts out the back. >> sure. >> it's different. there used to be a helicopter landing pad in the back >> yeah that's no longer there. >> i can remember president ronald reagan landing on that helicopter pad in our backyard. here i am today in the same spot >> that was my room right there. >> reporter: even though the base is about 25 miles away from the dmz, safety was never a concern for us it was a great place to grow up. you were safe. even though you were in the middle of a foreign country in seoul, south korea, i could ride my bike. and my parents weren't worried about me at all at ten years old they said go play. >> it's a great community here, very, very close community. all of the families are close. as you said it couldn't be safer. we're proud of it.
3:46 am
>> we also visited my school seoul american elementary. >> so this would have been my fourth grade classroom. >> this is where you went to school? >> 30 years ago! >> let's take you inside. >> oh, my goodness. >> yeah so this would have been your classroom 30 years ago. >> this would have been my classroom. he oh, my gosh. it's virtually the same. this is the same. right. >> the one thing changed -- >> -- there's a tv. >> it's an interactive smart board. >> can you believe i was ten years old in this classroom. >> reporter: today the elementary school upholds it's reputation for delivering a top-notch education. >> our students are able t go to school any where in the country. >> you have a graduate who's a journalist on cbs. >> it's a great thing. >> it's a great country. >> it's a great place. a great place to live. who knows. we may have the next cbs anchor here.
3:47 am
hi, everyone. this is norah. >> this happens to be where i started my career in broadcasting, >> yes there are a lot of students. >> giving on-camera english lessons. >> voice, voice. >> she dreamed that she met christopher columbus. >> for the korean educational development institute. [ speaking foreign language ]. >> see you next week. bye-bye, everybody. >> good-bye. >> good-bye. >> cbs overnight news will be right back. ♪ first you start with this. these guys. a place like shhh! no. found it! and definitely lipton ice tea. lots of it.
3:48 am
a lipton meal is what you bring to it. and the refreshing taste of lipton iced tea. it says you apply the blue one ok, letto me. this. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together.
3:49 am
because your carpet there's resolve carpet care. it lifts more dirt and pet hair versus vacuuming alone. resolve carpet care with five times benefits ♪ lysol max cover kills 99.9% of bacteria,
3:50 am
even on soft surfaces. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. what does life look like during your period? with tampax pearl. you get ultimate protection on your heaviest days and smooth removal for your lightest. tampax pearl and pocket pearl for on the go. the people who keep track of these things say there's now about 2 million surfers in the united states and when surf is up it seems like they're all on the same beach. some surfers who want some elbow room have taken to catching waves at night. cart er has the story from malibu. >> it's twilight on the malibu coast line and this crowd is just getting started.
3:51 am
>> night surfing is awesome. you can cruise all night long. it's like dancing on the waters. >> you're not going by sight. you're going by feel. >> reporter: it's not for the faint of heart or short sighted. >> for a sport that depends on seeing the right wave at the perfect time it may seem crazy to dive into darkness, but as i found out on my first night's surf section it's all about escaping the crowds. >> if it were light out here, there's bes like 100 guys. >> an everyone running into each other but right now there's like hardly anybody out. >>
3:52 am
helmut igle has seen the numbers grow. >> you watch the light on the wave like a serpent on the water. >> while avoiding gridlock are risking encounters with other under water creatures >> >> there have been a number of shark sightings. do you think about that at all? >> at night. i like to keep my feet up on a he long board. >> you're not going to see it coming. >> that's the thing. i don't want to see it coming. >> reporter: night surfing isn't entirely new, but new technology is making waves. in 2011 got a social media boost from this.
3:53 am
an australia conquered the wave. >> my heart was pounding so much at the timing myself just stand on your feet. >> it took him four years of preparation. and small army of support staff. >> the lights are so people could see you. >> yeah. >> that look is now catching on. roy johnson used to night surf as a younger man now crafts boards with led lights built into them. >> i like the reactions of the crowd, watching my son srurfing and see people come out go that's so cool. >> you're the official product
3:54 am
tester. >> absolutely. rain or shine we're out there. >> he says mostly the led lights make an impression on shore. >> what are people saying. they think it's a u.f.o. coming down the wave. >> at the end of the day or night surf something more sport than art and some prefer to keep it old school. >> i feel like i'm at halloween or something. it's a little bit disco, but i think i'll stick with my glow stick, and the moon if it's out. >> once each month it's the one day everyone can agree on. >> it's a full moon i can go for it. >> reporter: carter evans, malibu.
3:55 am
3:56 am
3:57 am
for years now the biggest complaint about air travel has been the long lines at the security gates, screeners searching for bombs and weapons and making sure air travellers are who they say they are. some airlines are testing new facial recognition technology, that should speed the process. we have the story from boston's logan airport. >> jet blue flight 773 from boston to aruba is about to fake a test flight into the future, it's going to compare my photo with the database to match my
3:58 am
passport it says i can approve without presenting boarding pass >> this is a trial of facial recognition technology by u.s. customs and jet blue. the airline wants to see if it makes the board process faster. >> it just amazes me the technology. >> the system matches images to a government database of passport photos. a seemless process of. accord according to >> we're looking at reducing the friction points to create an experience that doesn't have any lines. >> that is revolutionary in the airline industry and delta is right at the front of it. >> delta's senior vice president tested a facial recognition bag drop at minneapolis airport. passengers can check luggage without an employee identifying their identity. >> you can go from curb to plane without interacting with a human being.
3:59 am
if you so desire. >> even as the technology speeds passengers through the airport. >> couldn't be faster. >> some fear too fast. >> implementation of the use of biometrics need to be scrutinized very closely. >> jeremy scott from the electronic privacy information center worries about the use of personal identifiers that can't be changed. >> as we consolidate into big databases and use it more and more, those databases become targets and the risk of data breach increases greatly. >> u.s. government said it's not using the devices to store photo and privaty is a concern, >> for those long tsa lines at check points the tsa is experimenting with finger print verification for identities. >> that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back a little bit later for the morning news and of course cbs this morning. from the broadcast in new york city.
4:00 am
i captioning funded by cbs it's friday, june 23rd, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." senate republicans finally reveal their health care plan, and already it's at risk of flat lining. tropical storm cindy soaks the south and spawns deadly tornados. this morning the system's remnants will um packet millions more from florida to the northeast. hoop dreams come true. the nba's number one draft pick on his future off the basketball court. and skirting the rules. a group of boys protest their school's no shorts policy to beat the heat.

85 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on