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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 21, 2017 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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please. >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is friday, july 21st, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning." o.j. simpson granted parole after nine years in prison for kidnapping and armed robbery. first on "cbs this morning," ron goldman's family responds to the decision to free the man acquitted of killing him and simpson's ex-wife. two of trump's lawyers are out. and a deadly earthquake shake as popular tourist island overnight in greece. thousands run for cover with no safe place to go. plus, it's everywhere, the sound of the summer that is sweeping the globe and making music history.
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despacito >> we'll get the story behind how justin bieber became involved in the infectious hit you can't get out of your head. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> mr. simpson, i do vote to grant parole. >> thank you. >> after nine years in prison, o.j. simpson will soon be free. >> when he gets out, he's going to be our guilty pleasure and it's going to make me feel a little bit filthy. an earthquake rocks turkey. and a tsunami that has been a night of chaos as many fled their homes. >> the president's lawyers are looking for ways to under mine the investigation by counsel robert mueller. >> john mccain wants none of it. >> he called me three time this
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morning. no more woe is me. he's yelling and me and telling me to buck up. >> the minneapolis police chief is speaking up. >> justine shouldn't have died. this did not have to happen. >> the world is reeling over the suicide death of chester bennington. >> this fire is out of control. >> all that -- >> tornados touched down in western new york. >> powerful winds lifting an suv right off the ground. >> the lumberjack world championship, they're under their way in wisconsin that. looks like fun. >> -- and all that matters. >> homeland security spoke. >> do you need to take that call? >> it might be the president, so i do want to miss the call. >> -- on "cbs this morning." ♪
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>> 19 maryland elijah lee has a beatbox session. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is on assignment and gayle king is off. good morning. jeff glor and bianna golodryga. happy friday. great to have you here. we're going to begin with the headlines. o.j. simpson will soon be free from prison. the former football star showed jubilee and relief yesterday after convincing the parole board he deserves to be released. >> simpson served nearly nine years of a 33-year sentence. the defendants say it was pay back for his acquittal on murder
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charges more than two decades ago. >> john blackstone is in lovelock, nevada. >> reporter: the o.j. is the o.j. we knew, bright and charismatic. the board reached its yunanimou decision in nearly 30 minutes. >> mr. simpson, i do grant parole and that will end this hearing. >> thank you. >> reporter: simpson was visibly relie relieved. >> i've done my time. i've done it as well and as reflectfully as i think anybody can. >> reporter: he meant much of the hearing painting himself as a straight shooter and a family man. still when it came to the 2007 botched robbery that landed him
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in jail, he apologized but defended himself. >> i would never, ever pull a weapon on anybody. i've basically spent a conflict-free life. >> reporter: tonia brown is sister to nicole brown. >> there are many, many people out there who believe he didn't kill nicole and ron but the truth of the matter is he abused my sister. we have the diaries to prove that, the battered face to prove that. that's not a conflict-free life. >> reporter: at a hearing he received support from bruce fromong, one of his victims. >> if he called me up tomorrow and said, bruce, i'm getting out, will you pick me up, i
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would be there. >> reporter: his daughter arnelle also spoke on his behalf. >> we just want him to get out so we can move forward. >> reporter: o.j. simpson may be free but tom lange doesn't think this will be the last we see of him. >> nothing's going to stop him from getting in front of the camera again. that's him. he's very narcissistic. >> reporter: simpson said he would like go back to flr where he lived before. he was warned, however, even the slightest parole violation could land him right back here. >> thank you very much. rikki klieman was a prosecutor and has covered cases. when he gets out, where can he live and what can he do? >> they're working on the interstate compact so he can be
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transferred from hor his parole nevada to florida. he has substantial ties to the community and so everyone would suspect with a good plan for his future and parole, he will, in fact, be transferred. however, there are conditions of parole. there are standard ones in nevada. there will be others in florida. one of the conditions that he has to think about is not the simple one about no alcohol use or drug use. i'm sure that after that, they'll take that into consideration. but he has to comply with all laws. that means b s big ones, two li ones. have to think about his right of association, no convicted felons or trouble or criminal activity. >> even the slightest violation could put him back in jail. >> yes, it could. what you do, you've got to look. there's another grid. we looked at the terms of the
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possibility of his parole. there's nothing about the violation of what it does. if he runs a stop sign, do i expect him to be violated and put back in prison? no, i don't. however, if he were recklessly driving and ran a stop sign, that's a different matter. >> does it matter that he lied before the parole board saying he led a conflict-free life? >> i don't think the parole board looked at o.j.'s exaggeration or what some might say is a delusional statement as something they would call a lie and it would have disqualified him. in his mind he certainly thinks he led a conflict-free life. on any objective criteria, he, of course, was involved with conflict for many year, not only back to domestic violence but even with an altercation in florida. >> during his time he was going
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to take classes. can you tell us a little bit about that course? >> the alternative to violence course he believes should be mandated for every prisoner. he believes it's life-changing, he learned a lot from it, and he's a changed person. the future remains to be seen if that is a true statement. >> that is correct. rickki klieman, thank you very much. coming up we'll talk with fred and kim goldman, ron's father and sister. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." there's a confrontation. the president just lost two members of his legal team. others are looking for ways to push back against robert mueller's investigation which is now looking at the financial affairs of the president and the trump organization. major garrett is at the white house.
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good morning. >> good morning. president trump's strident decision raises question with how comfortable he is. sessions for his part gamely brushed aside questions yesterday about whether he should or would resign saying he'll stay on the job as long as it is appropriate. >> he should have told me before he took the job and i would have picked somebody else. >> just a day after president trump lashed out at attorney general jeff sessions and special counsel robert mueller in a television interview, he lost two members of his team. personal lawyer marc kasowitz who represents the president in all matters concerned investigations is out replaced by newly appointed attorney, ty cobb. his spokesman
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also resigned. >> this is about russia. >> he's signaled mueller is overreached but he has the due t ty to investigate. >> i saw a lot of condo units. i don't take money from russia. it's not my thing. i don't do that. over the years i've looked at maybe doing a deal in russia, but i never did one. >> jay sekulow, one of the president's attorneys denied published reports that the legal team is skblorg possibilities of pardons in the russia investigation. he said. quote, pardons are not being discussed, nor are they on the table. they're investigating the overseas business dealings over the former campaign chairman
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paul manafort. >> major garrett, congratulations as well in your reporting on the news of the shakeup. the arizona senator also took to twitter to thank everyone for their outpouring of support. he wrote, unfortunately for my sparring partners in congress, i'll be back soon. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. and, nancy, a lot of people are excited to hear he'll be come back. >> right. and well wishes still pouring in from every corner of congress, but in true mccain fashion, the 890-year-old senator says his colleagues including his best buddy needs to toughen up. >> i can't think of anything i've done since 1999 politically, in many ways, personally worth doing without john. >> mccain told lindsey graham, enough is enough. >> he called me three time this morning. no more woe is me, lindsey.
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he's yelling at me to buck up. i'm going to buck up. >> reporter: the two defense hallings have a long budding bromance. >> he's loyal to his friends and he stands up for his country. he would die for his country. i love him to death. >> it was graham who noticed his recent fatigue and urged him to get checked. the diagnosis of glioblastoma has surprised his colleagues. they thought his melanoma has returned. >> he's got longevity in the family. his mother is 105. >> she just quit driving a couple of years ago, i think. >> reporter: serving is a family trait. senators know he'll need to marshal that fighting spirtd tr the battle to come. >> anybody who would not leash a
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prisoner of war camp until his colleagues were released as well, voluntarily stay there longer than they should. that says all you need to know about john mccain. >> mccain is staying involved in policy conversations. he made it clear he's still going to be a thorn in the side of the trump administration. this was a statementer the white house dropping a program to help the syrian opposition, and mccain said the move is, quote, playing right into the hands of vladimir putin. jeff? >> nancy, thank you very much. the minneapolis chief of police said the shooting death of justine da monday should not have happened. state investigators say when police arrived, she was shot and killed by officer mohamed noor.
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jamie yuccas is in minneapolis. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we're at a memorial that's been erected at the end of the alley where justine damond was killed. the police chief said her death was the act of one officer and she wants to make it safe so people can call 911. belief chief janee harteau had harsh criticism. >> on our squad car us, you wil find towards "to serve with courage and compassion." >> reporter: officers noor and hairty responded. according to investigators, harrity said he drove down the alley after hearing a loud sound
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and damond appear by his door. >> it's my belief the body camera should have been activated. >> reporter: shortly after the conflict, protesters marched down the street. by her boyfriend's side, the mother of philando castile who was shot and killed by an officer last summer. >> we're just here to support the family. that's it. >> reporter: they have not spoken to authorities. his attorney said he doesn't intend to speak. as for the police chief, she said she hasn't publicly spoken up till now because she was in backpacking trip in a remote area and it was difficult to get back. an earthquake hit turkey killing two people. the epicenter was in the agian
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sea between two popular tourist destinations. jonathan vigliotti is in london with how people tried to take cover. good morning. >> good morning. the quake hit on one of the busiest seasons leaving thousands without shelter and no go clear place to go. this woman just blew out the candles on her birthday cake when the earthquake struck. within seconds the aegean sea spilled into the town. civilians from inside the nearby cafe showed people running for officerty and hospital staff hid with patients under desks. those inside were later evacuated to the streets. daybreak showed thousands of tourists spending theite outdoors, many in parking lots and sun beds along the beach.
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a souvenir shop didn't stand a chance. the most extensive damage was to the older buildings. two tourists killed in the quake from turkey and sweden were killed inside this bar. the powerful tre more also caused a tsunami which tossed boats like toys. heavy debris and flooding roads stalled rescue efforts. >> it's the second quake to reach them in weeks. it's now threatening the stability of buildings already damaged. bianna. >> jonathan, thank you. firefighters are struggling to control the massive debt qui why ler fire in california. it's burned just to the west of yosemite national park. thousands have been evacuated
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including every one of the town of mariposa. two rare tonights in upstate new york have call out the national guard to clean up debris. winds lifted cars and blew out windows yesterday. one twister had a maximum estimate of more than 100 miles. one cub was killed two years
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>> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. a nevada parole board says o.j. simpson has paid his debt to society and he will be free to leave prison soon. >> only on "cbs this morning," fred and kim goldman are in studio 57.
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ahead, they respond to the release of the man they believe killed their son and brother. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." it's like nothing you've seen. th24hr protectionum from frequent heartburn. all day, and all night. now packed into a pill so small, we call it mini. new clearminis from nexium 24hr. see heartburn differently. i'start at the new carfax.comar. show me minivans with no reported accidents. boom. love it. [struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. we come into this world needi♪ others. then we are told it's braver to go it alone. ♪ but there is another way to live. ♪ a way that sees the only path to fulfillment-
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take care! family: bye! kids singing: safelite® repair, safelite® replace. a new exhibit provide as rare look into the personal life of princess diana. ahead, what we learn about her taste in music. plus, what was president
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trump trying to do in white house that required so >> good morning, i'm rahel sole plan, update on breaking news, deadly home invasion in tioga. police are interviewing possible eyewitnesses right now, investigators say two men tried to barge into a home, on the 3300 block of north gratz street before midnight. during a struggle they some and killed a wheelchair bound man and injured his caretaker, now, checking the forecast with meteorologist, katie fehlinger. looks like the heat isn't done with us yet? >> many days left of very heat. today looks to me as the most sensitive, how much, the national weather service degrees with that, the heat warning continues until this evening, may soar as 102 this afternoon, really oppressive. but even though we don't break the 90s until tuesday, we are
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at least getting some relief over the course of the weekends. watch for heavier thunderstorms, too, especially by saturday night. >> and neck week, katie, i think everyone is looking forward to. that will it has been hot. it is looking very hot on the load ways, as well. take a look how busy it is, accident with tractor-trailer pulled off to the right. schuylkill weighs, city avenue, take a look at these backups around here. plus, an accident on the vine westbound, just cleared. rahel, back over to you. >> meisha, thank youment next update 7:55, up next on cbs this morning, tennessee credit for jail time but wait until you hear why. i'm rahel solomon, good morning.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ it isn't just about vision, it's about care. nobody cares for eyes more than pearle.
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they're celebrating at the white house where somehow a ceo of a glass company talk him into taking part in a demonstration. okay, so -- you did okay. mr. president, if you just do the same thing, but this time don't be afraid to lean in. >> really? >> it's not that tough. >> okay. >> look how happy he is. >> the president apply 1,000 pounds to prove that a new kind of glass packaging for
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prescription drugs is practically unbreakable. it will create hundreds of jobs in the u.s. >> putting a little elbow grease in there. welcome back to "cbs this morning." charlie is on assignment and gayle is off, so jeff glor and bianna golodryga of yahoo! news are with us. nice to have you here. elon musk claims he has the verbal go ahead to work on a hyperloop from washington to new york. but officials in new york say they don't know anything about this. >> a lot of people are excited about it. he said underground transport tunnels will some day move people at speeds of hundreds of miles an hour. it's still in the early stages of testing. here's a look at this morning's headlines around the globe. they're responding to the missile threat from north korea. today state officials will outline a plan that includes emergency alerts and school
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evacuation drilling. they successfully tested it. they said all american travel to north korea will be banned. student otto warmbier who was held there. an american mother accused chinese police of holding her son for ransom. 25-year-old was held. place say the police wants the equivalent of $7,400 to release him. >> the three rivers independent district says administrators may use paddles to discipline unruly students. parents must consent in verbal and in writing before it occurs.
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>> one of the lion cubs was killed. the 6-year-old lion was killed in zimbabwe. the killing of cecil two years ago by a minnesota dentist provoked worldwide anger. one of o.j. simpson's statements during his successful parole hearing yesterday is drawing a lot of criticism. >> i basically have spent a conflict-free life, you know. i'm not a guy who ever got in fights on the street with the public and everybody. i'm not a guy who lived a criminal living you know. i'm a pretty straight shooter. >> simpson will soon be released after nine years of a 33-year-old sentence for armed robbery and kidnapping. it's been nearly 22 years since the jury found simpson not guilty of murdering his ex-wife nicole simpson and her friend ron goldman. the trial captivated the nation and left the vick.
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s' families feeling they did not get justice. later simpson was found liable for the deaths of two. with us is ron gold manned and his daughter, an author. this is your first appearance on cbs. welcome to both of you. he served nine years of a 33-year-old sentence. is this one more example of o.j. simpson getting away with it? >> for me, the answer is yes, but then obviously we're a little biased. i'm troubled that he's out, free, getting a second chance, something that ron didn't get. i would prefer to see him back in jail, simple as that. i don't think he is worthy of the right to be out amongst
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decent people. >> kim, you watched that parole board hearing/conversation. what would you want to say to members of the parole board? >> it was eye opening to me to have a bird's-eye view. i wonder if that's typical across the country. they said, we give you the benefit. they went on to not press him, not ask follow-up questions, wear an inappropriate nfl taibbi one of the parole board members, what is your risk to the public safety. i was really alarmed that maybe their questions were answer bfrd the hearing even happened and i just wondered if that's how it always is. >> we played the statement. he's played a conflict-free
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life. >> conflict-free except for the beatings of his first wife nicole. >> and you can't ignore the fact he was held responsible in the civil court for kill ron and nicole. even though that wasn't a criminal case, he was held responsible and ordered to pay. >> he was ordered to pay $33 million. how much have you seen? >> less than 1%. >> honestly he's never physically paid anything. we've taken things from him, but he's never willingly paid a penny. >> i know you're interested in going after more of that money. what will you do? what can you do? >> we're going to do exactly what we did previously in the hopes that he'll continue to look over his shoulder and
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whether we're going to take what from him just like he did that ultimately we think caused him to go to vegas and take his stuff back. >> because you can't take the pension money. >> no. it's pension. >> which is $20,000 to $25,000. what can you take? >> anything he earns, anything that comes his way now. he authored that book years ago that we took away from him. >> if i can interrupt you, tad, it's not just about the money. it's about the punishment. that's what it affords us and gives other victims and survivors. i really encourage you if you have the judgment and pursue justice, that's what you do. it doesn't always work to your benefit. that's what -- he gets the benefits of it. why shouldn't the victims and sur vooivers. >> you were able to move on in
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life when he was behind bars and not in front of cameras. i want you to think about something he said yesterday, i might get involved with the media. what would your reaction be if he were to make an appearance on television or be part of a reality series sf. >> i think that's what we've been so anxious about. he garners a tremendous amount of media. now that you can take videos and pictures wherever you could. h loves the attention and be in the spotlight. we have to hunker down and be prepared for that too. >> it's about incarceration and rehabilitation. to you believe he's the same man or he's been rehabilitated? >> i believe without a doubt he's the same person. i think he showed it clearly during the parole hearings, his snickering about things, arrogant looks when they're
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reading things, the way he snapped at one of the kmugsers on the parole board when he said -- i don't recall what it was he said. he snapped at him. i think he's exactly who he is. >> we commend you for keeping your son's and brother's memory alive. he would be 49 years old. thank you. >> thank you. a tennessee judge is letting inmates trade jail time for a vasectomy or birth control. ahead, why he argues his controversiala will help end the opioid controversy. ahead, how two new sharks they changed could tell us more about the animals and how they mate. you're watchle "cbs this morning." the ones that keep it real. we haven't hung in five years we need a girls trip. so let's go. i plan on getting white girl wasted this weekend. [ coughing ]
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a tennessee judge is offering inmates less jail time if they get a va seth many or a birth control implant. judge sam benningfield has
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offered. it they've seen a withdrawal since the early 2000s. it's called neonatal abstinence syndrome or nsa and it's yet another growing part of the opioid epidemic. david begnaud has more on this controversial action. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the judge here is trying to stop perspective mothers and fathers from passing that drug addiction onto their children. in doig doing sew h ee is making a heartfelt incentive with nothing but good incentives, however, people say he's crossing the line. >> i'm not on a crusade. i'm trying to help people. >> reporter: judge sam benningfield say 80% to 90% o the cases that come before him are tied in some way to alcohol or drug use.
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>> it seemed to many a no-brainer. offer these women a chance to think about what they're doing and try to rehabilitate their life. >> reporter: he issued this two-fold standing order. inmated could get two days knocked off their sentence. he offered an additional 30 days off of their snebs if they undergoal a birth control procedure. a vasectomy for men and contraceptive for women. >> based on your expertise, do you think is illegal? >> i think it's potentially unlawful, yes. >> reporter: bryant doneaway handles cases. >> it's not the place for the government or courts, the state of tennessee, to encourage the trading of fertility procedures. >> let me push back on that.
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he's not encouraging anything. he's saying if you do this, you'll get this. >> i disagree. >> so far 24 women have had the implajt procedure and 389 men have signed up for the vasect y vasectomy. judge benningfield said he was blind-sided by the criticism. >> i'm trying to help people ta take responsibility for their lives and when they get out of jail, perhaps not be burdened with unwanted children and all that comes with that. >> reporter: for what it works the county sheriff fully supports the judge. the aclu believes its unconstitutional. that implangt for women lasts three years. in fact, the judge told us if a higher court coming in and tells him he's wronging he's prepared
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to reverse his order. >> thank you very much. the public will get a never b before before seen that. fi >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by panera bread, food as it should be. a good clean salad is so much more than green.
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featuring elton john, diana r s ross. ahead, how the hit song "despacito" made history. >> in less than six months. >> wow. >> yeah. the video's a bit racy. >> you're in the video, right, jeff? >> good lord no. >> we're tabbing about what makes the song so contagious.
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are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you're pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines. ask your healthcare professional about the risks and benefits of bexsero and if vaccination with bexsero is right for your teen. moms, we can't wait.
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>> good morning, i'm rahel solomon, attorney general, jeff sessions, is in philadelphia today, sessions will speak out against sanctuary cities like philadelphia that limit cooperation between police and i am graduation authorities. sessions caused the -- calls it unconstitutional. says he will not resign despite recent criticism from president trump. over to katie with a check on today's forecast, looks like the heat is sticking flashed. >> certainly is. today in fact will be the hottest day of the next few, we don't really see really clear cut ends in site, until early next week, for now, it already, look at this, already, feels like it is almost 90 degrees in atlantic city even dover, here in philly feeling more like 58 degrees, but we've got a long day ahead of us here, officially hit 96, factor in
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the humidity, will feel as hot as the low one hundreds, tomorrow evening specially severe storms that rumble through, meisha. >> thank you so much for. that will looking outside, still, very busy out there, so, we have a dent here, now there is was actually a car fire in bucks county. fifty-nine north past route 413, blocking the far right lane. it is very busy around there, plus, this accident, with tractor-trailer, still out there, schuylkill westbound at city avenue. pulled again all the way to the far right shoulder. see the back up in this area, as well, rahel, over you. >> thank you, next update 8: 25, coming up on cbs this morning, how two attack sharks are changing the way expert think about the animals, how they mate. i'm rahel solomon. good morning.
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good morning. it is july . >> reporter: it is friday, july 21, 2017. ahead, the actor's sister and his ex-wife. >> and we were there for the first time in 200126789 now the founder is back here in studio 57 with his newest research, but first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the hearing lasted more than an hour, and the parole board reached a unanimous decision in less than 30 minutes. >> and he believes that he learned a lot and he is a changed person. the future remains to be seen. >> i would prefer to see him back in jail, simple as that.
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i don't think he is worthy of the right to be out amongst decent people. >> i wouldn't be surprised if he popped up as often as he could. he loves the attention. >> the quake hit on one of the busiest weeks of the tourist season, leaving thousands without shelter. >> love is still pouring in from every corner of o congress but in true mccain fashion, he said his colleagues including his best buddy need to toughen up. >> it's the six-month anniversary of trump's inauguration. i can't believe it's six months. it seems so much longer. one of the staffers had a baby born on inauguration day and here's that same baby today. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by blue buffalo.
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i'm norah o'donnell along with jeff glor and bianna golodryga of yahoo! news. we'll begin with this. o.j. simpson's prison time is almost over. >> mr. simpson, i do vote to grant parole when eligible, and that will conclude this hearing. >> thank you. >> thank you. the nevada parole board decided to unanimously release the former football star. >> many watched as hi made the case for freedom. he told the board prison humbled him and he talked about scrutiny after he's freed. >> really in the last 20 years rarely have i even had any person give me any teddive stuff in the street. i have people give me looks and everything, but i'm pretty
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easily approachable. i dealt with it my whole life and i really don't see any problem dealing with the public now at all. >> simpson says he wants to move to florida to live with his family. he could be released as soon as october 1st. >> o.j. simpson was sent to prison in 2008 more than a decade after he was found not guilty of murdering ronald goldman and nichol brown simpson. her sister spoke about it yesterday. >> it brought me back three years ago sitting in the courtroom with the sweaty hands, visceral feeling in your belly and rapid heart rate. how i like to describe to people, it's like going up the tallest roller coaster. it really affected me today,
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this morning. but once it was read, i'm like, okay, the tv's going off. it is what it is. the law says he is granted parole and we as a community, you know, in order for us to feel peace in our own selves have to accept it or at least try to. >> we asked brown if simpson seemed like a changed man and she said no. president trump is shaking up his team of lawyers. trump's former attorney marc kasowitz is out. kasowitz's spokesman ron resigned. >> mr. trump said this week that investigating his and his family's finances would cross a
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redline. sources say they're investigating business dealings against the president's former campaign chairman paul manafort. they started that inquiry and then turned it over to mueller's team. senators are expected to vote next week. right now it's not clear what will be in that bill. senate majority whip john cornyn was asked yesterday if republicans would know brhand what they would be voting on. he said, quote, that's a luxury we don't have. shannon pettypiece is the white house correspondent. good morning. why don't they know what bill they're going to be voting on? >> because republicans haven't been able to come together about any consensus about what they'd like to do. there's a couple of options out there right now. one would be flat out repeal obamacare for delay two of years to give them a couple of years to come up with some sort of replacement. there is a bill right now with a
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replacement option. as of last night that replacement option still didn't have enough votes. there's amendments later on. there's still no pathway to 50 votes right now. the president is still pushing to have a vote next week. >> likely without john mccain. >> without john mccain, and they can lose no more than two votes. this is a fine needle they have to thread in order to get this bill passed. we already know. susan collins is a pretty hard no. john mccain. unless there is some change at the last minute where he's able to get back. >> iekter this way, these bills whichever they choose to do a vote for is not popular. isn't that fundamentally the problem that these are not popular and they know that? >> they're not popular with the public, they're not popular with
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the base, they're not popular with members of congress. yes, exactly. the house was able to get this passed and a lot of members had to hold their nose there and just pass this because they hoped the senate would do something to fix it. well, here we are at the senate. there's not many more safety checks or guard raids. ahead, whatever you vote for is likely to become law and that's the fate they're facing right now. >> what is interesting with the president, he is interesting in making a deal. he wants a deal on this, right? he was involved in the house talks, he was -- there was a lot of reports he was standing on the sidelines to begin with. now he's involved again, telling them potentially don't take your break. how much is that nudging and elbowing with dean heller and others affecting what's going on right now? >> i was in part of this luncheon they had earlier this week with the president and members of the senate. it was the first time i saw them make a sales pitch for the bill. not just saying this is a good
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bill, a good start. he was actually making a sales pitch, talking about the taxes that were removed, changes in medicaid, entitlement reform. he really seemed engage. too little too late. as they're pointing out the messaging about this story and this bill is already out there. 22 million would lose coverage. they're struggling to get the message under control and on their turf and i don't think in the next week or two weeks they're going to be able to convince enough people that this is a popular bill to move forward on this. >> president trump promised no cuts to medicaid, but doesn't just about every plan include cuts to medicaid? >> it does. that's one thing the republicans seem to have some sort of consensus on. >> those on capitol hill. >> yes. how much do you cut medicaid, how do you cut it. there's a view medicaid is an entitlement. we need to put it on a major
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diet and real it back in. but if you do that, however you shake it, certain millions are going to lose coverage. bus one in five are on medicaid. if you cut that program, you're going to be affecting a lot of people. >> the question is the president trump helping or hurting him. sunday on "face the nation" john dickerson will speak with two republican senators, susan collins aof maine and superior john barrassow of wyoming. ahead, the plan to sell appliances with
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family, so feed them like family with blue.
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tagging of a great white shark five years ago. ahead how tagging them could change our understanding of the predators and the ocean. you're watching "cbs this morning." atmore than one flavor, oruch texture, or color.ing.
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we watching history being made nearly five years ago as the fishermen and scientists of ocearch did that. jeanie was the first tagged and capture and released. they've completed 29 expeditions worldwide, a number of which we've been on. its mission is to learn more about the life cycle of the predators. ocearch's boat is in the marina. for its next mission, it's on montauk to tag juvenile fish. chris fischer is here. >> first i have to ask. was that you in the "despacito"
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video? >> unfortunately we have more on that coming up. >> you being with jeff before. >> oh, yeah. we love jeff. >> the last time we talked about the difficulty of tagging and releasing because there have been so many females you have tag and released. you have done that now. why is that significant? >> we were inspired when norah threw down you have to go get the boys because it makes sense of the females' tracks. mary lee showed us where she was giving birth along with great work from jack casey and toe by curtis. and then in order to find the mating site, these animals are sexually separated. you need that mature male tag. and when they come together. shay show you matting. we didn't have mature males.
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now we have two mature males and we'll see where they are. >> remind us again of sharks in the ocean. >> no big sharks. no fish for our grandchildren. if they thrive, the system thrives. >> there's so much fear about sharks. movies, books, every everything el. what we know about them is so limited. >> it with us hard to have accesslet it just exploded on multiple disciplines and we're learned fast. we're going win this one. we have 23 sharks tagged in the north atlantic right now and another 25 sharks and we will nail down a 400 million secret that and one of the those sharks tagged is female lydia. what are you learning from her? >> she's the only one we haven't. she's never gone to the cape cod area. we believe some of the sharks are mating in that area because other mature females are there.
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but what lydia did was she went to a small island called sabow island in nova scotia and she may be showing us a secondary site. >> mary lee is the shark you tagged in 2012. what have we learned from her? >> really what we've seen is she is totally shifting the conversation. sh's the most famous shark in history and she led us last may to long island which led to capturing the young white sharks. jack casey did some great work, toe by noah and mary lee. we thought, maybe they're giving birk there. we got mean of the pups. at this time they have defined where they lived between long island and south carolina. >> did she give birth?
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mary lee? >> we don't know that for sure. our best guess is yes. >> we hear a lot more stories it seem about shark encounters with people. the nets have been remove. there are more sharks it seems out there. there's always concern. your t-shirt says don't fear the fin. >> what should people make of the stories. >> they should be thrilled. there will be fish for your children to eat. the fear of sharks is kind of a primal thing we have. it's an irrational fear that doesn't exist. it's more dangerous to make toast in the morning. >> it's a reminder not to swim toward the shashs. >> use common sense. avoid the mornings and evenings if the for are there and the porpoise are feeding. move to a different place. >> also great to have you. >> thank you. ahead, the coffee being recalled because of a
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viagra-like ingredient. plus the person who spent over a million from this dusty bag. its journey from the moon to the auction block. next on "cbs this morning." ♪ give extra. get extra. you get used to food odors in your...smells fine, but your pas bell dinging new febreze car with odorclear technology cleans away odors... ...for up to 30 days smells nice... breathe happy, with new febreze.
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a dusty bag that once held rocks from the moon has sold at
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auction for more than $1.8 million. the price tag broke a record for the most money paid for an item from the u.s. space program. the previous owner bought the bag from a government auction website for less than a thousand dollars. astronaut neil armstrong used that bag to carry moon rocks and dust on the apollo mission in 1969. sothebys sold it yesterday to an anonymous bidder on the 48th anniversary of the moon landing. >> that's a great return. >> it's been to more places than you've been, jeff. >> bianna. throwing it down. >> none of us have been to the moon. >> the bag has. you are correct. i have not been to the moon. >> throwing it down. throwing it down. all right. amazon wants you to start talking to your refrigerator or
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air conditioner. >> this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news." >> and good morning to you, i'm rahel solomon, funeral services set today for one of the victims of the bucks county killings. jimi patrick murdered july 5th by cost know dinardo after a drug transaction gone wrong. patrick services are from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at saint andrew's in newtown, at 7:00 tonight friends and family will holds candlelight vigil for all four of the victims at delaware valley university in doylestown township. now over to katie with today's forecast, hi, katie. >> great day to be outside certainly, as long as you're taking care of yourself. it is one of the hazy, hot, humid days, where the sun will really be sweltering throughout the afternoon. but great place to try to beat that of course the beach. going on down to the board walk plaza here in rehoboth, already a lot of activity out,
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there even shy of 8:30 a.m. here. but, the high tide, starting to go out at this point. looking ahead to real nice beach day. again, very hot one at that. in the city in the meantime, do still have this excessive heat warning in effect until 8:00 p.m. and, it could feel as below 100, now, storm scan, remains nice and clear for you. throughout the better part of the day, by tomorrow, how much, different story, strong, severe thunderstorms going to be rumbling in, especially in the p.m. hours, meisha? >> busy weekends, all right, thanks so much, katie. looking outside, actually looking okay, a lot of what we were seeing earlier in terms every accidents are clearing out of the way. one, accident and car fire in bucks county, 59 past route 413, right lane compromised and now since cleared. still looking very busy there. then we also have a car fire here there is one's in collegeville, twp. line road, collegeville road, road blocked there. plus, construction tomorrow, on city avenue. rahel, back over to you. >> meisha, thank you. next update 8:55, ahead on c. s this morning, talking with the songwriter of the most streamed hit song in history.
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i'm rahel solomon. good morning.
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♪ wow. this bouncing baby in georgia did not miss a beat. this 19-year-old elijah lee is bouncing out to dad's beatboxing. it might be the first language elij elijah has spoken. they talk about forming a band when the second son is born in october. >> good stuff. >> look at his eyes too. >> look at his neck. he's going to snap it off. >> there you.
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. welcome back to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is on assignment, gayle king is off and jeff glor and bianna golodryga are here. the front man of a grammy-winning rock group has died. ♪ i tried so hard and got so far ♪ >> 41-year-old chester bennington led lincoln park with his powerful vocals. his body was found near his home in l.a. suicide is expected. they became a force by blending rock and hip-hop. the trademark moustache of salvador dali is perfectly preserved. dna will be used to determine if a woman who claimed part of dali's multi-million-dollar
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estate is his daughter. 350 larges companies average $15.6 million in 2017. that's 271 times more than the average worker's pay but it's down from 2015 when the average ceo earned $16.3 million. that was 286 times more than the average worker. 15 years ago the ratio was 20:1. a texas coffee company is recalling one of its roasts because it's too stimulating. the herbs coffee contains ingredients similar to an active ingredient in viagra. best herbs sold the coffee nationwide from july 2014 to june 2016. it could pose a health risk to
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some men. amazon is extending its reach with a big move into the major appliance market. they'll begin selling ken more brand appliances from sears. they'll be equipped with amazon's virtual assistant alexa. sears has had losses for more than seven years. the launch of kenmore products on amazon.com will significantly expand the distribution and available of kenmore in the u.s. good morning. great to have you here. >> good morning. >> earlier this year there was substantial doubt that the company can remain in business. did christmas come early with amazon swooping in for sears? >> i want to start with a short story. it it's a short story about a retail market who sit on their couches. this mail order company
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essentially becoming a logistics giant, it moves into the brick and more tarl business and becomes the company of its time. we're talking about sears & roebuck of 20th century and amazon of the 2 isst century. both. amazon is turning to bail out its historical predecessor. i to not believe it saves sears but it's a surrender. >> it's the front page of "the wall street journal" because it will jolt the appliance industry. in some ways it's an interesting marriage. >> amazon is one of the most fascinating company, maybe the most fascinating market right now. when it entered the market it's like a deflationary bomb is set off. we see it now with appliances, that it gets into kenmore and air conditioning and
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refrigerators. their values falls. we saw it with whole foods. it gets into grocery chains. so people are so afraid of amazon right now. >> i use the word "marrying" meaning marrying of technology, the voice command alexia into the appliances. how would that work? >> right now it would work so that you're sitting on your couch and you can say, i'd like it to be 67 degrees and the air conditions turning to 7 degrees. i'm not going to say it tees innovation of our time. the remote control technology exists. it doesn't take too much energy to get up and press the button from 69 to 67. i don't think it's quite revolutionary, but if it helps sell products, it's good. >> jeff bezos is really a revolutionary. what does he see with companies ranging from the washington, d.c. to whole foods to sears that maybe other companies don't
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necessarily see. >> world dominance? >> i think we can all say world domination. sears came out with the discover card and ail state along with its car parts to consumers. this is the same idea, to create a life bundle around consumers. if you want to sit on the couch, watch tv, buy groceries all from amazon, they will allow you to do it. >> kenmore is a great appliance. i hope this is a beneficial partnership. >> me too. >> thank you. well, it's the song of the summer. ahead how justin bieber helped make the catchy hit
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♪ she drops everything to dance wherever she is to the world's number one song "despacito. "her video has been viewed more than 69 million times. it universal music says the official version has been streamed more than 4.6 billion
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times. michelle miller shows us how the catchy hit sung almost entirely in spanish became our song of the summer. not just slowly but hotly. >> it is hot, let me say that. we're starting there. this spring when "despacito wets went to number one in the u.s., it became the third p predominantly spanish song. that follows "lobos" "the macarena." it's not showing any signs of slowing down. 2017's song of the summer comes down to just four syllables. ♪ despacito >> once you hear a song on every radio station, no matter the format, on everyone's playlist, in every nightclub, every bar, that's how you know the song is
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the song of the summer. >> it's dominant in all of the metric that measure a chart hit from sales to streaming to air play. >> reporter: the song of the summer has actually been warming up fans since february when it reached the billboard on the latin chart. daddy yankee made a hit in 2004 with "gasolina." luis luis fonsi has led it. >> for some reasons their songs have special magic and this one has it. >> reporter: songwriter erika
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ender co-wrote the song with fonsi. >> reporter: why do you think it's got spark? >> i have no idea. it's big for the latin industry, peri period. >> reporter: deejay cipha sound says it's united evan. >> they were kind of taking the american pop formula and then adding spanish language to it or like spanglish. but "despacito" is taking regular a doe music which is like real puerto rican music and bringing it to the masses. >> reporter: listen closely and
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you'll hear that repetitive regular a tone drumbeat and tropical style in some unlikely places. ♪ i'm in love with the shape of you ♪ >> sometimes they change it, spice it up, add different instruments on top of it, but that core is that one beat. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: it was already a familiar sound to justin bieber. then one fatdful spring night bieber heard "despacito" light up a club in colombia. >> what do you think of bieber getting involved? >> i'm so happy bieber got involved. i was in the studio working and fonsi called me and said, erika, i just received a phone call. justin bieber wants to record the song. what do you think. i'm like, go ahead. are you kidding me? of course. >> reporter: the remix was just a single additional verse in
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english, quickly went to number one on the billboard's hot 100 in mid-may where it's been since then. >> justin bieber has provided his magical record pixie dust. it's surprising it's such a huge record on anglo radio stations despite the fact it's nearly 80%. >> this confirms it doesn't matter the language or the time. when you get a good song in your head, it's like -- ♪ despacito >> and what isn't there to love about that. jeff, i know you're a little hot under the collar. >> we were translating some of the lyrics. >> it's a hot song, right? but it's gradually subtle and it gradually gets hotter. so if you translate it, you get the full means, but i think all of the dancing and the --
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>> kids are singing it word for word, even my 5-year-olds. >> somebody needs to turn the radio off. >> i love that song. >> that was a fun piece, thank you michelle. >> thank you. >> there you go. thanks, michelle. up next, we're going to look at all that mattered this week. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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well, that does it for us. be sure to tune in to the "cbs evening news" tonight. as we leave you, we want to take a look back at all that happened this week. we hope you have a despacito and great weekend. >> god knows it's not me. but i to know this. this disease has never had a more worthy opponent. >> if you asked every senator up here who among them is the
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toughest, they would all say john mccain. >> let obamacare fail. >> is it responsible. >> they thought they could do it on their own. now it's clear they can't. >> anyone can pull a rabbit out of a hat. i've seen them do it a number of times. >> everything about this is different. the white house felt no need to disclose it to traveling white house reporters with the president. >> in nearly two days this fire doubled in size. >> everybody's scare. you never think something like this would happen. >> the officers' body cameras were not turned on. >> we're desperate for snoofgs just steen didn't have to die. >> we're remembering the life and career of actor martin landau. >> i'm ready now. roll the camera. >> the o.j. we saw here is the o.j. we knew. >> mr. simpson, the parole board grants a release. >> i'm troubled that he's out
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free. >> it is russia week at the "late show." i took to the streets of st. petersburg, russia. >> do you know who i am? >> yeah, i know you. >> do you know my name? >> isaac and jimmy colbert. ♪ >> well, hello. there's charlie with barkley and hemingway. >> a woman in a- hee job and a mother breast fielding. i have to say i was excited about that. >> about what? the breast-feeding? >> that's exactly what i was going to say. >> dusty bags that held rocks from a moon went if $1.8 million. >> it's moon dust. >> it's been more polices than
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you have, dust. >> she does one of a kind in the robot world. they think the robots are going to take other. is that a fair assumption? >> if you can run for more than five minutes -- >> she's going to die before she gets you. >> norah told us before commercial break she enjoys mowing. >> i do. by the way weed whacking is important. >> have you ever done this? >> mowed the lawn. you know me so well. >> got you. >> got you. i'll get you back. >> a ten-pound beauty, all dark meet, wonderful flavor. >> danny comes back to join us. welcome. >> congratulations. that is so huge. >> i know this means a lot to you, but what is julia child to you? >> imagine if you were a broadcaster and someone said you just won the charlie rose award.
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that's how i feel right now. ♪
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>> live from the cbs broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news." good morning, i'm rahel solomon, police are investigating a deadly home invasion late last night in tioga. a man in a wheelchair was shot and killed and his caretaker injured before midnight on the 3300 block of north pratt street. fifty-one year old caretaker now in stable condition. they stay eyewitnesses tell them there were two gunmen involved in a home invasion attempt but so far police have made no arrests. >> over to katie with a check on today's very high forecast. >> yet another one, yes, already off to warm start out there, rahel, temperatures at the moment into the low 80s, and they'll spike very easily into the mid 90s later this afternoon, and now you're calling it little relief up in the poconos, only at 72, not that bad. dew point have been just boards erring on where you
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start to see little steamy. it does not mean the rest of lust enjoy that break. heat index today as high as 102 through the peak of the afternoon into the city. excessive heat warning until 8:00 p.m. granted not triple digits today, tomorrow, but steel harsh, heat index as high as out upper nine's, finally catch well deserved break like tuesday, it will take couple every days here, in addition, we have potential for some severe weather specially second half of tomorrow, maybe even again on sunday, so, it could ends up being a weekend here, meisha, that's got some natural fireworks going. >> certainly looks like that, the blinking icons, too, thank you so much, katie. still actually looking pretty busy on the roadways, accident here schuylkill eastbound at the boulevard, blog that far left lane, and it is a little slow traveling on by, plus disable tractor-trailer 95 north before allegheny avenue. now, the taillights are actually headed toward where that accident is up ahead, and you can see how busy it is both in the southbound direction and on the northbound side, rahel, over
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to you. >> thank you, that's "eyewitness news" for now, join us for "eyewitness news" at noon, i'm rahel solomon, good morning.
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