Skip to main content

tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  September 20, 2016 3:07am-4:00am EDT

3:07 am
directions to make them can be found on the internet. the devices use hard to trace, easily obtained explosives packed into cheap containers. all that is required is an electrical trigger like a cell phone to set them off. >> in this case it was an old-fashioned type of flip cell phone. that the caller simply calls, it sends an electric shock through, the wires, and it explodes the, the pressure cooker. >> reporter: one other thing about the pressure cooker bombs, experts say they have seen in
3:08 am
3:09 am
3:10 am
president obama made phone calls today to the two police officers who were wounded in linden, new jersey. he also called a minnesota police officer, who stopped a stabbing rampage in saint cloud that left nine people wounded the president said the two cases are not linked. dean reynolds is in minnesota. >> reporter: as a knife-wielding assailant roamed the walk ways of the crossroads shopping center. >> reporter: his violent episode brought to a sudden end by offduty police officer, jason faulkner who happened to be in the mall at the same time. saint cloud mayor, dave kleis
3:11 am
what happened. >> the officer fired. he went down. he came back up again. he fired again. three times this took place. before the officer actually had the -- the blow that, that took him out. >> reporter: the assailant identified as dahir a. adan, a 20-year-old naturalized resident from somalia. in the country since he was a baby. minnesota is home to 25,000 country. one where fears of radicalized youths have increased recently. the islamic state, isis claimed responsibility for the attack. and called adan a soldier of theirs. a statement that baffled authorities here. >> you haven't turned up any reason for them to say that? so far? >> i can't think of a reason -- for most of what isis does. to be honest with you.
3:12 am
>> reporter: the investigation is proceeding and adan's family is cooperating. for now, scott, the police chief says this looks like the work of a lone attacker. >> dean reynolds. thanks. today hillary clinton cast herself as the only presidential candidate who knows how to take terrorists off the battlefield. our campaign coverage begins with nancy cordes. >> this is a fast-moving situation. >> reporter: clinton told college students in philadelphia, and reporters in new york, that dangerous times call for steady leadership and experience. arguing she is armed with both. >> i'm the only candidate in this race who has been part of the hard decisions to take terrorists off the battlefield. >> sequester terry clinton as you know, donald trump had a lot to say about your record on the issue over the weekend. here is one example. under the leadership of obama and clinton, americans have experienced more attacks at hem
3:13 am
what's your reaction to that characterization? >> well it is like so much else he says. it is not grounded in fact. it's -- you know, meant to make some kind of demagoguic point. the facts are clear. we still have challenges. i am prepared to, ready to, actually take on those challenges. not engage in a lot of, you know, irresponsible reckless rhetoric. >> clinton called today for what she described as an intelligence surg and said she would be discussing the need for more foreign cooperation in one-on-one meetings with the leaders of egypt, ukraine, and japan. at the united nations general assembly in new york tonight. scott. >> nancy cordes, thanks. major garrett is on the trump campaign. >> we cannot let this evil continue. >> reporter: donald trump labeled the attacks islamic
3:14 am
>> hillary clinton talks tougher about my supporters than she does about islamic terrorists. right? >> this was trump's initial assessment of saturday night's explosion in new york city. made less than an hour after the blast. >> a bomb went off in new york. and nobody knows exactly what's going on. but, boy we are living in a time. we better get very tough, folks. on investigators who had not determined a cause. still trump's first take was vindicated. a point he celebrated. >> i should be a news caster. i called it before the news. what i said was exactly correct. everybody said while he was right. he called it too soon. give me a break. >> trump said if elected he would temporarily halt immigration from countries with extremist violence. news that 850 immigrants with deportation orders were mistakenly granted citizenship proves the current system is under stress and must be
3:15 am
>> major garrett reporting tonight. thank you. well the cease-fire in syria has collapsed. the syrian military announced its return to battle today within hours air strikes were hammering the city of aleppo where we find elizabeth palmer tonight. >> juste announcement as we watched a student party from a rooftop, the war officially restarted. those are syrian army rockets falling on the opposition side of the city. the collapse of the cease-fire will hurt civilians on both sides. while it lasted here in government controlled aleppo, doctors could once again concentrate on routine injuries.
3:16 am
a car accident. but now people maimed by mortars or sniper bullets will flood in again. the cease-fire limped along for a week in spite of poisonous rhetoric on all side. the atmosphere got worse when american war planes bombed the syrian army by mistake over the weekend. and now, another air strike gone horribly wrong. the syrian red crescent tweeted earlier today it was sending an aid convoy into the countryside west of aleppo. but when the air strikes by russian and/or syrian planes started. the convoy was hit and exploded in a fire ball. activists say 12 humanitarian workers are dead. scott, there is fierce fighting again in aleppo tonight. three mortars landed very close to our hotel. and on the opposition side of the city, heavy air strikes, you may have heard that one. and shelling have killed and injured an unknown number of people already. >> elizabeth palmer in the besieged city. liz, thank you. still ahead -- his hand are
3:17 am
the prosecutor says chris christie knew about a plot to create a monster traffic jam. >> and, remembering when screaming beatles' fans jammed shay stadium.
3:18 am
3:19 am
ahh...still sick, huh? i'll take it from here. i'm good. i just took new mucinex clear and cool. ah! what's this sudden cooooling thing happening? it's got a menthol burst. you can feel it right away. wow, that sort of blind-sided me. and it clears my terrible cold symptoms. ahh! this is awkward. new mucinex fast-max clear & cool. feel the menthol burst. and clear your worst cold symptoms.
3:20 am
let's end this. friday evening. an suv broke down in tulsa, oklahoma. minutes later the driver, an unarmed, african-american, was killed by a white police officer. here is manuel bojorquez. >> dash cam video shows terrence crutcher, hands in his air, walking to the vehicle surrounded by police officers. at the car he goes down to the ground. police say he was tasered and then shot. >> shots fired! >> reporter: another view from a police helicopter. shows the the incident. >> looks like a bad dude too. >> police say they were responding to a stalled vehicle in the road. over the weekend, police said as officers approached the vehicle, crutcher was asked to show his hands and refused to follow command. tulsa police chief chuck jordan.
3:21 am
suspect or in the suspect's vehicle. >> reporter: tulsa officer, betty shelby fired the shot that killed crutcher and placed on paid leave. >> we ask for the facts. we ask for answers. and we clearly got it through the video. and we are truly devastated. >> tiffany crutcher is terrence crutcher's twin sister. >> we are demanding today, immediately, that charges are pressed against this officer. that was incompetent. that took my brother's lif. >> scott, today the department of justice announced it is opening its own civil rights investigation into the shooting. >> manuel bojorquez, thank you very much. >> when we come back, one of miami's hot zones is declared
3:22 am
mmm... i can't believe it's so delicious. i can't believe it has 40% fewer calories than butter. i can't believe it's made with real, simple ingredients. i can't believe we're on a whale. i can't believe my role isn't bigger. oh, it's real. real ingredients. unbelievable taste.
3:23 am
today a federal prosecutor said new jersey governor chris
3:24 am
planned to punish a local mayor by engineering a traffic jam on the approach to a major bridge. two of christie's aide are on trial for conspiracy. the mayor had refused to endorse christie for re-election. christie is not charged. he says he didn't know anything about it. >> miami's wynwood district free of mosquitoes carrying the zika virus according to florida's governor. howevee four and a half square miles. zika can cause severe birth defects. mosquito bite are blamed for 85 infections in miami-dade county. coming up next, band on the run. paul, ringo and --
3:25 am
3:26 am
3:27 am
today the 82nd anniversary of the birth of brian epstein, the legendary manager of the beatles who led them on the greatest road trip in rock history. now documented in a movie rolled out over the weekend. here is anthony mason. >> here are the beatles. ? it's been a hard day's night ? >> arena rock was born in 1965 when the beatles played to 65,000 fans at shea stadium. >> when we end up at shay, that is the biggest thing we have ever done. it was like, far out. it was look what? >> the new documentary, eight days a week the touring years
3:28 am
? shake it up baby ? >> the thing about the beatles. we were a great little band. really. >> reporter: the two surviving beatles. paul and ringo talked about the days at abby road studio in london last week. >> we didn't plan for anything. >> we went on with what we had. >> the is not was constant. >> she loved me -- hey, whoa. after a while it was like i can't hear you. >> i was playing, you know to his foot tapping. to john's bouncing. you know, when they ent. i couldn't hear that. >> it's the whoo. >> reporter: was there a specific point you remember when of it? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i felt personally i was not playing the best i could. ? paul was the last hold out until the end of their concert at candlestick park in san francisco, august 1966. >> we got put in this van which was look chrome interior. and we were just sliding around in there. we all looked at each other. i said, you are right. this is it. forget it. this is just stupid. >> reporter: their music would play on. but the beatles would never play a live gig again. anthony mason, cbs news, london.
3:29 am
for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and of course, cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley. ? ? ?
3:30 am
? ? this is the cbs "overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm tony dokoupil. people who live on both sides of the hudson river, are breathing a sigh of relief. police arrested the prime suspect in the terror bombings in manhattan and new jersey. 28-year-old, ahmad khan rahami, carted off in handcuffs to the hospital after a gun battle with police in linden, new jersey. rahami a naturalized u.s. citizen. born in afghanistan. authorities don't yet know if he had any accomplices or links to foreign terrorists. but the hunt to get him took less than two days. jeff pegues begins our coverage. >> reporter: three hours after police sent out a massive cell phone alert with the suspect's name, ahmad khan rahami was spotted on the streets of linden, new jersey. you can hear the gunfire during
3:31 am
on the rain soaked pavement. bleeding from the arm. as he was taken to the hospital. the arrest brought an end to a weekend of terror. on saturday evening at around 8:30 p.m., a bomb exploded on west 23rd in manhattan. the force of the shrapnel packed bomb was enough to destroy a metal dumpster. and sent residents racing for cover. 29 people re >> another pressure cooker bomb was found four block as way. but it did not explode. surveillance video showed rahami in the manhattan neighborhood. plain as day as one investigator put it. more surveillance video from that night appears to show rahami, walking down the street. dragging a bag. which may have contained the bomb. law enforcement sources say, his fingerprint was found on one of
3:32 am
cell phone as a trigger. the same as a pipe bomb that had blown up 11 hours earlier at a charity race in new jersey. police now believe, all three are connected. by sunday evening, five more explosive devices were found in day trash can near the elizabeth train station in new jersey. elizabeth, rahami's last known address. but officials say he had also traveled to afghanistan at least three times where his family is investigators are still trying to determine the motive for the attack and whether he was acting aloan. fbi assistant director in charge. william sweeney. >> i have no indication there is a cell operating in the area, city. as we develop information. we continue to go. i have no indication there is a
3:33 am
sources tell us that rahami went to pakistan as well. investigators also tell us the phones used as a triggering device were bought in new jersey last year. so far investigators have not uncovered any direct links to isis or terrorist organization. >> president obama is new york city with 200 other head of state for the united nations general assembly. protecting the president is a job of the secret service the they come with a team of snipers. margaret brennan has the story. >> reporter: the secret service's elite countersniper team. is trained to hit targets dead on. hit in the forehead. we have to be ready to d down. take the shot. >> reporter: in the worst case scenario put themselves in the line of fire. travis has been on the force for a decade. >> 600 yard. >> he signed up to, take a bullet for the president. >> yes, ma'am. >> that's a lot. to sign up for. >> it is. absolutely. >> wherever the president is, countersnipers protect him from
3:34 am
they work in teams of two. armed with high power assault rifles that can hit would-be assassins. key to an active hit is the wind caller. here it is travis. >> center. >> telling his partner, terry, precisely how to aim, to counteract the wind. so you really have to trust the partner? >> absolutely. completely. >> you can take the shot. make the call. either way. i will drop down. he will start calling. if he sees the target. i will become the communicator and wind caller. just thinking about pressing the trigger. >> most complicated scenarios are in crowds overseas in unfamiliar terrain. during a recent presidential trip to poland. dennis, a ten year veteran of the team was concerned about how
3:35 am
among the buildings lining the motorcade route. >> president is going to come around here. going to assume all the people will come out looking out their windows. and you potentially could have 1,000 open windows right here. >> in the age of frequent terror attacks. open windows not the only concern. >> worried about suicide bombers. car bombs. go to the car, maybe suspicious. guy walking down the street in july. has a heavy coat on. looking for unusual. >> remarkably, no sniper team member has had to fire a shot since the unit was formed in 1971. it is a record they're determined to maintain. margaret brennan, laurel, maryland. health officials in florida ended the zika warning for the miamnw no new cases since early august. one man who caught zika says that might be because it is difficult for people to get tested. david begnaud reports. >> reporter: most people who have zika won't know they're infected or feel symptoms. this morning we'll introduce you to a miami beach doctor who has the virus. in speaking publicly for the first time he feels a responsibility to make people realize, zika is a real threat. not just for pregnant women. >> muscle pain. rash.
3:36 am
pain behind my eyes. and then the last symptom i developed. was, blodshot eyes. >> dr. mike sedshin started suffering, after a barbecue with a dozen friends at his miami beach home. he applied mosquito repellants as precaution. >> did any body complain of a bite at the party? >> no one. i was commenting to people how well the tiki torches and everything seemed e two days after the barbecue he started feeling sick. >> when did the rash start? >> about five days after the barbecue. >> reporter: after that rash. symptoms got worse. >> i had several evenings where i put on a winter coat and got underneath blankets. and shut off all the air conditioning in my home. and i was shivering. >> reporter: he is now one of 93
3:37 am
locally in florida. his infection occurred outside the original 1.5 mile zika zone. one reason that zone tripled. spraying of the insecticide continued as the state tries to kill more zika carrying mosquitoes. four party-goers showed symptoms. one tested positive. others have not yet been tested. he says getting the test was a challenge. his insurance wouldn't cover the $600 cost. so he want to the local health test. >> there is a big sign saying, we only test pregnant women. >> if you only test pregnant women, you will be underestimating and underreporting and you will never get a handle of what is really going on. >> reporter: for the record not just pregnant women can get tested. other women can too. as the you heard from the doctor, it is difficult. when he got to the health department he had to raise his shirt, show his rash, describe symptoms and beg for a test. he was finally given one for
3:38 am
i absolutely love my new york apartment, but the rent is outrageous. good thing geico offers affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... let geico help you with renters insurance. ahh...still sick, huh? i'll take it from here. i'm good. i just took new mucinex clear and cool. ah! what's this sudden cooooling thing happening? it's got a menthol burst. you can feel it right away. wow, that sort of blind-sided me. and it clears my terrible cold symptoms. ahh! this is awkward. new mucinex fast-max clear & cool. feel the menthol burst.
3:39 am
ditch the misery. let's end this. what makes a lipton meal? 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. today you can do everything in just one click, even keep your toilet clean and fresh. introducing lysol click gel. click it in to enjoy clean freshness with every flush. lysol.
3:40 am
welcome back to the overnight news. hillary clinton and donald trump have the highest unfavorability ratings of any pair of major party candidates ever to run for president. 83% of republicans believe the country will be damaged beyond repair if hillary clinton is elected. even more democrats believe that about donald trump. a nationwide poll found them essentially tied when you factor in libertarian and green party candidates. the libs as they're called are on the ballot in all 50 states. hardly any body knows about them. steve croft of 60 minutes gives us an introduction. >> boy, i will say. >> reporter: if you don't recognize them. tall guy on the left is vice presidential candidate, bill weld, the shorter one is former new mexico governor and presidential nominee, gary
3:41 am
through a park unmolested by the press and the public. their rallies usually attract only a few hundred people. but they can still make some noise. supporters. without enthusiasti- >> gary, gary, gary. >> the next president of the united states, gary johnson. >> you rock. you rock. why are you doing this? >> i think we would do a really good job. >> i feel something of a patriotic duty. given how the election season is unfolding. we feel a responsibility to -- to offhe >> has life in this country ever been better? >> they're not political knee neophytes. each won two terms as governors in democratic states. >> do you think you have a chance to win? >> neither of us would be doing this if we didn't think that was a possibility. >> let me be a little skeptical
3:42 am
>> we expected no less. >> the people that do this for a living. that try and -- do polling and public opinion surveys. some of the most prominent experts. put your chances at less than 1%. >> less than 1%. >> i think donald trump started out that way. and i would have given him that, i would have given him that percentage at the very start. but, as crazy as this election season is. it could be ultimate crazy. that two of us get elected. >> right. how does that happen? >> presidential debates. a third alternative. 70% of america doesn't even know who we are. and yet we exist. i think there is a lot of opportunity here. and there is still a lot of time left. >> we are in a way breaking a glass ceiling. >> they're hoping to got a place in at least one of the
3:43 am
but right now they don't meet the threshold of 15% in the national poll. >> are you running against a two party system. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> i do believe this is the demise of the republican party. >> you see yourself as protest vote? >> no way. i think a -- conciliatory vote. look, this is, this is how we want to come together. >> it happens, steve, if people do think for themselves and fep -- focus on choices available. nationally people do tend to agree with our a libertarian, you just don't know it yet. >> let's bring back liberty. >> reporter: the libertarians were founded 45 years ago as an offchute of the republicans. they tend to be fiscally conservative, social liberals. who want the federal government out of their pockets. out of their schools. out of their computers. and out of their bedrooms. >> all 25. >> they support the right to bear arms, even assault weapons.
3:44 am
the right to an abortion, gays have the right to marry, and adults have the right to smoke pot. they oppose almost every federal program not mentioned specifically in the constitution. including, social security and medicare, and the regulatory agencies. >> you are making yourself seem like mainstream candidates. in fact your positions and positions of the party aren't mainstream. you are for phasing out medicare. for doing away with private health insurance. as a way to bring down medical costs. the irs and imposing a 29%, 28% sales tax, essentially, sales tax, you call it a consumption tax. talk about eliminating the department of homeland security. these aren't exactly, mainstream opinions. >> well, what you can count on, the two of us to provide is consistency. we are going to always be consist in looking for --
3:45 am
much of what you cite is the libertarian platform. we are the libertarian nominees for president and vice president. we are not looking to eliminate medicare. we do believe in a safety net. but there has to be -- reforms for medicaid and medicare. and social security. and if we are going to put our head in the sand. say we are going to do nothing in any of the areas. it is a fiscal cliff. nobody can tell me that no changes are necessary in washington. those bozos think unless goes up 5% they call that a cut. well that's not how we approach our state budgets. that's not what we would do in washington either. >> do you think most want to do away with the department of homeland security? >> i do. i do. i think there is a real -- skepticism. i mean, really, we have the fbi why another agency? i mean, and all these homeland security cars driving around these days the what are they doing? >> they're functions that you
3:46 am
sure they're attended to. but there are some who remind me of the, you know, muddled bureaucracy in washington, that nobody can quite tell you why they're essential. and that's where i would go hunting. >> they also want to abolish the departments of education, commerce, and housing and urban development. they want to cut the defense budget by around 20%. and get american troops out of korea. as they have said. they don't agree with their party on everything. some times they dent even agree with each other. >>ar in construction before making his political name as the first governor to ever advocate the legalization of marijuana. until earlier this year. he was ceo of the marijuana branding company. >> until recently you were a consumer. >> of marijuana. >> one of 100 million americans
3:47 am
i am, i am guilty. saying one thing. doing another. telling the truth. i hope more than anything. i am credited here with -- telling the truth. >> but you are not using marijuana now? >> i am not. former massachusetts governor. bill weld, a card carrying member of the eastern establishment whose libertarian are still questioned by the true believers. until his nomination in may, he was a member of the nearly extinct political species known as moderate republicans. >> you weren't a libertarian until a couple months ago? >> well i considered myself a libertarian since the 70s. people called me libertarian republican.
3:48 am
when weep were with them their version of a presidential limousine was a rented red toyy ta. >> do you have a motorcade? >> no. >> do you stop for red lights? >> we do. >> do you have a campaign plane? >> no. no. >> we do fly commercial? >> do you have campaign headquarters? >> yes, we do. but if you want to the campaign headquarters you wouldn't find any bed there. because, this is, this is social media. >> come on. get selfie ready here. let's do it. >> reporr: and have 50 million followers. young people. johnson and weld are good friends and plan a co-presidency sharing the same staff. on the campaign trail they stay at each other's homes. they have tried just about everything to get more attention in hopes their campaign would go viral. for a while, ten days ago it did. >> governor, good to have you with us. >> the wrong attention. when johnson was unable to identify aleppo as center of the humanitarian crisis in syria.
3:49 am
>> you are kidding? >> no. >> you have been on the front page a lot. this month. you made a big splash. and it was a belly flop? we're talking about aleppo here. >> sure, sure. >> tell me about aleppo. how did that happen? >> i blame no one but myself. i understand the underlying policy, people have said, this guy is not qualified to be president. how do you react to that? >> well, that i am human. i have a filter. it starts with honesty. it starts with the truth. it starts with transparency. and would serve as president in that capacity. when i was asked the question, the first thing that came into my mind was this is an acronym. aleppo. american. >> didn't sound familiar to you? >> it didn't or i think i would have -- look, i do not in any way, want to make an excuse for myself. you know, so many people have
3:50 am
well 90% of america is not running for president of the united states. >> exactly. >> no excuse. >> see the full report on our website. cbs news.com. the overnight news will be right
3:51 am
oh, dishwasher, why don't you dry my dishes? oh, he doesn't know any better. you just need to add finish? jet-dry? in the rinse aid compartment. it's there for a reason. it dries much better than detergent alone. sorry dishwasher. finish? jet-dry?. for drier, shinier dishes. h. i'm good. i just took new mucinex clear and cool. ah! what's this sudden cooooling thing happening? it's got a menthol burst. you can feel it right away. wow, that sort of blind-sided me. and it clears my terrible cold symptoms. ahh! this is awkward. new mucinex fast-max clear & cool. feel the menthol burst. and clear your worst cold symptoms. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this.
3:52 am
stretch out. i want you to stay this bright blue forever... that's why you will stay in this drawer... forever. i can't live without you. and that's why i will never, ever wash you. protect your clothes from the damage of the wash with downy fabric conditioner. it not only softens and freshens... it helps protect clothes... from stretching, fading and fuzz... so your favorite clothes stay your favorite clothes. downy fabric conditioner wash in the wow. the fall is almost here. football season is under way. the world series right around the corner.
3:53 am
? ? >> reporter: if you have ever left your heart in san francisco, the city has just reopened museum of modern art may provide a very good reason to come back. it has been closed for three years while undergoing a $300 million renovation. it cost a lot. but now it is a lot bigger. nearly three times bigger. neil benezera is the museum director. >> i have not met a museum director yet who didn't want to have a bigger building. >> reporter: which means the museum can dedicate bigger galleries to big name artists such as elsworth kelly. chuck close, frank stella. roy liechtenstein, and andy warhol. rest assured elvis has not left the building.
3:54 am
there is plenty of art to see across the country. three states over in colorado, the denver art museum explores japanese fashion design in its latest exhibit, shock wave. and at the kimble art museum in fort worth, texas. monet, the early years. on the east coast, the philadelphia museum of art looks south. with paint the revolution mexican modernism. and then -- this where two highly anticipated exhibits opened this weekend. at the whitney, a retrospective of works from 101-year-old abstract artist carmen herrera. uptown at the guggenheim, the art is more well, interactive. ? ? an 18 karat golden toilet. yes, you can use it.
3:55 am
disparity, and also, our common humanity. it is perhaps one toilet truly worthy of being called a throne. ? ? thousands of them and now many are returning to civilian live. they are evaluating career options. beginning new jobs. and starting businesses. acp advisor net can help them. acp advisor net is a nonprofit online community where americans can provide advice to those who have served. now we can serve those who served us
3:56 am
3:57 am
numbers are in. the emmy award show was the lowest rated ever. a lot more people were watching sunday night football. if you missed it. game of thrones won best drama. for the second year in a row. and big winner, the people versus o.j. simpson. kevin frasier has the wrap. >> reporter: it was a night of drama for both fantasy, reality, me game of thrones. 12 emmys this year. and now has won 38 overall. most wins ever by a primetime show. but with ten award, the people versus o.j. simpson continued to permeate pop culture. >> and the emmy goes to, the people versus o.j. simpson. >> three of the series trial lawyers became first time emmy winners. >> courtney b.vance won emmy for spirited portrayal of johnnie cochran.
3:58 am
>> this one is for you, girl. >> he got lots of love from the couple's 10-year-old twins. >> hi, dad. >> hi, daddy. >> did you see it? >> i'm right here, daddy. i love you! >> i love you too. >> wow. >> let me go now. okay. >> we love you. we love you. we love you. >> that will get you every time. >> that almost got me. that almost got me. >> whoa. >> the larger lesson was win, lose, draw. come home with. wonderful. if i don't. >> sarah paulson. >> reporter: the tv marcia clark got a hug from the real oj prosecutor when she won for outstanding actress in a limited series. sarah told nancy o'dell that the drama showed her how this hard working professional was a far cry from any tabloid image. >> once i did any further looking, it became very clear what a very, very deep complicated wonderful smart woman she was and what battle she was fighting. yeah, became a very different
3:59 am
>> sterling k. brown. >> christopher darden, rounded out the trio of wins. >> i felt like i instantly began to float above like the venue and looking down on myself. and it happened. it was surreal. >> reporter: julia louis dreyfus overcome with emotion when she accepted her emmy for veep. her hand shook as she spoke of her father who passed away friday. >> because his opinion was the one that really mattered. thank you. other first time emmy winners, the star of orphan black and everyone's favorite, vigilante hacker, mr. robot. >> don't know if it will be etched in my mind the i can barely remember it now. >> that's the overnight news for
4:00 am
? it's tuesday, september 20th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." ahmad khan ra haimmy suspected of bombings. outrage after tulsa police admit a man shot to death last friday was unarmed. >> we as a people deserve better. and a united nations aid convoy carrying supplies to syrian rebels is the target of an air strike. it's reported that at least 12 were killed. were killed. ?

66 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on