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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  August 23, 2016 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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have a great tuesday. ? good morning, it is tuesday, august 23rd. 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." hillary clinton tries to use late night humor to answer questions about the fbi's discovery of nearly 15,000 and donald trump stopped talking about a mass deportation of undocumented immigrants. and uber charts a new road to the future with self-driving semi trucks. only on "cbs this morning." we'll see how the big rig handles a busy highway. and an historic recommendation to shut sugar from kids' diets. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye
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now, we learn about another 15,000 e-mails she failed to turn over. and they've just been discovered, i guess, today. >> hillary clinton confronts a new e-mail scandal. >> we've already released 30,000 plus so what's a few more? >> he's reporting them. >> donald trump appears to be working through his position on immigration. >>t your heads will spin. >> the zika problem growing in florida. health officials saying 37 cases from local mosquitos. >> and deadly flooding. >> we expect the president to show up. outrage grows over the deadly shooting of an unarmed deaf driver after being pulled over in charlotte, north
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students to use bathrooms with their gender. wildfires in washington state has destroyed at least 60 homes and forced evacuation. a river of people on the run in taiwan, all chasing a rare pokemon. >> all that -- >> are you enjoying being a grandparent. >> it is the best. i think i'd be distraught if we didn't have facetime. >> do you do that a lot? >> consider you considered using facetime instead of e-mail? the united states coming out on all medal counts. the u.s. brought home 47 gold medals and four idiots. we also won the most gold medals, the most silver medals and bronze medals.
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two and three. okay? >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose and gayle king are enjoying some time off. anthony mason is here along with kevin frazier. >> good morning. >> good morning again. hillary clinton faces new pressure on two fronts. her ties to the clinton foundation and her private computer server while she was secretary of state. the state department is now under orders to review and release thousands of messages retrieved during an fbi investigation. >> they are not part of the roughly 30,000 documents the democratic nominee turned over two years ago. nancy cordes has clinton's late night response to the late east mail revelations. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. clinton aides say they don't
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e-mails and documents recovered from her servers by the fbi or how her lawyers missed them when they said they turned over all the e-mails. on late night tv she tried to make light of what has become a serious liability. >> we've already released i don't know 30,000 plus so what's a few more. >> have you considered using facetime instead of e-ma? >> actually, actually, i think that's really good advice. >> that's a good idea. >> reporter: but in akron, ohio, donald trump and his supporters didn't find it that funny. >> now, we learn about another 15,000 e-mails. she failed to turn over. and they've just been discovered. >> reporter: on "jimmy kimmel
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>> take my pulse. >> okay. >> reporter: trump -- >> she also lacks the physical and mental stamina. >> reporter: clinton's doctor said she's in excellent health. >> it's part of the wacky strategy, just say all of these crazy things and maybe you can get some people to believe you. >> reporter: trump used the same approach to go after clinton's charity on monday. >> see, clinton foundation constitute thele rico racketeering, influence corrupt organization enterprise. >> reporter: he insisted donors got favors from clinton's state department and he called for a special prosecutor. >> it's criminality, everybody knows this. >> reporter: the state department says it's not true. >> we have seen no evidence of any behavior, any relations with the clinton foundation that weren't completely above board. >> former president bill clinton
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will stop raising money for the foundation and step down from the board if his wife is elected president. but foundation officials have resisted for calls to step down altogether. they say that will deprive millions around the world of life saving medical treatment. the obama administration that his policy would be fair but firm. with speculation about whether he would deport millions of people who enter the u.s. illy. they spoke with supporters. major gator is in indiana following the trump campaign. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump denies what appears to be a clear way away from mass deportation. the best clue -- trump doesn't talk about it anymore. neither does anyone paid to speak on his behalf.
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estimated 11 million undocumented illegal immigrants in the u.s. >> we're going to build a wall. >> reporter: donald trump clung to that applause line like a life raft in ohio. with the once pledge to deport all undocumented u.s. residents. trump now talks of deporting only hardened criminals and felons. >> the first thing we're going to do if and when i win is w bad ones. we're going to go through the process. >> reporter: trump would not explain what that process was or how it would work but he no longer insists it includes raids, arrests or lengthy deportation proceedings. >> i'm not going to put them in a detention center. >> reporter: a newly informed advisory council informed trump of the logistical challenges tied to mass deportation.
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while simultaneously wooing minority voters. >> it is a disaster the way african-americans are living in many cases. and in many cases the way hispanics are living. and i say it with such a deep felt feeling, what do you have to lose? >> reporter: trump described the world as squalor and hopelessness, offering himself as a potential savior. >> you could go to war safer than living in some of our inner cities. >> reporter: there's another problem for trump. internal campaign chaos. visors said this week would be devoted to border security in speeches in colorado. those have been scrapped. now, the campaign says it wants to focus more attention on clinton's e-mail woes. >> cbs news contributor mark
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times" magazine. it's been nearly nine months since hillary clinton held a press conference. she chose late night tv to address the new questions. was that the right way to address it? >> well, they seem to think so. it's obviously a safe setting for her. she comes off well. most people do. as a member of the media, i have a horse in this race, i would love her to do a press conference as everyone else. >> what questions would you if she's so glib about what's a few more e-mails, why haven't we seen them? what else is in there. i mean, i would be more pointed than that. but it's just very, very glib to come off and say in a situation that keeping lingering and politically, it's very frustrating. >> do you think the state department would say if there's evidence that there's not evidence it's completely above board.
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>> that's the second batch of e-mail. >> yes, that's the second. it's very damaging. in the context, it's the damaging because it links the e-mails, two, questions about the foundation. put the two together, you have a possible not a quid pro quo, but certainly, the interactions between the two are carefully linked there. this also ensures it's going to linger through october. probably to election day and >> can we talk about donald trump for a second. being vague on immigration. something that was such a big part of his campaign early on. what are we talking? >> i don't think it will hurt him. they obviously have a strategy that says look we're going to be a little softer in our rhetoric here. hopefully, we don't eliminate our base. and pick off a few hispanic voters. this is the core of the issue. this is arguably the issue that
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>> do you think he can pick up hispanic supporters saying i'm not going to deport, i'm going to build a wall? >> well, it's going to be something, i'm going to be fair. i'mgoing to be humane. those are words he did not use during the primary. >> donald trump is raising questions about hillary clinton's stamina. her health. he says, we've never before in history had two candidates, nominees as old as trudonald tr and hillary clinton. she went on, in part by opening a can of pickles. what does it need to say more? >> you mean, the pickle test doesn't put away the test? >> i must say i have trouble opening a jar of pickles. >> i think hillary clinton in
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her personal physician has released a letter that seemed authoritative but brief. >> it was two pages. >> she can say -- he's released virtually nothing. unless you count the two paragraph letter that his doctor released. i mean, so, yeah, i mean, i think people would like to see more. what i'm curious about in the larger sense is why do you make this an issue now if you're donald trump? the health, the stamina of your some kind of doubt. there are other bigger issues to focus on, beginning with e-mail. >> thanks so much. the fbi is investigating a stabbing in virginia as a possible terror attack. a man and woman were seriously wounded saturday at an apartment building in roanoke. sources confirm the suspect tried and failed to get to syria earlier this year. 20-year-old wasil farooqui was
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investigators have known about him for months. he's described as self-radicalized but the motive for the attack is unknown. police think the victims were chosen at random, others say god was great was yelled during the stabbing. two areas of miami-dade county are designated zika zones where the virus is spreading. and there are 37 transmitted cases by local mosquitos. the those areas yesterday, while kids returned to school. david begnaud is in miami beach, as concerns about zika spread far beyond the warning zone. >> reporter: you got pregnant women moving and some goes somewhere else. you've got businesses worried about what the threat is going to do to them. this is one of the biggest
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by far, it's been the sizzling feud between the mayor of miami beach and florida's governor. >> what the governor did, he not only blind sided me, he blind sided our administration. >> reporter: mike levine took aim at governor rick scott for failing to take them about zika indications on miami beach. >> i think it would be more useful in the future to let the elected leaders, let the administration know what's going on so we can take the necessary steps. >> reporter: governor scott fired back. >> i reached tout mayor levine, and unfortunately didn't return phone calls. >> reporter: two areas in miami-dade county, wynwood neighborhood and south beach are home to at least 37 locally transmitted cases. katrina bernard's third child is due in december. >> this isn't a cold. it's life or death.
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she's scared to leave her miami-dade home. what is the criteria? >> seeing babies with microcephaly, and seeing women having to make the choice to either not continue their pregnancy or just be dealt a very hard hand. >> reporter: there are 69 pregnant women in the state of florida infected with zika. the disease has been linked to babies born with microcephaly and can impact the child's head potentially causing mental delays and other problems. christina frigo is also from the miami area. earlier this month, she relocated to chicago and she plans to stay there for the remainder of her pregnancy. >> you inconvenience yourself so your baby is safe. >> reporter: we're reaching the peak of hurricane season, should we get a storm here, standing water after that storm will pose a real problem when it comes to mosquitos breeding and
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standing water, even a little bit of it, because, remember, those mosquitos can breed in something like this, a bottle cap. that small. >> david, thank you so much. thunderstorms are forecast in southern louisiana during president obama's avisit. the president will make his long awaited visit to the states to tour areas december stated by the disastrous flooding. it skikilled manuel bojorquez is there. >> reporter: good morning. there are flooded out vehicles where you can see the water line, just how high the water came herer and their belongings destroyed. a previous pickup has start neared baton rouge, but removing all of it could take months. >> it just breaks my heart. and it's devastating, and you don't know what you're going to do. and you're just scared,
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now? >> yes. >> reporter: the fear of what comes next is setting in for nicki mcdonald and thousands more in louisiana where lifelong possessions now rest in piles on the side of the street. what's it like when you look at your neighborhood right now? >> it's just devastating. i mean, going down the street, you see people's entire house is on the street right now. all of this stuff that they've accumulated and worked for is just sitting on the streets right now. >> reporter: everything? >> everything. >> reporter: the same is t for wallace and shirley amons. they lost everything in their baton rouge home. >> all of my treasures, everything, are on the side of the road. and we don't know what we're going to do. >> reporter: the couple in their 70s is now faced with the daunting task of having to start over. >> we wanted to come back home,
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we still have our life, minus the home. >> reporter: like 80% of people in louisiana, neither the amons nor mcdonald'ses have flood insurance. with 60,000 homes damaged and more than 106,000 registered for emergency federal aid, officials here say the recovery could take years. >> the people that didn't have flood insurance which is most of the people in this area, i just don't know what they're going to do. they need assistance. we need attention. we need someone to help us out. >> reporter: that's what many people here say they would like to express to the president. they need help. and beyond the financial assistance. they say right now, they need volunteers help clear out damaged homes and clean up all of this debris. anthony. >> manuel, thanks. firefighters are struggling to contain a series of wildfires burning this morning in northeast washington state.
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area. in california, six major wildfires have burned more than 200,000 acres. thousands are under evacuation orders from the chimney fire from san luis obispo in monterrey county. a driver is shot dead in his own home by police. his family says he was deaf and
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toyota. let's go places. computer guided trucks could revolutionize the transportation industry. >> it's a fascinating story. john blackstone hits the road to see the future. >> uber is getting into self-driving technology in a big way. we'll take you on an exclusive first look at otto.
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liders. sold! ? olympics swimmer ryan lochte deals dry up.
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forbes new list good morning. it is 7:26 on this tuesday, august 23rd. another beautiful day ahead with lots of sunshine. i'm chris wragge. john elliot has your forecast coming up in just a moment. but, first, a funeral will be held today for 69-year-old scott martella, one of six people killed on sunday night's multi-car crash on thely lie in shirley. services will be held at helen and isador in west hampton. a home in flames in sayreville, new jersey. five people include ago 1-month- old infant were able to escape the blaze through a second floor window when the home became engulfed in flames. young girls between the ages of 8 and 10 jumped down to safety as a mother tossed her baby down to rescuers. everyone making it out alive without any major injuries.
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brazenly burglarized the indonesiaian consulate on the upper east side. police say they got in through an unlocked side door early yesterday morning. investigators say they made off with several items, including liquor, a tablet and the keys to a minivan which they then allegedly stole. now let's get over to john elliot with your forecast. john. >> look at this. it's just beautiful out there, sterling blue skies and less wind, comfortable, refreshing out the door. 64 in the city, still hanging onto the 40s north and west. so, yeah, it's a chilly way to start the day. jacket or sweater for the morning walk or off to work early, but then it's going to be nice thatch. in fact, right around what you'd expect, 80 in the city with less wind, feels great. 82 is the normal, 92 and 51 your records. sun sets at 7:42. between now and sunset time it's another pleaser, another winner with less wind. almost a fall preview now, but
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then more humidity on thursday. so late thursday into friday that's our next chance for an isolated shower or storm. and the odds are low. until then, i mean, really, this is some of the best weather in the country >> okay, john, thanks so much. i'm chris wragge. we're back with another local update in about 25 minutes. "cbs this morning" returns in
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. for legal reasons we're not allowed to show or air olympic footage. you just can't do it. what i can do is show you a live reenactment of the u.s. versus serbia. let's do that right now. [ cheers and applause ] >> sort of how it went. there they go again. >> serbia had a tough time under the boards. [ cheers and applause ] >> serbia, a really difficult -- gosh, it was just won! >> oh, man. those serbians were must bigger than that. >> it's hard to compete against
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team. congratulations to them. welcome back. coming up is olympic swimmer ryan lochte washed up when it comes to endorsements. mellody hobson is in the studio, after the gas station. gearing up for uber's next journey. john blackstone shows us a big rig will the technology stop truckers from the long haul? a syrian leader calls the largest city the apex of horror. more than 125,000 people in aleppo are cut off from food and water. he told the security council, it's likely to be the worst humanitarian catastrophe of the five-year-old civil war. the houston chronicle reports on a federal judge
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obama's directive on bathrooms in public schools and transgender students. the directive allows transgender students to use the bathroom of the gender they identify with. 13 states are challenging it. the judge said the directive contradicted other regulation. the republican of springfield massachusetts reports on a former high school star athlete sentenced to probation in a sexual assault case. 18-year-old david becker was charged with sexually assaulting two unconscious classmates after a party i years' probation after he pled to a reduced charge. becker's attorney said we all made mistakes as teenagers and, quote, we shouldn't be branded for life with a felony offense. the los angeles tile times a city officering punching a
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years ago, but the court just granted the paper's request to make it public. the officer was charged with assault but avoided prison partly by pleading no contest. and the charlotte observer said the family of a deaf man killed by a north carolina state trooper wants more training for police. daniel harris was shot on thursday after the trooper followed him all the way to harris' neighborhood. jericka duncan is here. good morning. >> and speech inimpediment and not have a weapon. the trooper may not have been trained to handle someone with a handicap. >> reporter: daniel kevin harris was remembered at a vigil in charlotte last night, lit by candles marked the spot where the 29-year-old father of one was killed. daniel's brother, sam harris, who is also hearing impaired
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interpreter. >> interpreter: if the officer had known he was deaf, it would have ended. >> reporter: north carolina trooper tried to stop harris for speeding along an interstate. the pursuant ended about five miles away. harris was almost home. >> highway patrol involved in a shooting. >> got one suspect down. >> he stopped over here. then a few >> reporter: in a release from the department of public safety, the state patrol said the driver exited his vehicle and an encounter took place between the driver and the trooper causing a shot to be fired. harris posted this video online last year. on a fund-raising site, his family said daniel will be a hero in our deaf community once police have proper training on how to confront deaf people. >> what we need to know is that
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prevent horrific tragedies like this from happening, where people die, because of something simple as i don't hear what the police say because i'm deaf. >> funeral services for harris will be held tonight. the state bureau of investigation expects to get footage from dash cameras and body born cameras from officers that responded to the shooting. the north carolina state highway patrol i investigation. and the trooper who shot harris is on administrative leave. team usa from ryan lochte has his gold but his value in corporate america is plunging. this comes day as ever the medal the apologized. speedo, ralph lauren, and the make of a laser hair removal system all announced they're
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sponsorship with lochte. speedo said in a statement, we cannot condone behavior that is counter to the values this brand has long stood for. mellody hobson at the table. good morning. this is turning out to be very expensive for ryan lochte. >> very expensive. in the scheme of things the number he's making from endorsements isn't huge, but for him, it's big. reportedly, about $1 million a year. that's down from $2.3 million ar to put that in perspective, someone like lance armstrong lost something like $20 million a year after the scandal that happened for him. you look at lebron james right now at his peak, he's making $50 million plus for sponsorship. >> how does a company like ralph lauren say let's drop this deal? >> well, very easily. they have morals clauses in all of these endorsement deals. that state if you do something
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and they're ruthless about it. they have to be. the brand is everything. and people know that going in. and when the actions are not commensurate with the brand, they make the right decision. >> in 2009, a photo surfaced of swimmer michael phelps. and it looked like he was inhaling marijuana. only one sponsor dropped him. why the difference with that? >> right, that was kellogg's. very big difference. first, many people youthful because he was in his 20s. in the case of lochte, 32. not really youthful. and immediately after it surfaced, phelps apologized within 24 hours. this story went on for days. the story changed. and some are not happy with exaggerating the facts.
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i think last but not least, it was the idea that they -- one is a superstar. greatest of all time in the pool. and the other is obviously an olympic medalist, but very different in terms of their profile. >> what's this going to mean for future deals for him? do you think there will be any? >> i think it's going to be very hard. i talked to the company yesterday. they said, no, they wouldn't touch it. >> thanks. uber next drive into the future. coming up -- a front row seat with a company developing self-driving big rigs is amazing. if you're heading out the door you can watch us live through the cbs "all-access" app on your digital device. you won't want to miss the doctor on the new warning on the amount of sugar your kids should be eating. we'll be right back. i want my blood sugar to stay in control. so i asked about tresiba?.
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on the fast track of its business model. the on-demand car pioneer recently bought a company that's designing autonomous big rigs. john blackstone is in the cab of a self-driving semi, in san francisco, on a story you'll only see on "cbs this morning." john, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, well, driving a big rig is a big job. and even a rig as bigs itself. a silicon valley startup called otto just bought by uber is designed to put a fleet of self-driving trucks on the nation's wides in as close as two years. we were invited along. at 50 miles an hour with no one behind the wheel, otto is testing its technology on closed
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>> we are good. >> we're back. the truck is driving itself. >> reporter: a safety driver sits behind the wheel just in case. your hands are now close to the wheel but not on the wheel. leon ron is co-founder of otto. your goal here is to build equipment that can be put on to any truck to make any truck a self-driving truck? >> correct, we want to make every truck a self-driving those trucks with equipment that is providing those trucks. >> reporter: they announced last week that uber is buying otto for an estimates $86 million to give a ride sharing access to otto's technology to further its own push into self-driving vehicles. >> the key for all of this is about accelerating the future.
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it will allow us to get to the future sooner than later. >> reporter: that future is arriving in pittsburgh. where uber is introducing a complete of new cars complete to drive themselves. right now, more than 1 million uber drivers around the world may be seeing a future where they are no longer needed. >> what would you say to professional drivers now who see uber and they see otto as a big >> well, the gradual condition, it's going to take many, many years for that to happen. and at the end of the transition, we're going to see the shift slightly. >> there's no way that this will be have the dependency on human drivers. >> reporter: uber is only one of the companies racing towards a self-driving future. its competitor lyft is teaming up with general motors on
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google, ford and other major car companies are also pursuing the technology. >> i think smart car technology will be similar to smartphone technology in the recent years. meaning, it's going to show up quickly and change things dramatically in a relatively short period of time. >> reporter: truck drivers will be needed for everything off the highway. so they'll still have some job security. otto's trucks are designed to self-driving mode only. so truckers will still be needed for everything off the highway. anthony. >> john, thanks. i'm not sure that i was convinced that you weren't nervous in that cab, john. >> you brought up a good point. what's going to happen to all of these drivers and these jobs it's not being addressed? >> it's a big issue that's going to slowly hit the country. all right, james corden takes the stage with coldplay
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>> like the carpool karaoke man. i think it was his birthday yesterday. happy birthday. polls say most voters don't trust donald trump or hillary clinton, we'll see how it compares to previous nominees. that's ahead right here on "cbs this morning." i was in shock when my dentist was explaining to me the acidity of foods and what they can do to your teeth. thinning of the teeth and leading to being extremely yellow would probably gross me out! my dentist recommended pronamel. it can help protect enamel from acid erosion. my mouth feels really fresh and clean and i stuck with it. i really like it. it gives me a lot of confidence. pronamel is all about your enamel. helping to protect your enamel. wahhhh... right. in. your. stomach! watch this!... >>yikes, that ice cream was
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good morning. it is 7:56 on this tuesday, august 23rd. a cool start to your day, but it's going to warm up later. i'm chris wragge. john will have your forecast in just a moment. first, newark police are investigating a shooting that left one man dead and a woman injured. it happened around a bullet hole could be seen in a window. no word from police on a motive or possible suspects. an x-ray technician at a brooklyn hospital is out of a job this morning after being accused of sexually assaulting two patients. 65-year-old larry jones has been charged following alleged incidents at kings county hospital on saturday. both an 83-year-old woman and a 57-year-old woman said that jones touched them inappropriately. he was arraigned on sunday. now to the growing concern over the spread of the zika
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will be sprayed tonight at 10:00 p.m. new york city has about 500 cases of zika, but all involve people who caught the disease while traveling. along with spraying, the health department is trapping and testing mosquitoes. so far none have been carrying the zika virus. now let's get over to john. he's got your forecast. john >> yeah. just love all of these great shots of the city that we're able to share. glorious skies. we're up to 65, up a few degrees from la onto the low 50s in through parts of sul van, orange, dutchess. hey, enjoy the dutchess county fair. i think that gets under way today. 57 in armonk, 57 in westbury, 53 is the dewpoint in seeing effort. look at the dewpoint in the city, it's drop, 49. so a very dry air mass out there. scanning the skies, yeah, it's a big ridge of high pressure. how big? it's all the way through the lakes. flip side of that, though, you get a sense of that, and we are going to tap into a little bit
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of the week. 80 today, winds not as strong as they were yesterday. tonight 67 for the city, cool again for the suburbs, and then tomorrow just a little warmer, still another very nice summer day, high of 85. chris. >> okay, john, thanks so much. i'm chris wragge. we are back with another local update in about 25 minutes. "cbs this morning" returns
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? it's tuesday, august 23rd, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including the first of their kind recommendations on sugar in our children's diets. new limits that kids may f but first, here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. they say they don't know what's in these 15,000 e-mails or how the lawyers missed them. >> denies what appears to be a clear way away from mass deportation. the best clues -- >> doesn't talk about it anymore. >> she chose late night tv to address the new questions. >> it's obviously a very safe setting for her. she comes off well.
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press conference like everyone else would. >> biggest head line in the last 24 hours is in the sizzling political feud between the mayor of miami beach and the governor. >> this is just what some of what the president will see today. >> even a rig as big as this one is now learning to drive itself. >> this is turning out to be very expensive for ryan. >> very expensive. >> and now the whole world thinksya crazy american with the weird hair who keeps making stuff up and causing international incident which is is not how an olympian acts. that is how a presidential candidate acts. >> president obama and the first family you returned from their summer vacation in martha's vineyard only to find the lock had been changed. [ laughter ] i'm norah o'donnell with
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entertainment tonight. charlie and gayle are off. donald trump says he would deport 11 million undocumented immigrants now he says only the bad ones. >> trump did not explain what the process would be, but he no longer insists on raids arrests and lengthy deportation proceedings. >> we don't have to put them in a deportation >> you never would do that? >> no, i never said that, i never heard the term. >> mr. trump, you cited dwight eisenhower on this program -- >> who, by the way, deported a tremendous number of people. >> he rounded them up. he took them out. so when you cited him as an example of someone you would emulate, that's what the conclusion is. >> yeah. i said it's something that has been done in a very strong manner. i don't agree with that.
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about president eisenhower's deportation program in the 1950s. >> dwight eisenhower, you don't get nicer. you don't get friendlier, they moved 1.5 million people out. we have no choice. >> a lot of people like that. >> okay. now, he deported as you rightly point out about 1 million, maybe a little more illegal aliens back in the early '50s. believe me when i tell you, mr. trump. those people to kick them back. i mean, the stuff they did was really brutal. >> well -- well -- >> it could never happen today. >> i've heard it both ways. >> you know me -- >> we would do it in a very humane way. >> in a rally last night, trump attacked hillary clinton and the clinton foundation and the newly discovered e-mail. >> the investigation of hillary clinton's private servers
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e-mails. a judge ordered the state department to make them public. clinton brushed off the news in a late night tv visit. >> state department said they have to release 15,000 e-mails by the deadline. a couple days before the debate. are you concerned about that. >> no. >> i would be terrified if my e-mails were released. [ laughter ] >> jimmy, my e-mails are so boring. i'm embarrassed about that. they're so boring. don't know, 30,000 plus, so what's a few more. >> in the end, you're not concerned that there's something that donald trump is able to use again you that comes in at the last second. >> but he makes up stuff to use against me. if he would stick with reality, i wouldn't have a worry in the world. >> have you ever sent him an e-mail? >> no. >> the additional e-mails raise new questions about clinton's transparency.
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a latest poll shows 60% of voters believe that clinton and trump are not honest and trustworthy. julianna goldman. >> good morning. both were criticized for not being open. and bernie sanders was under criticism for n pages to wall street. >> no press conference in what, 255 days? >> he refuses to release his tax returns. >> reporter: donald trump and hillary clinton regularly accuse their rival of hiding secrets. but both nominees have skirted basic standards of transparency. >> i'll release them when the order is completed. >> reporter: since 1976, every presidential nominee has released their tax returns.
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but the returns would shine a light on the business mogul's finances. including how his global empire could present conflicts of interest if he were to be president. clinton has fought back persistent criticism for deleting thousands of e-mails while secretary of state. while she sat down to reporters in event months, since december she hasn't opened herself up to -- >> let me try to unpack your >> reporter: -- rapid fire multiple questions. over the same period in 2008 then senator obama held at least four press conferences. donald trump has held at least seven. >> i think the political press is among the most dishonest people that i've ever met. >> reporter: yet both 2016 candidates keep reporters the a distance. neither allow reporters into their fund-raisers.
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obama, senator john mccain and mitt romney allowed journalists to cover portions of what they said to top donors. clinton has two campaign events scheduled for the rest of the month. at least eight fund-raisers just this week. >> several of the norms that we have for what the public should know are fairly good ones. >> reporter: john wonderlake is the interim director for the sunlight foundation which advocates for open government. >> transparency is in a democracy, we understand what the government is doing, because if we don't have an understanding of that what does our vote really mean. >> neither campaign responded to requests for comments on this. over the weekend, clinton's campaign manager said she's not avoiding tough questions but has sat down for more than 200 interviews. trump said he won't release his tax returns even though a few years are being audited. former president jimmy
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his cancer diagnosis last year. he told those yesterday he had just weeks to live. mr. carter at a similar event acted more optimistic than he truly was. >> i still have signs of cancer in my brain, although it was seeming to go away. i thought i'd be back next year. i wasn't sure i'd be back. i thought i'd be gone by now. but it has turned out quite well. the optimism i h out. >> the current president does not have any current signs of cancer. but doctors check him periodically, he will be 92 in october. the killing of a little boy by an alligator at a disney resort has been ruled an accident. a report by florida's wildlife agency said 2-year-old lane graves does nothing to provoke the alligator.
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attack. at least two workers said they saw the alligator before the attack. the cincinnati zoo is calling for an end to negativity surrounding its killing of a gorilla. zoo officials killed harambe to save a 3-year-old boy who got into the gorilla's enclosure. and petitions began to hold the boy's mother responsible. since then, the gorilla has been used in tweets and viral images. down, but earlier even a tweet about a zebra sparked. people responded with, quote, had an unique way of killing
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firefighters have been out on the fire lines in the biggest fire lines. he talks to scientists about why the fight is also taking place indoors. >> there's an expression that everybody uses here in the u.s. spreads like wildfire. yet we don't even know how wildfires spread. >> ahead, how this lab could stop futurest rning." i've been taking fish oil from nature's bounty to support my heart. i'm running, four times a week. eating better, keeping healthy.
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? in our "morning rounds" a new push to curb your kid's sweeth tooth. the american heart association issued its first recommendation for added sugar.
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old. kids consume an average of 19 teaspoons a day. our dr. tara narula is a cardiologist. how diasteric are the guidelines? >> the world health organization recommended less than 10% of your daily calories. for parents it's hard to figure out, i don't know calories my kids take in. this simplifies it says, 6 teaspoons, 25 grams. the added sugars add nothing in the way of nutrition. all they do is raise the caloric value. it's currently 16% of kids' daily cal riories are from adde
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and other cookies. when people come to my office as an adult patient and have coronary disease, they say, i didn't see this, how did it happen? we see coronary heart disease in teenagers. what sugar does when added in excess, it can increase your risk for obesity. it can increase your blood pressure. it alter youry' cholesterol. >> my husband and i wrote a book called baby love about baby food. what you're feeding your children is affecting them for the re rest of their lives. however i think there's pushback from the sugar. they say the american heart association is recommends six piece of added sugar. for an act 16 to 18-year-old,
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they're saying where's the science to support this? >> where's the science to support the need for added sugars that aren't providing any nutritional benefit. you want to make sure that calis are budgeted appropriately. if for proteins, some for healthy fats but the added sugars are not providing anything. >> what about the mother of a 6-year-old boy who get my son to eat oatmeal or cereal but it has sugar? >> that's when it's allowed for flavoring for chocolate milk or whole grains. you want to get your kids to eat them. added sugars because you're giving them in a form where they're getting vitamins and proteins. >> what about natural sugars? >> natural sugar is different. there are fruits and vegetables and milk products that have natural sugars.
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about. in terms of juice for little kids you can give them 100% unsweetened juice. you want to limit that to smaller amounts. that will raise their caloric intake. the better thing is fruit. >> is there a formula or some suggestion you have for parents who struggle with little ones who love their sweets? >> i have 4-year-old who is constantly asking for candy or strawberry milk. one of the things that this nonnutritive sweeteners like asparta aspartame. and we don't have research to say. this statement doesn't really provide a recommendation for or against. as a parent and cardiologist, i like to teach my kids about the science even when they're young, to explain it to them why i'm telling them this. so that when they're out of the house, and they're offered
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healthy. instead of saying no juice, no juice, explain to them. >> correct me if i'm wrong, i think one of the number one source is soda or drinks. if you can cut that out you're doing a lot. >> right. the stampede takes over a busy city intersection. ahead, the phenomenon that sent thousands of people sprinting. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: "cbs morning rounds" sponsored by nexium.
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?? ?? ?? the 2016 us open.
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?? ?? ??
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? the pokemon go craze apparently caused a stampede in the capital of taiwan. video posted to facebook over the weekend appears to show thousands of people running to catch an elusive pokemon called norlax. at an intersection, oh, my gosh. police reportedly stepped up to patrol the overcrowding triggered by the mobile game. >> that's insane. >> i don't know -- >> i hope somebody got -- >> norlax. from babies staring the screens to the grown-up world of online dating. the technology may be taking control. the woman with the digital age,
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in our green room good morning. 8:25 on this tuesday, august 23rd. another beautiful day ahead with lots of sunshine. i'm mary calvi. john elliot has our forecast coming up. but, first, a funeral will be held today for 29-year-old scott martella, one of six people killed in sunday's multi- car crash on the l.i.e. in shirley. services will be held tomorrow for victims helen west hampton. a daring rescue at a home up in flames in sayreville, new jersey. five people, including a 1- month-old infant were able to escape the blaze through a second floor window when the home became engulfed in flames. young girls between the ages of 8 and 10 jumping down to safety as a mother tossed her baby down to rescuers. everyone made it out alive without any major injuries. a manhunt now under way for the pair police say
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upper east side. police say they got in through an unlock side door early yesterday morning. investigators say they made off with several items, including liquor, a tablet and the keys to a minivan which they then allegedly stole. now to growing concerns over the spread of the zika virus an the city's mosquito control efforts. parts of queens and brooklyn will be sprayed tonight starting at 10:00 p.m. new york city has about 500 cases of zika, but all involve people who caught while traveling. >> there's been no local transmission. we are really concern about the potential for it here which is why we are stepping up our mosquito control program. for right now people should retain their usual concern about trying to avoid mosquito bites. >> along with spraying, the health department is trapping and testing mosquitoes. so far none has tested positive for zika. and now let's turn it over to john elliot with a look at your forecast. john. >> you know, mary, another real important part of that story is
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a decent rain, in a day or so you have to dump that out so they don't have a breeding ground. we have to work together with this thing too, make sure the kids have the right stuff on to avoid the bites. skies are clear and winds variable at six. as i nag you every morning. 54 in walden, the cool spot on the map, but the 50s through, let's see, sussex, warren, parts of passaic, down into and up into the hudson valley. dewpoints, though, oh, yeah, we've got dewpoints in the 50s and 40s. feel. 80, nice skies, lighter winds than we saw yesterday. overnight tonight, that's for the city, so that means it's going to be a little bit cooler for the suburbs, and then tomorrow plenty of sun and 85. that warming trend will continue as we work our way toward friday. mary. >> john, thanks. we're back with another local update in about 25 minutes. i'm mary calvi, "cbs this morning" returns in just a
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? welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, new research in the fight against wildfires. carter evans takes us to a special lab where scientists are literally playing with fire to save lives. hear in a top researche w wildfires is to simply let them burn. plus, he helps keep new yorkers safe. but this muslim police captain is traveling the country to bring people together. ahead, his family shows why it's a battle that begins on the home front. >> right now, time for headlines. "the wall street journal" says the alcohol industry is going on a public relations offensive
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studying linking cancer risks that light drinking has light benefits. countries like russia and the uk are encouraging the reduction in drinking. a homeless woman's fight with the government for more than $100,000. 80-year-old wanda rearic spe ic on the streets. the social worker helped wanda and now she has an apartment. what a story. >> good for her. the st. louis post dispatch shows how a minor leaguer smashed a home run and also his car. brandon thomas hit a brand slam sunday night for his frontier team in illinois. the ball cleared the left field fence and landed on the windshield of his eight-year-old pickup. the club said someone
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a festival in michigan that turned into an international incident. people on inflatable rafts and boats floated down the st. clair river sunday. but strong winds blew them to the canadian shore. about 150040 floaters ends up in canada and had to return to michigan on buses. 23-year-old, cbs news began covering the rise of the world wide web at a trade show in washington. >> there's a global network called the internet. >> data highways. >> to communicate with anyone in the world. >> and it changes the way people access information. >> most people think in 10 or 20 years, yeah, we're going to give in this modern world. it's here. >> it's fun to look at that. after the internet evolved as lightning speed, dialups gave way to aol mailers.
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so how it all of his high-tech upheaval changing human behavior. that's one question cyberpsychologist mary aiken investigates in her her new book. good morning. what exactly say cyb cyberpsychologist and this book? >> we human environments. i wanted to write the book for the largest unregulated social experiment of all time. and we would pay attention. >> let's talk about screens particularly. it's one thing that the american academy of pediatrics recommend nod screens for kids under age 2. you talk about it's really important to look at your baby's face? >> yes, babies need eye contact. there are studies that doesn't
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i expose my baby to facetime? i think under 2. but what's more important what age do you expect infants for screen time. the average time we look is 200 times a day. if you're a parent or caregiver of an infant, that's 200 times that you haven'too child. >> you say that eye contact could change the course of human civilization? >> absolutely. in terms of bonding, children need face time. not the app, eye contact. they need this. the real question is where did they learn to do that? >> what can we do about the disturbing trend of
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this trick that the social media companies have ever pulled is to convince us they can do nothing about cyberbully. there's a punch in the playground, harsh words. you can't cyberbully without leaving a trail of digital evidence. >> so what can tech companies do? we've seen companies like twitter and others recently say that they're going to crack down on this? >> i think there has to be more step up. so we're all hung up on surveys. and nobody wants to enforce what they learned. but children need to be monitored, under surveillance and parents should monitor their children. i'm working on an oalgorithm. cyberbullying is math. direction, i'm bullying you. interval and frequency.
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algorithm on a chat forum and it may escalate into a digital mess for the child. parents shouldn't be the last person to know that their child is being bullied. >> that's brilliant to know. >> and adults and abuse on twitter and other social media, too, right? >> absolutely. now, you're in protection and surveillance. let's start with the kids. let's start with the kids. >> yeah. >> and let's look trends, their behavior, and healthy parents. parents should not be left to parent their own children in cyberspace. >> why are people so so doggone mean in cyberspace where they can be anonymous? >> there's a study that looks at online that finds a relationship
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traits and the study concludes that it's a manifestation of everof day satanism. >> wow. >> you talk about the importance of the selfie. it's not just harmless little things that we're all doing now. guilty. >> you know, at our age at the table, we're done, we're cooked. taking selfies, it's not going to make other than the type of selfies but for kids. you have young kids. ages between 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, children go through what's called identity formation. so can you imagine if they create this idealized self online. 50% of kids under the age of 13
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in self. so that leads to an identity crisis. and they can never live up to this thing, this thing, being popular, evidence like all of these connections. >> very interesting. mary aiken, thank you so much. great information. by the way, "the cyber goes on sale today. meanwhile, researchers are looking at a surprising new tactic to fight wildfires. the blue cut wildfire is one the most damaging in california state history. the fire destroyed more than 100 houses despite the efforts of firefighters. carter evans went to a lab looking at a firefighting
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>> reporter: inside a laboratory in missoula. cameras capture the flames from every angle to help scientists like mark finney better under how fires spread. >> there's an expression that everybody uses here in new york. spreads like wildfire. yet, we don't know how wildfires spread. >> reporter: in this specially designed burn chamber researchers for the u.s. forest service measure burns. it didn't even require flames? >> no. >> reporter: and they study how a fire can propel itself even without wind. slow motion experiments show the flames forming peaks or troughs like a fire blade. so those troughs or the dips is where the fire is advancing? >> that's right. and it's pushing. >> reporter: but finney's research said more needs to be done outside of the lab to cut
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putting out every fire is not working. >> if we truly want to manage fire, rather than have it manage us, we need to get out there well before the fires and those conditions. >> reporter: the forest service spent an $1.4 million fighting fires that burned 10.1 million acres last year. are we making it worse? >> we are making it worse. we are entering the fire paradox which means the harder you try to suppress get. >> reporter: under normal conditions fire thin out for us, but by constantly putting them out, more unburned brush is left for the next fire. mini says firefighters should be intentionally set be more so-called prescribed fires to burn off vegetation or simply letting natural fires burn. in a statement to cbs news, the forest service says it agrees
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are important tools and our capacity to complete this work is restricted by the budget. more developers push to build homes closer to fire-prone areas. >> fire is inevitable. if we convince ourselves it's not. essentially we have a repeat every single year of the same situation. >> reporter: for now, scientists hope by setting these controlled fires in the lab, they'll better under how to manage them in the forest. for "cbs this morning," carter s, >> it's amazing how much we don't know about wildfires. >> an interesting concept but kind of scary at the same time. okay. can a police officer stop more than crime.
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? at a fund-raiser this week hillary clinton said insulting muslims makes the world more dangerous. a cbs news poll found 59% of voters oppose a temporary band of muslims in the usa as donald trump suggested. michelle, good morning. >> good morning, out of 36,000 nypd officers there are about
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hammel altahiri has been protecting new york city for 12 years. do you like him being a police officer? >> yes. >> reporter: why? but his 10-year-old all-american daughter nadine recently needed her own protectfr >> a bull y bully said that i w terrorist. >> reporter: do you know what a terrorist and isis is? >> reporter: he's one of the highest ranking muslims on nypd, he and his wife, first generation immigrants face the
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has to experience that. >> reporter: were you ready to really explain to her these big issues? >> you have to be ready because we hear it all the time. i hear it in the bus. i hear it in the train. i hear it in the park. i hear it every time we go out. we need to have respect for each other. respect each other. we don't need that. >> reporter: they encouraged nadine and all the other children negativity. >> i don't see myself as american-jew or american-catholic or gay-american, i'm just american. i want to introduce myself as a muslim. they say, you're a cool guy, you're muslim? i'm like, yeah, muslims are cool, too. i owe it to myself, but to the community.
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free time, he travels around the country speaking at mosques, synagogues and churches. this visit came in the aftermath of the orlando shooting. >> islamists love. >> reporter: recently recognized for his work in the community. >> he amplifies everything that everything good that it means to be an immigrant. and everything good to be an american. >> reporter: the captain says even in these troubled times he remains optimistic. >> it's what i can do about it. and that i did something. >> reporter: in the end, he says, we all could. well, he credits his mother for
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she taught him what it really means to be a person who understands that, hey, people can have a bad day. and she would often quote muhammad as saying, you know what, think about people being mad, think of giving them so many excuses. scotland's most decorated penguin gets a new honor. it brought out a king's guard. the story of this marching mascot next on "cbs this
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good morning. it's 8:55 on this tuesday, august 23rd. cool start to your day, but it is going to warm up later. i'm mary calvi. john has your forecast coming up. but, first, a funeral will be held today for 29-year-old scott martella, one of six people killed in sunday's multi- car crash on in shirley. services will be held tomorrow for victims helen and isador edelson at their synagogue in west hampton. newark police are investigating a shooting that left one man dead and a woman injured. it happened at around 12:30 this morning on seymour avenue. a bullet hole could be seen in a window. no word from police on a motive or possible suspects in this. and new this morning, police in brooklyn have arrested three men for stealing
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the men allegedly made off with 2,000 boxes filled with the packaged fish from a shipping terminal in elizabeth, new jersey on june 1st. so far police say they have recovered less than half of the stolen eel. let's get to your forecast, find out about the warm temperatures today. hey, john. >> wow! what a story. i normally get a charge out of electric eels, but that is different. we've got sunny skies right now and 67 in the city. now that 67 in the city but look at that, we're still hanging onto the 50s into parts of the hudson valley. dewpoints are just delightful, they're in the low 50s. so it's going to be really a nice day today. just talking to scott shannon on the f.m. side and saying, you know, this is probably the best weather in the country. absence of the wind, beautiful skies, nice numbers, a fall preview. i know so many excited about the fall season. warmer readings tomorrow, and then the summer lovers, the
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to love thursday into friday. there's more heat, there's more humidity, so we go to a very refreshing morning this morning to almost 90 on friday with more humidity and a stray shower or thunderstorm popping up. but do enjoy today. mary >> we will. john, thanks so much. our next newscast is at noon. we're always on at cbsnewyork.com. i'm mary calvi.
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>> announcer: when a family spoke up... >> i said, "hey, there's no heater back here." >> announcer: did their landlord threaten to silence them? >> judge larry: you came over drunk and then threw a punch at her. there's nothing you can say to justify that kind of conduct. >> announcer: "hot bench." judge tanya acker. judge larry bakman. judge patricia dimango. three judges. one verdict. >> judge patricia: we've reached our decision. >> announcer: in a court of law, it's called a hot bench. jessica smith is suing her former landlord, eddie agosto, for the return of rent and for moving fees. >> judge patricia: all right, everyone. thank you very much. please be seated. sir, you may sit. >> sonia: your honor, this is case number eight, smith vs. agosto. >> judge tanya: thank you, officer montejano. ms. smith, you and your husband rented a home

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