tv CBS Overnight News CBS February 11, 2016 3:07am-4:30am EST
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nancy cordes is covering the clinton campaign for us. nancy? >> scott, new hampshire was one state. but it exposed a couple of serious weaknesses for her campaign. softening support among women and almost no support among millenials. >> i know i have some work to do, particularly with young people. >> clinton identified the problem last night. but now needs to solve it.
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youthful energy that was a hallmark of the obama campaign. and now, surround bernie sanders. feel the bern! >> reporter: part of her challenge is younger voters tend to be more liberal voters. her opponent once again ties her left. voters under 30, suzanne jones went for sanders last night by more than 60 points. >> for me i don't care about gender or race or anything like that. if i share their views then they have my vote. >> clinton aide acknowledge she needs to reconnect with women who flocked to her first bid. she won new hampshire women by 12 points. last night lost them by nearly the same margin. teacher jesse collie was one of the defectors. >> a tough decision for you? >> there was.
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hillary with me as well. and i do, go along with a lot of her, definitely her values as well. but i am just, yeah, bernie won out for me. so that's where i'm at. >> clinton did win over the three high school seniors who diagnose her dilemma this way. >> i think because young voters tend to be idealistic. and bernie sanders, promises you the world, tuition free college, free health care, all sound great. >> and there is another looming challenge for clinton. fund-raising. pressure from sanders made the optics of the ritzy big dollar fundraisers problematic for her. while he is on track, scott to raise $6 millon online just in the 24 hours post victory. >> great insight, nancy. thank you very much. we are going to turn now to a disturbing investigation at an elementary school near washington, d.c. a teacher's aide charged with sexually abusing students. police say that they know of ten victims, but that could more than double. here is justice correspondent jeff pegues.
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paid teacher assistant and director of youth choir. police believe that elementary school at glenarden and aquatic center, he was videotaping sexual acts between minors and sexually abusing some victims 9-13. so far, detectives say they uncovered 40 videos. a victim's relative called police after discovering a nude photo sent via the messaging app kik on the child's cell phone. kik allows users to remain anonymous. a lawsuit filed alleging the abuse was common knowledge at school and that the principal refused to take any action. that principal is now on leave. and the school district says it will cooperate fully with the investigation. scott, carraway held on $1 million bail. according to court records does not yet have an attorney. >> jeff, thank you very much. late today the u.s. justice department sued ferguson,
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rejected an agreement to reform its police and courts. 18 months ago a white ferguson cop killed michael brown, an unarmed black teenager, setting off violent protest thousands. >> going to call the meeting to order. >> reporter: decision to file a lawsuit against ferguson comes after angry residents debated the ferguson city council concerns that it will cost too much to comply. >> my fear is that with your vote tonight, if it is to sign the consent decree, that ferguson will cease to exist. protecting the citizens of ferguson should be our priority. >> reporter: council voted to approve the doj agreement with conditions. no additional salary increases for the police department or city employees. control over hiring contractors, extended compliance deadlines. and the right to back out of the agreement if the police department is ever dissolved.
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>> what we did was take out things we thought were immaterial to constitutional policing. >> reporter: the city has a $14 million budget and nearly $3 million in debt. negotiated consent decree, estimated to cost $10 million over three years. ten year ferguson resident, aly shah jordan says the price tag of the agreement is less than the cost of doing nothing. >> so much of this seems to be around money. >> it is. and i do understand, you know, because i am living it. we're all living it. but ought the end of the day well have to do what's right. >> reporter: the mayor told us it will be less expensive to fight the lawsuit in court than to implement the decree as drafted. scott, now there is a possibility. the city could end up paying for both. >> thanks. some laminate flooring sold by lumber liquidators can cause eye, nose, throat irritation and breathing difficulty according
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and jim axelrod continues our report. >> reporter: last september, a company called pathway genomics launched a blood test making game changing claims. >> cancer intercept can detect a greg tumor in the body before a patient may notice symptoms. >> reporter: we were intrigued. a few weeks ago we sat down with pathway ceo jim plante to ask him about the evidence. can you tell me? >> before we launched the test we had a clinical study of more than 100. >> is 100 enough? >> well, it depends on what -- your, you're looking for, right? i mean, you could make an argument that there is never enough data, right. >> my question is about -- the testing. has your product been clinically validated? >> our test has been validated under the current regulatory requirements. >> which doesn't mean much since under current fda regulations, labs that develop tests like
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claims before putting them on the market. it's become a profitable business model. >> they sell. they sell before they're ready. >> reporter: and a big concern for researchers like dr. theodora ross who runs cancer jen itices program at university of texas, southwestern. >> i think that people are not waiting long enough before they send the test out. >> do you feel sometimes the science gets short changed in the face -- of -- of the business? >> yes. if the fda would have come in said show me your data. couldn't show me the data. they should not be testing the patients. >> reporter: why not? >> it's useless. >> reprter: many tests may be useful. but right now there is no way to know. that may change later this year. when the fda its set to finalize more stringent regulation. jim axelrod, cbs news, san diego. in a moment, welcome back bernie. senator sanders takes us to
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after new hampshire we wanted to know more about bernie sanders. he served four terms as mayor of burlington, vermont, eight terms in the u.s. house. and was elected to the senate in 2006. but he grew up in brooklyn. the son of poor, jewish immigrants from poland. >> in the apartment houses i group in that one. good friends across the street. it was -- my mother's dream to get out of the apartment. and get a home of her own. but she died young and never achieved that dream.
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>> 46. >> how old were you? >> 19, i think. >> how did that affect you? >> significantly. significantly. not having enough money was a cause of constant tension and when you're 5, 6 years of age and your parents are yelling at each other. it's, you know, you think back on it now. it is traumatic and hard. >> reporter: must have been a lot of joys up and down and across the road. >> are you kidding, i would get up saturday morning. use to play with the spalding rubber ball. throw it. start at the red rick. white brick. red brick. you would win if you threw it all the way up there. literally, leave, 9:00, 10:00 in the morning and come back at 5:00, exhausted. i had been running all day long. but a happy exhaustion. by the way, i learned something also about democracy. we don't have much adult supervision.
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she was hoping her business background would strike a chord with voters. it did not. as for christie, he invested a lot of time and money in new hampshire hoping it would jump-start his campaign. ohio governor john kasich was a big winner in new hampshire finishing behind donald trump. ted cruz, jeb bush, marco rubio essentially tied for third. kasich and bush discussed the race on cbs this morning. others argue e gue you don't have the money or staff to meet, take advantage of the momentum out of new hampshire. >> charlie, a lot of people said i wouldn't get in the race. i wouldn't raise the money. i've wouldn't make the debate. i wouldn't do well. i would drop out. i would disappear.
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being underestimated. i have all my lifetime. we are in south carolina. we are going to compete here in parts of south carolina. look, i think people are tired of the negativity. i think the ability to talk about what you want to do. you know the reason a lot of people go negative is because the positive doesn't work. imagine if you are running for office. you didn't have much positive. all you spent your time doing was talking negative. that's sort of a downer, i think it is. and, but look, i think people want to know we can solve problems. my message is simple. republican or democrat.
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an american working together to solve problems. that message i think works. if it doesn't i can't change my message. just the way it goats. >> all right. >> politicians argue there may be a difference between negative and being comparative. jeb bush is running a lengthy ad attacking your record as governor of ohio noting you chose to expand medicaid. but also you offered, a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants. well that message resonate, will that message resonate in south carolina, much more conservative electorate than new hampshire? they just go negative, negative, negative. distorting negative. as arnold schwarzenegger once told me about campaign, negative campaigns. john, love the beatings. i do love the beatings. the fact is the bush campaign can't figure out what it is for.
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what he is for. they spend their time bashing somebody else. what did you discover from all the town meet sngz. >> charlie, a lot of people don't have anybody to listen to them that if don't have any body that sell bralts celebrates their victories and denlt have on't have people who can sit down and cry with them. the other aspect is that nothing in the country will be the way it ought to be if we are not creating jobs. able to do it as part of the committee in washington. i have a plan i can implement in the first 100 days each of tell people. you know me a long type.
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so many things i want to change. i tell people, get ready the first 100 days if you didn't have a seatbelt on your chair. go get one. you are not going to see anything like this. >> governor, what is your pathway to winning the nomination now? >> well i think the field will whittle down. i am a patient person. i wish it happened overnight. that's kind of the obsession of the pundits want that to happen. it will happen. when it does, i am the one candidate that has taken on donald trump that does not believe he is a conservative and head of the conservative party, nominee should be a conservative. i take my record one of accomplishment, disruption, changing the culture in my state capital to the people here of south carolina then on to nevada. >> some will argue that donald trump will get stronger and while it takes place and too late. >> that would be a disaster for the republican party and mean landslide defeats for a lot of really good people that are
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my case is one that, look, we can be angry about the status quo. or we can fix it. i have a proven record of how that works. that's what i this morning. and at hilton head. there will be 47 people there. we will get a sense of how people look that. buzz i think they do. >> on the democratic side. hillary clinton's campaign is still licking its wounds after being trounced by bernie sanders in new hampshire. sanders finished with 60% compared to clinton's 38%. he also within 83% of the youth vote. and finished 11 points ahead of clinton with female voters. nancy cordes has that part. >> women are normally a demographic hillary clinton can count on. but over the next few days, she is going to be asking a question that men have been pondering for centuries. what do women want. i know i have work to do. women went to the pollsen a big
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>> boat load of debt. be great to afford a house. and have kids. and cbs exit polling and generational divide. the only age group of women clinton won was ages 45 and up. overall, bernie sanders won the women's vote in new hampshire by 11 points. among women, 18 to 29. sanders beat clinton by nearly 60 points. the numbers show women were not convinced by this rallying cry from former secretary of state, madeline albright. >> there is a special place in hell for women who don't help each other. even clinton supporters say it's
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but you know -- >> never unstoppable, you? >> i would never want to say that. we had a great time. the people of new hampshire have been amazing. the way they just took me in. i have been friendly, have a lot of friend from the area. i thought i would do well there. >> what made the difference, iowa and new hampshire for you? >> i think we did really well in iowa. i got no credit. came in second. never did this before. haven't been a politician t in iowa, six months a politician. came in second. the largest number of voters ever, except for ted. we had the problem with ben carson. very unfair thing happened to him. if that didn't happen i would have within iowa. i was happy with iowa. came in second. came in third. made him like a star. i said what about me, came in second. what happened to me. >> marco rubio. >> yeah. >> the republican party is hell-bent, the establishment on
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even governor bush said this morning on this program, it would be disastrous if you were the nominee? >> well, jeb is a person who, you know he doesn't have it. he spent $38 million. >> he is not alone. you talked about him before. >> i did. the republican party, the establishment worries about you? >> charlie. >> they want to stop you. >> i am getting so many calls from the members of the establishment, people in the republican party were against me. they want to join the team now. >> it includes chris christie. he called you? >> he didn't call to say he is going to support me. >> he did call. >> he is a friend of mine. debate. he is a friend of mine the he congratulated me. you have done. numbers were fantastic. 34%. field. the four establishment candidates, together gained a greater percentage of the vote than you. since they're well funded do you think this will go on all the way to the convention? >> will i am much better funded than they are. it's called my own money. putting up my own money. better funded than any. when they put down trump. they don't put down anything. i put up my own money.
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by specialists, lobbyists and people. a lot of people, say, they check the results. they say that was a big reason i did so well. people are tired of it. >> politicians are controlled by the people that put up the money. >> donald trump where is this coming from. either people are excite add but your candidacy or mortified about your candidacy. >> i don't think mortified. i think they respected. well, they may be, not happy. but, mortified is a different kind of a word. >> politicians say they worry they lose the senate and the house if you are the head of the ticket. >> yet polls are coming out. polls showing i will beat hillary clinton easily. i don't know about the other one. i think the other one is going to be, if bernie gets it. i can't imagine that is possible. going to charge you 95%, tax. i thought i would beat clinton. i thought i would do something different. i have a chance of winning new york. look at the politicians. the six states.
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win ohio. florida. i can change the game because i really have a chance at new york. i'm going to win virginia. i'm going to win certain states. i am going to win michigan as an example. >> yes, director of national intelligence in congress saying that north korea's nuclear effort is the top threat to the united states. what would you do to deal with that reclusive country? >> i would get china to make that guy disappear in one form or another. very quickly. let me tell you. >> how do you make him disappear, assassinate him? >> well, i have heard of worse things, frankly. this guy is a bad dude. don't underestimate. any young guy can take over from his father with all the generals and any body else who want the position. this is not somebody to be underestimated. because china has control, absolute control of north korea. they don't say it. they do. and they should make that problem disappear.
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they're taking our money. they're taking our jobs. they're doing so much. we have rebuilt china with what they have taken out. we have power over china. china should do that. now, iran. >> force the chinese to take care of north korea. >> force the chinese to do it. >> economically, charlie. they're suck the money out of us. we have a trade deficit this year with china $500 billion. they're taking money out of our country. they're taking our jobs. >> they hold all our debt too. >> you know what, we owe them, think of it. they take our money. they take our jobs. they take our base. and guess what we owe, we owe them $1.7 trillion. we have a lot of power over china. don't underestimate. >> you would leave it up to the chinese? >> i wouldn't leave it up to them. i would say you got to diet. you've got to diet. >> if they said no what would you do? >> i would strongly, i'm going
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extent. maybe do it a little more forcefully. one other thing, we make that horrible deal with iran. the closest partner of north korea is iran. why didn't we put something in there, where we are making a deal. giving them $150 billion. why didn't we do something with iran, iran gets in. we force iran to get in and do something with north korea. we didn't do anything. when we made that deal. that deal is a horror show. one of the worst i have ever seen. when we made the deal with iran, why didn't kerry stay you have to help us out. we have a problem. north korea. playing around with nuclears. nuclears the whole game changer. if it weren't for that. we shouldn't be in the middle east. we can't take a chance that somebody plays the nuclear game. we should have done that also. china in the meantime has tremendous power over north korea and, they take our money so. we have power over china. >> it may be off the front pages. the situation there is awful. we have the defense secretary, ash carter, in brussels, convening leaders, they say we need more u.s. leadership, we should commit u.s. ground troops.
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>> syria is a different thing. i view isis, very important. i love the fact that russia is hitting isis. as the far as i'm concerned they have to continue hitting isis. >> in syria, russia is hitting the groups we are backing the. >> why are we backing the groups? we are giving billions of equipment to people, here we go again. we are giving all of this money and all of this equipment to people we have no idea who they are. they're probably worse than assad. assad is no baby, he's not good. but who are the people that we are backing? here we go again. >> that's president obama's argument. >> that's good. >> we have no idea. >> why is he doing it? he is giving them a lot of weaponry. we're backing people that want to knock out assad. russia and iran now a power, made them the power, they're backing assad. we have got to get rid of isis. we have to get rid of the people chopping off everybody's head >> you will be hearing more from donald trump this saturday when
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school of science and mathematics. mark strassmann met the teacher and his harmonious class. >> two and -- >> reporter: at north carolina school of science and math, this stage is full of academic virtuosos. high achievers bound for america's best colleges. and their maestro is phillip riggs. >> they're obviously motivated. one of the challenges i think is how do we put those folks together into in two years and make annen -- an ensemble. >> this public high school is unusual. juniors, seniors only. and 650 students live in dorms. >> wood winds. >> the 50-year-old music instructor taught the band to read from the same sheet of music and more. >> for people listening saying he has a bunch of smart kids how hard could that possibly be?
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very difficult. >> keep going. you have to be on your a game for sure. or they let you know it. >> reporter: they will? >> yes. i am okay with that. that's what keeps it fresh. what's the best part of this job for you? >> even when they're completely tired, and mentally they're drained from all the academic work they have done, you can still see in their eyes the fire of i want to do this well. >> reporter: john waters on trumpet is an 18-year-old senior. 77 students play in this band. but somehow, riggs makes each feel like the star soloist. >> he would be the first to ask, how is this going for you? about forming a personal connection. >> he is a special person. not a special teacher, a special person. >> sarah and graham are two
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>> reporter: what kind of impact did he have on you and music? >> tremendous impact. >> reporter: his players are his audience for a series of life lessons. >> you are not always going to get first chair. you are not always going to make all state. and that's okay. and he taught us that, even when we work very, very hard there is going to be obstacles in music and in life. and you just have off to keep going. >> reporter: you still play? >> i am still playing. >> reporter: graham mulvaney, 25. says riggs taught him to be a leader. >> he showed me what music can be. more than notes on a page. entire experience of shaping somebody's life of bringing joy to people. i had no idea what that was before. >> reporter: what is your teaching style? >> wow. it is about the music, but not main leap about the music. it is about integrity. character. enhancing their quality of life. the tool or the vehicle to do
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>> reporter: they're dedicated to their instruments. but most of riggs stew dnlts have ambitions beyond music. hoping to go to yale to major in chemistry. and greg mulvaney finishing medical school at north carolina, the specialty, neurosurgery. >> i wanted to be a doctor that played a saxophone. sarah stafford nominated riggs for the grammy award. >> i think he is an inspirer. by that i mean he is not just an inspiration, but he, he taught >> reporter: she is now a middle >> as a mother, as a wife, as a teacher, as a friend, it's always, always, about something bigger than myself. and i never would have learned that without him. >> reporter: two former students
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their weddings. >> how many kids from former band are you still in touch with? >> oh, wow. hundreds at least. >> that's who you are? >> it is who i am. if they've call. they write. they text. what can i do to help, i am there. one, two, ready. >> reporter: when you watch the grammys look for riggs in the audience. he will be sitting right where
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thank you. >> one taste of victory and trump is hooked. >> oh, i'm going to win south carolina. >> also tonight, fresh from his new hampshire win, sanders takes us to his brooklyn roots. what hardship formed the character that you have now? a cbs news investigation -- dubious medical tests unapproved by the fda. and at 93, he found love
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the love he lost seven decades ago. >> i said i'll see you soon. and away i went. and never saw her again. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." new hampshire shook up the presidential race with huge wins by democrat bernie sanders and republican donald trump. yesterday, chris christie and carly fiorina dropped out of the gop race. the field is now done to seven. trump beat john kasich, 2-1. now kasich rises to become a trump alternative. with ted cruz third. just ahead of jeb bush and marco rubio. sanders trounced hillary clinton by 22 points. major garrett with the republicans in the next battleground, south carolina. >> the right overcame the darkness of negative campaigning. i feel great about it. >> reporter: john kasich's second place finish in new
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republicans and independents. kasich! i think there is a -- >> reporter: here in south carolina he will face a conservative electorate. kasich says he is in the race for the long haul. >> we are going to do as well as on. i am really looking forward to the south. i'm really looking for ward to the midwest. i can't wait to go to michigan. >> oh, wow. wow. wow. wow. >> reporter: fresh off his first victory in presidential politics, donald trump told cbs this morning he will win south carolina. and he noted his similarities to democratic primary winner bernie sanders. >> i think i am a little against the establishment, he probably is also. >> what an incredible, incredible evening. >> iowa winner ted cruz finished third in new hampshire cast himself here as trump's worst nightmare. >> one of the most important conclusions coming out of the first two states is that the only candidate who can beat donald trump its me. >> i'm disappointed.
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and admitted overly scripted answers in saturday's debate hurt him. >> i thought i don't want to get into a republican knife fight here it doesn't look good. but it didn't work out well. >> one of the lessons you need to bring more knives? >> sometimes you have to deal with what they're throwing at you. don't have to start it. if some one starts you have to finish it. >> reporter: jeb bush arrived here with criticism for everyone. according to bush, trump is too insulting. kasich too moderate. rubio too inexperienced. and cruz too calculating. >> thanks. now to calculations of john dickerson, mod ray erator of the next republican debate. what are you expecting in south carolina? >> not a lot of southern cordial tichlt y cordialty, a bit of a history of being bruising. john mccain won in new hampshire came with a head of steam beaten
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ran into a brick wall in south carolina. bruising, personal fight with bush, mccain ended up losing by 12 points. in 2012 all over again. mitt romney won in new hampshire. then lost to newt gingrich. the state has more conservatives and more evangelicals than new hampshire it sets up well for senator ted cruz. but donald trump is ahead in the polls. he greeted ted cruz with a bruising ad calling cruise's integrity into question. with ten days left to go, scott. not going to get any nicer. >> thanks very much. john will nod rate the ninth republican debate from greenville, south carolina, saturday at 9:00 p.m. eastern. here at cbs. bernie sanders win last night was a rout after essentially tying clinton in iowa. today in his boyhood neighborhood in brooklyn, we asked about his plan for america and whether he can win on the harder road ahead. you looked look you were having fun at your victory party. >> i was.
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>> it only gets harder from here. >> don't think it is going to be our last one. >> but new hampshire, largely white. a more liberal population than the states that you are headed to next. >> south carolina. nevada. you are going to be facing african-american voters, latino voters. how do you appeal to those people? >> well the same way we appeal to all americans. look, if you and i were having this conversation, nine months ago, what would you have said to me? you would have said, bernie nobody knows who you are, you are regarded as a fringe candidate. you don't have any money. don't have any political organization. last poll we saw you with, 4%. how are you possibly going to do well in iowa or new hampshire? a lot has happened in nine months. >> what's your tax plan? awe my tax plan, at a time of massive wealth, the top 1% have as much wealth as blt tom 90%. we are going to ask the wealthiest people in the country
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start paying their fair share of taxes. >> but tax increases you envision for people in what income brackets? how low? >> well, the vast bulk of the tax increases would come from families making $250,000 a year or more. >> what is your top individual income tax rate? >> 52%. >> 52%. >> yeah, for people making $10 million or more. >> all the tax money he says will pay for free college tuition for students and free medical care for everyone. administered by the government. >> a government insurance program. people still go to the doctors they want. it is the same thing as medicare now. which exists for seniors. we would expanned it to all people. >> you have vowed to increase the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. >> over several years. >> aren't employers going to start laying people off. sorry, can't afford to keep you any more. >> quite the contrary. every worker in the country will be earning at least a living wage.
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workers will have disposable income. when you do that. you create jobs. >> every one of these ideas is dead on arrival in the congress? >> no it is not. >> change always takes place when millions of people stand up and fight back. and what we are talking about in this campaign is a political revolution. the republicans in congress are going to say you go ahead and have your revolution, but we are not going to have one here. >> but the republicans, for better or for worse are going to be drawn into this revolution. >> you are going to change their mind? >> no. the american people will change their mind. later in the broadcast, we'll talk to sanders about the hardships that shaped his ideas. the cbs evernight news
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nancy cordes is covering the nancy? state. but it exposed a couple of serious weaknesses for her campaign. softening support among women and almost no support among millenials. >> i know i have some work to people. >> clinton identified the problem last night. but now needs to solve it. and trying to capture the
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hallmark of the obama campaign. and now, surround bernie sanders. feel the bern! >> reporter: part of her challenge is younger voters tend to be more liberal voters. her opponent once again ties her left. voters under 30, suzanne jones went for sanders last night by more than 60 points. >> for me i don't care about gender or race or anything like that. if i share their views then they have my vote. >> clinton aide acknowledge she needs to reconnect with women who flk ocked to her first bid. she won new hampshire women by 12 points. last night lost them by nearly the same margin. teacher jesse collie was one of the defectors. >> a tough decision for you? >> there was. there is a female draw to hillary with me as well. and i do, go along with a lot of her, definitely her values as well. but i am just, yeah, bernie won out for me.
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>> clinton did win over the three high school seniors who diagnose her dilemma this way. >> i think because young voters tend to be idealistic. and bernie sanders, promises you the world, tuition free college, great. >> and there is another looming fund-raising. pressure from sanders made the optics of the ritzy big dollar fundraisers problematic for her. while he is on track, scott to raise $6 million online just in the 24 hours post victory. >> great insight, nancy. thank you very much. we are going to turn now to a disturbing investigation at an elementary school near washington, d.c. a teacher's aide charged with sexually abusing students. police say that they know of ten victims, but that could more than double.
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>> 22-year-old deonte carraway, paid teacher assistant and director of youth choir. during the school day at this school at glenarden and aquatic center, he was videotaping sexual acts between minors and abusing some victims 9-13. so far, detectives say they uncovered 40 videos. a victim's relative called police after discovering a nude photo sent via the messaging app kik on the child's cell phone. kik allows users to remain anonymous. a lawsuit filed alleging the abuse was common knowledge at school and that the principal refused to take any action. that principal is now on leave. and the school district says it will cooperate fully with the investigation. scott, carraway held on $1 million bail. according to court records does not yet have hand attorney. >> jeff, thank you very much.
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department sued ferguson, missouri, after the city rejected an agreement to reform its police and courts. 18 months ago a white ferguson cop killed michael brown, an unarmed black teenager, setting off violent protest thousands. >> going to call the meeting to order. >> reprter: decision to file a lawsuit against ferguson comes after angry residents debated the concerns that it will cost too much to comply. >> my fear is that with your vote tonight, if it is to sign the consent decree, that ferguson will cease to exist. protecting the citizens of ferguson should be our priority. >> reporter: council voted to approve the doj agreement with conditions. no additional salary increases for the police department or city employees. control over hiring contractors, extended compliance deadlines. and the right to back out of the
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department is ever dissolved. mayor james knoles. >> what we did was take out things we thought were immaterial to constitutional policing. >> reporter: the city has a $14 million budget and nearly $3 million in debt. negotiated consent decree, estimated to cost $10 million over three years. ten year ferguson resident, aly shah jordan says the price tag of the agreement is less than the cost of doing nothing. >> so much of this seems to be around money. >> it is. and i do understand, you know, because i am living it. we're all living it. but ought the end of the day well have to do what's right. >> reporter: the mayor told us it will be less expensive to fight the lawsuit in court than to implement the decree as drafted. possibility. both. >> thanks. some laminate flooring sold
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eye, nose, throat irritation and breathing difficulty according to the cdc today. concerns were raised by a 60 minutes investigation into formaldehyde in the flooring. the cdc says the cancer risk is low. coming up next -- tests for cancer are being sold without proof that they work. and -- the search for a lost love across seven decades and 15 time zones. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. living well your immune system works hard to keep you on top of your game. you can support it by eating healthy, drinking fluids, and getting some rest. and you can combine these simple remedies with airborne. no other leading immunity brand gives you more vitamin c. plus it has a specially crafted blend of 13 vitamins, minerals and herbs. so when you want to support your immune system,
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and enjoy living well. i think we should've taken a left at the river. tarzan know where tarzan go! tarzan does not know where tarzan go. hey, excuse me, do you know where the waterfall is? waterfall? no, me tarzan, king of jungle. why don't you want to just ask somebody? if you're a couple, you fight over directions. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. oh ohhhhh it's what you do. ohhhhhh! do you have to do thattright in my ear? (sounds of birds whistling) music introducing new k-y touch gel cr me. for massage and intimacy. every touch, gently intensified.
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k-y touch. seriously? where do you think you're going? to work, with you. you're not coming. i took mucinex to help get rid of my mucusy congestion. like 4 hours. forget the tacos! one pill lasts 12 hours. i'm good all day. wait! your loss. only mucinex has a bi-layer tablet that starts fast, and keeps working. not 4, not 6, but 12 full hours. start the relief. ditch the misery.
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and jim axelrod continues our report. >> reporter: last september, a company called pathway genomics launched a blood test making game changing claims. >> cancer intercept can detect a greg tumor in the body before a patient may notice symptoms. >> reporter: we were intrigued. a few weeks ago we sat down with pathway ceo jim plante to ask him about the evidence. can you tell me? >> beaver fore we launched the test we had a clinical study of more than 100. >> is 100 enough? >> well, it depends on what -- your, you're looking for, right? i mean, you could make an argument that there is never enough data, right. >> my question is about -- the testing. has your product been clinically validated? >> our test has been validated under the current regulatory requirements.
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under current fda regulations, labs that develop tests like these don't have to prove their claims before putting them on the market. it's become a profitable business model. >> they sell. they sell before they're ready. >> reporter: and a big concern for researchers like dr. theodora ross who runs cancer jen itices program at university of texas, southwestern. >> i think that people are not waiting long enough before they send the test out. >> do you feel sometimes the science gets short changed in the face -- of -- of the business? >> yes. if the fda would have come in said show me your data. couldn't show me the data. they should not be testing the patients. >> reporter: why not? >> it's useless. >> reporter: many tests may be useful. but right now there is no way to know. that may change later this year. when the fda its set to finalize more stringent regulation. jim axelrod, cbs news, san
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after new hampshire we wanted to know more about bernie sanders. he served four terms as mayor of burlington, vermont, eight terms in the u.s. house. 2006. but he grew up in brooklyn. the son of poor, jewish immigrants from poland. >> in the apartment houses i group in that one. good friends across the street. it was -- my mother's dream to get out of the apartment. and get a home of her own. but she died young and never achieved that dream. >> how old was your mother?
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>> how old were you? >> 19, i think. >> how did that affect you? >> significantly. significantly. not having enough money was a cause of constant tension and when you're 5, 6 years of age and your parents are yelling at each other. it's, you know, you think back on it now. it is traumatic and hard. >> reporter: must have been a lot of joys up and down and across the road. >> are you kidding, i would get up saturday morning. use to play with the spalding rubber ball. throw it. start at the red rick. white brick. red brick. you would win if you threw it all the way up there. literally, leave, 9:00, 10:00 in the morning and come back at 5:00, exhausted. i had been running all day long. but a happy exhaustion. by the way, i learned something also about democracy.
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