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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  October 26, 2016 2:07am-3:37am EDT

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most expensive senate race ever. >> julianna goldman on the senate tonight. thanks. let alone regain my life. with the right help and determination, i did. whateverdship you face, never give up. ou ask for help and lean on others for support.
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there is another race to election day, it is a surgef migrants from central america. unaccompanied children at the u.s. border are up nearly 50 manu echt l manuel bojorquezound out why. >> every day, the he illegally crossed into the u.s. and released by border patro with ankle monitors. while they file for asylum. brenda guillar fled honduras. >> translator: single mother
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honduras. we. >> we are getting mass spikes of people crossing turning themselves in. >> reporter: agent chris cabrera with the border patrol union. on some days they encountered 1,000 immigrants on the border. >> what'sriving them. >> smugglers are telling them if hillary gets elected there will be amnesty. so they need to get here by a certain date. they're being told if trump gets elected there will be a once the wall gets nobody will ever get in again. >> reporter: something edward suaritos fears. th is your last option you feel? >> translator: yes, he says because if trump wins, we won't be able to come in. and ask for asylum. at the church, it's time for this gro to head to the bus depot. the route scribbled on envelopes
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the numbers are not expected to simply drop after election ay tg as violence and poverty persist on the other side of the rio grande, smugglers will just find another reason to convince people it's time to cross. >> manuel bojorquezn the texas border. manuel, thank you. donald trump is wning about the possibility of voter fraud. in one city that he s pointed to is philadelphia. so we asked jeff into that. >> reporter: in a philadelphia warehouse, almost 4,000 electronic voting machines are ready to be rolled out. but some cybersecurity experts warn the machines which are used in most pennsylvania counties, are vulnerable. >> it is a relatively lucrative target if you are going to try to manipulate something. >> ben johnson, former nsa engineer with cybersecurity group, carbon black. he say these direct recording
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cast. king a recount in a tight race difficult. >> really around creating doubt. doubt in democracy. doubt in the integrity of the election process. >> i just hear such reports about philadelphia. >> reporter: donald trump has singled out philadelphia as being a hotbed for voter fraud. we have to make sure the people of philadelphia are protected. that the vote counts are 100%. >> so you have condence in the voting machines here? >> yes. >> reporter: republican scidt disagrees. he wrote a report on voting irregularities duringhe 2012 election. there have been dozensf cases but only 10 prosecutions. >> voter fraud does occur. but that is a completely different animal from vote rigging right or ramp ant voter fraud. which would involve hundred of people stealing thousand of votes to change the outcome of a presidential election.
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paper trail, the electronic machines are safe because they do keep a digital record of votes cast. and he points out, the individual machines are not connected to t internet. >> our voting system has more in common with a househo appliance than it does with a laptop or anything like that. >> that means -- they don't believe the voting machines themselves are, are vulnerable to a cyberattack. scott, with other aspects of the system. online, pennsva about, 40 states getting cybersecurity help, from the department of homeland security. >> jeff pegues, homeland security correspondent. thank you very much. the u.s. and its allies plan to force isis out of its capital city, raqqa, syria, shortly after the city of mosul, iraq is won. that according to u.s. defense secretary, ashe carter today. the liberation of mosul by iraqi
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american air power and special forces is still likely many weeks away. holly williams is with refugees who are spilling on to the battlefield. >> reporter: the refugees are a% fractionf under isis inside mosul. there are fears already that isis fighters could use the exodus to escape or launch terror attacks. men on arrival to interrogate them. these men told us they welcome it. because they fled here to be safe. but ahmet who came from the south its accused of bei an isis fighter. he admits that his father and two brothers joined the extremists, but is adamant that. >> why did you flee now? why not before?
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for people, even if they had family members in isis. he said. so, i came to find out. he can only join the other refugees, if he can prove he is innocent. awakened to the m ocht sul offensive. they're outgunned and outmanned. but fighting back with its tremark guerrilla tactics. suicide attacks a car bombs. in like this one in the town 200 miles west of baghdad. planting its fighters amongst sperate refugees to wreak more violence is a tactic that isis will find hard to resist. since thisffensive began, the united nations received unconfirmed reports of massacres in mosul, scott, including the
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in a village near the city. holly williams on the battlefield for us tonight. holly, thank you. well the u.s. is going to have to accept north korea as a nuclear power. that is what the director of national intelligence james clapr told charlie rose today. at the counciln foreign relations. that is their ticket to survival. i got a good taste ofhat when i was there about how the world lo they are under siege and very paranoid. >> clapper told charlie the u.s. has to assume the north koreans could launch a nuclear missile that could reach alaska or hawaii. coming up next, glaring problems with headlights. dawn helps open... something even bigger.
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extraordinary starts here. new k-y intense. a stimulating gel that takes her pleasure to new heights. k-y intense. thsu headlights on cars and trucks and it is not a pretty picture. here is transportation correspondent kris van cleave. researchers at insurance institute for highway safety say this is the typ of headlight every car should have. potential obstacles and the fence are clearly visible. now, look below. you can barely see them. and this is the view many drivers get from their headlights.
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>> a lot of the low beams we tested they don't allow drivers to see far enough. >> reporter: the institute began testing headlights this year looking at glare and visibility. out of 63 mid sized sedans, small suvs and pickups with 152 different headlight options, only two scored the top or good rating. the honda rieline and the toyota prius. 75 fee two deer can be spotted 150 feet away. but in the worst performing pickup tested, the 2016 chevy colorado, i driver can barely make out the person. >> you probably shouldn't be driving faster than 35 miles an hour with the low beams on this pickup. you won't have time to see what you ne to see. and still be able to avoid a crash. >> while all of the headlights meet federal requirements. such a poor showing in the tests will likely force changes.
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>> probably see manufacturers react and build better, brighter, glare free headlights in futuring products. the f 150 from ford earned high safety marks. its headlights, scott were ranked poor. >> chris, thank you very much. we'll be right back. i did everything i could to make her party perfect. almost everything. you know, 1 i n 10 houses could get hit by an expensive septic disaster. but for only $7 a month, rid-x helps break down waste.
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tum m tum tum. chewy delights. only from tums. momentum is building in congress to help national guard members forced to return reenlistment bonuses in the war in iraq and afghanistan. we told you here last night that pentagon auditors have decided that the bonuses weren't due years after the joined those askinghe pentagon to back off. and defense secretary ash carter ordered a depy to resolve this. the new york giants released place kicker josh brown after admitting to emotionallynd physically abusing his wife. he was arrested last year but not charged. the team said it didn't know the extent of the abuse until last week. still ead, is this finally the
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last night, dean reynolds told us about cubs' fever in chicago. tonight, in keeping with long standing cbs news policy, we give the opposition equal time. don dahler is in cleveland where the world series opens tonight. >> october 12th, 194. >> 1948, yeah. >> that was the big day? >> yeah, yeah. >> gino sumo was 10 when beloved
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>> did you thing it was going to take this time? >> when our team is in cleveland, yes. but i have been here a long time. >> but now the city once called the mistake by the lake is going through an identy crisis of sorts. >> with the nba champion cavaliers and now american league pennant, cleveland fans who lived throu decades without a single championship team are now getting used to the idea of winning. shelley is in cleveland. what's up, shelley. caller s the cubs would be the best thing ever, losing to the cubs would be the worst thing ever. we don't expect you to be good. we expect you to be watchable. if they win, the comedian who mined the town's misyear for laughs may need a new act. >> that was our identity for a long time. and whether it was a negative identity, at least we knew who we were. now we have to adjust and figure it out.
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>> in ohio they take the long view. distance isn't described by miles but how long it takes to get some where. if the indians lose, what's the reaction like? >> it is going to be terrible again. and i think we will with stand that. >> always next year or the year after that? >> we say that a lot. >> we say that a lot. >> but cleveland hopes next year is finally here. >> let's go! that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you, the continues. for others check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and be sure not to miss cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new
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wrel come to the overnight news. hillary clinton and donald trump are in the homestretch of the race for the white house. polls show trump fading in several battleground states. but insists the polls are wrong. clinton picked of the endorsement of former secretary of state colin powell and now focusing down ballot democrats win seats in the house and senate. nancy cordes begins our coverage. >> hello, broward county. >> reporter: the clinton juggernaut doesn't leave much to chance. see if you can spot today's message in coconut creek,
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street to the north regional library and cast your ballot today. clinton is spending the next four days in florida, north carolina and iowa. the battleground states with the biggest early voting programs. more than half of all ballots in the three straits will be cast well before november #th. then next week focus on ohio and pennsylvania where most voting happens on election day. everywhere she goes, she is stalked by wikileaks,ch included one that seemed t contradict what the president told cbs's bill plant in march 2015. >> when did you first learn that hillary clinton used an e-mail system outside the u.s. government for official business whilshe was secretary of state? >> the same time everybody else learned it through news reports. reporter: within minutes of the intervie clinton's former chief of staff cheryl mills told campaign aide we need to clean
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her. they do not say state.gov. >> he's caught up now. >> in orlando trump said the president should be investigated. >> this guy, he iss bad as she bring us some jobs. okay. >> donald trump will take some time off the campaign trail today for the grandpening of the new trump international hotel in washington, d.c. it is a $200 million renovation of the old d.c. post office. an right outside. trump's stop in washington will beshort. he is on a tour of battleground states. yesterday it was florida. major garrett reports. >> reporter: donald trump greeted supporters with gusto and looked for a political life line in the ongoing ws of obama care. the rates are going through the before it was passed. >> reporter: the obama administration said yesterday insurance premiums on the health
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average of 25% this year. in some states, premium increase will be much higher. the administration did say federal subsidies will go up to soften the blow. trump warned, democratic rival hillary clinton will make matters worse. she wants to put the government totay in charge of your health care despite the fact it is no good. it will be much more expensive than even today. >> today north carolina former president, bill clinton said his wife would fix the law. the law. attack the problems. she is the only person you can vote for that wants to do that. >> clinton has the also criticized sa fordable care act, giving trump and republicans fodder for attacks. >> people are busting it, 60 hours a week. wind up with their premiums doubled and coverage cut in half. it's the craziest thing in the world. trump bungled his health care message at an event with
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tremendous problem with obama care. >> reporter: the general manager of the course said most trump employees have company provided coverage and not obama care. >> ohio picked the winner of every presidential election since 1980. both donald trump and hillary clinton are flooding the airwaves trying to win votes. and a lot of people in ohio, they're fed up. mark strassmann reports. >> that is not who we are as americans. >> reporter: on great again. ads for donald trump or hillary clinton. brought on local television every three minutes. >> you have no job. >> in hillary clinton's america. >> more than 54,000 of them since june. >> overwhelping with ad. overwhelming with calls. overwhelming with nonstop political stuff.
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independent. betty drake is a democrat who leans nservative. >> if you get up at 7:00. what time have you heard the first ad? >> 7:03. >> then all day long? >> yes. it is a noig. >> turn off the tv? they have tried. these campaigns. >> i work for the hillary clinton kachl pain. >> will hunt you down. >> you get calls all day long from numbers youon't recognize. these are robo calls? >> then as if on cue. >> this has been going on for a year. [ phone rings ] >> what do you think the phone call was? >> a robo call. >> how ofteno you get these? >> every day. >> lots of campaign mail shows up. some times strangers stop by. >> from the clinton campaign. >> what did you do? >> actually my husband chased her away.
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million on ads in ohio. >> nothing any body said changed your mind one bit? >> no. >> a lot of noise for nothing? >> it is. a lot of noise for nothing. >> in iraq, the battle for mosul moving slowly. allied forces are reclaiming the surrounding towns, but most of them have been deserted for years. now there is a mad dash to get out of mosul before the fighting gets hot. holly williams is on the front line. the refugees are a fraction of those trapped inside mosul. there are fears already that isis fighters could use the exodus to escape or launch terror attacks. at this camp, housing some refugees from mosul they separate the men on arrival to interrogate them. these men told us they welcome it. because they fled here to be
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being an isis fighter. he admits that his father and two brothers, joined the extremists. but is adamant he did not. why did you flee now? why not before? we heard there was amnesty for people if they had family in isis. he said. so i cam to find out. he can only join the other refugees if he can prove he is innocent. a week into the mosul offensive. outgunned and outmanned. but fighting back with its trademark guerrilla tactics. suicide attacks and car bombs. digging networks of tunnels. and launching surprise assaults like this one in the town 200 miles west of baghdad. planting its fighters amongst
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violence is a tactic that isis will find hard to resist. the cbs "overnight news"
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a new generation of media moguls making a killing in the advertising business, they're called the influencers. and their influence is felt on line. they attct millions of followers on platforms, face book, twitter, ch major corporations are paying them millions to hawk their products. bill whitaker has the story for "60 minutes." if you find yourself dumbfounded by the notion that 21-year-old logan paul could become a millionaire with goofy online videos look this, then you are probably not a millenial.
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postings shot with the cell phone camera have attracted more than 30 million followers on all his platforms. more than either donald trump or hillary clinton. they're drawn to his boyish charm and slapstick humor. >> slapstick with a sense of wit, fun, high engy. that is your thing. advertisers know he is reaching their most coveted demographic. young people. he has been such a successful pitchman, he was featured on the cover of "ad week." >> the biggest companies in the world and brands have come to me to help sell their product to the younger generation. i speak the language of millenials and they respond to my content. >> reporter: they pay you well for this?
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internet. he inow in such demand, he has earned the freedom to make ad the way he makes his videos. off the cuff. we watched himaking a dunkin donuts ad in central park. alad-libbed. all his idea and style. >> reporter: you make this up on the fly? >> yeah, if someone has an idea. yeah, let's see. run with it. when he posted the ad it was viewed more than 7 million times. and dunkin donuts told us this sp primetime tv ad. for one day's work, logan paul s paid almost $200,000. >> whoo! >> so you are worth all the money these come pans pay you? >> to be worth three times the amount i'm getting paid. >> reporter: you are a bargain? >> i think anyone on the internet with eyeballs at this time and place is a bargain. because it's so new, no one
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>> the more followers an influencer has the more none kn they can make. the successful ones are an eclectic bunch. most in the 20s who started for fun. like zach ki. >> i call myself a digital magician. >> whoo. >> reporter: he but a following of 25 million with video illusions that are easy t binge watch. comedian has more than 20 million followers. all right. >> oh, my. >> oh. >> i posted my snap chat video i just shot five minutes ago. and now i have 35,000 views. >> one of the most successful is andrew bachelor. known as kinbatch, has more than 37 million followers. following is
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videos on vine are just six seconds long. >> what can you do in six seconds? >> teach you to cook something. >> in six second. >> yeah. >> make you laugh in six seconds. make you cry in six seconds. >> yeah. >> i can do it in four. >> show me what you do >> okay. show me how six seconds can make a star. >> aright. the movie ba vs. superman came out. minute movie. i am showing you, batman vs. superman was real and in six seconds. >> superman. >> reporter: ha-ha. did that get a lot of views? >> yeah, how many? >> couple milln. >> advertisers pay batch. he made a handful of videos wearing a jimmy john's logo and earned more than $300,000 from the sandwich maker.
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this? >> i can retire if ianted to. >> reporter: off six second videos. >> yeah. >> reporter: ha-ha. >> you hate me. that's a laugh of hate. >> i chose the wrong line of rk. >> reporter: social media influencers are a small slice of what the advertisi industry spend overall on ads. but it was enough to catch the eye of hollywood. paul kaser, an agent with caa one of the biggest talent firms do they make too much for what they do? >> absolutely not. they're the new rock stars with a bigger audience than old hollywood had a chance to access. when they take a video, picture. push a button on their phone, immediately disseminated to people across the planet. that level of access is unprecedented. >> caa made its name representing stars ohe big screen. bukaser represents emerging stars the tiny screen. we carry in our pockets.
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mpaign see how many millions watched it. where they watched it. what age they are. and their demo. furthermore, it's more than just the views. you can see their engagement. you can see, people are continuing to talk about a video afterward. and they're sharg. i don't know how you could put a price on that. because of the internet. logan paul has the a worldwide reach. we got a glimpse of his star por when we went for a stroll on hollywood boulard. >> h what is your me? >> are you french? yes. >> nice. >> do you know who he is in france? >> oh, no way. >> he is a star in france. >> all right. >> in just 20 minutes. visitors from kuwait, israel. mexico, swede send. also told us they follow paul. >> where are you from? >> mongolia. >> yeah. >> i don know where that is.
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recognizable face on social media than kim kardashians. she attracted more than 160 million followers. by exposing her life, seepingly minute by minute on line. this month, her visibility became a liability. when thieves in paris tracked her and robbed her at gun point of a reported $10 million in jewelry. jewelry she had shown on instagram, just a few days earlier. the incident is sll before the that being so public is what helped make her so popular. and wealthy. >> there are pitfalls. lack of privacy. ss oprivacy. that mit, that'not for everyone. >> reporter: a pitfall? >> for me, i can handle it. >> reporter: you are famous worldwide. would that famous kim kardashian
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>> not inhis way. i tally attribute my career to social media. >> reporter: i have readt out h monetize just the a of living? >> i guess so, yeah. >> reporter: the reality is she is a savvy business woman one of the first to turn the millions of eyeballs watching her online into millions o dollars she posts pictures and getsaid for clothes she wes, we have been talking to a number ma of them have different lents. ey, they -- do comedy. ey dance. ey sing. what's your talent? >> it is a tent to have a brand that's really successful off of getting people to like you for you. >> reporter: you he turned you empire. worth in excess of $100 million
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involveome kind of talent, you know? >> you can see the ful report th"overnight news" will be
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a new study found expensive pickup trucks have a major problem. their headlights don't exactly light up the road. insurance institute for highway safety, found the honda kris van cleave is standing by one truck that didn't make the cuts. >> reporter: the 150 one of the highest rated for safety. when it comes to the headlights with the led option itas deemed inadequate in all test scenarios. there is concern about many vehicles the institute tested that in researchers minds don't going freeway speed to spot an on
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lit by what insuran institute for highway safety sa is a well performing headlight. the led option on the 2017 honda ridgeline. the bottom from a 2016 chevy colorado with headlights that were rated poor. and pformed the worst of tho tested. >> you shouldn't bead driving faster than 35 an hour. with the low beams. yodidn't have time to see what you need to see and aindividual a crash. we can begin testing. >> the first year insurance institute tested headlight performance and consistently found they underperform. out of 63 vehicles, with 152 different headlight options, only two scored the top or good rating. the ridgelin and the t priu with upgraded led headlights. >> manufacturers cld do what theyhought w a pretty good job of designing t headlight.
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attention to how it was installed. so it might not have been aimed properly. automakers are listening now. says motor trend editor-in-chief, ed low. >> they'oing to have to change course and probably upgrade a lot of their products. becaus -- this standard gets -- rolled into ihss safety protocol it could affect les.va pickup. two of thehree headlht options scored poor, the other, compensatey're not as effective they could be or should they ar. >> ford tells cbs this morning safety is one of its highest priorities. fia/chrysler makes the ram and says the test does notgn with regulatory requirements. adding its vehicles meet or exceed those requirements. iihs says several automakers indicated they're making changes to headlight design and that could be becau starting next
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safety ranking possible, the
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heher krueger was diagned ar-ol with sta 4 liver disease. doctors said she had a few months to live >> they immediately told me i was going to need a transplant. >> reporter: n enough time to find a donor, right? >>,yhat type, i could
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officer for village of frankfurt, illinois. he says he was in the break room when he overheard a guy talking about this woman who need aid liver donor. >> i spent four years in marine corps. and learned there never to run away from anything. , i just said to my sef. hey can help i am going to help. keep in mind he never met heather. he got tested to see if he was compatible. when he fo time. >> whad lunch together. discussed what the whole process was going to be. >>id you buy at least? >> no here, bought. >> my gosh, this guy is amazing. >> yeah, he was as i remember. >> reporter: not long after they checked into the university of illinois hospital. the transplant, which involves removing about half of the donor's liver, wen off without a hitch. afterward. chris and heatheremained close. they got so close, in fact, he
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he had to be, really. i mean what's a wedding without a oom. and so it was, a year and a half after giving her part of his liver. she gave him all her heart. >> you are the most incredible man i have ever known. you believe in me. you make me feel amazing every single day. because of you, i laug smile, and i dare to dream again. >> reporter: acts of great kindness are done without expectation. when chris decided to give an organ to a random stranger, he had no idea he was saving his own wife. but such its the way of goodness, the more likely you likely you are to live happily ever after. steve hartman, on the road, in frankfurt, illinois. >> that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday.
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from the broadcastenter in new york city. obama care rate hikes. trump uses it to hammer clinton. awe i ll repeal it and replace it she will expand it. it will get more and more expensive. also tonight, a surge ata the >> the smugglers are telling them if trump gets elected there will be a magicalall that pop up overnight. danger on the highway. headlights on many pickups don't ach very far. >> is this heaven? >> no. it's cleland. >> do you think it was going to
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123 days now unt election day. fact is, novemr # is the last day to vote. eay voting is under w ready in states. for hillary cnton and donald trump,here is not a secon to e. r gtt is coverin trump. clinn anduran hello, bty >> the clinton jugrnaus not leave much to messe in cocon grove
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>> in fact, you go acrs the street right now to the north regional lrary and cast your ballot today. clinton is spending the next four days in florida, north ate she waetary of al business >> theame time ebody else learned it through news reports. interview, clinton's former chief of staff, cheryl mills told campaign aide we need to clean this up. he h-mailsrom her. they do not say state.gov. >> he's caught uno >> in orlando, trump sd the president should be investigated. >> this guy, he is as the bad as she is. and he's got to stop campaigning ang us sombs. okay. >> the president has no plans to stop campaigning. t one of his aides said he will probably be out on the
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fundair of tampaign tonight, scott, sot she can well. narrowing innlikely aces like texas and arizona for example. is clion going to make a play for the republican states? >> she might spend some money there. but her aideay that as of right now there are no plans to send clinton herself to those states. as enticing as the state like arizona is with its 11 electoral votes they say they still believe that her time is better spent in big battleground like florida and ohio. she would need to feel confident before she started venturing into republican territory. >> nancy cordes, thank you. major garrett. we learned trump is right about one thin there will be big obamacare rate increases, the benchmark going up 25% next year. what did he make of that today? >> well, scott donald trump has had some trouble staying on message. advisers insist heound an
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for e duration. health care. italliesepublicans and puts hillary clinton on the defensive. donald trump greeted supporters in sanford, florida with characteristic gusto and looke for a political life line in the on going woes of obamacare. >>he rates are going through the sky. we all know it. >> reporter: premiums on health care exchanges will rise by 25% this year. some states premium increases will be much higher. the administration did say federal subsidies will go up to soften the blow. trump warned democratic rival hillary clinton will make sheants to put the government totally in charge of your health care despite the fact it is no good. it will be much more expensive than even today. >> today in north carolina,
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said his wifwould fix the law. >> you keep what's good out the law. and attack the problems. the only person you can vote for. clinton also criticized affordable care act, giving trump and republicans fodder for attacks. busting it some times 60 hours a week wind up with their premiums doubled and their coverage cut in half. it's the craziest thing in the world. >> trump today bungled his health care ag having a problem with obamacare. >> the general manager said most emoyees have company provided verage and notbama the doral event also showcased a trump property. much the same will happen in the naon's capital tomorrow when trump officially opens his newest hotel. scott, trump's recent intuation with marketing has some republicans concerned he is not that interested in the closing days of the campaign, at least not politically. >> former republican secretary of state colin powell said he
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major garrett, democrats need a gain of five seats to take the senate or just four if they win the white house. because, a vice president kaine would break a 50/50 tie. one seat democrats have their e on is in pennsylvania. julianna goldman is there. >> i definitely need your help. we have twweeks g >> stumping in lancaster, pennsylvania, republican senator pat toomey argued he is need in the senate to stop the agenda of a prent hillary clinton. >> pennsylvanians want an independent senator who will evaluate policdependently. as it pertains to pennsylv and not just be a ank check for llary to >> polls here show clintonith a rong lead donaltrump. wh crary ked a tight race clinton she is f on ocused
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unwillingness to say if he wl vote for the g nominee. >> pat toomey owes it to voeers to answer whether he is voting for donald trump or not. >> i find it is a genuine dilemma. hillary clinton is unacceptable to me. i recognize that my party nominated a candidate who has serious flaws. >> toomey can't win without his party's base and points to what he would expect from a republican president trump. >> probably sign a repeal of obamacare, sanctions on iran, the is constructive things we could do. >> the senator also need to convince some clinton vote tires split the ticket especially in women in areas like philadelphia suburbs. recent blorg poll showed 76% were bothered a lot by trump's crude comments on the access hollywood tape. statewide, mcginty is winning points.
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and the dollars ba that up. scott, with 113 million spent so far it has already become the most expensive senate race ever. >> julianna goldman on the senate tonight. thanks.
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cer: you taught him how to hit a baball. how to hit a receiver. you even taught him how to hit the open man. but how much time have you spent teachg him...
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the is another race to election day, it is a rge of migrants from central america. unaccompanied children at the u.s. border are up nearly 50%. manuel bojorquez found out why. >> reporter: every day dozens o men, women and children, stream through the streets in texas to this migrant center at sacred heart, catholic church. they have just illegally crossed into the u.s. and released by border control with ankle monitors. while they file for asylum. brenda guillar fled honduras. >> translator: single mother looking for work. and also to flee thelence
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>> we are getting mass spikes of themselves in. >> reporter: agent chr cabre with the border patrol union. on some days they encountered 1,000 immigrants on the border. >> what's driving them. >> smugglers are telling them if hillary gets elected there wil be amnesty. certain date. they're being told if trump gets elected there will be a magical wall that pops up overnight. once the wall gets up. nobody will ever get in again. >> reporter: something edward suaritos fears. this is your last option you feel? >> translator: yes, he says because if trump wins, we won't
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and ask for asylum. at the church, it's time for this group to head to the bus depot. the route scribbled on envelopes show they're continuing the journey north. the numbers are not expected to simply drop after election day. scott, experts say that as long aslence and poverty persist on the other side of the rio anher reason to convince st find people it's time to cross. >> manuel bojorquez on the texas border. manuelthanyou. donald trump is warning about in one city that he has pointed so we asked jeff pegues to look into that. >> reporter: in a philadelphia warehouse, almost 4,000 ines are rey to be rolled out. but some cybersecurity experts warn the machines which are used
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to manipulate something. >> ben johnson, former nsa engineer with cybersecurity group, carbon black. he says these direct recording electronic machines don't have paperbackups of each ballot cast. king a recount in a tight race difficult. >> really around creating doubt. ubt in the integrity of the election process. >> just hear such reports about philadelphia. >> reporter: donald trumhas singled out philadelphia a being a hotbed for voter fraud. we have to make sure the people of philadelphia are protected. that the vote counts are 100%. >> so you have confidence in the voting machines here >> yes. >> reporter: republican elections mmissioner al schmidt disagrees. he wrote a report on voting irregularities during e 2012 election. there have been dozens of cases but only 10 prosecutions. >> voter fraud does occur. but that is a completely different animal from vote rigging right or ramp ant voter fraud. which would involve hundred of
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votes to change the outcome of a presidential election. >> schmidt says even without a paper trail, the electronic machines are safe because they do keep a digital record of votes cast. and he points out, the individual machines are not connected to the internet. ur voting system has more in common with a household appliance than it does with a laop or anything like that. >> that mes -- they don't system. online, pennsylvania is e of about, 40 states getti cybersecurity help, from the depament ome >> jf pegues, thank youch. > the u.s. and its allies plan to force isis out of its capital city, raqqa, syria, shortly after the city of mosul, iraq is won. that according to u.s. defense secretary, ashe carter today. the liberation of mosul by iraqi
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american air power a special forces is still likely many weeks away. holly williams is with refugees who are spilling on he ttlefid. >> reporter: the refugees a fraction of those still trapped under isis insidmosu ere are fears already at isis fighters could use th exodus to escape or launch terror attacks. this mp they separate the men rrivin thesmen told us elme it. because they fled here to be safe. but ahmet who came from th south its cused being an isisighter. he admits that h fatr and two brothersd thoine extremists, but is amant that
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why not before? >>e ard there was an amnesty for people, even if they had family memrs in isis. he said. soi came to find out. he can only join the other refugees, if he can prove he is innocent. week into the mosuld. but fighting back with its trademark guerrilla tactics.
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lling of0 police officers and the murder of 70 civilians a village near the city. holly williams on the battlefield for us tonight. holly, thank you. well the u.s. is going to have to accept north korea as a nuclear power. that is what the director of national intelligence james clapper told charlie rose today. at the council on foreign relations. thats thr ticket to survival.
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the insurance industry recently began testing headlights on cars and trucks and it is not a etty picture. here is transportation correspondent kris van cleave. researchers at insurance instite for highway safety say this is the type of headlight every car should have. potential obstacles and the fence are clearly visible. now, look below. you can barely see them. and this is the view many drivers get from their headlights.
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tested they n't allow drivers to see far enough. >> reporter: the institute began testing helights this year looking at glare and visibility. out of 63 mid sized sedans, small suvs and pickups with 152 different headlight options, only two scored the top or good rating. the honda ridgine and the toyota prius. 75eet out. two deer can be spotted 150 feet away. but in the worst performing pickup tested, the 2016 chevy colorado, i driver can barely make out the person. >> y probably shouldn't be driving faster than miles an hour with the low beams on this
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you need to see. and still be able to avoid a crash. >> whilell of the headlights meet federal requirements. such a poor showing in the tests willikely rce changes. ed low from motor trend. >> probably see manufacturers react and build better, brighter, glare free headlights in futuring products. the f 150 from ford earned high safety marks. its headlights, scott were ranked poor. 'll be right back.ry much. mmm... i can't believe it's so delicious. i can't believe it has 40% fewer calories than butter. i can't believe it's made with real, simple ingredients. i can't believe we're on a whale. i cabelieve my role isn't bigger. , it real. real ingredients. unbelievable taste. go ahead, enjoy. ? music ?
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momentum is building in congress to help national guard members forced to return reenlistment bonuses in the war in iraq and afghtan. weold yohere last night that pentagon auditors decided that the bonuses weren't due years after the fact. today house speaker paul rya joined those askth and defense secretary ash carter ordered a deputy to resolve this. the new york giants released place cker josh brown after he admitted physically and emotionally abusing his former wife. brown was arrested for domestic violence last year, but not charged. the team says it didt know the extent of the abuse until last week. ill ahead, is this finally the
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last night, dean reynolds told uout cubs' fever in chicago. tonight, in keeping with long standing cbs news policy, we give the opposition equal time. don dahler is in cleveland where the world series opens tonight. october 12th, 194. >> 1948, yeah. >> that was the big day? >> yeah, yeah. >> gino sumo was 10 when beloved cleveland indians last won the world series.
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>> when our team is in cleveland, yes. but i have beehere a long time. >> but now the city once called the mistake by the lake is going througan ideity crisis of sorts. >> with the nba champion cavaliers and now american league pennant, cleveland fans who lived thugh dedes without a single championship team are now getting used to the idea of winning. shelley is in cleveland. callers on sports radio expressed hofuconfidence. the cubs would be the best thing ever, losing to the cubs would be the worst thing ever. we don't expect you to be good. we expect you toe watchable. if they win, the comedian who mid the wn's misyear for laughs may need a new act. >> that was our identity for a long time. and whetr it was a negative identity, at least wew who we were.
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it out. >> game one, baby. >> in oh they take the long view. distance isn't described by miles but how long it takes to get some where. if the india lose, what's the reaction like? >> it is going to be terrible again. and i think we will with stand that. >> always next year or the year after that? >> we say that aot >> we say that a lot. >> but cleveland hopes next year is finally here. ntinues.f you, the news news" for others check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and be sure not to miss cbs this morning. from theroadcast center in new
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welcome to the overnight news. hillary clinton and donald trump are in the homestretch of e race for the white house. polls show trump fading in ve clinton picked of the endorsement of former secretary of state colin powell and now focusing down ballot democrats win seats in the housend senate. nancy cordes begins our coverage. >> hello, broward county. >> reporter: the clinton juggernaut doesn't leave much to
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see if you can spot today's message in coconut creek, a. in ft you can go across the street to the north regional library and cast your ballot today. clinton is spending the next four days in florida, north carolina and iowa. the battleground states with the biggest early voting programs. more than half of all ballots in the ree straits will be cast well before november #th. then next week fus on ohio and pennsylvania where most voting happens on election day. yw hacked e-mails released to day included o that emed to contradict what e present told cbs's bill plant in march 2015. >> when did you first learn that hillary clinton used an e-mail system outside the u.s. government for official business while she was secretary of state? >> the same time everybody else learned it throughews rerts. >> reporter: within minutes of the interview, clinton'sormer chief of sff chel mills told
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her. they do not say state.gov. >> hs ught up now. >> in orlandump said the president should be investigated. >> this guy, he is as bad as she is. he's got to stop campaigning and bring us some jobs. okay. >> donald trump will takme time off the campaign trail today for the grand opening of the new trump international hotel in washington, d.c. it is a $200 million renovation of the old d.c. post office. and protes s ty'll be right outside. trump's stop in washington will be short. he is on a tour of battleground states. yesterday it was florida major garrett reports. >> reporter: donald trump greeted supporrs with gusto and looked for a political life line in the ongoing woes of obama care. the rates are going through the sky. we all knew th knew it before it was passed.
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administration said yesterday th care exchanges will rise by an average of 25% this year. in some states, premium increases will be much higher. the administration did say fedel subsidies will go up to soften the blow. trump warned, democratic rival hillary clinton will make matters worse. she nts to put the government totally in charge of your health care despite the fact it is no good. it will be much more expensive than even today. president, bill clinton id his wife would fix the law. you keep what is good about the law. attack the problems. she is the only person you can vote for that wants to do at >> clinton has the also criticized sa fordable care act, giving trump and republicans dd for attacks. >> people are busting it, 60 hours a week. wind up with theremiums doubled and coverage cut in half. it's the craziest thing in the world.
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employees of t doral golf club. all my employees are having a tremendous problemh obam care. >> reporter: the general manager of the course said most trump employees have company provided coveragendevery presidential el e 1980. both donald trump and hillary inton are flooding the airwaves trying to win votes. and a lot of people in ohio, they're fed up mark strassmann reports. >> that is not who we are as throughout ohio. ogether we will make america great again. ads for donald trump or hillary clinton. broughon loc television every threminutes. >> you have no job. >> in hillary clinn's america. >> more than 54,000 of them since june. >> overwhelming with ad. overwhelming with calls. overwhelming with nonstop political stuff. linda marian is a registered independent.
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leans conservative. >> if you get up at 7:00. what time have you heard the first ad? >> 7:03. >> then all day ng? >> yes. it is a noig. >> turn off the tv? they have tried. these campaigns. >> i work for the hillary clinton kachl pain. >> will hunt you down. >> you get calls all day long from numbers you don't >> this has enng on for a year. [ phone rings ] >> what you thinkhe pho call was? >> a robo call. >> how often do you get these? >> everyay up. some times strangers stop by. >> from the clinton campaign. >> what did you do? >> actually my husband chased r away
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>> nhing any body said changed your mind one bit? >> no. >> a lot of nofo >> in iraq, the ttle f mosul moving slowly. allied forces are reclaiming the surrounding towns, but most of them have been deserted for years. now there is a mad dash to get out of mosul before the fighting gets h holly ms is on the front line. the fugees are a fraction of those trapped inside mosul. there are fears alrey th isis fighters could use the exodus to escape or launch terror attacks. at this camp, housing some refugees from mosul they separate the men on arrival to interrogate them. these men told us they welcome it because they fled here to be safe.
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he admits that his father and two brothers, joined the extremists. but is adamant he dinot. why did you flee now? why not before? we heard there was amnesty for people if they had family in isis. he said. so i cam to find out. he can only join the other refugeesf he can prove he is innocent. a week into the mosul offensive. outgunned and outmanned. but fighting back with its trademark guerrilla ta suicide attacks and car bombs. digging networ of tunnels. and launching surpriseaults like this one in the town 200 les west of baghdad. planting its fighters amongst desperate refugees to wreak more violence is a tactic that isis will find hard to resist. the cbs "overnight news" ll be right back. a new generatif media
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a new generation of media moguls making a killing in the advertising business, they're called the influencers. and their influence is felt on line. they attractlions of followers on platforms, face book, twitter, snapchat. majorporations are paying products. bill whitakehas the story for "60 minutes." if you find yourself dumbfounded by the notion th1-ar-old logan paul could become a millionaire with goofy online videos look this, then you are ? probably not a millenial. >> it's easy just dance. >> no budget, low quality
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than 30 million followers on all his platforms. more than either donald trump or hillary clinton. they're drawn to his boyish charm and slapstick humor. >> slapstick with nse of wit, fun, high energy. that is your thing. >> reporter: and he's turned it to by promoting products to his online followers. >> by mining online data, vertisers know he is reaching their most coveted demographic. young people. he h been such a successful pitchman, he was featured on the cover of "ad week." wohe biggest companies in the d and brands have come to me to hp sell their product to the unger generation. i speak the language of millenials and therespond to my ctent. >> reporter: they pay you well for this? >> yeah.
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he is now in sh demand, he has earned the freedom to make ad the way he makes his videos. off the cuff. we watched himaking a dunkin donuts ad in central park. all ad-libbed. all his idea and style. >> reporter: you make this up on the fly? >> yeah, if someone has an idea. yeah, let's see. run with it. when he posted the ad was viewed more than 7 million times. and dunkin donuts told us this spot had the same reac h a primetime tv ad. >> whoo! >> so you are worth all the money these come pans pay you? >> to be hones'm worth three times the amount i'm getting paid. >> reporter: you are a bargain? >> i think anyone on the internet with eyeballs at this time and place is a bargain. because it's so new, no one real knows what they're worth. >> the more followers an influencer has the more none knee they n make. the successful ones are an eclectic bunch.
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like zach king. >> i call myself a digital magician.t a following of 25 million with video illusions that are easy to binge wah. amanda serney, model turned comedian million followers. all right. >> oh, my. >> oh. >> i posted my snap chat video i just shot five minutes ago. and now i ha000 ve5,ews. >> one of the most successful is andrew bachelor. known as kg batch, has more th 3million followers.
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a star. >> all right. the movie batman vs. superman came t. 90 minute movie. i am showing you, batman vs. superman was real and in six seconds. >> superman. >> reporter: ha-ha. did that get a lot of views? >> yeah, how many? >> couple million. >> advertisers pay batch. he made a handful of videos wearing a jimmy john'sogo and earned more than $00 the sandwich maker. >> reporter: makg money of
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>> i can retire if ianted to. reporter: off s second videos. >> yeah. >> reporter:a-ha. >> you hatme. that's a laugh of hate. >> i c the wrong line of work. >> reporter: social media influencers are a sml slice of what the advertising industry spend overall on ads. but it was enough to catch the eye of hollywood. paul kaser, an agent with caa one of the biggest talent firm in town. do they make too much for what they do? >> they're the new rock stars with a bigger audience than old llywood had a chance to access. when they take a video, picture. push a button on their phone, immediately disseminated to people across thplanet. that level of access is unprecedented. >> caa made its name representing stars of the big screen. but kaser represents emerging stars of the tiny screen. we carry in our pockets. like logan paul.
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it. where they watched it. what age they are. and their demo. rthermore, it's more than just the views. you can see eir gament. you can see, people are continuing to ta about a video afterward. and they're sharing. i don't know how you could put a price on that. because of the internet. logan paul has the a worldwide reach. we g a glise of his star power when we wentor a strl on hollywood boulevard. >> how are you? what is your name? >> are you french? >> yes. >> nice. >> do you know who he is in france? >> oh, no way. >>e is a star in france. >> all right. in just 20 minutes. visitors from kuwait, israel. mexico, swede send.
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>> where are you from? >> mongolia. >> yeah. >> don't know where that is. >> i have no idea. >>re may be no more cognizable face on social media than kim kardashia she attracted more than 160 million follers. by exposing her life, seepingl minute by minute on line. this month, her visibility became a liability. en thieves in paris tracked her and robbed her at gun point of a reported $10 min in jewelry. jewelry she had shown on instagram, just a few days earlier. the and she hasn't posted since. before the robbery, she told us that being so public is what helped make her popular. and wealthy. >> there are pitfalls. la oprivacy. loss of privacy. that might, that's not for everyone. >> reporter: a pitfall? >> for me, i canandle it. >> repr: you a?re famous worldwide. would that famous kim kardashian
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i totally attribute my caeer to social media. >> reporter: i have read that you figured out how to monetize just the act of living? >> i guess so, yeah. >> reporter: the reality is she is a savvy business woman onof the first to turn the millions of eyeballs watching her online into millions of dollars she posts pictures and gets paid for clothes she wears, products she es, brds she endorses. we have been talking to a nuer of young, influencers. many of them have different talents. they, they -- do comedy. th dce. they sing. what's your talent? >> it is a talent to have a brand that's really successful off of getting people to like you for you. >> reporter: you have turned you into an empire.
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>> i would think that has to involve some kind of talent, you know? >> you can see the full report on our website, cbsnews.com. the "overnight news" will be right back. (achoo!) you can pick up the flu from surfaces for up to 48 hours. it's like having a sick family member in your home. but lysol kills 99.9% of germs
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d this. a new study found expensive pickup trucks have a major problem. their headlights don exactly light up the road. insurance institute for highy safety, found the hond ridgeline earned top marks. kris van cleave is standing by one truck that didt make the cuts. >> repr: the f-150 one of the highest rated for safety. whn it comes to the headlights with the led option it was deemed inadequate in all test scenarios. there is concern about many vehicles the institute tested that in researchers minds don't give enough light to a dver going frway speed to spot an object down the road and spot it.
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institute headlight. the led option on the 2017 honda ridgeline. the bottom from a 2016 chevy colorado with headlights that were ratedoor. and performed the rs tse tested. >> you shouldn't bead driving faster than 35 ahour. with the low beams. you didn't have time to see what you need to see and aindividual a crash. >> we can begin testing. >> the first year insurance institute tested headlight performance and consistently out of 63 vehicles, with 152 different headlight options, only two scored the top or good rating. the ridgeline and the toyota priusv with upgraded led headlights. >> manufacturers could do what
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buthen maybe not pay as much attention to how it was installe so it might not have been aimed properly. automakers are listening now. says motor trend editor-in-chief, ed low. >> they're going to have to ange course and probably upgrade a lot of their products. because as -- this standard gets -- rolled into ih safet protocol it could affect sales. >> tom evans owns a dodge ram pickup. two of the three headlight marginal. evans uses his fog lightto compensate. >> they're not as effective as they could be or should be for ing what they are. >> ford tells cbs thisorning safety is one of its highest priorities. sa the test does not align and with regulatory requirements. the headlight design thatnges
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some marriages appear to be made in heaven. others come together in ranger ways as steve hartman found out on theoad. >> reporter: there are always a wedding day. but the bride-to-be at this church outside chicago, had one person to thank over all others. de this possible. >> i wouldn't have been here if it wasn't for him. >> reporter: a couple years ago, out of the blue, 27-year-old
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doctors said she had a few months to live. >> they immediately told me i was going to need a transplant. >> rorter: not enough time to find a donor, right? >> no, by that type, i could rely feel my body shutting down. enter r hero. chris dempsey, a code endorsen't officer for village of frankfurt, illinois. he says he was in the break room when he overheard a guy talking about this woman who need aid liver donor. >> i spentour yes in marine corps. and lene mpatible. to see if he was to when he found out he was that's when they met for the first time. >> we had lunch together. discussed what the whole process was going to be. >> did you buy at least? >> no here, bought. >> my gosh, this guy is amazing. >> yeah, he was as i remember. >> reporter: not long after they checked into the university of illinois hospital. the transplant, which involves removing about half of the
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a hitch. afterward. chris and heather remained close. they got so close,n fact, he was at her wedding last weekend. he had to be, really. i mean what's a wedding without a oom. and so it was, a year and a half after giving her part of his liver. e gave him all her heart. >> you are the most incredible man i have ever known. you believe in me. you make me feel amazing ery single day. because of you, i laugh, smile, and i dare to dream again. >> reporter: acts of great kindness are done without expection. when chris decided to give an wh organ to a random stranger, he had no idea he was saving his own wife. but such its the way o goodness, the more likely you are to live for others, the more likely you are to live happily ever after. steve hartman, on the road, in frankfurt, illins. >> that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you, the news contues. for others, check back with us a
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captioning funded by cbs > it'sednesday, october 26th, 16. 13 days until the presidential election. this is the "cbs morning news." to haunt hillary clinton this morning. the latest round highlights her staff's concerns over her stincts, while donald trump gets another reason to pounce on the president. >> this guy, he's as d as she is. >> meanwhile, clinton's strategy to get out the ear vote continues and so does her outrage over trump's refusal to accept the electionresults.

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