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tv   CBS Morning News  CBS  October 28, 2016 4:00am-4:31am EDT

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captioning funded by cbs it's friday, october 28th, 2016. eleven days until the presidential election. this is the "cbs morning news."> campaign last night when mike pence's plane went skidding off a laguardia runway. >> suddenly we hit the ground, big thump, followed by big thumps. trump hits hard over new links between the clinton foundation and bill clinton's pockets. >> just imagine what they will do, given the chance, to once
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>> two first ladies, one stage, as michelle obama joins hillary clinton on the campaign trail for the first time. >> hillary doesn't play. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. investigators are trying to figure out why a plane carrying republican vice presidential nominee mike pence skidded off the runway guardian airport. it was raining and safety technology stopped the plane preventing a more serious accident. brooks silva-braga is at the laguardia airport. >> joo crews are working through the night to move the plane. we saw a bulldozer levy the tail and heavy matter laid down around the wheel but the plane
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arrive later this morning. the boeing 737 that carried mike pence remains in the grass off the runway at laguardia airport this morning, the spot where it ended up after coming dangerously close to a major new york city highway. >> it was relatively close to the grand central. it would have been hundreds of feet away, if i had to guess. >> we have an emergency at the airport. we are getting help for you. >> reporter: port authority official say the aircraf landing in heavy rain. >> i looked up and i saw this trump-pence plane making a noise and screeching and it came to a stop right here. >> reporter: allen hee has been following governor pence on the campaign trail for cbs news and was on the plane at the time. >> we hit the ground. a big thump. followed by a series of bump and you could smell rubber in the cabin. >> reporter: everyone on board, including governor pence, his
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were unharmed. authorities say beds at the end of the runway slowed the plane down and may have saved lives. >> the arrester beds served their purpose tonight. >> reporter: republican nominee donald trump called his running mate from the battleground state of ohio. >> i just spoke to our future vice president and he is okay. >> reporter: democratic nominee hillary clinton tweeted glad to hear mike pence, his staff, secret service and the crew are all safe. governor pence also took to responders. after cancellinging a fund-raising event last night, governor pence is scheduled to keep his event today which includes campaign events. >> it's reported that hillary clinton is strongly considering naming vice president joe biden at her secretary of state if she is elected president. a source tells politico that biden is at the top of a short
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team but clinton aides are trying to figure out how to approach biden and he has not officially been told. biden almost ran against clinton but campaigning hard for her the past few months. biden is well-known and respected on the national stage. clinton made her first joint appearance with the first lady, while trump tried to make hay following the release of a new batch of hacked e-mails. craig boswell reports. >> reporter: donald trump accused bill and hillary clinton using their charity to cash in personally. he was seizing on the latest batch of clinton campaign e-mails released by wick wikileaks. >> mr. band called the arrangement unorthodoxed.
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corrupt. >> reporter: band said he was the foundation's chief fund-raiser and arranged more than $50 million in for-profit activity for president clinton including in kind services for the president and his family for personal travel, hospitality, vacation, and the like. >> i think we have had enough of the clinton's, in all fairness. >> reporter: trump made those comments in ohio where he is tied with clinton. she campaigned in north carolina, another must-win state. the former first lady got a t >> she is absolutely ready to be commander in chief on day one and, yes, she happens to be a woman. >> reporter: clinton urged supporters to help her build on the obama legacy. >> i, for one, and i hope all of you, do not want that hard work by our president and our first lady and millions of americans to be wiped away. >> reporter: while clinton hat lead in most national polls, the latest one from fox news shows
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craig boswell, cbs news, the white house. well, today, clinton campaigns in iowa, while trump makes his case in iowa as well, as new hampshire and maine. in north dakota now. law enforcement officers moved on demonstrators protesting an oil pipeline. the protesters set fire to a bridge and threw molotov cocktails. barry petersen has our report. >> reporter: it was tough and it was tense, as police moved forward to take over make-shift camps and protesters were detained. it was an unequal fight. police had billy clubs, mace, and weapons. this is the way it's been going. the police have just arrested one of the protesters. over here, the protesters continue to taunt them. and every time a protester makes a move, the police move right along with them.
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activists eagleman struggled to keep the peace. you can win against all of this? >> no, i'm not saying we are going to win, but it's going to be a tough battle spiritually. >> reporter: cass county sheriff paul lamy ran the law enforcement operation. >> our emphasis here is we don't want a confrontation. the last thing north dakota law enforcement wants is a confrontation. the last thing the state of north dakota wants is a confrontation. >> reporter: the camp is blocking construction of nearly 1,200 mile pipeline that would carry cru fields to illinois. builders want to tunnel under the missouri river. the native americans say if there was ever a leak, they would pollute a tribal life line that also provides drinking water to millions of americans down stream. the protesters have come here from reservations across the u.s. and neither side shows any sign of giving in.
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in a surprising turn, the leaders of an armed occupation of a national wildlife refuge in oregon were acquitted following a seven-week trial. ammon bundy and his brother ryan and five others were charged. they occupied the refuge for 41 days. bundy's attorney called the verdict stunning. the family still faces assault and charges stemming another standoff at nevada ranch. in iraq forces trying to attack mosul. iraqi and kurdish ground troops aided by u.s. air strikes are approaching from different directions. more than a million civilians remain in mosul and many are running for their lives. holly williams is in iraq. >> reporter: thousands of civilians are escaping from isis as the extremists retreat from their villages. this offensive has killed hundreds of isis fighters,
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with over 300 square miles claude by by iraqi and kurdish forces to the east and south, but they still haven't entered mosul itself. at the american base, south of mosul, major chris parker told us protecting the city's 1 million civilians will make the fight more difficult. >> air strikes do become more complicated when you move to a major metropolitan area. and the fighting will be more complicated. this is a tough fight. they have been dug into for two years now and had time to prepare. >> reporter: there are 50,000 iraqi ground forces, compared to the 5,000 isis fighters thought to be in mosul. but the extremists have one terrifying weapon. the suicide car bomb, a vehicle ladened with explosives. isis has used dozens of them in
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caught on the front line. they want to die. i guess the only, you know, real comparison is kamikaze pilots in the second world war? >> when you're dealing with that mentality, it's a very dangerous enemy, no doubt about that. coming up on the "morning news." a gymnast files a lawsuit against some of the biggest names in sport. plus a suspect is arrested for vandaling donald trump's star on the hollywood o ? ? is the "cbs morning news." with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, nutella adds a smile to any morning. one jar; so many delicious possibilities.
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in a deadly amtrak crash and gymnastics official are named in an abuse lawsuit. those are some of the headlines on the morning newsstand. the indianapolis star reports that the nation's governing body of gymnastics is accused of turning a blind eye to sexual abuse. a former member of the national team says the team doctor abused her for five years. she is suing usa gymnastics and the doctors and team leaders bela a known to acknowledge the alleged abuses. more than 30 people have accused the doctor of sexual abuse. a jury awarded more than 70 million dollars to a woman who said baby powder sawed her cancer. the third lawsuit linking johnson & johnson to a lawsuit. the company says it will appeal because science supports the safety of its product. national public radio
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dollar settlement with those affected by a deadly crash last year. eight people were killed and more than 200 were hurt when a speeding train derailed in philadelphia. the settlement is $30 million under the cap for damages set by congress. and the des moines register says an iowa woman will soon break more records in space. peggy whitson will become the oldest female astronaut when she is sent to the space station in two weeks. she has spent 377 days in space. still ahead, buying is cut off. -- vine is cut off. it is coming to an end. see me. see me. don't stare at me. see me. see me. see me to know that psoriasis is just something that i have. i'm not contagious. see me to know that... ...i won't stop
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apple sold 5% fewer iphones. on the cbs "moneywatch" the building at vine closes down and new rules to protect your online data. jill wagner is at the new york stock exchange with that and more. good morning, jill. >> reporter: good morning. internet service providers now must get your permission before selling the data that they collect to marketers. providers like comcast or verizon collect information about your health, finances, children, social security smartphone your location and they used to be able to sell it all to marketers but under some new fcc rules, they have to inform customers about the information they collect and obtain permission to share it. well, the commerce department releases third quarter gross domestic product numbers this morning. u.s. stocks were down yesterday while bond interest rates climbed to their highest level since may. the dow lost 29 points. the s&p sank six and the nasdaq
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amazon shares took a dramatic hit in after-hours trading falling more than 5%. the world's largest online retailer's third quarter profit fell short of analysts' expectations and posting its lowest quarterly profit in a year. amazon opened new warehouses and is trying to meet shorter delivery times and that caused costs to go up. twitter is cutting about 9% of its employees and ending vine, that is the mobile video app it recently bout. vine allowed u video clips that play on a loop. over time, though, they lost out to competitors like snapchat and instagram. twitter says it will not delete any vines that have been post for now. >> jill wagner at the new york stock exchange, thanks a lot, jill. still to come, high tech cooking. we will show you the newest gadgets that will help you fix
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here's a look at today's forecast in some cities around the country. the robots can now take over your kitchen if you let them. chris martinez checks out the new smart appliances that can think like a chef. >> reporter: the smart appliance trend that started in the living room is now moving into the kitchen. >> you look at ovens. the technology has not changed in 50 years. >> reporter: it uses sensors and scales and cameras to determine what you're cooking and place something inside like this piece of salmon and the convexion oven's computer figures out how to cook it and you can monitor the food from your smartphone. >> we are, in essence, teaching
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jo. sensors help to determine what you've put in enough ingredient based on weight. the scale's research chef jessica insert has been testing it for more than a year. when with was the last time you used a measuring cup? >> not in a year. >> reporter: this has cameras inside and at the grocery store, shoppers can use their smartphone to see if they are out of milk and there is a touch screen where you canoo recipes. and if you want to go hands-free, siri and other voice recognition have the answer. mark helps design kitchen products. >> some really smart forward thinking company saying, well, how could we make seamless experiences in the kitchen? >> an ideal recipe he says that mixes food with technology.
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coming up after your local news on "cbs this morning," the stars of elementary lucy liu and johnny lee miller. i'm anne-marie green. this is the "cbs morning news." y teeth was weakening. the whiteness wasn't there as much, my teeth didn't look as healthy as others. my dentist said that pronamel would help protect my teeth. pronamel is giving me the confidence to know that i'm doing the right thing so it's nice to know that it was as simple as that. ? ?you don't own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? ?just let me be myself?
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?you don't own me?
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a group of lucky shelter dogs are joining a new pack. a high school cross country team is getting the dogs out of their cages and out on the trails. here is carter evans. >> reporter: at the santa barbara county animal shelte they want to run! they want to play. hi, guys! >> reporter: coordinator stacy silva came up with a plan that cross country coach louis escobar couldn't refuse. >> you got a bunch of dogs in cages and want to be outside and want to run and i have a group of high school students who want to run. >> reporter: perfect match. >> perfect match. the dogs realized they were getting out of those kennels and to go outside as a group, it was just happy chaos. >> reporter: who does most of
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pulling? >> she does the. i'm just along for the ride. >> reporter: when the kids of st. joseph first ran with the kids. >> it was millions and millions of views and shares. >> reporter: at the end of that viral video, 16-year-old josh manussa holds a tired terrier named fred. >> fred has had it! >> reporter: a week later, he returned to the shelter. >> the first started crying. oh, no, he needs to come with me. >> reporter: they are inseparable. the newest manussa family dog. the attachment is real. >> we have to put them back, it's kind of, like, i'm really sorry about this, but hopefully you'll get adopted. >> reporter: does a dog that gets exercise and socialize more, does it make it more adoptable? >> 100%.
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show you just because now you're paying attention to it and it makes a huge difference. >> reporter: this trainiregimen not help them win more races, but they have won over a bunch of hearts. >> a great idea. no one was injured when the plane carrying vice presidential candidate mike pence slid york. pence, members of his family and aides and reporters were on board. the plane skidded on the runway but was slowed by an arrested safety barrier designed to prevent planes from running over the runway. coming up after your local news on "cbs this morning," we will go to oklahoma and show you the draw backs of being a nonbattleground state.
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we will talk to dr. tara narula and take you to pikes peak park and show you the foliage. that is the "cbs morning news" for this friday. thanks for watching.
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