tv CBS Overnight News CBS March 16, 2016 2:37am-4:00am EDT
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show me the real evidence rather than just making claims. it's very hard to do. another thing. >> reporter: how much evidence can you show in 30 seconds? >> you can't. these should be 60 second ad. >> you can't kill some one, who the public has come to have faith in. >> luntz says effective ads, credible. >> if there is one anti-trump ad that might work. this one is it. >> we used to have made in the usa. >> produced by anti-trump our principles pac, this uses interview with david letterman to go after trump's record of
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>> ties are made in where, china? >> taking things donald trump has said. and giving them a mega phone. >> the group's founder is gop strategist, katie packer. >> there isn't any one silver bullet. it take is a lot of information to convince people that they have been duped. >> florida is the first state where our principle's pac has tried to replicate the strategy that stopped trump from winning the iowa caucuses. luntz says it is likely too late. >> you should have done this 90 days ago. >> all negative ads flooding the airways this season has a lot of parents wondering how to talk about the election with their children. turns out the kids may know more than you think. chip reid has the story. >> reporter: we are at middleburg charter school and fifth graters are holding their own presidential debates. they told me that their debates are more focused on the issues and a whole lot more polite than
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who really enjoys watching the debates? >> a little. >> little bit. >> what do you look watching abut the debates, max? >> they make us laugh. >> reporter: make you laugh? >> any bed in ody in particular? >> donald trump. >> reporter: donald trump makes you laugh. all laugh. >> yes. >> reporter: why does donald trump make you laugh, ella? >> i agree with some of his platforms. it's just, he has never been in politics, but some how he is winning. >> reporter: max, ella, brin, alanya are middle schoolers. >> if you were old enough to vote, what is the main reason you would not vote for donald trump? >> i don't think he ever answers the questions. >> reporter: he doesn't answer the questions? max? >> huh ow mean he is. >> a policy question. >> let's see if he answers.
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don't worry abit, little marco. >> donald trump is a pathologic liar. >> hey, bernie get your people in line, bernie. >> excuse me. i'm talking. >> first of all this guy is a choke artist and liar. >> mean, unruly, uncivil, or unhinged. >> it is a disgrace, get him out. get him out. >> the 2016 election cycle has been tough for some adults to watch. these students feel the same way. >> are you tired of them being mean to each other? >> yes. >> tired of them talking over each other? >> yes. >> are you tired of them making fun of each mother? >> yeah. >> where do you think all that started? >> donald trump. >> donald trump. >> that's not good for your reputation. i have to tell you. >> do you think a lot of people like donald trump because of the issues? or because he is entertaining? or both? >> because he is entertaining. >> does it surprise you that people support him? >> yeah. >> he says he is going to make am great again? >> yeah.
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>> no. >> think he will make it worse. >> you do? >> yeah. >> reporter: they pay close attention to a range of issues, immigration, gun control. terrorism. >> >> donald trump said one way you deal with terrorism is keep all muslims out of country from coming into the country? >> not all muslims are bad. >> yeah. >> say that again, max? >> not all muslims are bad. >> not all muslims are bad. >> some muslims are probably super nice. >> reporter: they may disagree for trump but aren't exactly rooting for the other candidates either. >> personally i wouldn't vote for like -- hillary clinton. but, what i most am worried about, even if a woman was president, would all of the women's rights like, issues be, solved? >> i would she do a better job, not necessarily. >> what do you think of bernie? >> bernie, he made too much promises. >> reporter: do you look forward to being able to vote? >> yes.
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your age should be able to vote? >> yes. >> reporter: you do? >> uh-huh. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. oncert style might show your age, your skin never will. with olay you age less, so you're ageless. olay. ageless. hi, anne. how are you doing? hi, evelyn. i know it's been a difficult time since your mom passed away. yeah. i miss her a lot, but i'm okay. wow. that was fast. this is the check i've been waiting for. mom had a guaranteed acceptance life insurance policy through the colonial penn program, and this will really help with the cost of her final expenses. is it affordable? it costs less than 35 cents a day-- that's pretty affordable, huh?
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dove men+care. the strength test. like leather, skin is stronger when it's hydrated. that's why dove men+care bodywash has a unique hydrating formula to leave skin healthier and stronger. jill and kate use the same dishwasher. same detergent. but only jill ends up with wet, spotty glasses. kate adds finish jet-dry with five power actions that dry dishes and prevent spots and film, so all that's left is the shine. for better results, use finish jet-dry. even in death michael jackson continues to make headlines. his estate is selling his extensive music catalog to sony for 3/4 billion dollars and include the rights to a lot of beatles song.
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of his fame in the 1980s when he began purchasing the rights to songs including much of the beatles catalog. that upset sir paul mccartney at the time. the two collaborated previously. the king of pop became the owner of three million of the world's most iconic songs including classics from the rolling stones, carol king and bob dylan. this is thriller >> reporter: michael jackson was famous for owning the spotlight. showcasing his original style of musical genius. but off the stage, the late king of pop ruled over a treasure trove of music and melanies written and performed by other legends. hey jude >> reporter: including the beatles. i want them to >> the rolling stones.
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>> reporter: and bob dyalan. jackson purchased atv publishing for $41.5 million. and included the beatles catalog and many lennon/mccartney classics. in 1995 jackson sold half interest at sony to create atv publishing. the deal gave jackson, now his estate, 50% control of some of the newest generation of stars. including taylor swift. ed sheeran, and farrell. it don't matter if you are black or white >> proved to be the pop star's most lucrative investment in a business career riddled with failures and debt. you've been hit by a smooth criminal >> jackson's estate agreed to sell its stake in the company to sony for $750 million. the sale is expected to finalize in march.
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on what jackson paid for atv originally. overseas, china's communist government is moving to combat the terrible air pollution around beijing with pedal power. seth doan is there. >> reporter: we have seen plenty of pollution busting gimmicks and cans of fresh air. this was a publicity stunt. now beijing is looking at another way to combat smog and bad traffic. and about as low tech as you can get. early each morning, he prepares or well braces for his commute. the 39-year-old zig-zags through beijing traffic on his 30-minute journey through the city of more than 5.5 million cars. it is dangerous he admits. cars and bikes are fighting for space on the road. what can you do? 28,000 new cars came on to beijing streets last year.
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smog and snarled traffic, city planners are looking to the past. riding bikes is a good way to avoid being stuck in terrible traffic. adding, bikes are totally green and have zero emissions. he is with beijing's transportation department across the city it installed nearly 1900 racks filled with rental bicycles. they're free for the first hour and less than $2 for a day. >> seems like there is an awful long we to go before the bikes are really a way to cut down on pollution and any significant manner. >> it takes time, he acknowledged. we now have more than half a million users bane shing. and figure every new bike will attract 11 new users. beijing plans to add 10,000 more bikes this year. there was a time of course when
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of bicycles. in 1980, more than 60% of commuters rode bikes. by 2000 that number dropped to 3%. and by 2013. fewer than 12% of chinese commuters rode bicycles. the communist party aims to get the numbers back up to 18% by 2020. beijing was inspired by the success of bike sharing programs in paris and amsterdam and looked to new york city for tips on adding bicycle lanes. special lanes are already being built in china's capital to improve safety. he would welcome anything that would make his commute a tad less hair-raising. >> translator: my fantasy is more bike riders will gin me, he said, and fight for space on the road. urban planners across china are looking at a number of ways to try to battle pollution.
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spring break for millions of college students. that means beaches, beer and sometimes trouble. mark strassmann is in miami where the police claim they're overwhelmed. i'm standing in the heart of south beach. 100 yard that way. 7 miles of beautiful beaches. over here on the street this is where the party really happens. as, outnumbered police try to corral and contain tens of thousand of partiers. >> this is ocean drive on south beach. think of it as a mosh pit that stretches at least eight blocks. how many kids? couple hundred thousand is a frequent guess.
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the real number no longer matters except to miami beach cops. fewer than 400 of them trying to keep the lid on. >> you can deal with one or two not thousand of them. >> bobby jenkins is president of the local fraternal order of police. >> worse than in years past? >> yes. >> how so? >> people leave when you tell them to leave. here they want to challenge you and take-up on about it. >> reporter: take last friday night. the beach party moved into the street and out of control. >> i guess the people got too rowdy. >> reporter: seven parters were arrested. in florida's panhandle. panama city beach is still recovering from last year's spring break. this video of an alleged gang rape of an unconscious woman on a crowded beach. no one stopped it. seven people shot at a house party. more than 1,000 arrests in march alone. the city banned drinking on the beach this year.
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year old tyler gilmore from indiana after a day of drinking fell to his death from a parking garage. mark frizz, gilmore's high school wrestling coach. >> spring break should be fun. and go and be safe. >> drinking in public is banned in miami beach. police there admit they have so many other issues that ban is widely ignored. and in south beach, this party gets going again, in a few hours. the peak spring break season goes on untilened of the month. the family of tyler gilmore told us they hope his death is a reminder of what else can happen on spring break and huh to prevent it. >> that's the "cbs overnight news" for this wednesday. check back with us later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center here in new york city, i'm demarco
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this is the "cbs overnight news." the this is the "cbs overnight news." half the states have now voted in primaries and caucuses this year and democratic insider, hillary clinton, and republican outsider donald trump appear to have a look. clinton beat bernie sanders in florida, ohio, north carolina and illinois. essentially tied in missouri. >> we are moving closer to securing the democratic party nomination and winning this election in november. our commander-in-chief has to be able to defend our country not embarrass it. engage our allies not alienate
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defeat our adversaries, not embolden them. when we hear a candidate call for rounding up 12 million immigrants. banning all muslims from entering the united states, when he embraces torture, that doesn't make him strong, it makes him wrong. >> are you tired of a handful of billionaires running our economy? well, if you are, you have come to the right place. we started this campaign at 3% in the national polls, we have come a long way in ten months.
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as well as we have, the reason that we have defied all expectations, is that we are doing something very radical in american politics, we are telling the truth. >> on the republican side, trump won florida forcing marco rubio out of the race. trump also won north carolina and illinois. trump and cruz essentially tied in missouri and will split those delegates. but in ohio, john kasich kept his hopes alive with a big win in his home state. >> number one, i want to congratulate marco rubio on
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campaign. he is tough. he is smart. and he has a great future. he has the got a great future. but i have to say, and -- nobody has ever, ever, in the history of politics received the kind of negative advertising that i have. record, record, record. by the way, mostly false. i wouldn't say 100%. about 90%. mostly false, vicious, horrible, they say it was $1 million the first week, last week, $25 million. added up to over $40 million. and you explain it to me because i can't. my numbers went up. i don't understand it. nobody understands it. my numbers went up. so, again, i just want to congratulate everybody. this is a really interesting
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it is an amazing process. it is very tough. but it is -- by the end if you get to the end, you can handle a lot of things including pressure. that i can tell you. because the there is nothing like. lies, deceit, viciousness, disgusting reporters, horrible people. some are nice. some are nice. some really disgusting people back there. and, i just want to say we are going to go forward and we are going to win. but more importantly we are going to win for the country. we are going to win, win, win. we are not stopping. we are going to have great victories for our country. thank you very much, everybody. thank you. thank you. >> i haven't had a chance to speak to him. i've want to congratulate donald trump on his victory. big victory in florida. no, no, no, no. no, no, no. no, guys. we live in a republic. our voters make these decisions. we respect that very much.
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i want to begin by thanking all of you here today. the politics of resentment against other people will not just leave us a fractured party, they're going to leave us a fractured nation. they're going to leave us as a nation where people literally hate each other. because they have different political opinions. we find ourselves at this point its not surprising. for the warning signs have been here close to a decade. in 2010, a tea party wave carried me and others into office, not enough was happening. that tea party wave gave republicans a majority in the house. nothing changed. the same voters gave republicans a majority in the senate. still nothing changed. and i blame some of that on the conservative movement. a movement that is supposed to be about our principles and our ideas. but i blame most on our political establishment. but after tonight it is clear that while we are on the right
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on the winning side. i take great comfort in the ancient words which teaches us -- that in their hearts, humans plan their course. but the lord establishes their steps. while it is not god's plan that i be president in 2016, or maybe ever, and while today my campaign is suspended. the fact that i have even come this far is evidence of how special america truly is. and all the reason more why we must do all that we can to a special place. >> to those who supported marco. who worked so hard, we welcome you with open arms. only two campaigns have a plausible path to the nomination. ours and donald trump's. nobody else has any mathematical possibility whatsoever. only one campaign has beaten donald trump over and over and
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not once, not twice, not three times, but nine times all across the country from alaska to maine. tonight, tonight we arrived in cleveland. and we went to a restaurant. we thought we could kind of sneak in and grab a quick meal. and when we walked through the restaurant people started to cheer. my reaction i said please don't do that because you are going to make me cry. but to have -- to have people believe in you, and to belief that you can bring people together and strengthen our country, i have to thank the people off the great state of ohio the i love you is all i can tell you. i love you.
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in north carolina, about 1,000 voters cast provisional ballots because they didn't have enough identification to meet the state's new strict voter id law. the law was passed even though voter fraud is almost unknown there. opponents say the law is meant to silence minority voters and here is mark strassmann. >> reporter: as north carolina voted this morning, maria del carmen sanchez thorpe woke up worried. >> i need to present a valid north carolina i.d. >> you are anxious?
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how many may not show up. >> reporter: she is 58 years old, a u.s. citizen born in cuba. all her photo ids, passport, driver's license say sanchez her maiden name. >> that is a problem. voter registration has married name. >> reporter: sanchez-thorpe says latinos use multiple last names with sometimes conflicting ids. north carolina estimates 225,000 of its registered voters may not have a valid driver's license. of the 11 states with record black voter turnout in 2008, seven have enacted stricter voter id laws including north carolina. wendy wiser studies elections at nyu law school. >> these laws are a backlash against increasing participation by new voters and the political process. >> but republican state representative david lewis supports the new laws.
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incidences of voter fraud in the last five years do you know about? >> we don't know how if, how widespread that may be or may not be. isn't the integrity of our republic worth maintaining that somebody is who they say they are when they present themselves off to vote. >> sanchez-thorpe did get to vote. but by mid afternoon. roughly 1,000 voters without valid ids had to cast provisional ballots they need to be verified before the votes scan be counted. mark strassmann, cbs news. president obama today was critical of the rhetoric of the campaign. he was speaking at what was billed as a unity luncheon at the capitol. he had some kind words to speak about the speaker of the house. >> i suspect that all of us can recall some intemperate words that we regret. certainly i can. and while some may be more to blame than others for the
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responsible for reversing it. for it is a cycle that is not an accurate reflection of america. and it has to stop. speaker ryan, you and i don't agree on a lot of policy, but i know you are a great father and a great husband. and i know you want what's best for america. and we may fiercely disagree on policy and nfc north. and i don't have a bad word to say about you as a man. >> the president today on civility. in another important story, floodwaters are getting deeper and no place has been hit harder than deweyville texas on the louisiana border. david begnaud is there. >> reporter: this is the worst flooding deweyville has seen in over 100 years. everything, sheriff's department, post office, church,
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grocery store is underwater. deweyville, town of 1,100 sits west of the sabine river, a funnel for tributaries carrying walt walt -- water downstream from three larger bodies of water. 20 inches of rain over the last week. and 45 billion gallons of watr release from an overflowing reservoir left deweyville flooded in four feet of water. >> look at the dog. >> rescuers spotted animals in need of help. this dog had to be coaxed into the boat. >> oh. >> downriver is christa's home with two feet of water inside. >> it's horrific. i never would have in all my 26 years thought i would see what i'm seeing right now. >> heading with the rescuers who check on a guy. refused to leave his flooded home. one of the rescuers thought it was pitiful. >> no one responded.
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shore, we spotted ray holden. >> do you plan on leaving? >> why not? >> i have guns, food, water. >> guns, food, water? >> yeah. i got everything i need. >> reporter: here in deweyville, the sabine river is cresting through tomorrow morning. scott, the river is expected to crest at 33.2 feet. 9 feet above flood stage. >> david begnaud, thank you. vladamir putin appears to be making good on his pledge to begin withdrawing russian forces from syria. today several war planes flew home to a hero's welcome. the russians have launched more than 9,000 bombing missions in syria since september. and turned the tide of the civil war to the assad dictatorship. tonight, cbs news has learned that the american who defected to, from isis, and then surrendered to kurdish forces, had left the d.c. area in mid december. three months with isis was
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elizabeth palmer has more from irbil in northern iraq. here is the moment kurdish soldiers find out they have detained an american. >> where are you from? >> the united states. >> reporter: minutes earlier the kurds grabbed him when he walked out of the scrubland at dawn and right into their front line. in broken arabic and english he told them he wanted to surrender. one of the kurds who arrested him, but didn't want his face shown, said, he confirmed he had been fighting for isis. how did you make sure that he wasn't a suicide bomber that he had no explosives on him? we got him to lift his shirt up and drop his pants to prove it he said. that standard procedure all along the kurd, front line. anyone crossing has to strip to
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26-year-old mohamed kweis had his driver's license, two credit card and three cell phones with $4,000. he gave himself up here at the village of gaulat near talafar. kurds say it was a mistake. he had been aiming for the turkish border but was double crossed by the smuggler hired to take him there. back in virginia, reporters showed up at the family home to ask questions. but a scene that started out as merely chaotic turned hostile whn kweis' father turned the hose on them. kweis' parents say they lost touch with their son and they have no idea how he ended up where he is tonight in the custody of kurdish intelligence. and it is not clear, scott, how long before he returns to the u.s. but the department of justice is already planning to file charges against him. >> liz palmer in northern iraq for us tonight. liz, thank you.
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mother teresa will become a saint on september 4th. pope francis cleared the way by attributing two miracles to her work. mother teresa devoted her live to working with the sick and the homeless in calcutta, india. she died 19 years ago at age 87. >> the cdc is urging drastic action to stop an epidemic of prescription painkiller overdoses. and, he talks constantly about china. now, what china says about trump. the cbs overnight news will be right back. my son and i used to watch the red carpet shows on tv now, i'm walking them. life is unpredictable being flake free isn't. because i have used head and shoulders for 20 years. used regularly, it removesr up to 100% of flakes keeping you protected live flake free for life hey there, heard the good news? spray 'n wash is back... and even better. it's powerful formula removes everyday stains the first time. which is bad news for stains, and good news for you.
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today the cdc urged doctors true stop overprescribing opioids, painkillers that includes vicodin and oxycontin. there is a groegs epidemic of addiction, and each day, over 40 from overdoses of these drugs. here is dr. jon lapook. >> 60-year-old executive recruiter, steven diamond was prescribed opioids. in 2004 to treat chronic and skiing. whatever the doctor gave me wasn't enough. so i got more. >> reporter: it wasn't long before he became addicted and >> i think the doctors make it easy for you.
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one to ten. tell me what you are feeling. >> reporter: today the cdc said enough is enough. dr. tom friedman. >> it is driven by doctor prescribing. but because doctor prescribing drove this, doctor prescribing can also help stop it. >> reporter: the cdc recommendations include patients and doctors should first consider pain management that doesn't include opioids, physical therapy, exercise and medications like ibuprofen. before prescribing opioids.% outline addiction, and they should be low dose and short acting. >> a lot of people who get into problems with opiates, start with acute pain. that's why we say, that for most episodes of acute pain, three days will be enough. it is very rare that more than seven days will be needed. >> the cdc hopes clinicians will check an online database to see
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doctors to get the drugs. >> they scan be a gateway to heroin as well. jon, thank you very much. >> in a moment, what the chinese say about trump. donald trump never passes up a chance to mention china. as recently as six months ago, seth doan found that few chinese had ever heard of him. they know him now and have plenty of opinions. china's global times calls trump a racist and compares him to hitler. here is seth in beijing. >> do you know this man? >> trump. it is trump. >> reporter: just his picture triggers opinions. >> little bit crazy. >> reporter: you think trump would be tougher on china? >> yeah, much tougher.
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taking our money. >> how much more are people talking about donald trump than say, the other candidates? >> much more. much more. >> reporter: he takes clips from the campaign trail and translates them into chinese. then he posts them on line with subtitles for his 370,000 followers on webo, china's twitter. >> reporter: what is the range of opinions you hear about donald trump? >> from, a total liar and bigot. to the only truth telling candidate. >> i know him. >> reporter: we have seen trump's name recognition here increase compared to last fall. no, this is not jeb bush. >> china has taken millions of jobs. >> reporter: after he took so many high-profile jabs at china. >> the greatest theft in the history of the world. >> i think his business need china. i don't know why he says something very mean. >> reporter: 7,000 miles away. >> i think this is kind of a
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donald trump has picked up the first win of this day. he got 272% of the vote and all nine delegates in the northern mariana island. a pacific island change ruled over centuries by spain, germany and japan. it is now one of five u.s. territories whose citizens can vote in primaries and caucuses. but not in the november election. with that victory, trump met a gop requirement that a candidate win more than 50% of the delegates in at least eight
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." half the states have now voted in primaries and caucuses this year. and democratic incider, hillary clinton and republican outsider, donald trump appear to be all but unstoppable. have a look. clinton beat bernie sanders in florida, ohio, north carolina, and illinois. essentially tied in missouri. >> we are moving closer to securing the democratic party nomination and winning this election in november. our commander-in-chief has to be able to defend our country, not
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engage our allies not alienate them. defeat our adversaries, not embolden them. when we hear a candidate for president call for rounding up 12 million immigrants, banning all muslims from entering the united states, when he embraces torture, that doesn't make him strong, it makes him wrong. >> are you tired of a handful of billionaires running our economy? well, if you are, you are come to the right place. we started this campaign at 3% in the national polls.
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months. the reason we have done as well as we have, the reason that we have defied all expectations, is that we are doing something very radical in american politics. we are telling the truth. >> on the republican side, trump won florida forcing marco rubio out of the race. trump also won north carolina and illinois. trump and cruz essentially tied in missouri and will split those delegates. but in ohio, john kasich kept
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in his home state. >> number one, i want to congratulate marco rubio on having run a really tough campaign. he is tough. he is smart. he has a great feature. he has a great future. but i have to say, and nobody has ever, ever, in the history of politics, received the kind of negative advertising that i have. record, record, record. by the way, mostly false. i wouldn't say 100%. but about 90%. i would say mostly false. vicious. horrible. they say it was 18 million the first week. meaning last week. and 25 million. it added up to over 40 million dollars. and you explain it to me because i can't. my numbers went up. i don't understand it. nobody understand it. my numbers went up. >> so again, i just want to congratulate everybody. this is a really interesting process.
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it is very tough. but it is a -- by the end if you get to the end. you can handle a lot of things including pressure. that i can tell you. there is nothing like it. lies, deceit. viciousness. disgusting reporters. horrible people. some are nice. some are nice. some really disgusting people back there that i -- and i just want to say we are going to go forward. we are going to win. but more importantly we are going to win for the country. we are going to win, win, win. we are not stopping. we are going to have great victories for our country. thank you very much, everybody. thank you. thank you. >> i haven't had a chance to speak to him. i want to congratulate donald trump on his victory. big victory in florida. no, no, no, no. no, no, no.
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we live in a republic. our voters make these decisions. and we respect that very much. it was a big win. i want to begin by thanking all of you here today. the politics of resentment against other people, will not just leave us a fractured party. they're going to leave us a fractured nation. they're going to leave us as a nation where people literally hate each other. because they have different political opinions. but we find ourselves at this point is not surprising. for the warning signs have been here close to a decade. in 2010, the tea party wave carried me and others into office. because not enough was happening. that tea party wave gave republicans a majority in the house. but nothing changed. and in 2014, the same voters gave republicans a majority in the senate. and still, nothing changed. and i blame some of that on the conservative movement. a movement that is supposed to be about our principles and our idea. political establishment. but after tonight it is clear
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side, this year, we will not be on the winning side. i take great comfort in the ancient words which teaches us that in their hearts, humans plan their course. but the lord establishes their steps. while it is not god's plan that i be president in 2016, or maybe ever. and while today my campaign is suspended. the fact that i have even come this far is evidece of how special america truly is. and all of the reason more why we must do all we can to ensure that this nation remains a special place. to those who supported marco, who worked so hard, we welcome you with open arms. and only two campaigns have a plausible path to the nomination. ours and donald trump's. nobody else has any mathematical possibility whatsoever. only one campaign has beaten
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over again. not once, not twice, not three times, but nine times all across the country. from alaska to maine. tonight -- tonight we arrived in -- in cleveland. and we went to a restaurant. thought we could sneak in and grab a quick meal. and when we walked through -- the restaurant, people started to cheer. my reaction. please don't do that. because you are going to make me cry. to have people believe in you. bring people together and strengthen our country. i have to thank the people, of the great state of ohio. i love you. >> hi, everyone.
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i'm demarco morgan. anti-donald trump forces within the republican party had another unsuccessful primary day. trying to derail his quest for the nomination. ty glasses. kate adds finish jet-dry with five power actions that dry dishes and prevent spots and film, so all that's left is the shine. for better results, use finish jet-dry. plumpify your lashes with new plumpify mascara a ginormous lash lifting brush boosts lashes to 50 times the volume and lifts lashes up up and away... new plumpify mascara from easy breezy beautiful
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lysol max cover. its innovative cap has a 2x wider spray that kills 99.9% of bacteria. max cover is another great way to lysol that. >> hi, everyone. welcome to the overnight news. i'm demarco morgan. anti-donald trump forces within the republican party had another unsuccessful primary day. trying to derail his quest for the nomination. trump's opponents spent more than $24 million on attack ads over the past two weeks. more than half of all of the money spent on gop ads over that time. jeff glor reports. >> reporter: it is the newest attempt by republican candidates and super pacs supporting them to weaken donald trump.
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one conservative group is raising millions with the sole promise of spending it to attack the front-runner. >> bimbo. dog. fat pig. real quotes from donald trump about women. >> donald trump campaign violence. >> donald trump will always put himself ahead of us. >> reporter: voters from ohio to florida are bombarded by ads like these. >> he gets the nomination. they're going to sue his [ bleep ]. >> attacking everything from donald trump's off color campaign style to his failed business ventures. >> my job was to sell people on trump university. >> reporter: since late february, 23,000 commercials attacking donald trump have run nationwide. according to ad tracking group. >> two out of every five tv spots on the republican side for the last week attacked donald trump in some way. >> reporter: are they working? >> every time you attack donald trump, trump goes up. attack him again, he goes up >> reporter: yet watching all negative ads about donald trump? >> it's crazy.
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foolishness. american democracy. >> reporter: cbs news contributor, republican strategist frank luntz, analyzed ads this cycle. one of least effective attacks on trump. >> trump entrusted convicts to help him run his company. >> pathetic. it is pathetic, it is not, it is not authentic. show me the real evidence rather than just making claims. it's very hard to do. another thing. >> reporter: how much evidence can you show in 30 seconds? >> you can't. these should be 60 second ad. >> you can't kill some one, who the public has come to have faith in. >> luntz says effective ads, negative ones have to be credible. >> if there is one anti-trump ad that might work. this one is it. >> we used to have made in the usa. >> produced by anti-trump our
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interview with david letterman to go after trump's record of out sourcing. >> ties are made in where, china? >> taking things donald trump has said. and giving them a mega phone. >> the group's founder is gop strategist, katie packer. >> there isn't any one silver bullet. it take is a lot of information to convince people that they have been duped. >> florida is the first state where our principle's pac has tried to replicate the strategy that stopped trump from winning luntz says it is likely too late. >> if you wanted to defeat donald trump, you should have done this 90 days ago. >> all negative ads flooding the airways this season has a lot of parents wondering how to talk about the election with their children. turns out the kids may know more than you think. chip reid has that part of the story from middleburg, virginia. >> reporter: we are at middleburg charter school and 5th graders are holding their own presidential debates. they told me that their debates are more focused on the issues and a whole lot more polite than
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who really enjoys watching the debates? >> a little. >> little bit. >> what do you like watching about the debates, max? >> they make us laugh. >> reporter: make you laugh? >> any body in particular? >> donald trump. >> reporter: donald trump makes you laugh. all laugh. >> yes. >> reporter: why does donald trump make you laugh, ella? >> i agree with some of his platforms. it's just, he has never been in politics, but some how he is winning. >> reporter: max, ella, brin, alanya are middle schoolers. >> if you were old enough to vote, what is the main reason you would not vote for donald trump? >> nobody. what is the main reason you wouldn't vote for donald trump? >> i don't think he ever answers the questions. >> reporter: he doesn't answer the questions? max? why would you not vote for him? >> how mean he is. >> because of how mean he is. >> a policy question. >> let's see if he answers.
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>> donald trump is a pathologic >> hey, bernie get your people in line, bernie. >> excuse me. i'm talking. >> first of all this guy is a choke artist and liar. >> mean, unruly, uncivil, or unhinged. >> it is a disgrace, get him out. get him out. >> the 2016 election cycle has been tough for some adults to watch. these students feel the same way. >> are you tired of them being mean to each other? >> yes. >> tired of them talking over each other? >> are you tired of them making >> yeah. started? >> donald trump. >> that's not good for your reputation. i have to tell you. >> do you think a lot of people issues? or because he is entertaining? or both? >> does it surprise you that people support him? >> yeah.
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am great again? >> yeah. >> do you believe him? >> no. >> think he will make it worse. >> you do? >> yeah. >> reporter: they pay close attention to a range of issues, immigration, gun control. terrorism. >> donald trump said one way you deal with terrorism is keep all muslims out of country from coming into the country? >> not all muslims are bad. >> yeah. >> say that again, max? >> not all muslims are bad. >> not all muslims are bad. >> some muslims are probably super nice. >> reporter: they may disagree for trump but aren't exactly rooting for the other candidates either. >> personally i wouldn't vote for like -- hillary clinton. but, what i most am worried about, even if a woman was president, would all of the women's rights like, issues be, solved? >> i think the barrier needs to be broken for a woman to be president. would she do a better job? nos necessarily? >> what do you think of bernie? >> bernie, he made too much promises. >> reporter: do you look forward
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your age should be able to vote? >> yes. >> reporter: you do? >> uh-huh. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. (cell phone rings) where are you? well the squirrels are back in the attic. mom? exterminator... can i call you back, mom? he says it's personal this time... if you're a mom, you call at the worst time. it's what you do. fifteen percent or more on car insurance, r it's what you do. it's very loud there. are you taking at zumba class? there's moving... and there's moving with move free ultra. it has triple-action support for your joints, cartilage and bones. osteo-bi flex pills, it's all in one tiny pill. get your move on. when heartburn hits fight back fast tums smoothies starts dissolving your tongue
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>> michael jackson at the height of his fame in the 1980s when he began purchasing the rights to songs including much of the beatles catalog. that upset sir paul mccartney at the time. the two collaborated previously. the king of pop became the owner of three million of the world's most iconic songs including classics from the rolling stones, carol king and bob dylan. this is thriller >> reporter: michael jackson was famous for owning the spotlight. showcasing his original style of musical genius. but off the stage, the late king of pop ruled over a treasure trove of music and melanies written and performed by other legends. hey jude >> reporter: including the beatles. i want them to >> the rolling stones.
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>> reporter: and bob dyalan. jackson purchased atv publishing for $41.5 million. and included the beatles catalog and many lennon/mccartney classics. in 1995 jackson sold half interest at sony to create atv publishing. the deal gave jackson, now his estate, 50% control of some of the newest generation of stars. including taylor swift. ed sheeran, and farrell. it don't matter if you are black or white >> proved to be the pop star's most lucrative investment in a business career riddled with failures and debt. you've been hit by a smooth criminal >> jackson's estate agreed to sell its stake in the company to sony for $750 million. the sale is expected to finalize in march. and more than 17,000% increase
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originally. overseas, china's communist government is moving to combat the terrible air pollution around beijing with pedal power. seth doan is there. >> reporter: we have seen plenty of pollution busting gimmicks and cans of fresh air. this was a publicity stunt. now beijing is looking at another way to combat smog and bad traffic. and about as low tech as you can get. early each morning, he prepares or well braces for his commute. the 39-year-old zig-zags through beijing traffic on his 30-minute journey through the city of more than 5.5 million cars. it is dangerous he admits. cars and bikes are fighting for space on the road. what can you do? 28,000 new cars came on to beijing streets last year.
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smog and snarled traffic, city planners are looking to the past. riding bikes is a good way to avoid being stuck in terrible traffic. adding, bikes are totally green and have zero emissions. he is with beijing's transportation department across the city it installed nearly 1900 racks filled with rental bicycles. they're free for the first hour and less than $2 for a day. >> seems like there is an awful long we to go before the bikes are really a way to cut down on pollution and any significant manner. >> it takes time, he acknowledged. we now have more than half a million users in beijing. and we figure every new bike will attract 11 new users. beijing plans to add 10,000 more bikes this year. there was a time of course when china was known as the kingdom
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in 1980, more than 60% of commuters rode bikes. by 2000 that number dropped to 38%. and by 2013. fewer than 12% of chinese commuters rode bicycles. the communist party aims to get the numbers back up to 18% by 2020. beijing was inspired by the success of bike sharing programs in paris and amsterdam and looked to new york city for tips on adding bicycle lanes. special lanes are already being built in china's capital to improve safety. he would welcome anything that would make his commute a tad less hair-raising. >> translator: my fantasy is he said, and fight for space on the road. urban planners across china are looking at a number of ways to try to battle pollution.
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spring break for millions of college students. that means beaches, beer and sometimes trouble. mark strassmann is in miami where the police claim they're overwhelmed. i'm standing in the heart of south beach. 100 yards that way. 7 miles of beautiful beaches. over here on the street this is where the party really happens. as, outnumbered police try to corral and contain tens of thousand of partiers. >> this is ocean drive on south beach. think of it as a mosh pit that stretches at least eight blocks. how many kids? couple hundred thousand is a frequent guess. like drinking that ninth beer.
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matters except to miami beach cops. fewer than 400 of them trying to keep the lid on. >> you can deal with one or two not thousand of them. >> bobby jenkins is president of the local fraternal order of police. >> worse than in years past? >> yes. >> how so? >> people leave when you tell them to leave. here they want to challenge you and take-up on about it. >> reporter: take last friday night. the beach party moved into the street and out of control. >> i guess the people got too rowdy. >> reporter: some seven partiers were arrested. in florida's panhandle. panama city beach is still recovering from last year's spring break. this video of an alleged gang rape of an unconscious woman on a crowded beach. no one stopped it. seven people shot at a house party. more than 1,000 arrests in march alone. the city banned drinking on the beach this year. but on sunday, police say 20 year old tyler gilmore from
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fell to his death from a parking garage. mark frizz, gilmore's high school wrestling coach. >> spring break should be fun. and go and be safe. >> drinking in public is banned in miami beach. police there admit they have so many other issues that ban is widely ignored. and in south beach, this party gets going again, in a few
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captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, march 16th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." a three-man race. donald trump stacks up victories in the republican chase for the white house, knocking marco rubio out, but john kasich's win in ohio puts a new obstacle in the billionaire's path to the nomination. while hillary clinton made huge drives towards becoming the democratic nominee winning four of the night's contest and
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