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tv   CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley  CBS  November 29, 2016 6:30pm-7:00pm EST

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it's a lot. that's how i save at publix. how 'bout you? publix. where shopping is a pleasure. >> o'donnell: a race against the flames. >> go, go, go, go! >> o'donnell: wildfires turn deadly in the great smoky mointins. thousands run, hotel hotels ands burn. >> this is a fire for the history books. >> o'donnell: also tonight-- ( cheers ) a soccer team's cinderella story ends in tragedy. dozens were killed when thijet went down, but there were survivors. donald trump makes more cabinet picks, including the man who intends to blow up obamacare. and why would they put a mop bucket in a museum?
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bucket to do it once, but when you do it 17 million times, it really has an impact. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> o'donnell: good evening. scott is off tonight. i'm norah o'donnell. the worst fire to hit tennessee in 100 years has killed at least three people and sent more than a dozen to the hospital. 14,000 fled as a wall of flames closed in on gatlinburg. one resort was destroyed. the for dolly parton, was spared. demarco morgan is in tennessee. >> hit the gas! hit the gas! >> reporter: you're watching cell phone video taken taen by two brothers as they escape from a vacation resort area in the mountains of gatlinburg, tennessee. they say they had no warning as the wall of flames surrounded them last night, and their only choice was to ride through it or die. >> please, lord, let us get off this mountain. >> reporter: by early evening,
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winds that topped 87 miles per hour. fire quickly spread in this drought-stricken area when burning embers blew and toppleled trees ripped down power lines. this community is at the edge of great smoky mountain's national park, most visited national park in the country. >> the smoke is really bad in here. >> reporter: logan baker was at the vita hilton hotel when flames came right up to the building. >> they're keeping us in h the sullivan county fire chief. what is it like to actually be there? >> it's horrible. i mean, it's devastating to-- you know, all the people lost their homes and business and everything else. i mean, things they worked hard for. >> reporter: this is what's left, more than 100 business and homes were destroyed. just take a look at this. it was once an apartment building. neighborhoods were left in smoking synders. at this red cross shelter, more than 1,000 showed up, anxiously
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greg lanham and his family escaped with their pet and the clothes on their backs. >> you know, possessions are possessions. as long as i've got my family, that's all that matters, really. >> reporter: norah, unfortunately, dozens of families won't be returning to places like this behind me. this home that was completely destroyed. but firefighters may get some help tonight as heavy rains and thunderstorms are expected. >> o'donnell: let's hope for that rain. can now to the tragedy in south america. a soccer team that had won the hearts of brazil was on its way last night to play for its first championship, but the chartered plane crashed in the mountains of colombia. 71 were killed. here anna werner. >> reporter: video taken after the crash showed little remained of the jet. workers carried body bags over hilly terrain. the pilots requested a priority landing at 15,000 feet while
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of colombia in poor weather. the plane was carrying most members of a brazilian so, team, as well as 20 journalists flying from bolivia to medellin. six people survived. this morning, the soccer club's vice president said for a tragedy like this to happen, it is very difficult. the sadness is great, but we will have faith in god. the can chapecoense real soccer tam represented a cinderella rose from the minor leagues to make it into this year's sudamericana championship finals. video posted to facebook live on monday showed team members checking in for the flight, and some seated on board the plane minutes before taking off. "it's going to start" player felipe machado said. "the trip to colombia is going to begin." another player seen in video
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survive the crash. a photo making the rounds on social media today appears to show a few team members who did not go on the trip. and on the team's twitter page was this, with the heading, "let this be the last image of our warriors." three players, a journalist and two crew members survived. in a tribute to the players who died, the colombian team that was set to face them in play wednesday has asked that the brazilian team, norah, be declared tournament champion. >> o'donnell: wow. anna werner, thank you very much. late today, president-elect trump settled on four more cabinet picks. major garrett is covering the trump transition. >> reporter: cbs news has confirmed that hollywood financier osca stephen mnuchin l be treasury secretary. he has also donated to democrats
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this will be mnuchin's first government possible. the president-elect also intends to nominate billionaire businessman wilbur ross to lead the commerce department. >> this is a system that's not working for the american people. >> reporter: mr. trump's pick to lead the department of health and human services is a leading congressional critic of obamacare. georgia congressman tom price was an early trump supporter and draft the the most comprehensive alternative to the affordable care act. >> we want a system that's affordable for everybody, that's accele of the highest quality, and provides choices for patients. >> reporter: price's plan would abolish the expansion of medicaid under obamacare that has provided insurance coverage to 15 million americans. price would also roll back guaranteed coverage for patients with preexisting medical conditions. he would use tax credits and promote health savings accounts to help americans purchase insurance. the president-elect also named elaine chao as transportation
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secretary under president george w. bush and is married -- >> the love of my life, your senator, mitch mcconnell. >> reporter: to senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. for secretary of state, mr. trump continues to deliberate among mitt romney, retired general david petraeus, and rudy giuliani. senate foreign relations committee chairman bob corker was also at trump tower today. the president-elect is dining tonight with mitt romney, their second meeting in as many weeks. the presidele twitter this morning to denounce burning of the american flag and said it warranted prison sentences and revocation of citizenship. norah, the supreme court ruled in 1989 that flag burning was symbolic protected free speech. >> o'donnell: all right, major garrett, thank you so much. tonight there are growing evidence that the somali-born student behind yesterday's car and knife attack at the ohio state university was inspired by terrorists. 11 people were injured before a
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>> reporter: hours before his rampage abdul razak ali artan went on facebook to praiseradical muslim cleric anwar al-awlaki, whose sermons still inspire attacks even though he was killed by a u.s. drone five years ago. saying he had reached a "boiling point," artan wrote, "i am sick and tired of seeing my fellow muslim brothers and sisters being killed and tortured everywhere. i can't take it examine. i am willing to infidels for a single disabled muslim." one of his victims yesterday, iraq veteran and current o.s.u. senior, anderson payne, was trying to help car crash victims when he was slashed. >> i initially saw him, i thought he was just angry because he had just wrecked his car, but then when i saw him starting to swing and i saw the knife i knew there were-- it was not just an accident. >> reporter: hisham ouhammou
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sunday. >> he seems a very, very nice nigh. i never expected anything from him at all. i mean, he's very friendly. >> reporter: it certainly saemed sooemed that way at artan's graduation from a local community college, but his neighbor, louann carnahan, recalled seeing him with people she hadn't seen him with before and noticed some unusual behavior. >> the last interaction my family had with him was on thanksgiving day and he had a gopro on his head and head that he was going into that house with, that if something was to happen to him, you know, the gopro was his proof. in hindsight you sort of look pack at that and it's like, what?" >> reporter: now, cbs news has learned that artan purchased the exwiestles he used in the attack just hours before he he carriedt out. when and while no direct ties to terrorist organizations have been discovered so far, federal authorities are increasingly
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his actions. >> o'donnell: all right, dean reynolds, thank you so much. in less than to months, donald trump will inherit america's war against isis. the u.s. is training and assisting iraqi and kurdish forces in the liberation of mosul. now, that is the last major city in iraq that is controlled by isis. this operation is now six weeks old. >> reporter: lieutent general fran townsend served here in northern iraq during the u.n. occupation 10 years ago and now he's back. the commander of the u.s. coalition against isis, visiting troops manning a battery of how theiters in the desert. >> here's inside the city right here. here's the east side of the city. >> reporter: a new generation of americans in iraq, this time around, aiding iraqi troops who will do most of the fighting on the front line.
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challenge any army. this fight would challenge the united states army. >> reporter: but then he broke off our interview. they're about to fire over there? >> i think we might be about to fire. >> reporter: should we just have a look over there? because his men had isis in their sights. there are now around 6,000 u.s. troops in iraq, supporting over 40,000 iraqi fighters in the battle for mosul, an offensive crefsed b for its lack of secrecy. >> whatever happened to the element of surprise? okay. we announce we're going after mosul. i've been reading going after mosul for, how long is it, hillary, three months? >> reporter: is a battle that size something you can keep a secret? >> no, i don't think so. it's hard to move 40,000 troops and all their tanks and trucks and artillery into position and it not be noticed by somebody. it's really hart hardto do that. >> reporter: donald trump's
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"bomb the hell out of them." but at this command center where they launch air strikes on isis, every strike must be approved by senior officers. >> do they look like people to you? about center screen? >> reporter: it can take minutes or several hours, and sometimes they're refused permission. captain matt lyles explained why. >> we need to get it right for us. we need to get it right for them. >> reporter: you want to avoid killing civili a you don't want to try house if you don't need to. >> reporter: correct, correct. >> reporter: american airpower is playing a decisive role in beating back the extremists, but the simple truth is there is no easy solution to isis. and, norah, the battle for mosul will be long and deadly. >> o'donnell: holly williams, thank you. there was emotional testimony today in charleston, south carolina, when former police officer, michael slager, took the stand in his own defense. he is charged with murdering walter scott, a man he had just
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light. jericka duncan is there. >> reporter: michael slager's voice cracked at times as he described the events that led up to the death of walter scott 19 months ago. >> reporter: a day that gab with this routine traffic stop. >> your card. >> reporter: and ended after a chase and scuffle and a burst of gunfire. it was captured on cell phone video by someone passing by. >> i was tired. >> reporter: slager's argument is self-defense. >> i was on the fight, on the ground. mr. scott was coming after me with the taser twice. you know, my mind-- i don't-- my mind was like spaghetti. >> reporter: prosecutor bruce dur ant. >> from watching the video, sir, do you concede at the time you
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your taser? >> yes, after learning information now, i do. >> reporter: one of the lingering questions is what slager may have picked up and dropped near scott's body. >> i don't remember dropping the taser. i don't remember anything. >> well, you have a pretty clear recollection of what went on here. it seems like you're just not remembering the things that are bad for you. >> we need justice for walter. >> reporter: scott's brother, anthony, says the video leaves no doubt. >> to me, it's a man being in the back by a coward police officer. >> reporter: slager used his taser 14 times in five years. now, the scott family was in the courtroom as slager testified. the family decliendz to comment. norah, the jury starts deliberations tomorrow morning. >> o'donnell: all right, gereek athank you. coming up in on the cbs evening news, siewba dissidents hope for
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every great why needs a great how. >> o'donnell: four days after fidel castro's death, some who opposed the dictator are already dreaming of a better future for cuba. manuel bojorquez in havana spoke with one. >> reporter: while thousands of cubans mourned, antonio rodiles was being half theled outside his havana home by a man he says was a government official, a warning not to change. when you found out fidel castro was dead, how did you react? >> reporter: rodiles hosts an opposition talk show that is distributed on dvds through an underground network. he says he was detained 50 times last year, and in 2014, was beaten and jailed after opposing the u.s. deal to reopen relations with cuba. he says it failed to address
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hopeful president-elect trump will change course. >> reporter: you think trump would do that? >> i think so so. >> reporter: not all cubans feel that way. the society is slowly opening up, and interaction with the u.s. is generally welcome here. economic opportunity could be the strongest catalyst for cubans to turn the page from the castro era. >> reporter: but do you see a free election happening here, say, in your lifetime? you do? that will not be easy, judging by this crowd. norah, tens, prps hundreds of thousands of cubans have gathered here at revolution square, joining heads of state for a massive tribute to their
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bojorquez, thank you. when we come back, pipeline protesters ignore the weather and orders to go home. ? when you have $7.95 online u.s. equity trades lower than td ameritrade, schwab, and e-trade, you realize the smartest investing idea
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sible. >> o'donnell: protesters near the dakota access pipeline in north dakota are ignoring orders to leave their camp, despite bitter cold and snow. michelle miller is there and filed this a short time ago. >> reporter: norah, the conditions here are simply brutal. that's why the governor of north dakota says he has issued a mandatory evacuation for the more than 5,000 people who are camped out here at the ochochee sakoin. what we can tell you is some of the people we spoke with say they're not budging. the governor's order comes just days after the u.s. army corps of engineers, which is managing the site, set a december 5 deadline for the protesters to leave the area for a safer location. norah, with that evacuation
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army corps of engineers and the sheriff's department here say they will not forcibly remove any of the people mere from this camp, but as they like to be called, these water protectors, if they do stay, the sheriff's department says they stay at their own risk. >> o'donnell: incredible. michelle miller there. thank you. today, the world's oldest person celebrated her 117th birthday. emma morano, who lives in italy, is believed to be the last person alive whoas 1800s. get this-- she eats few fruits or vegetables, but she says she has enjoyed three raw eggs and biscuits a day for 90 years, along with a glass of brandy. all right, next, out of this bucket came an ocean of good.
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>> o'donnell: today is giving tuesday, so it's fitting that today an icon of altruism was given a new home. here's jan crawford. >> reporter: it was a social media sensation, 17 million people, our friends and coworkers, along with presidents, billionaires, and celebrities all braving the ice bucket challenge that raised more than $200 million to fight a.l.s. and it really got started with this-- a blue plasket bucket jeannette senerchia used to mop her floor. she did the challenge for her husband anthony who suffers from the degenerative disease. >> that was the first documented connection between a.l.s. and the ice bucket.
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petroleum smi museum of american history called "giving in america." >> you look at this and think why would the smi collect a mop bucket? you know, it really helps us tell the story that, you know, objects can really help us understand our history. >> it's displayed next to a boch from the 1800s that people would have used to raise money. >> and we have the march of dimes can, that someone would have marched around their can community going door to door asking people to contribute to the march of dimes. that money they coled money collected from their community into a bigir pool to a bigger pool so in that way it's not much different from the ice bucket challenge. >> reporter: it shows one contribution when put together with so many can make a huge difference. >> yes. it seems like the proverbial drop in the bucket to do it once but when you do it 17 million times, it really has an impact. >> reporter: drops in a bucket or from a bucket can become a deluge of good. jan crawford, cbs news, washington.
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