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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  December 2, 2016 2:30am-4:00am EST

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super easy to move snow around. u geall that lerage, so you can even move heavy, w snowith ease. >> and that means you'll use your aerocart year round. when you add in the wagon accessory, water hauler, and snow plow, that's 11 different functions, all from one machine. it's like a swiss army knife on eels hoowner or ctractor.r any >> yeah, i've been a general contractor for the majity of my father, my uncles, my brothers -- everyone has been in the field. having the right tool makes the job better and mak it easier. i feel the aerocart makes your projects a lot easier and a lot simpler. we personally have used the aerocart on the job move refrigerators. we've loaded it up to 200, 300 pounds. we've mixed cement in it, carried tile in it. it's a dynamicrodu. i recommend it to everyone. >> annouer: thworx aerocart makes every project easier by giving you 4 times more lifting power.
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from the very first time you try it. >> that feels like 15 pounds. [ laughs ] >> oh, i can't do that. [ laughs ] that is too heav [ laughs ] i can do it! i can dit! >> the wheelbarrow's really heavy and wobbly and unstable. and the aerocart is -- wow, it's really light and balanced, and i can move it freely wherever i want. >> oh, my gosh. this is really light. doesn't feel like anything. >> i love ! i could work in thrd all day, guys, with thisne. >> the wheelbarrow wants to tip over, and i'm really having to fight it. just immediately, i noticed how easy it is. i feel like i could run with this because it's just so light aneasyo us >> this is heavy. [ chuckles ] this is a very hea rock. oh, yeah. aerocart makes it a lot easier. >> oh, clearly, 8 in 1 aerocart is the way to go. it's just smarter. >> it never fails. you go to use your old-fashioned
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waste time finding an air pump, trying to fix it. >> well, the good news is that will never happen with aerocart, thanks to these special never flat tires. >> and when we sayneveflat we mean it. let dllome that poi... >> [ chuckles ] >> literally. look. we can drill a hole right into the tire... [ drilwhirring ] >> wow. >> ...and it will never go flat. >> and unlike other no-flat flible for eywheels will stay maneuverability. that's because aeroct wh feature a brand-new tire technology. micro air bubbles are actually embedded in the rubber, so they always stay inflated. >> when worx engineered the aerocart, they really thought of everything. >> 9 out of 10 times, you store th wheelbarrow -- you goo use it, and you got a flat tire. and that's horrible. >> it's just gonna be there when you need it. it's durable. you don't have to pump up a tire or anythg like that. it's always gonna be right there for you. >> i like that it would roll very easily on those big tires that it has. on the narrow parts of the yard, it was easy to maneuver and get
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be dangerous, particularly when they're a traditional, single-wheeled tool. the weight can be distributed unevenly and unpredictably, leading to injuries. however, when you use an aerocart, the wheels are naturally placed symtricly apart, so that the forces are diribud evenly across their core and there's no unpredictable, jerky motion. >> the hardest part of any oject is the lifting and carrying. >> but not anymore. the worx aerocart does the lifting and carrying for you, so projects get done faster and ea than ever before. >> do yourself a favor. get your own worx aerocart today. >> this is your last chance. order right now. >> it really does do it all, and it does it very well.>> i used . i used it as a dolly. it was very easy to change from one mode to the other. >> it makes heavy things and bulky things easier and lighter. >> it just makes all the yardwork or anything you need to
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done. >> i'm a big f i've been the cheerleader from day 1 and been showing it to everyone and telling everyone about it. [ tires screech ] >> announcer: introducing the worx aerocart, the revolutionary new way to make heavy loads feel lighter than air. e seet iin aerocars new easy leverage design that places the wheels right under the weight of the load. this instantly makes you up to 4 times stronger. old-fashiod wheelbarrows make you do all the heavy lifting. ever try moving 200 pounds in a regular wheelbarrow? >> it'li and a little unbalanced. [ strained ] not so much. >> it's kind of heavy. it feels like 200 pounds. >> announcer: now look at the same people lift the same 200 pounds in the aerocart. >> fabulous. >> yeah? >> like, really easy. >>iecef ca! oh, gosh. look at that. >> doesn't feel like 200 pounds in the slightest. it feels like it's something i could lift with one hand. actually, i can. [ laughs ] >> announcer: old-fashioned wheelbarrows have only one wheel, so they're unbalanced and
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aerocart has 2heel so 's perfectly balanced and super stable. and you know howegular wheelbarrow tires always seem to be flat when you need them? aerocart's new revolutionary never flat tires are always ready when you are. plus, they're designed for indoor and outdoor use. aerocart's unique shape lets you get through gates and doways where ordinary wheelbarrows can't go. the aerocart is the one tool you need to help keep your yard and home at its best. need to move something huge? heavy-duty hand truck.into a why would you strain your back moving a big potted plant? just extend the reinforced steel arms, hook on the plant strap, and the aerocart can move any size potted plant easily. but that's not all. snap on the cylinder holder, and the aerocart is a barrel, watejug, and garbage can transport. now, what out something heavy you can barely pick up in the first place? no problem for aerocart -- simply roll heavy rocks or bags of gravel on the rock-lifting
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lifting for you. for really bigtemsjustlip wn the extended dolly arms, and the rocart becomesour own personal forklift. with the aerocart, the possibilities are endless. you can add a trailer ball, and now you have a trailer mover. use the bag holder to make cleaning up leaves and yard debris easier. the list goes on you'll use t aerocart in all kinds of ws, year round, a it'll always lighten every load. so, why clutter up your garage with so many mhines? with its compact design, the aerocart stores in as little space as a pair of boots. movehe handlesand the of your car, syohave liftingnk wer on the go. >> it makes it so much easier to carry a heavy thing than a garden cart or a wheelbarrow. >> we actually -- in one day, we evy feure that y couldits paces. possibly try with this, we used it, and it wked bulously we. >> announcer: the worx aerocart is super versatile.
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it's one of the handiest must-have tools ever. design will make every load feel lighter. now it's your rn to t a worxerocart. if you bought separate specialty tools to do all 8 jobs the worx aeroct can do, you'd pay over $400. order today, and you won't pay $400 or 00. you won't even pay $200. order now, and you'll receive the complete worx aerocart system, including the mesh rock mover, cylinder holder, potted plant mover, and large bag holder -- all for just 4 ea paynts $34.99.get your aey 4 easy payments of $34.99. now that's an amazing deal! there's no risk because worx stands behind the aerocart with a 60-day, no-questions-ask return guarantee. lift less and do more with the worx aeroct.
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4 easy payments of $34.99. your satisfaction is completely guaranteed. and be sure to ask about how you can receive the rocart wagon acceory package, snow plow, or watehauler. this is an exclusive, limited-time tv offer that you won't find in any store, so order today. the worx aerocart -- make any orr rit now.t as air. the aecart also makes a great gift, and this limitedime tv offer is only valid through don't miss this opportunity to get the worx aerocart and make any load as light as air for even less. order your aerocart now. the preceding has been a paid advertisemt r the
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reporters. p-22 was already a local celebrity because of this national geographic picture taken by a remote camera a mile or two from the house. wildlife experts finally decided to shoo everybody out after the 11:00 news. hoping p-22 might head back into the hills nearby. which he did. >> when did he leave? how did he leave? >> we don't know how. >> they call them ghost cats. >> right. >> there you go. >> reporter: and though they live in the shadows in much of southern california they're never far away.
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stone's throw from the rooftops of suburbia. >> these animals do their best to, you know, stay elusive and away from us. even researchers who follow them almost daily, we hardly ever see them. >> jeff sikic is a biologist, an expert on big cats who holds something of a record. he's seen and captured p-22 four times now. this time he and hits him with a tranquilizer dart. quickly it knocks p-22 out, with his eyes still open. the batteries on his gps collar were running low. replacing them gives sikic and his crew a chance for a checkup. p-22 is healthy. weighing in at 125 pounds. from experience, sikic knows that when the animal comes to it's no threat.
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sure enough, a groggy p-22 wakes up and stumbles back into the shadows. >> here's the past eight months of where p-22 has traveled. >> reporter: the gps signals from their collars tell sikic and his colleague seth riley where the animals roam. p-22 wanders the hills of griffith park, a small enclave in los angeles frequented by park's famed observatory. >> we haven't, knock on wood, had any major conflicts with him and people, and it shows that even a large carnivore like a mountain lion can live right among people for many years. >> reporter: they think p-22 migrated east across the santa monica mountains for 20 miles or so. perhaps chased out by a bigger male. he somehow crossed the 405
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busiest, worked his way through bel air and beverly hills, and somewhere near the hollywood bowl amphitheater crossed a second busy freeway, the 101, to griffith park. >> p-22 had it great, no competition, no other adult males in griffith park, seemed to be plenty of prey for him. >> reporter: he's been in griffith park for three years now. all alone, looking for love in all the wrong places. >> yeah, you ow out there, which is pretty surprising. i would have bet he would have left looking for a potential mate. >> reporter: if the mating urge overwhelms him, he could take his chances crossing the freeways again to find a female. a very risky business. why not move him? >> usually it doesn't work moving lions. we'd just be moving this animal, this adult male, into another adult male's territory, and that usually results?
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>> reporter: and in the verd goh mountains a small range overlooking the san fernando valley, there's another lonely lion. >> i never thought one would actually come through our back yard. and he was right next to our bedroom window. and then he'd continue up this way. >> reporter: nancy vandermay and eric barkolo moved here to be close to wildlife and got their wish in the form of a mountain lion named p-41, who seems to he's right out here where we are? >> exactly where we are. >> reporter: he has come to visit at least ten times. triggering security cameras taking both video and still pictures. the area is called cougar canyon. what else? >> here he is just literally made a loop around our house for some reason. >> yeah. >> reporter: like proud parents with baby pictures they show off their video scrapbook.
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the gravel so he can make as little noise as possible. >> wow. >> they want to be silent at all times. >> reporter: camera technology has revolutionized the way mountain lions and other wild animals are studied. joanna turner is a sound effects editor for universal studios. on her own time she's one of several citizen scientists, as they're called, who put remote cameras up in the wild hoping to get that perfect shot. >> there he is. oh, come on, buddy. >> how do you know where to look? >> we look for tracks and we look for signs of them and we look for deer because that's their food source. >> reporter: to lure the lions into camera range she'll sprinkle catnip, vanilla extract, even men's cologne on a branch, and just like house cats they love it. the holy grail is a shot like
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but her cameras also catch bobcats, coyotes, foxes and bears. >> you can see the full report on our website, cbsnews.com. the "overnight news" will be right back. i pinky promised my little girl a fabulous garden party for her birthday. put up all the decorations. i thought i got everything. almost everything! you know, 1 in 10 houses could get hit by a septic disaster, and a bill of up to $13,000. but for only $7 a month, rid-x is scientifically proven to break down waste, helping you avoid a septic disaster. rid-x. the #1 brand used by septic professionals in their own tanks. hi, anne. how are you doing? hi, evelyn.
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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? that's less than the cost of a postage stamp. so, you said it was guaranteed acceptance? yes. it's for people ages 50 to 85. you can't be turned down because of your health. it fit right into mom's budget and gave her added peace of mind. you should give them a call man: are you between the ages of 50 and 85? for less than 35 cents a day, you can get guaranteed acceptance life insurance through the colonial penn program. you cannot be turned down because of your health. there are no health questions or medical exam. your rate will never go up and your benefit will never go down due to age--
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the average cost of a funeral is over $7300, and social security pays a death benefit of just $255. don't leave a burden for your loved ones. call about the colonial penn program now. ?living well? rise above joint discomfort with move free ultra's triple action joint support and 20% better comfort from one tiny, mighty pill... get move free ultra, and enjoy living well. over the past three years five casinos in atlantic city have shut their doors. but that doesn't mean the entire industry is coming up craps.
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casino developers still prepared to roll the dice. >> reporter: casinos have never been more flush than they are right now. >> we went from about 800 employees to 3,000 employees in less than six months. >> reporter: so the demand is there. >> oh, the demand is there. >> reporter: rob norton is president of maryland live, a sprawling casino in the baltimore, maryland suburbs that opened just four years ago. after rounds of expansion it now sells itself as one of the nation's largestin >> are you going to keep growing? >> we are going to absolutely keep growing. >> reporter: and like a gambler on a winning streak, the casino is plunging ahead. it's just broken ground on a $200 million convention center and hotel. a confident david cordish owns maryland live. is it a bet for you to build this hotel or is it a sure thing? >> it's pretty much a sure thing. >> reporter: cordish is doubling down because he says he only
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things -- a high-income community, a busy interstate, and a major retail magnet. maryland live sits next to arundel mills mall, a 1.6 million-square-foot shopping paradise. you're a bullish man on a lot of things. >> i am bullish. very optimistic. >> reporter: but even an optimist dreads a losing hand. 30 years ago only two states had casinos. now 42 states do. you're running out of room to expand in. >> by in large the united states locations. >> reporter: does that mean you're running out of customers, that at some point casinos will be cannibalizing from each other? >> at some point. it's already happening. >> reporter: on election day new jersey voters will decide whether to amend the constitution to allow casinos beyond atlantic city. the one-time las vegas of the east where the chips are most certainly down. in 2001 the new jersey resort city had 16% of the u.s.
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after neighboring new york, pennsylvania and maryland let casinos open there. and it's hurting the bottom line. new jersey's casino tax revenues are half what they were ten years ago. meaning less money for senior citizens, the disabled, and economic revitalization programs. while new york's quadrupled, sending a windfall toej educati. delaware's general fund took a hit as maryland hit the with five casinos since 2009 is & a sixth, the mgm at national harb harbor, opening december 8th. >> basically kind of an arms race. >> reporter: alex bumoginy is an analyst at fitz ratings. even though commercial casino revenue nationwide is up 48% since 2001 to more than $40 % billion nationwide, bumoginy says the casino industry is now extremely saturated. >> fortunately, most states at this point already have gaming and have a limited amount of
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where future development is very limited. >> does that worry you? >> it doesn't worry me for the ones we're involved in. >> you think you're immune. >> i think we're immune in the locations we've picked. >> reporter: david cordish now has plans for a new live casino in philadelphia. his fifth casino. convinced he's on a roll. do you think there are too many casinos opening? >> actually, no, i don't. i don't feel like there's too many casinos. >> why not? because you want choice? >> yes. most definitely. >> reporter: andrea hanks came north from richmond, virginia to give maryland live a spin. as did betsy bane. she's a shrewd shopper at the slots and vows to check out mgm's brand new mega casino when it opens in national harbor. she told us she'll keep sampling. >> you can try another one. >> so you don't have a loyalty to one particular casino. you like to try them all. >> yes. with their different promotions like tournaments. >> you want them to fight for
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>> reporter: there are now more than 1,000 casinos nationwide. and just like these gamblers,
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. the holiday shopping season is in full swing, and a lot of people are determined to avoid the malls at all costs. but if you're one of the millions who shop online with your smartphone, you could be putting your personal information at risk. a lot of those phone apps are anna werner has the details. >> i would say for most of my purchases i do use my iphone. >> reporter: nicole barker likes shopping through her apps but didn't realize they could put her identity at risk. >> it's really scary. you trust those brands when you see them and you just accept or trust that that's who you think you're dealing with. >> reporter: but a company that creates many of those apps for major retailers found some shopping apps for names like dillard's, payless, even
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weren't real. >> we found there were hundreds of fake apps. hundreds. >> reporter: chris mason from branding brand. >> if you take those apps down and you get rid of that provider, you'll find them show up in a different form of a new name, new credentials. for every one you take down there's two that come up. >> it's collecting a lot of data. >> reporter: gary milevsky with cyber security firm snoop wall says it's all about criminals getting hold of your private information. >> some of these apps, these counterfeit apps, are so good they give you a complete shopping cart experience. er "congratulations, here's your order number, it's on its way." and then you never get the goods. >> reporter: but he points to something even more disturbing, with super popular emoji keyboard apps. these keyboards replace the one on your phone giving you an endless supply of emoticons for every occasion. but he says many can also gain access to your contacts, text messages, possibly even passwords and send your private information overseas.
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employees of companies in china. >> so what do you think somebody in china is doing with all that information? >> some think that the chinese version of the nsa is using these kinds of tools to collect a lot of information on people overseas. and time will tell. >> we don't know, do we? >> we don't know. >> reporter: google told us it scans apps for potentially malicious code as well as spammy developer accounts and they have a separate tool for android devices to verify apps. apple said they provide notice on k fact these apps can have access to what you type. except for passwords, which apple says can only be typed in using the regular keyboard. but milevsky says better to avoid emoji keyboards entirely, especially if they're free. news to nicole barker. >> i do have an emoji keyboard. as do most of my friends. that really gets me scared, makes me realize i probably should take that off my phone. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this friday.
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little later for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm don dahler. the president-elect already on the job. with the deal that saved hundreds of them. >> companies are not going to without consequences. also tonight, the vice president-elect on donald trump shifting positions on immigration and prosecuting hillary clinton. >> did he just say those things to get elected? a so-called magical treatment for the anxiety and depression that come with cancer. >> from that moment the fear was gone. and a new over-the-top light
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." the trump-pence administration takes office in 49 days, and we are about to hear from two key players. we have interviews with vice president-elect mike pence and the speaker of the house, paul ryan. but first, donald trump has made his first public appearance since he was elected more than three weeks ago. manufacturerin sending more than 2,000 jobs to mexico. mr. trump's intervention and tax incentives from the state have persuaded the carrier corporation to send only 1,300 jobs south of the border, saving 800. major garrett has the story. >> they say it's not presidential to call up these massive leaders of business. i think it's very presidential. >> reporter: president-elect donald trump called the ceo of carrier's parent company, united technologies, directly to
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indiana. >> companies are not going to leave the united states anymore without consequences. not going to happen. >> reporter: during the campaign trump threatened to slap import tariffs on companies that send jobs overseas. but in this case the state of indiana provided the company $7 million in tax incentives, something states often do to keep or attract businesses. and mr. trump promised lower corporate taxes and fewer regulations. the publicity bang is larger than the national economic impact of saving 1,000 jobs in a labor force of 159 million. but for carrier workers like bryan dyson the reaction was emotional and appreciative. >> crying. relieved. christmas coming, you know. everybody's head's up. >> reporter: dawn kinnard said it was a promise kept. >> i'm very thankful that he did follow through because he didn't have to. he could have just said that and walked away.
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contrast to the reaction when carrier announced in february that jobs were moving to mexico. [ yelling ] not far from the carrier plant manufacturer rexnord plans to move 300 jobs to mexico. brian reed is an assembler. >> devastated. i can't put it in words. i mean, the 300 people i work with, things just went through just devastating. >> reporter: reed said he doesn't feel left behind. >> with what mr. trump did, it does give a sense of hope for the american working class. i don't know that personally it will affect my factory. >> reporter: at rallies during the campaign then candidate trump often said he and populist democrat bernie sanders agreed on trade and protecting u.s. manufacturing jobs. but scott, sanders is very critical of this carrier deal, arguing it will incentivize other corporations to threaten
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>> major, there's word tonight that the trump transition team is getting closer to naming a secretary of defense. what do you know about that? >> reporter: that would be general james mattis, retired marine corps general, formerly head of central command. he has two nicknames. mad dog mattis and warrior monk. a confirmed bachelor, 66, mattis is regarded as probably the most respected marine of a generation or two. people often call him not in the marine cor a soldier. marines call him a marine's marine. we are told the announcement could come as early as tomorrow. there is one wrinkle here, scott. to become defense secretary if you're a retired general there needs to be seven years between your separation from the military force and that ascension to defense secretary. to waive that congress would have to intervene. the trump transition team has been told by congressional leaders they will do that. >> major garrett reporting for us tonight. major, thank you. well, that deal in indiana was done with the help of the governor of indiana, who is also
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we spoke to mike pence late today, and we asked him what mr. trump meant by consequences for companies that moved jobs overseas. >> the president-elect's made it very clear that when companies shutter factories and move them out of this country in the hopes of being able to build their products and ship them right back into the united states that we're going to have the kind of trade deals that have consequences for enterprises like that and we're going to have the kind of trade that puts american jobs and american workers first. >> when mr. trump talks about consequences, are we talking about punitive taxes? >> i think -- everything is really on the table as we negotiate trade deals going forward, as we renegotiate the north american free trade agreement. i think what the american people can anticipate, that the trump administration is going to roll
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to drive a hard bargain. >> now, carrier tells us that you have saved 800 jobs that were headed to mexico. how did you do it? >> he picked up the phone. he called the chairman of the parent company and just asked them to reconsider their decision to move jobs to mexico from here in the state of indiana. >> but not to put too fine a point on it, sir, 1,300 jobs are still going to mexico. and i wonder, why were you not ablesa >> this change? their business policies was set into motion many months before he even secured the nomination. but the fact that carrier was set at this factory to go to zero jobs and now we have more than 1,100 good-paying jobs here in the state of indiana with the opportunity for that to grow i think is welcome news. >> just since the election president-elect trump has reversed himself on prosecuting
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11 million illegal immigrants in this country. did he just say those things to get elected? did he never intend to do them? >> i promise you, as we were meeting yesterday on capitol hill with leaders of the house and senate, we're going to go straight to work after this congress convenes and this administration takes office. >> the speaker of the house told us today that when it comes to deporting 11 million illegal immigrants it's not going to happen and he won't fund it. >> well, i -- i will tell you that the policies that the president-elect outlined in his speech in arizona will be the policies that we advance. i'm very confident that we'll have broad-based support in the congress for what the president-elect outlined in the course of his campaign and we're going to work every day to make sure that we advance those policies and end illegal immigration once and for all. >> vice president-elect mike pence, also governor of indiana until january the 20th, we thank you very much for your time. you made a big difference for about 800 families in your home state there. thank you very much again.
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and we have more of the pence interview on cbsnews.com
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the repeal of obamacare will be the first bill taken up by the new congress. that's according to the speaker of the house. in an interview for "60 minutes" paul ryan told us that repeal will be immediate but a years away. no one, he said, will lose health coverage in the meantime. we met the speaker at the capitol today, and we asked him about his rocky relationship with mr. trump. >> you called donald trump a racist. >> no, i didn't. i said his comment was. >> uh-huh. i'm not sure there's a great deal of daylight between those two definitions. but he definitely called you ineffective and disloyal. have you patched it up? >> yeah, we have. we're fine.
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we're looking forward. we actually -- we've had -- like i said, we speak about every day, and it's not about looking forward -- back in the past. that's behind us. we're way beyond that. >> did you believe he could be nominated? really. >> yeah, no, i didn't see this one coming. he knows that. donald trump's a very -- he was a very unconventional candidat. he's going to be an unconventional president. what i like about it in my, like i said, almost daily conversations is he's just a get things done kind of guy. >> have you told him being president is not being ceo of the united states? that the congress is going to have a say? >> oh, we've talked about that extensively. we've talked about the constitution, article one in the constitution, the separation of powers. he feels very strongly, actually, that under president obama's watch he stripped a lot of power away from the constitution, away from the legislative branch of government, and we want to reset the balance of power so that people and the constitution are rightfully restored.
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his plans for sweeping tax reform and immigration enforcement. that's this sunday on "60 minutes." ryan's home state of wisconsin today began recounting votes. but the recounts there and possibly in michigan and pennsylvania are not expected to change the outcome of the presidential race. donald trump won with 306 electoral votes, even though hillary clinton got nearly 2.5 million more popular votes. that is nearly a 2% margin and is the largest by any candidate to win the popular vote and go on to lose the election. tonight in syria, families are running for their lives to escape aleppo. once a home to a million people. syrian government forces, backed by russia, are obliterating neighborhoods held by rebels. and today debora patta got a rare look.
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rebel-held aleppo it must have felt like even the weather deserted them. huddling under blankets for warmth, they sleep cheek to cheek in makeshift shelters. for many this is their first meal in days. the united nations estimates that 200,000 are still inside eastern aleppo, trapped between the syrian army and rebel fighters, the relentless shelling continues. the u.n. has demandepa evacuation of the sick and injured and the delivery of food and medicine. but the syrian government has answered with silence. its main backer, russia, talks about opening humanitarian corridors, but so far that's all it is, talk. the government's five-month siege has left food and medical supplies dangerously low, while hospitals have been blown to pieces. as the rebel territory shrinks
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military, desperate civilians make one last run for safety. um muneer spent six hours trying to escape. "my son and i had no choice but to leave," she said, "even if we had to walk all the way." as miserable as it is for those who made it out to safety, it's far worse for those who stayed behind. we can tell you, scott, that since we arrived in aleppo the sound of shelling has not let up. >> debora patta in the war zone debora, thank you. today the death toll from the tennessee wildfires climbed to 10. 80 are injured and many are missing. demarco morgan is in the great smoky mountains. >> reporter: with dozens of leads to track down, authorities here continue to search for those who have been reporting missing. sevier county mayor larry watters. >> we're concluding the rescue probably today, and we're moving
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>> reporter: this board at an american red cross shelter is covered with the names of those unaccounted for, including members of the reed family. donna casey and kela inman are school nurses at the school where missing sisters, 9-year-old lily and 12-year-old chloe reed, attend. the two were with their mom, constant, the night of the massive wildfire. >> our school is a family. i mean, we are truly a family. and this is hurting all of us. >> reporter: monday night michael reed received a desperate call from his wife that flames were fastly approaching their home. >> to have two of our own missing, it's just -- it's devastating. we're heartbroken. we're heartbroken, and we need the help. >> we want them back. >> reporter: scott, this three-story home on the mountain is just one of hundreds of structures destroyed. officials expect to start letting other homeowners return to their property within the next few days. >> demarco morgan, thanks. in medellin, colombia they were supposed to play a soccer championship last night but
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for a memorial for the brazilian team whose plane crashed on monday. 71 were killed, including most of the players. six people survived. the club's home stadium in brazil was also filled last night for a mass in honor of the victims. coming up next, a molecule in mushrooms relieves depression in cancer patients. and later, shedding new light on the beauty of nature. 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,
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?living well? rise above joint discomfort with move free ultra's triple action joint support for improved mobility and flexibility, and 20% better comfort from one tiny, mighty pill... get move free ultra, and enjoy living well. today doctors testing a groundbreaking treatment for some of the side effects of cancer reported what they called "very impressive results." here's our chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook. >> reporter: after dinah bazer was treated for ovarian cancer in 2010, the next two years were filled with dread. >> all i thought about was the cancer, that it would come back and i would die of it. >> how severe was the anxiety? were you able to go on with your life? >> i felt like it was destroying
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>> reporter: in 2012 bazer entered a study to treat anxiety and depression in cancer patients using the hallucinogenic drug psilocybin, the active ingredient in certain mushrooms. dr. stephen ross directs addiction studies at nyu langone medical center and led the study. >> the idea was that drugs which were known to induce spiritual or these unusual mystical states of consciousness might help people who were having this domain of distress. >> reporter: bazer took the room with therapists present for support. during the session she saw her fear inside her body. >> and as soon as i visualized the fear i became furious. in my mind i screamed, "who the hell do you think you are? i won't be eaten alive." from that moment the fear was gone. >> you took control. >> i took control. and it was gone.
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a second one at johns hopkins, followed a total of 80 patients for six months after a single dose of psilocybin. there was lasting reduction of anxiety and depression in 60% to 80% of the patients. >> i began to feel the most amazing love i have ever felt. i think my brain was rewired a little bit, and that love that i felt has done very well, very good things for me. >> reporter: there were no serious side effects. though encouraging, these results are definitely preliminary, and for now the drug remains banned except for research. and scott, dr. ross told me that the fda is expected to consider within the next two months whether or not to approve a larger study. >> what an amazing result for dinah. jon, thanks very much. coming up next, the national christmas tree is lighted by the
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many people clean their dentures with toothpaste or plain water. and even though their dentures look clean, in reality they're not. if a denture were to be put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists on the denture, and that bacteria multiplies very rapidly. that's why dentists recommend cleaning with polident everyday. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture every day. i pinky promised my little girl a fabulous garden party for her birthday. so i mowed the lawn, put up all the decorations. i thought i got everything. almost everything! you know, 1 in 10 houses could get hit by a septic disaster, and a bill of up to $13,000. but for only $7 a month, rid-x is scientifically proven to break down waste, helping you avoid a septic disaster.
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? rooms come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. with eight times more fragrance control, the air wick? scented oil warmer lets you dial up or down for the perfect amount of fragrance. no matter the size of the room. air wick?. home is in the air. carnival's princess cruise lines was hit today with a record $40 million penalty for polluting the ocean and trying to cover it up. the "caribbean princess" dumped thousands of gallons of contaminated waste using a its hull.
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authorities. buzz aldrin, the second man to leave bootprints on the moon, needed a lift from the bottom of the earth today. aldrin, now 86, developed fluid in his lungs while sightseeing at the south pole. he was evacuated by ski-plane and is now resting in new zealand. there was a north pole feel in washington today as the obamas presided over the lighting of the national christmas tree, a tradition started by the coolidges in 1923. the tree is a colorado blue across from the white house in 2012. and there is another light show going on tonight.
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finally tonight, they've changed the light bulbs at niagara falls. michelle miller gives us a look at a new work in watercolor. >> reporter: by day the view is majestic. water cascading nearly 200 feet between the u.s. and canada. but at night it's illuminating. a dazzling rainbow of colors from the canadian side light up the americ half a mile away. tonight, thanks to a $4 million renovation, they will be even brighter. >> this is a new era in niagara falls history tonight. >> reporter: mark thomas is chairman of the niagara falls illumination board. >> we're eliminating all the dark spots so that you can actually see the whole rim of the falls, the whole curtain of the falls, and we're going to add a whole host of colors you that couldn't get before with our old technology. >> reporter: i mean, aren't lights just lights?
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lights on these falls they dazzle. >> reporter: the illumination of the falls started in 1860 to celebrate the prince of wales' visit to canada. by 1925 the light show became a nightly spectacle. the lights themselves were even an attraction. today some 20 million people are drawn to them. >> yes, they're going to be bright. >> reporter: ed gesh helped with the new 1,400 l.e.d. lighting makeover, boosting the colors up to 14 times brighter. are they also more energy efficient? >> absolutely. up to 85% energy savings as we do the colors. >> reporter: when the lights came on, visitors on the canadian side got the full view. how big of a difference is it? >> oh, i love the blue. the blue is beautiful, the color. >> reporter: it's hard to beat natural beauty, scott, but nothing wrong with adding a little color. >> michelle miller with a bright idea. thanks. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues.
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little bit later for the morning news and be sure not to miss "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley. ? >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." and welcome to the "overnight news." i'm don dahler. president-elect donald trump kicked off his victory tour in indiana. he was given a hero's welcome at a carrier air-conditioner factory where he made good on a campaign promise to save hundreds of union jobs. mr. trump personally negotiated a deal to keep the company from relocating the positions to mexico. but hundreds more jobs are leaving the country and the deal itself will cost the government upwards of $7 million. major garrett is there. >> they say it's not presidential to call up these massive leaders of business. i think it's very presidential.
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donald trump called the ceo of carry yers parent company, united technologies, directly to discuss keeping the jobs in indiana. >> companies are not going to leave the united states anymore without consequences. not going to happen. >> reporter: during the campaign trump threatened to slap import tariffs on companies that sent jobs overseas. but in this case the state of indiana provided the company $7 million in tax incentives, something states o d and mr. trump promised lower corporate taxes and fewer regulations. the publicity bang is larger than the national economic impact of saving 1,000 jobs in a labor force of 159 million. but for carrier workers like bryan dyson the reaction was emotional and appreciative. >> crying. relieved. christmas coming, you know, everybody's head's up. >> reporter: dawn kinnard said
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follow through because he didn't have to. he could have just said that and walked away. but he really did follow through. >> reporter: all this is a stark contrast to the reaction when carrier announced in february that jobs were moving to mexico. [ yelling ] not far from the carrier plant, manufacturer rexnord plans to move 300 jobs to mexico. brian reed is an assembler. >> devastated. it just -- i can't put it in words. i mean, the 300 people i work with, my mind and it just -- it was just devastating. >> reporter: reed said he doesn't feel left behind. >> with what mr. trump did it does give a sense of hope for the american working class. i don't know that personally it will affect my factory. in the waning days of the obama administration the white house is working to find countries willing to accept dozens of detainees who have been cleared for release from
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bay. margaret brennan reports from cuba. >> reporter: well, the pace of prisoner releases has picked up in recent months, but donald trump's campaign pledge to stop this prison from closing has left the fate of many prisoners in limbo. on a quiet day in the guantanamo prison yard giant buzzers picked at a detainee's leftovers. one prisoner spotted our cameras and gave an impromptu art show. we weren't permitted to film his face as he described each painting in a mix of arabic. his name is khalid qasim. he's accused of training with al qaeda, but he's never been charged with a crime, 14 years after arriving here. nearly half of the 60 remaining detainees will never be charged, in part due to a lack of conclusive evidence. but rear admiral peter clark said there are grounds for their detention. >> i know that the detainees we have here today are not folks
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up. there's a reason why they're still here. >> reporter: saifala parasha is the oldest detainee at 69. he claims his encounters with both osama bin laden and khalid sheikh muhammad from innocent. the u.s. intelligence community disagrees but his son mustafa said it's not fair to continue holding him. >> charge him, take him to court, release him, transfer him to the u.s., but something needs to be done. doors will slam shut when donald trump takes office. his client told him the prisoners were on edge on election night. >> he said that many detainees thought it was the end of the world and felt terrible. and that many detainees asked for tranquilizers, sleeping pills, because they were so distraught. >> reporter: some prisoners are being freed as the u.s. no longer considers them a security threat. commander steven gabovics old
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apartment to begin adjusting to life on the outside. >> here they'll have a refrigerator, they have showers, they have the tv, free action. they'll have a dvd player. they'll have if they want to a playstation game. >> reporter: this route out of the prison is called the pathway to freedom. officials here insist that they are not rushing out any prisoners, but there is congressional concern that they are being sent to countries that won't adequately monitor them or stop them from posing a future threat. southernif of the only places on earth where mountain lions live mostly peacefully among people. they're photographed, tagged, and tracked, and most people like having them around. so there was outrage when a local rancher was given a permit to shoot one of the big cats after it killed some of her livestock. carter evans has the story from the santa monica mountains near malibu. >> reporter: wildlife officials
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keep their livestock safe at night. they expected about a dozen people or so to show up. instead there were hundreds. >> no one wants anyone to shoot p-45 -- >> whoo! >> reporter: at a packed meeting with wildlife officials last night, concerned residents voiced their outrage over plans to kill a mountain lion known to locals as p-45. the 150-pound cat is one of roughly a dozen roaming the hills near losel being tracked by the national park service with a gps collar that logs every move. but over the past year it's believed p-45 has killed dozens of livestock, carrying out its bloodiest attack yet last weekend. >> he didn't eat any of them. he just killed them. and kind of left them where they lay and went on to the next one. >> reporter: wendell phillips immediately suspected p-45 when he saw the ten dead alpacas on his neighbor victoria's ranch. monday california's department
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victoria's request for a ten-day permit to shoot p-45, which they're required to do by law when it's determined a mountain lion has destroyed a land owner's property. still, the decision sparked immediate backlash. >> it makes no sense! >> reporter: attorney reed brightman, who represents victoria, attended last night's meeting. >> she has taken a lot of steps to try and avoid this over the last year. she's lost 20 of her alpacas -- >> no. >> reporter: he revealed she's now reconsidering hext and wildlife to capture the animal instead and have it relocated to an animal sanctuary. >> if she could have any solution that does not involve the animal being killed, she wants to explore it. >> reporter: but the department says that request may not be possible. >> in this situation he wouldn't relocate this animal based on the fact that it's killed animals. so it would take it kind of off the table. >> reporter: of course wildlife folks don't want the animal
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relocated. they just want him to be able to roam freely. >> we'll have more on the mountain lions of southern california when we return. this is the "cbs overnight news." 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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there's outrage in malibu, california after a local rancher got a permit to hunt down the mountain lion that slaughtered some of her livestock. mountain lions roam freely in the santa monica mountains, and so far there are no reports of the big cats attacking any humans. the national park service has been studying the animals for 13 years, tagging, tracking, and photographing them. and some of the big cats have become local celebrities. bill whitaker has the story for "60 minutes." >> when you moved here, did you know there was a mountain lion in the vicinity? >> no. >> no. not at all. not at all. there are signs for rattlesnakes.
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lions. >> some view you have here. >> yeah. >> reporter: paula and jason archanakos's house is something of a local landmark. not just for the killer view of los angeles but also for an encounter a workman had one day in the crawlspace under the house. he was doing some wiring when he saw something scary. >> he comes into my office terrified, and he says, bro, you have a mountain lion in your house, bro. and so id he goes, yeah, man, a mountain lion. face to face, eye to eye. i came eye to eye with it. and he was like terrified. >> reporter: he had been eye to eye with p-22, so named by the park service. p for puma. number 22 out of 44 they've studied. photographed here with a small camera on a very long stick. p-22 wears a park service
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signals on his location. signals that were blocked this day because he was under the house. >> he was just laying there trying to snooze, completely just like we woke him from a nap. >> reporter: soon the house was packed with cameras and reporters. p-22 was already a local celebrity because of this national geographic picture taken by a remote camera a mile or two from the archinacoses' house. wildlife experts finally decided to shoo everybody out after the 11:00 news. hoping p-22 might head back into the hills nearby. which he did. >> when did he leave? how did he leave? >> we don't know how. >> they call them ghost cats. >> right. >> there you go. >> reporter: and though they live in the shadows in much of southern california they're never far away.
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stone's throw from the rooftops of suburbia. >> these animals do their best to, you know, stay elusive and away from us. even us researchers who follow them almost daily, we hardly ever see them. >> jeff sikic is a park service biologist, an expert on big cats who holds something of a record. he's seen and captured p-22 four times now. this time he corners the animal and hits him with a tranquilizer dart. quickly it knocks p-22 out, with his eyes still open. the batteries on his gps collar were running low. replacing them gives sikic and his crew a chance for a checkup. p-22 is healthy. weighing in at 125 pounds. from experience, sikic knows that when the animal comes to
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the instinct to get away from people kicks in. sure enough, a groggy p-22 wakes up and stumbles back into the shadows. >> here's the past eight months of where p-22 has traveled. >> reporter: the gps signals from their collars tell sikic and his colleague seth riley where the animals roam. p-22 wanders the hills of griffith park, a small enclave in los angeles frequented by hikers and visitors to the park's famed obserry >> we haven't, knock on wood, had any major conflicts with him and people, and it shows that even a large carnivore like a mountain lion can live right among people for many years. >> reporter: they think p-22 migrated east across the santa monica mountains for 20 miles or so. perhaps chased out by a bigger male. he somehow crossed the 405
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busiest, worked his way through bel air and beverly hills, and somewhere near the hollywood bowl amphitheater crossed a second busy freeway, the 101, to griffith park. >> p-22 had it great, no competition, no other adult males in griffith park, seemed b >> reporter: he's been in griffith park for three years now. all alone, loking for love in all the wrong places. >> yeah, you know, still hang out there, which is pretty surprising. i would have bet he would have left looking for a potential mate. >> reporter: if the mating urge overwhelms him, he could take his chances crossing the freeways again to find a female.
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why not move him? >> usually it doesn't work moving lions. we'd just be moving this animal, this adult male, into another adult male's territory, and that usually results in the death of one of them. >> reporter: and in the verdugo mountains a small range overlooking the san fernando valley, there's another lonely lion. >> i never thought one would actually come through our back yard. and he was right next to our bedroom window. and then he'd continue up this way. >> reporter: nancy vandermay and eric barkolo moved here to be close to wildlife and got their wish in the form of a mountain lion named p-41, who seems to he's right out here where we are? >> exactly where we are. >> reporter: he has come to visit at least ten times. triggering security cameras taking both video and still pictures. the area is called cougar canyon. what else? >> here he is just literally made a loop around our house for
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>> reporter: like proud parents with baby pictures they show off their video scrapbook. >> and let me point out how his paws are on the wood and not on the gravel so he can make as little noise as possible. >> wow. >> they want to be silent at all times. >> reporter: camera technology has revolutionized the way mountain lions and other wild animar editor for universal studios. on her own time she's one of several citizen scientists, as they're called, who put remote cameras up in the wild hoping to get that perfect shot. >> there he is. oh, come on, buddy. >> how do you know where to look? >> we look for tracks and we look for signs of them and we look for deer because that's their food source. >> reporter: to lure the lions into camera range she'll sprinkle catnip, vanilla
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branch, and just like house cats they love it. the holy grail is a shot like this one of p-41. but her cameras also catch bobcats, coyotes, foxes and bears. >> you can see the full report on our website, cbsnews.com. the "overnight news" will be right back. with move free ultra's triple action joint support for improved mobility and flexibility, and 20% better comfort from one tiny, mighty pill... get move free ultra, and enjoy living well. my hygienist said the most random thing. she said i should think of my teeth like an apple. her advice? use a toothpaste and mouthwash that strengthens both. go pro with crest pro-health advanced. it's uniquely formulated with activestrength technology to strengthen teeth inside and is better at strengthening the outside than colgate total. crest toothpaste and mouthwash makes my whole mouth feel amazing. advance to healthier gums and stronger teeth from day one. my check-up was great. mmm... i can't believe it's so delicious.
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but that doesn't mean the entire industry is coming up craps. mark albert found some big-time casino developers still prepared to roll the dice. >> reporter: casinos have never been more flush than they are right now. >> we went from about 800 employees to 3,000 employees in less than six months.sn't mean e industry is coming up craps. mark albert found some big-time casino developers still prepared to roll the dice. >> reporter: casinos have never been more flush than they are right now. >> we went from about 800 employees to 3,000 employees in less than six months. >> reporter: rob norton is president of maryland live, a sprawling casino in the baltimore, maryland suburbs that opened just four years ago. after rounds of expansion it now sells itself as one of the and entertainment venues. >> are you going to keep growing? >> we are going to absolutely keep growing. >> reporter: and like a gambler on a winning streak, the casino is plunging ahead. it's just broken ground on a $200 million convention center and hotel. a confident david cordish owns maryland live. is it a bet for you to build this hotel or is it a sure thing? >> it's pretty much a sure thing. >> reporter: cordish is doubling
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builds casinos near these three things -- a high-income community, a busy interstate, and a major retail magnet. maryland live sits next to arundel mills mall, a 1.6 million-square-foot shopping paradise. you're a bullish man on a lot of things. >> i am bullish. very optimistic. >> reporter: but even an optimist dreads a losing hand. 30 years ago only two states had casinos. now 42 states do. you're running out of room to expand in. >> by and large the united states is running out of good locations. >> reporter: does that mean you're running out of customers, that at some point casinos will be cannibalizing from each other? >> at some point. it's already happening. >> reporter: on election day new jersey voters will decide whether to amend the constitution to allow casinos beyond atlantic city. the one-time las vegas of the east where the chips are most certainly down.
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city had 16% of the u.s. commercial casino market. now it's just 6%. after neighboring new york, pennsylvania and maryland let casinos open there. and it's hurting the bottom line. new jersey's casino tax revenues are half what they were ten years ago. meaning less money for senior citizens, the disabled, and economic revitalization programs. while new york's quadrupled, sending a windfall to education. delaware's general fund took a hit as maryland hit the jackpot. with five casinos since 2009 is & a sixth, the mgm at national harbor, opening december 8th. >> basically kind of an arms race. >> reporter: alex bumoginy is an analyst at fitz ratings. even though commercial casino revenue nationwide is up 48% since 2001 to more than $40 billion nationwide, bumoginy says the casino industry is now extremely saturated. >> fortunately, most states at this point already have gaming and have a limited amount of licenses to issue.
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>> does that worry you? >> it doesn't worry me for the ones we're involved in. >> you think you're immune. >> i think we're immune in the locations we've picked. >> reorter: david cordish now has plans for a new live casino in philadelphia. his fifth casino. convinced he's on a roll. ou casinos opening? >> actually, no, i don't. i don't feel like there's too many casinos. >> why not? because you want choice? >> yes. most definitely. >> reporter: andrea hanks came from her fiance 2 1/2 hours north from richmond, virginia to give maryland live a spin. as did betsy bane. she's a shrewd shopper at the
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it opens in national harbor. she told us she'll keep sampling. >> you can try another one. >> so you don't have a loyalty to one particular casino.
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the holiday shopping season is in full swing, and a lot of people are determined to avoid the malls at all costs. but if you're one of the millions who shop online with your smartphone, you could be putting your personal information at risk. a lot of those phone apps are fake. anna werner has the details. >> i would say for most of my purchases i do use my iphone. >> reporter: nicole barker likes shopping through her apps but didn't realize they could put her identity at risk. >> it's really scary. you trust those brands when you see them and you just accept or trust that that's who you think you're dealing with. >> reporter: but a company that creates many of those apps for major retailers found some shopping apps for names like dillard's, payless, even christian dior and jimmy choo,
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of fake apps. hundreds. >> reporter: chris mason from branding brand. >> if you take those apps down and you get rid of that provider, you'll find them show up in a different form of a new name, new credentials. for every one you take down there's two that come up. >> it's collecting a lot of data. >> reporter: gary milevsky with cyber security firm snoop wall says it's all about criminals getting hold of your private information. >> some of these apps, these counterfeit apps, are so good they give you a complete shopping cart experience. everything through the "congratulations, here's your order number, it's on its way." and then you never get the goods. >> reporter: but he points to something even more disturbing, with super popular emoji keyboard apps. these keyboards replace the one on your phone giving you an endless supply of emoticons for every occasion. but he says many can also gain access to your contacts, text messages, possibly even passwords and send your private information overseas. >> these are all developed by
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>> so what do you think somebody in china is doing with all that information? >> some think that the chinese version of the nsa is using these kinds of tools to collect a lot of information on people ov g the regular keyboard. but milevsky says better to avoid emoji keyboards entirely, especially if they're free. news to nicole barker. >> i do have an emoji keyboard. as do most of my friends. that really gets me scared, makes me realize i probably should take that off my phone.
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captioning funded by cbs it's friday, december 2nd, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." ? proud to be an american ? victory lap. president-elect donald trump kicks off his thank you tour with a fiery speech, promising to put america's interests first. and returning home. today, people who escaped the tennessee wildfires will be allowed to go back to their neighborhoods to see what is left.

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