tv CBS Evening News CBS July 18, 2017 6:30pm-7:00pm EDT
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>> mason: resting in pieces. >> when we finally get chance to repeal and replace, they don't take advantage of it. >> mason: the senate healthcare bill dies. is this plan "b"? >> we'll let obamacare fail, and then the democrats are going to come to us. >> he wants to throw up his hands rather then roll up his sleeves and work with us. >> mason: also tonight, a ten-year-old miami boy is one of the youngest casualties of the opioid epidemic. scandal at the vatican. funds for a children's hospital allegedly used to renovate a cardinal's apartment. >> this really plays to the stereotype of out of touch arrogant cardinals growing fat on t
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west virginia's shelly moore capito said, "i did not come to washington to hurt people." maine's susan collins agreed. >> i believe it would cause the insurance markets to go into turmoil, and i don't think it is the right way to proceed. >> reporter: she's got back-up from the non-mart sudan congressional budget office, which determined a 2015 repeal bill with no replacement would have pushed 18 million people off insurance within a year. the cbo says this approach decimates the individual market. >> this may not be a viable option, but we all voted for it before. repealing we're all for. replacing we're all over the board. >> reporter: so all over the board that two replacement plans are now in the dustbin. senate moderates opposed deep medicate cuts, while conservatives said too much of obamacare was being left in place. >> well, weed like to see the senate move on something. >> reporter: under pressure today from the house and the white house... >> and congress needs to do
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their job now. >> reporter:...senate leader mitch mcconnell announced he will hold a vote to repeal obamacare without a replacement even though he knows it can't pass. if that vote fails, do you then begin working with democrats? >> we'll have to see what happens. we will have demonstrated that republicans by themselves are not prepared at this particular point to do a replacement. >> reporter: democrats said it was proof grassroots opposition works. on twitter they hailed everyone who sent letters, made calls, or attended a town hall. massachusetts senator ed markey. >> it's a great day. it's a great victory for the healthcare of the american people. >> reporter: the g.o.p. chair of the senate health committee announced this afternoon that he will soon begin holding hearings on ways to stabilize the individual insurance market, and that is a big change, because up until now, republicans have not
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to obamacare that do not involve repeal. anthony? >> mason: nancy cordes at the capitol. thank you, nancy. over at the white house, the president threatened to let obamacare fall apart and put the blame on the democrats. here's chip reid. >> i would say i'm disappointed in what took place. >> reporter: president trump interrupted a lunch with afghan war veterans to vent his frustration over the failed republican healthcare bill. >> i'm sitting in the oval office right next door, pen in hand, waiting to sign something. >> reporter: he pointed the finger of blame primarily at democrats. but that's a difficult argument to make when republicans control the white house and both houses of congress, and after he promised again and again that he would get it done. >> we get rid of obamacare, and we have a great life altogether. you're going to have such great healthcare at a tiny fraction of
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>> he is actively, actively trying to undermine the healthcare system in this country using millions of americans as political pawns in a cynical game. >> reporter: the president said today that the solution is to get more republicans elected to congress, but even if he can accomplish that, that new congress wouldn't be in place until the year 2019. anthony? >> mason: chip reid at the white house, thanks. it turns out this meeting between president trump and russian pde
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earlier this month was not the only one. late today the white house confirmed putin and mr. trump had another previously undisclosed informal meeting that evening. we this not know what was discussed. and now more about that infamous meeting at trump tower last year involving donald trump, jr. the number of attendees we know about is up to eight. here's jeff pegues. >> reporter: today ike kaveladze, a soviet-born businessman who came to the u.s. in 1991, was identified by his lawyer as yet another person who attended donald trump, jr.,'s meeting in trump tower in june 2016. the lawyer, scott balber, said kaveladze doesn't remember saying a single word, left scratching his head, and wondering, why am i here? investigators for special counsel robert mueller have asked to talk to kaveladze. mueller is examining whether the
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the russian government. >> there is nothing there. >> reporter: last week the president's son said he agreed to the meeting because he was led to believe the kremlin had negative information about hillary clinton. instead he has said the russians really wanted to talk about reversing sanctions imposed by the obama administration. the meeting took place at the bethest of the agalorov family. aras agalorov is a russian billionaire oligarch with close ties to russian president vladimir putin. kaveladze was the agalorov's man in the trump tower meeting. in 2013 on the eve of the miss u.s.a. pageant, he attended this dinner in las vegas with the agalorovs as they dined with mr. trump. kaveladze's name has surfaced before. in 2000, a government report said a businessman later identified as kaveladze had set up hundreds of accounts for russian brokers in two u.s. banks. the report said the accounts were used to possibly launder over $1 billion from
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eastern european companies. kaveladze was not charged in that case. his lawyer said at the time that he did nothing illegal, and he accused the g.a.o. of a witch-hunt. anthony? >> mason: jeff pegues. thank you, jeff. the minneapolis police chief is calling for an outside investigation into the shooting death of a yoga teacher by an officer saturday night, but the department has said next to nothing about how it happened. jamie yuccas now on what she's learned. >> reporter: 40-year-old justine damond, a yoga instructor and life coach, was described by many who knew her as a bright light. >> what i wanted to do is make miracles the norm. >> reporter: today damond's father spoke from australia. >> we only ask that the light of justice shine down on the circumstances of her death. >> reporter: the officer who fired the fatal shot is mohamed noor, a second-year officer with the minneapolis police department. the first somali-american officer hired for the fifth precinct. his hiring was seen
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build trust between an immigrant community and law enforcement. abdi bihi is a community leader. >> we have an officer who community members hold in high regard who is involved in her death. that's why people are demanding answers. >> reporter: since joining the department, officer noor has had three complaints filed against him. he was sued after an incident in may in which a woman says he treated her roughly during a police call. on saturday, damond called 911 to report a suspected sexual assault in an alley near her home. >> a female standing behind the building. >> reporter: according to law enforcement, damond was standing at the driver's window of a squad car when officer noor opened fire from the passenger seat. the bullet passed in front of his partner and went through the open window, fatally striking damond. >> shots fired. one down. >> there are no suspects alive. >> reporter: she was such a sweet person. >> shelly received life coaching from damond
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>> to have her in my life and other people's lives, not to have her is a huge loss, huge. >> reporter: the prime minister of australia is demanding answers today. anthony, the city of minneapolis is expected to release a full transcript of the 911 calls in a short time, but what won't be released is any video, that's because the police officer's body cameras as well as the camera in the squad car were both turned off during the time of the incident. >> mason: jamie yuccas with lots of unanswered questions in minneapolis. thank you, jamie. the prosecutor in cincinnati said the police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black driver during a traffic stop will not face a third trial. two previous jurors deadlocked on murder and manslaughter charges against ray tensing, who was fired after being indicted. tensing testified that he feared fosr hiif le when he shot sam dubose two years ago tomorrow. at the vatican today, two civilians went on trial for allegedly violating at least one of the ten
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about stealing. here's seth doane. >> reporter: the trial has the hallmarks of a tv crime drama. two former administrators of the vatican's bambio gesu hospital are accused of embezzling nearly $500,000 in hospital funds to pay for the renovations of a sprawling 3,200-foot apartment belonging to cardinal tarcisio bertone. giuseppe profiti, the former hospital president, had defended the scheme, saying the money was an investment because the cardinal's apartment would be used for hospital fund-raisers. bertone, the vatican's number two under pope benedict, was not charged and it cysts he knew nothing about the diverted funds. >> a scandal like this really plays to the stereotype of out-of-touch arrogant cardinals growing fat on the wealth of the church. >> reporter: candida moss, a professor of theology at the university of notre dame, says no less than the credibility
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>> if we don't see results in this trial, if we don't see a prosecution, people will wonder if francis is really serious about financial reform. >> reporter: the hospital is one of europe's leading pediatric centers. first lady melania trump paid a visit there in may. recently pope francis said one of the worst cancers in the hospital is corruption. this vatican court proceeding takes place, anthony, as pope francis is trying to tidy up the finances of the vatican. the next hearing will be in early september. >> mason: seth doane at the vatican. thanks, seth. late last night the trump administration grudgingly confirmed that iran is complying with the terms of the international nuclear deal. hours later it accused iran of stirring up trouble in other ways in the middle east and slapped new economic sanctions on 18 iranian individuals and groups. here's white house and senior foreign affairs correspondent margaret brennan. >> it violatee
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we will look at it and see whether it violates the letter of the deal and act accordingly. >> reporter: iran's top dip mad, javad zarif, said new sanctions announced today by the trump administration are poisoning already strained relations between the two countries. at stake is the 2015 deal to freeze iran's nuclear program that president trump has repeatedly criticized as rewarding a u.s. enemy. >> it's one of the worst deals i've ever witnessed. >> reporter: president trump wants the scrap the deal or renegotiate. president trump said it's a bad deal for americans and that there are flaws in it. >> it isn't. it isn't. well, no deal is completely acceptable to everybody. >> reporter: you're saying iran is not willing to negotiate? >> this is a multilateral deal approved by the security council. it's in the a bilateral deal to be withdrawn from or to be renegotiated. >> reporter: the white house accuses iran of supporting terrorists in syria and iraq,
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but zarif disputed that and placed blame on u.s. allies like saudi arabia. >> these are the countries that are producing terrorists for you, and the united states is going after iran. i don't know why. >> reporter: anotherrer tantd, the travel ban on -- another irritant, the travel ban on six majority muslim countries, including iran. >> what the united states has done against the iranian people over the past several months has been really repugnant. >> you think it's up to president trump to show some goodwill? >> i certainly think it is up to the u.s. government to stop sending all these hostile signals. >> reporter: there are also at least three americans detained in iran, which zarif acknowledged isn't helping. the most recent is a princeton scholar who was give an ten-year sentence for what the u.s. calls "fabricated charges." anthony? >> mason: margaret, thanks. coming up next on the "cbs evening news," mystery surrounds the death of a ten year old, a victim of the opioid epidemic.
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>> mason: a ten-year-old boy has become one of the youngest casualties of the opioid crisis, and how the drugs ended up in his system is a mystery. omar villafranca is in miami. >> reporter: investigators say fifth grader alton banks died on june 23rd after a visit to a community pool here in miami's overtown neighborhood. he began vomiting after coming home and later that evening his mother found him unresponsive. preliminary toxicology tests showed the ten-year-old had a mix of fentanyl and heroin in his system. miami-dade state attorney katherine fernandez rundle. >> we don't know where he got it. we don't believe at this point it was in his home. we believe that it was somewhere between the park or the pool or the sidewalk or maybe he touched something. >> reporter: investigators say that alton may have been exposed to the deadly drugs during his walk home. the poverty-stricken overtown neighborhood has seen
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year. jessie davis is alton banks' neighbor. she worries for her own grandchildren. >> it could be anywhere. you have to pray and talk to them, and hopefully they learn and don't pick it up or touch things. that's all i can do is tell them. >> reporter: according to the medical examiner's office, there were nearly 300 overdose deaths last year in the miami area involving fentanyl. the drug is so powerful, about two months ago a ohio police officer allegedly overdosed just by touching it. anthony? >> mason: omar villafranca with another victim of the opioid crisis. up next, the wildfire in the west could cut the power to a national park. and diarrhea. i tried lifestyle changes and over-the-counter treatments, but my symptoms keep coming back. it turns out i have irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea, or ibs-d.
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that's why i talked to my doctor about viberzi... ...a different way to treat ibs-d. viberzi is a prescription medication you take every day that helps proactively manage both abdominal pain and diarrhea at the same time. so i can stay ahead of my symptoms. viberzi can cause new or worsening abdominal pain. do not take viberzi if you have no gallbladder, have pancreas or severe liver problems, problems with alcohol abuse, long-lasting or severe constipation, or a bowel or gallbladder blockage. pancreatitis may occur and can lead to hospitalization and death. if you are taking viberzi, you should not take medicines that cause constipation. the most common side effects of viberzi include constipation, nausea, and abdominal pain. stay ahead of ibs-d with viberzi. ♪ i'm...i' m so in love with you. ♪ ♪ whatever you want to do...
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♪ ooo baby let's... ♪ ...let's stay together... [radi♪ alarm] julie is living with metastatic breast cancer, which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor- positive her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ♪ ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. and ibrance plus letrozole shrunk tumors in over half of these patients.
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develop low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include low red blood cell and low platelet counts... ...infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. julie calls it her "new" normal. because a lot has changed, but a lot hasn't. ask your doctor about ibrance, the number-one-prescribed, fda-approved oral combination treatment for hr+/her2- mbc. >> mason: former house speaker dennis hastert was released today from a federal prison in minnesota. he'll now undergo sex offender treatment back home inll
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last ertd was convicted of violating banking laws to pay hush money to man he sexually abused when he was a high school wrestling coach. a wildfire in california is threatening power lines that supply yosemite national park. the fire has grown to nearly 20,000 acres inch canada a blanket of smoke covers mush of british columbia where nearly 400 fires are raging. 40,000 people have been evacuated. dozens of homes have been destroyed. from fires to a hurricane, that's julia hawkins' nickname. on saturday she became the oldest woman to compete in the u.s.a.bt6ck and field masters championships at, get this, 101. hawkins set a record in the 100-meter dash for centenarians. just over 40 seconds. she knew it was important. as she put it, "i gave up my nap for this." we'll be back in a moment.
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>> mason: we end tonight with a story you don't know about first lunar landing in the summer of 1969. the woman who rescued a precious artifact from the dustbin of history. here's jim axelrod. >> that's one small step for man... >> reporter: neil armstrong's giant leap for mankind on to the moon allowed him to make several small stops there, as well. >> he's got a little bag on the rim. >> reporter: collecting lunar dust and rocks in a specially designed decontamination bag to bring home. the rocks became a national treasure. the bag not so much. forgotten about
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resurfacing three years ago on a government auction web site that space enthusiast nancy carlson likes to check out. >> i did see a bag described as a lunar bag, a small one, with a number on it. >> reporter: she quickly slapped down her $995, and a week later, history arrived. >> it was like finding the holy grail. >> reporter: but found was almost lost again for nancy. just to be sure it was from apollo 11, she sent the bag off to nasa so they could test the dust embedded in the fabric. >> a very powdery surface. >> that's where things started to go off the rails, to put it nicely. >> reporter: nasa told carlson, yes, her bag had been to the moon, but no they would not be returning it, since it never should have been sold to start with. nancy had to sue to get her bag back. she won, though the publicity convinced her the bag wouldn't be safe in her home, so thursday the
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moon landing, nancy will auction it off. >> that's moon dust? >> yes. >> reporter: cassandra hatton is with sotheby's. >> if i just say neil armstrong moon dust, you get it. you don't need to be mesh to understand why this is important. also what's exciting is i can talk the a five-year-old in china and they would get excited about this. >> reporter: the bag is expected to fetch $2 million and $4 million. not a bad return on nancy's $995 investment. >> i found a piece of history that everybody forgot about. so that's my great gratification in all of this. i saved it from being lost. >> reporter: nearly half a century later, thanks to nancy carlson's internet trolling, there is a new footnote to the greatest adventure story in human history. >> it's very pretty out here. >> very pretty. >> mason: jim axelrod with some moon dust that's better than gold dust. that's the "cbs evening news." i'm anthony mason. thanks for watching.
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kirk, kirk, kirk. cousins? kirk. >> not even his boss seems to know for sure. can anyone imagine a bigger mess? >> i'm not going to own it. >> congress needs to step up. congress needs to do their job, and congress needs to do their job now. >> where do we go now with healthcare? ♪ [ music ] >> r kelly, cult leader? more shocking allegations against the rnb star. hillo i'm bruce johnson, and thanks for joining us on
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