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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  September 15, 2017 2:07am-3:59am EDT

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in a health care fraud complaint yet the center was allowed to stay open. >> how could a facility like this still be open? >> look, that's another question for the state agency that regulate the nursing home. at what point do you pull the license? >> reporter: when the home lost power, police believe the backup generators were not big enough to cool the space. records show several 911 calls came from the center starting at 3:30 in the morning. but it was nurse judy fromme who walked over with colleagues to find out what was happening. >> it was a situation where we knew we had to get the patients evacuated. >> reporter: vendetta craig wonder why the staff didn't take patients to the air-conditioned hospital steps away. >> i hope the truth comes out. it's senseless. >> reporter: we called the nursing home for comment and have not heard back. we visited the owner's home.
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hurricane. this evening 39 people re
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this is the "cbs overnight news." we begin with breaking news. another missile launched by north korea. national security correspondent david martin is following developments from the pentagon. >> the missile landed in the north pacific after a flight of 2200 miles. it was the second time north korea has launched a missile over japan and this one traveled about 500 miles further. the pentagon's initial assessment is i
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intermediate range missile that never posed a threat to the u.s. homeland or u.s. bases on guam. >> those in favor of the -- >> reporter: north korea had been threatening to retaliate for the latest round of sanctions passed by the u.n. security council on monday. and u.s. intelligence had been expecting a missile launch either today or tomorrow. this is part of a long-running ballistic missile development program and the norae north koreans would be testing these missiles in any event. still, north korean missiles flying over an american ally seems to have become the new normal. >> david martin with another missile launch from north korea, thanks. after leaving florida the president repeated comments he made last month
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violence in charlottesville, virginia. at the time the president blamed many sides for the violence. today on air force one, mr. trump told reporters, quote, you had some pretty bad dudes on the other side also and essentially that's what i said. you look at really what has happened since charlottesville and a lot of people are saying, in fact, a lot of people have written, gee, trump may have had a point. the florida keys have born the brunt of irma. >> reporter: with the scope of devastation in parts of the keys becoming more clear the focus is now on relief. monroe county officials say they have checked on all homes in the hardest hit areas and found no additional victims. >> thank you so much. >> reporter: water and food are reaching those who stayed behind. but it could be days before running water, power, and cell service are fully restored.
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about harold davis. he never got rid of his landline phone and is helping neighbors connect with the outside world. >> you have become a lifeline in a way. >> a little bit, yeah. yeah. and that helps. it gives you a little more desire to keep pushing forward. >> reporter: it's also come in handy for him. the home he shares with his wife took on more than four feet of storm surge. he has called fema and helped others file claims too. >> it's tough. try to be the man and try to be, you know, strong for your wife and everybody else. and i didn't want to see this. but -- we'll pick up and move on. >> reporter: harold says he doesn't even recognize most of the debris in his backyard becaus
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down the street. conditions are still considered hazardous here. it could be days before all residents of the keys are allowed back in. anthony? >> thank you, manny. new york city police today released body cam video that shows officers shooting a man to death in his bedroom. they had gone to check on miguel richards after his landlord reported he hadn't seen him in days. they pleaded with richards to drop a knife. when richards appeared to aim a gun with a laser pointer at the officers, they opened fire. that gun turned out to be a toy. the nypd says it released the body cam video in the interest of transparency. and we're back in just a moment.
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a student accused of opening fire at a high school south of spokane, washington posted online videos of himself acting out shootings. in the attack one student was killed and three others are in stable condition. >> are you playing halo? i just sat up here planning your murder. >> reporter: this video posted in june of the suspected shooter shows a high school sophomore role-playing in a first person shooting game with toy guns. a newly released affidavit says that caleb told detectives he came to school to teach everyone a lesson about what happens when you bully others. he has been seeing a school
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ideations. the gun belongs to sharp's father. they found a suicide note written by their son a week ago. his first shot came from a rifle that jammed up. a handgun was used to shoot sam strahan who was attempting to intervene. he said i always knew you were going to shoot up the school. sharp shot strahan in the abdomen and face killing him. minutes later the school janitor, joe bow when stepped in to stop the shooter. >> why did he step in at the time? >> those are rare people. and if you ask him, i'll bet you he can't tell you. you just do what you got to do. joe confronted him, ordered him to the ground and held him there. >> reporter: a friend of sharpe's told detectives he makes improvised explosives devices out
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and white gas. >> does it surprise you that a 15-year-old was playing with chemicals for ieds? >> not at all. this is a situation that plays out in our society way too often. >> reporter: the sheriff wants to charge the alleged shooter as an adult even though he is only 15 years old. his charges would include premeditated murder with an arraignment set for later this month. >> thanks. coming up next how equifax opened the door to hackers. and later, pop star selena gomez and the friend who saved her life.
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you're lucky you're cute. lysol max cover with 2x wider coverage kills 99.9% of bacteria. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. the federal trade commission said today it's investigating the massive cyberattack at equifax. the credit raid raigt company revealed last week that hackers gainedcc aess to the personal information of about 143 million americans. anna werner is following this. >> reporter: consumers posting their outrage on social media. some comni
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freeze their credit but couldn't and wanted answers. equifax disclosed that the hackers stole information through a software vulnerability on a web server. the software's maker, the apache software foundation said that they failed to update the updates in an urgent matter which is bad enough. >> the fact that there was an unpatched server for a matter of months just opened the door to the hackers. >> reporter: but he says among experts right now the bigger question is once the hackers got in was the consumer data protected through encryption or not? >> if it was uncrypted there is nothing that can be done. the hackers are buying and selling everything there is to know about our identity on the dark
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attorney general says she will be suing equifax over its exposure of consumers private information. >> equifax needs to pay what it will cost consumers to have credit monitoring and make sure they are protected against potential identity threat or misuse of their data. >> reporter: we asked cbs news employees to try that credit freeze protocol and some got error messages. we asked equifax to provide more information about the breach and we did not get any answers to those questions. >> anna werner, thanks. up next, why the treasury secretary requested a government plane for his honeymoon.
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treasury secretary steve mnuchin has been under fire for requesting a government plane last month to get to his honeymoon in europe. as a member of the national security council eneeds secure communications. in the end the secretary got access to the communications without using a government plane. three women who used to work for google sued the company they claim google
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less than men for similar work and assigns female workers jobs less likely to lead to promotions. google denies the allegations. crayola chose a name for a new blue crayon. bluetiful was the winner. we end with a pop star who got the gift of life from her best friend. selena gomez told fans today she is recovering from a kidney transplant and her best friend, francia raisa is the donor. gomez explained her kidney failure was caused by lupus. the 25-year-old actress and singer was diagnosed with the auto immune disease in 2014 and underwent chemotherapy. >> if you are broken you do not
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>> reporter: last year gomez took a break from her career after suffering from anxiety and depression. she poke about that tough period at the american music awards in november. >> i had to stop. i had everything. and i was absolutely broken inside. >> reporter: earlier this week, at the hand in hand telethon for hurricane relief. the texas native became emotional talking about a houston family swept away by floodwaters. >> their story affected all who heard it and no matter who we are, the differences we have, suddenly did not seem to matter. >> reporter: gomez had a meet and greet with fans yesterday and appeared to be in good health and spirits. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues, for others, check back for the morning news and cbs this morning.
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york city i'm anthony mason. thanks for watching. ♪ captioning funded by cbs this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news i'm michelle miller. president trump has touched off a guessing game on capitol hill over whether or not he has cut an immigration deal with democrats. they say the deal would protect young undocumented workers from deportation and provide more money for border security but not a wall between the u.s. and mexico. republican leaders say there's no such deal. we've got both sides of the story now from juliana goldman and nancy cordes. >> reporter: the white house was initially vague about last night's meeting calling it a constructive working dinner. but as my colleague nancy cordes can tell you, democrats said there was more too it.
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the president signed off on a policy they've been pushing for years. >> we had an agreement to move forward. >> reporter: democratic leaders say they left that white house dinner with a framework in hand. legal protections for d.r.e.a.m.ers paired with funding for border security, excluding the wall. >> we're not for the wall. >> reporter: at the white house, press secretary sarah huckabee sanders refuted the democrats' version of events saying excluding the wall was not agreed to. >> we will build the wall. >> reporter: building a wall on the u.s./mexico border defined mr. trump's campaign. traveling to florida today he tried to reassure his base he hadn't given up. >> there was no deal. >> reporter: there is a lot of sympathy for the d.r.e.a.m.ers. >> reporter: here on the hill many republicans were supportive. but some conservatives accuse the president of
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north carolina's mark walker tweeted if the deal is at ploensy characterized it causes more than a pause, more like a screeching halt. they are nervous about the president's newfound bipartisan. even schumer marvelled about it. >> he likes us. he likes me anyway. >> reporter: paul ryan reminded reporters, republicans still control congress and write the legislation. >> have you asked the president to at least check with you before he makes an agreement with democrats? >> first off, there is no agreement. it was a discussion. not an agreement or a negotiation. >> reporter: back on air force one, the president said his party supports him. >> my relationship with the republicans is excellent. >> reporter: by the time mr. trump spoke to reporters for
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fourth time he was back to criticizing the democrats about the wall. leaders on both sides appear to be interested in doing something quickly. the question is how long it's going to take for them to draft and agree to the border security side of this package. and will republican leaders be willing to turn their backs on a small but vocal group of conservatives who believe granting the so-called d.r.e.a.m.ers any status would equal amnesty. >> this is a president who promised to be a deal maker and he has come up short. he is frustrated with republicans and he wants a win. but it's not like he is making nice with the democrats here. the president sent out a campaign e-mail saying that liberals in congress need one more reminder that building the wall is nonnegotiable. president trump stepped away from the immigration debate gripping washingtoo
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irma disaster zone in florida. >> reporter: on the tarmac in ft. myers, president trump praised florida governor rick scott for the response to hurricane irma. >> the job that rick has done is being talked about all over. >> reporter: and couldn't resistant injecting a little politics. >> i hope this man right here runs for the senate. >> reporter: the president and first lady got an aerial view of the destruction in naples below. they visited a mobile home park that was badly damaged. >> we love the people of florida and they went through something the likes of which no one has seen before. they never have seen a category like this before. it came in at a 5. just look at the keys. >> reporter: hurricane irma made landfall on sunday on cudjoe key as a category 4. later the president handed out sandwiches and met with supporters. >> he has a couple of questions. >> we were
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last hurricane. he was layiplaying golf. >> was this a good vote? he said the best vote of his life. >> reporter: after the president left the airport here at ft. myers he told reporters he hopes to visit puerto rico, the u.s. virgin island and the florida keys to see the damage for himself as early as next week. in hollywood florida, a criminal investigation is underway into the deaths of eight nursing home residents. they died in sweltering conditions when the air-conditioning at the home went dark. jon vigliotti reports. >> shame on you. >> reporter: vendetta craig's mother, edna jefferson was one of the 158 patients rescued after spending three days in the sweltering heat. >> reporter: what do you want to say to the owner of this facility? >> we coming for you. we coming for you. this is unacceptable.
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you mess with my mom. you mess with my mom. i'm not taking it. >> reporter: now police have launched a criminal investigation. one inspection last year found 29 violations, including patients being given the wrong medications, overflowing trash, and insects in the kitchen. residents complained they were hungry and were calling out for food. the facility was ranked much below average by the agency for administration and it owner was fined $15 million in a 2006 health care fraud complaint. yet the center was allowed to stay open. how could something like this, a facility like this still be open? >> that's another question for the state agencies that regulate the nursing homes? at what point do you pull the license? >> reporter: when the home lost power, police believe the backup generators were not big enough to cool the space. records show several 911
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3:30 in the morning. but it was nurse judy fromme from a hospital across the street who walked over to see what was happening. >> we had to get the patients evacuated. >> reporter: and vendetta craig wonders why the staff did not take the patients to the air-conditioned hospital steps away. >> i hope the proof comes out. it's senseless. >> reporter: we have called the nursing home for comment and have not heard back. we visited the owner's home. it was still boarded up for the hurricane. and the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." anthony bourdain has gone from being a celebrity chef to perhaps the hardest workman in show business. he took time out from his busy schedule for a chat with our own anthony mason. >> mm. magic. >> reporter: after a life on the road traveling to parts unknown, eating with no reservations, anthony bourdain is very particular when he gets back home. >> so you don't like being fussed over? >> i don't want to be comped or want extra courses. just serve me like anyone else. >> reporter: which is why we
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at pastrami queen. >> this is what i crave. this is the first thing i want and need. >> reporter: in his travels, he has eaten everything from rotten shark to -- >> sheep testicles. >> reporter: is there anything you won't eat? >> i have eaten a lot of bad food. it's when no one cares at all, that's soul destroying. i will literally, really carelessly made burger by a cynical, large company, the contempt inimplicit in that transaction can spend me into a spiral of depression that will last for days. >> reporter: little seems to slow him down. >> so how many pot do you have on theto sve? >> a lot but all of themre
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>> reporter: they include producing, writing and starring in his cnn series, "parts unknown." his web series, "raw craft" he is authoring a new cookbook and a speaking tour. >> how much are you on the road? >> about 250 days a year. it's been like this for the better part of 15 years. >> and you're okay with that? >> i am -- i've been sentenced to the best job in the world. >> reporter: it started in 1999 when the then struggling chef wrote an article for the "new yorker" entitled "don't eat before reading this". >> which mushroomed into a book deal? >> overnight. "kitchen confidential" published in 2000 turned the restaurant world inside out and his life up side down. >> i was 44 years old. uninsured.
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hideously and hopelessly in debt. behind on my taxes and rent. >> reporter: it would sell a million copies. >> how is this guy different from that guy? >> when you travel as much as i have, you -- i don't want to say i'm more humble but i think you become aware of how other people live and how hard their lives are and how big the world is. and of course fatherhood changes everything. i became a father at 50. and you know, at that moment you stop being the star of the film. >> that's the truth. >> for me, that was an enormous relief and a gift. >> reporter: his daughter is the inspiration for his new cookbook, "appetites". >> the person i'm trying to bleez please is a 9-year-old and her friends. and it
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the heart of the bad boy image from 1999. >> reporter: this wouldn't be the dish if we didn't have a drink. >> this is very good 30-year-old whiskey. >> there is a bad joke in here. anthony walks in a bar at 9:00 in the morning. >> yeah. >> reporter: at the bar in the carlisle hotel, we sampled some of their best scotch that sells for $1,000 a bottle. >> this is very smooth. >> it better be. >> reporter: he has partnered with the distillery on his web series "raw craft" to profile great artisans. >> i worked in an industry where everything was temporary, food. you have one second of satisfaction. there is a part of me that has always thought wouldn't it be nice to be able to make beautiful things with my hands that last. >> reporter: he's had a lot of
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unlikely encounters in his travels. in "parts unknown" he met up with president obama in a hanoi restaurant in vietnam. >> it was a room about this size. i think one exit. second floor of a not particularly clean noodle shop. he is very good with chop sticks which endears anyone to me. and you know, it's nice seeing the president of the united states drinking a beer out of a bottle. >> is there anybody out there you would like to have a meal with? >> keith richards. i have been trying for years to eat bangers and mash and talk about british naval history which he is a big fan of. that would be super cool. pill. it helps block 6 key inflammatory substances that cause symptoms. pills block one and 6 is greater than 1. flonase changes everything.
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the federal aviation administration is you should new pressure to regulate the seating on commercial airlines. seats and leg room have been shrinking for years and now critics say it's a safety risk. here's kris van cleave. >> reporter: everyone has to be able to get off a completely full airliners within 90 seconds even with half of the exit blocked. that is enough time to get people off before fire, smoke or
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water can turn deadly. but evacuations don't always go smoothly. that's fall this 767 had to evacuate after takeoff in chicago. on board, passengers pushed and shoved to get out. some stopped to grab their luggage. it took 116 passengers and nine crew more than two minutes to get off. hector was on that flight and captured the mayhem on his phone. >> everyone is shoving and pushing against you in such a way where you're pretty much almost squashed. >> reporter: passenger safety advocates worry the shrinking seat is creating another potential danger during an evacuation. just as the passengers are getting bigger, the space between rows has shrunk from 35 inches to 31 or even 28. paul hudson is president
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fliers rights and his group sued to regulate seat size. >> they have no jurisdiction over comfort. >> safety? >> they view safety narrowly. >> reporter: a federal court agreed there is plausible life or death issues. >> it's a true safety problem ad the faa needs to protect us. >> reporter: steve cohen issued legislation to establish a minimum seat size. >> we don't have seats and aisles that are capable of facility sil dating a safe exit. >> reporter: boeing tells cbs this morning that it conducts its evacuation tests in accordance with regulations and that is in a hangar. reese witherspoon is expects to be a big winner at the
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awards. she sat down with a chat with krista smith. >> reporter: the mothers of monterey are the belles of the ball at this sunday's emmy awards. >> you're so nice. thank you. >> monterey. we pound people with nice. >> to death. >> reporter: the darkly comic hbo series about mischief and murder among coastal california women are up for 16 awards, including one for star, reese witherspoon. >> i think five women who are so dynamic and complex and it was fascinating to people. >> i'm madeleine martha mckenzie. >> why did you pick madeleine? >> madeleine picked me. david kelly said he had written a script. he is like you're playing madeleine. >> i'm like, what are you talking about? he is like, you are madeleine. >> do you surf? >> do you
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boyfriend, girlfriend? i'm open to all possibilities. >> i'm not a busy body at all. i'm just interested in other people's lives. >> you're southern. >> we're friendly. >> i want more of that feeling. >> reporter: she is also real powerful. besides starring in the show she produces it. a role she transitioned to in 2012 and start aid quiring the rights to popular books. >> i was voracious reader and i bought "gone girl" and "wild" were the two i bought. i self funded a company for five years. >> you got me out here, is that where your plan ends? >> reporter: she made the move after playing june carter cash in "walk the line." >> where is my friend john is he high or incognito or is he gone. >> reporter: and fell into a
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>> i read a script and it was just awful and i called my agent and said i'm not going to do this. and he saad every actress in hollywood wants this part. and it was a light bulb moment for me and i said i have to do better and create more and do better for other women and create opportunities for other women. >> i'm elle woods. >> reporter: but that doesn't mean that the actress who created elle woods is giving up her time in front of the camera. >> did you wash these? >> i did. but only because i have been doing a load. >> reporter: she is revisiting romantic comedy territory in "home again" and time for a highly anticipated reunion. >> oh, my god, jill. >> rachel. >> reporter: with her big
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from "friends" with jennifer aniston. >> you really think that's going to work on me? i invented that. >> right. >> just getting to work together again. like over the moon. we keep texting each other. >> it's based on morning news shows. it's not lost on me that we're on a morning news show. >> and it's great to talk about women's role in media. and how women are treated on the morning news. >> reporter: her journey has taken her into the business as the driving force biehind the lifestyle brand. >> it was just a little bit hard for her i think because there with respect a lot of jobs for women at that time and you were expected to stay home particularly in the south. and i feel like in some ways i'm getting to live the life she
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>> reporter: when everyone is leaning away from
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a new study of distracted driving found some of the most dangerous streets in the naegs pass in front of our schools. carter evans has that story. >> reporter: parents here might not know they are in the second most dangerous county for distracted drivers. >> i'm about to step and walk across the street and almost got run over by somebody. >> reporter: claudia says she and her daughter have had several close calls. talia knows why. >> they're on their phones, they're texting. >> reporter: a study analyzed 4 million drivers cruising near 75,000 schools and determined
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carmichael elementary has some of the most dangerous streets in the country for distracted driving. a school in houston has the worst drivers. in general, the more urban the county, the riskier the school roads. >> which is more dangerous, morning dropoff or afternoon? >> the afternoon by about 40%. >> reporter: the ceo of zen drive, the company behind the research. he says the afternoon hours between 2:00 and 5:00 p.m. are more dangerous than the morning especially 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. all his data is collected online for anyone to access. >> we put all of this information into a very powerful map where you can search any name of any one of the 75,000 schools that we collected. >> reporter: for instance if you check in victory christian school in north carolina, it
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for average phone use while driving. in contrast to trinity lutheran church in texas. the area around that school received an "f." armed with the data, police can deploy resources in dangerous areas. >> police work is driven by information. we have to keep addressing traffic issues to make the streets better. that's a good thing. >> reporter: he hopes that participants will take failing grades to their school boards and law enforcement. >> it's their duty to keep our kids safe and now we can give them a score card and keep them accou accountable and focus the resources on the areas that need attention. that's it for the overnight news on this friday. for some of you the news continues, for others check back for the morning news. from the broadcast center in new york city. i'm michelle mil
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-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com captioning funded by cbs this is the "cbs overnight news." >> we begin with a question is there a deal to help d.r.e.a.m.ers? president trump scrapped the obama era daca program that protected undocumented immigrants brought here as children from deportation. and he gave congress six months to come up with a replacement. today we got so many conflicting answers we needed two correspondents to sort through them. here are nancy cordes on capitol hill and juliana goldman at the white house where the republican president had dinner last night with the top two democrats in congress. >> reporter: the white house was initially vague about last night's meeting calling it a constructive working dinner but as my colag
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tell you, democrats said there was more to it. >> reporter: democrats insist the president signed off on a deal they had been pushing for years. democratic leaders, nancy pelosi and chuck schumer say they left that white house dinner with a framework in hand. legal protection for d.r.e.a.m.ers paired with funding for border security excluding the wall. >> we're not for the wall. we'll never be for the wall. >> reporter: at the white house, press secretary sarah huckabee sanders quickly refuted the democrats' version of events, saying excluding the wall was not agreed to. >> we will build the wall. >> reporter: building a wall on the u.s./mexico border defined mr. trump's campaign. >> the wall will come later -- >> reporter: traveling to florida today he tried to reassure his base he hasn't given up. >> there's a lot of sympathy for the d.r.e.a.m.ers. >> reporter: here on the hill, many
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but some conservatives accuse the president of selling out. north carolina's mark walker tweeted if the deal is as pelosi characterized it causes more than a pause, more like a screeching halt. they are nervous about the president's new-found bipartisan and even schumer marvelled at the detente today in this hot mike moment on the senate floor. >> he likes us. he likes me, anyway. >> reporter: paul ryan reminded reporters that republicans still control congress and write the legislation. >> have you asked the president to check with you before he makes an agreement with democrats? >> first off, there is no agreement. it was a discussion not an agreement or negotiation. >> reporter: on air force one the president said his party supports him. >> my relationship with republicans is excellent. many of them agree with what i'm doing. >> reporter: by the time trump spoke with reporters for the fourth time he was back to
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criticizing democrats about the wall. >> if the democrats are not going to approve it we're not going to do what they want. >> so what's the bottom line here? if you are a d.r.e.a.m.er should you be breathing easier tonight >> you should be encouraged by the fact that everyone is talking about this and leaders on both sides appear to be interested in doing something quickly. the question is how long it's going to take them to draft and agree to the border security side of this package and will republican leaders be willing to turn their backs on a small but vocal group of conservatives who believe that granting the d.r.e.a.m.ers any legal status especially citizenship would amount to amnesty. >> this is the second time in a week the president has been willing to deal with democrats. what's that about? >> this is a president who promised to be a deal maker and so far he has come up short. he is frustrated with republicans and he wants a win. but anthony, it's not like he is
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in addition to his comments today, the president sent out an e-mail saying that liberals in congress need one more reminder that building the wall is non-negotiable. >> juliana goldman and nancy cordes, thank you, both. the president went to florida today to see for himself the damage done by hurricne irma last weekend. and to talk to some of the victims. here's carter evans. >> reporter: on the tarmac in ft. myers president trump praised florida governor rick scott for the response to hurricane irma. >> the job that rick has done has been talked about all over. >> reporter: and couldn't resist injecting a little politics. >> what do i know? but i hope this man, right here, rick scott, runs for senate. >> reporter: aboard marine one, the president and first lady got a view of the aerial view of the destruction below. they visited a mobile home park that was badly damaged. >> we love the people of florida and they went through something
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that the likes of which they have never seen before. they've never seen a category like this come in. because it came in really at a 5. just look at what happened in the keys. >> reporter: hurricane irma made landfall on cudjoe key as a category 4. later the president handed out sandwiches and met with supporters. >> he has a couple of questions. >> we were with obama on the last hurricane. he was playing golf. >> was this a good vote? said the best vote of his life. >> reporter: after the president left the airport here at ft. myers he told reporters on air force one he hopes to visit puerto rico, the u.s. virgin islands and the florida keys to see the damage for himself, perhaps as early as next week. anthony? >> carter evans, thanks. the hurricane death toll is at least 25 in florida. that does not include eight residents of a hollywood nursing home that lost air-conditioning.
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more now from jon vigliotti. >> shame on you. shame on you. >> reporter: vendetta craig's mother was one of the 158 patients rescued after spending three days in the sweltering heat. >> what do you want to say to the owner of this facility? >> we coming for you. we coming for you. this is unacceptable. you mess with my mom. you mess with my mom. i'm not taking it. >> reporter: police have launched a criminal investigation, one inspection last year found 29 violations including patients being given the wrong medications, overflowing trash and insects in the kitchen. residents complained they were hungry and were calling out for food. the facility was ranked below average by the state agency for health care administration and its owner was fined $15 million
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complaint. yet the center was allowed to stay open. >> how could something like this -- how could a facility like this still be open? >> look, that's another question for the state agency that regulate the nursing home. at what point do you pull the license? at what point is it enough? >> reporter: when the home lost power, police believe the backup generators were not big enough to cool the space. records show several 911 calls came from the center starting at 3:30 in the morning. but it was nurse judy fromme, at a hospital just across the street who walked over with colleagues to find out what was happening. >> it was a situation where we knew we had to get the patients evacuated. >> reporter: vendetta craig wonder why the staff didn't take patients to the air-conditioned hospital steps away. >> i hope the truth comes out. it's senseless. >> reporter: we called the nursing home for comment and have not heard back. we visited the owner's home. it was still boarded up for the hurricane.
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hospitalized. >>
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ople take action against housing discrimination? my friends were told they might be more comfortable in another neighborhood. my co-worker was pressured by her landlord to pay her rent with sexual favors. my neighbor was told she needs to get rid of her dog, even though he's an assistance animal. they all reported these forms of housing discrimination. when you don't report them, landlords and owners are allowed to keep breaking the law. housing discrimination is illegal. if you think you've been a victim, report it. like we did. narrator: if you suspect that you've been discriminated against because of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status or disability, report it to hud or your local fair housing center. visit hud.gov/fairhousing or call the hud hotline at 1-800-669-9777. fair housing is your right. use it.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." we begin with breaking news. another missile launched by north korea. national security correspondent david martin is following developments from the pentagon. fwlrt the -- >> reporter: the missile flew over japan and landed in the north pacific after a flight of around 22 mur00 miles. it was the second time north korea has launched a missile over japan and this one traveled about 500 miles further. the pentagon's initial assessment is it was an intermediate range missile that
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never posed a threat to the u.s. homeland or to american bases on guam. >> those in favor of the -- >> reporter: north korea had been threatening to retaliate for the latest round of sanctions passed by the u.n. security council on monday. and u.s. intelligence had been expecting a missile launch either today or tomorrow. this is part of a long-running ballistic missile development program and the north koreans would likely be conducting these tests in any event. in both launches over japan, north korea has been careful to fly over an unpopulated area and in a direction well away from guam. still, north korean missiles flying over an american ally seems to have become the new normal. anthony? >> david martin with another missile launch from north korea, thanks. after leaving florida the president repeated comments he made last month about the violence in charlottesville, virginia.
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when protesters clashed with white nationalists. at the time the president blamed many sides for the violence. today on air force one, mr. trump told reporters, quote, you had some pretty bad dudes on the other side also and essentially that's what i said. you look at really what has happened since charlottesville and a lot of people are saying, in fact, a lot of people have written, gee, trump may have had a point. the florida keys have born the brunt of irma. we now report on the massachusetts massive effort to get supplied to those who lost everything. >> reporter: with the scope of devastation in parts of the keys becoming more clear the focus is now on relief. monroe county officials say they have checked on all homes in the hardest hit areas and found no additional victims. >> thank you so much. >> reporter: water and food are reaching those who stayed behind. but it could be days before running water, power, and cell service are fully restored. in marathon word is spreading about harold davis.
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he never got rid of his landline phone and is helping neighbors connect with the outside world. >> you have become a lifeline in a way. when it comes to communication? >> a little bit, yeah. yeah. and that helps. because it gives you a little more desire to keep pushing forward. >> it's over four feet. >> reporter: it's also come in handy for him. the home he shares with his wife took on more than four feet of storm surge. he has called fema and helped others start filing claims too. >> it's tough. you know, try to be the man and try to be, you know, strong for your wife and everybody else. and i didn't want to see this. but -- we'll pick up and move on. >> reporter: harold says he doesn't even recognize most of the debris in his backyard because it washed up from houses
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all the way down the street. conditions are still considered hazardous here. it could be days before all residents of the keys are allowed back in. anthony? >> thank you, manny. new york city police today released body cam video that shows officers shooting a man to death in his bedroom. they had gone to check on miguel richards after his landlord reported he hadn't seen him in days. the officers repeatedly pleaded with richards to drop a knife. the police say when richards appeared to aim a gun with a laser pointer at the officers, they opened fire. that gun turned out to be a toy. the nypd says it released the body cam video in the interest of transparency. and we're back in ajust moment.
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a student accused of opening fire at a high school south of spokane, washington, had previously posted online videos of himself acting out shootings. in the attack one student was killed and three others are in stable condition. here's the report from rockford, washington. >> are you playing halo? i just sat up here planning your murder. >> reporter: this youtube video posted in june of the suspected shooter, caleb sharpe shows the high school sophomore role-playing in a first-person shooting game with toy guns. a newly released affidavit says that caleb told detectives he came to school to teach everyone a lesson about what happens when you bully others. he told detectives he's been seeing a schoolns
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the gun belongs to sharpe's father. they found a suicide note written by their son a week ago. sharpe's first shot came from a rifle that jammed up. a handgun was used to shoot sam strahan who was attempting to intervene. at one point he even said, i always knew you were going to shoot up the school. sharpe shot strahan in the abdomen and face killing him. the sheriff says minutes later, the school janitor, joe bow en stepped in to stop the shooter. >> why did he step in at the time? >> those are rare people. and if you ask him, i'll bet you he can't tell you. you just do what you got to do. joe confronted him, ordered him to the ground and held him there. >> reporter: according to the aft, a friend of sharpe's told detectives caleb makes improvised explosive devices out of various chemicals and white gases and
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how to make the ieds. >> does it surprise you that a 15-year-old was playing with chemicals for ieds? >> not at all. this is a situation that plays out in our society way too often. >> reporter: the sheriff wants to charge the alleged shooter as an adult even though he is only 15 years old. his charges would include premeditated murder with an arraignment set for later this month. anthony? >> thanks. coming up next how equifax opened the door to hackers. and later, pop star selena gomez and the friend who saved her life.
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the federal trade commission said today it's investigating the massive cyberattack at equifax. the credit rating company revealed last week that hackers gained access to the personal information of about 143 million americans. anna werner is following this. >> reporter: consumers posting their outrage on social media. some complaining they tried to freeze their credit but couldn't and wanted answers.
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equifax disclosed that the hackers stole information of millions through a software vulnerability on a web server. the fix should have been an immediate security update. the software's maker, the apache software foundation said that hackers exploited what it called equifax's failure to install the security updates in a timely manner. >> this was an urgent update. >> reporter: which the ceo says is bad enough. >> the fact that there was an unpatched server for a matter of months just opened the door to the hackers. >> reporter: but he says among experts right now the bigger question is once the hackers got in was the consumer data protected through encryption or not? >> if it was unencrypted there is nothing that can be done. the hackers are buying and selling everything there is to know about our identity on the dark web. >> reporter: the massachusetts attorney general says she
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exposure of consumers private information. >> equifax needs to pay what it will cost consumers to have credit freezes on their accounts, to have credit monitoring and to make sure that they are protected against potential identity threeft or misuse of their data. >> reporter: we asked cbs news employees to try that credit freeze protocol and some got error messages. we asked equifax to provide more information about the breach and whether as those experts are questioning, consumer data was encrypted or not and we did not get answers to any of those questions. >> anna werner, thanks. up next, why the treasury secretary requested a government plane for his honeymoon.
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treasury secretary steve mnuchin has been under fire for requesting a government plane last month to get to his honeymoon in europe. today the department defended mnuchin saying as a member of the national security council he needs secure communications. the department says in the end, the secretary got access to those communications without using a government plane. three women who used to work for google sued the company today for discrimination. they claim google pays women less than men for similar work
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less likely to lead to promotions. google denies the allegations. crayola chose a name for a new blue crayon. in a vote by fans, bluetiful beat out dreams come blue, and star spangled blue. it will replace dandelion. we end with a pop star who got the gift of life from her best friend. selena gomez told fans today she is recovering from a kidney transplant and her best friend, francia raisa is the donor. in an instagram post gomez explained that her kidney failure was caused by lupus. the 25-year-old actress and singer was diagnosed with the auto immune disease in 2014 and says she underwent chemotherapy. >> if you are broken you do not have to stay broken. >> reporter: last year gomez
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after suffering from anxiety and depression. specific spoke about that tough period at the american music awards in november. >> i had to stop. i had everything. and i was absolutely broken inside. >> reporter: earlier this week, at the hand in hand telethon for hurricane relief. the texas native became emotional talking about a houston family swept away by floodwaters. >> their story affected all who heard it and no matter who we are, the differences we have, suddenly did not seem to matter. >> reporter: gomez had a meet and greet with fans yesterday and appeared to be in good health and spirits. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues, for others, check back for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city i'm anthony mason. thanks for watching.
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♪ captioning funded by cbs this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news i'm michelle miller. president trump has touched off a guessing game on capitol hill over whether or not he has cut an immigration deal with congressional democrats. they say the deal would protect young undocumented workers from deportation and provide more money for border security but not a wall between the u.s. and mexico. republican leaders say there's no such deal. we've got both sides of the story now from juliana goldman and nancy cordes. >> reporter: the white house was initially vague about last night's meeting calling it a constructive working dinner. but as my colleague nancy cordes can tell you, democrats said there was more too it. >> reporter: democrats insist the pren
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policy they've been pushing for years. >> we had an agreement to move forward. >> reporter: democratic leaders nancy pelosi and chuck schumer say they left that white house dinner with a framework in hand. legal protections for d.r.e.a.m.ers paired with funding for border security, excluding the wall. >> we're not for the wall. we'll never be for the wall. >> reporter: at the white house, press secretary sarah huckabee sanders refuted the democrats' version of events saying excluding the wall was not agreed to. >> we will build the wall. >> reporter: building a wall on the u.s./mexico border defined mr. trump's campaign. >> the wall will come later. >> reporter: traveling to florida today, he tried to reassure his base he hadn't given up. >> there was no deal. >> reporter: there is a lot of sympathy for the d.r.e.a.m.ers. >> reporter: here on the hill many republicans were supportive. but some conservatives accuse the president of selling out,
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tweeted if the deal is at pelosi characterized it causes more than a pause, more like a screeching halt. they are nervous about the president's newfound bipartisanship. even schumer marvelled about it. in this hot mike moment on the senate floor. >> he likes us. he likes me, anyway. >> reporter: house speaker paul ryan reminded reporters republicans still control congress and write the legislation. >> have you asked the president to at least check with you before he makes an agreement with democrats? >> first off, there is no agreement. it was a discussion. not an agreement or a negotiation. >> reporter: back on air force one, the president said his party supports him. >> my relationship with the republicans is excellent. many of them agree with what i'm doing. >> reporter: by the time mr. trump spoke to reporters for fourth time he was back to criticizing the democrats abut the wall.
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>> if the democrats aren't going to approve it then we're not going to do what they want. >> reporter: leaders on both sides appear to be interested in doing something quickly. the question is how long it's going to take for them to draft and agree to the border security side of this package. and will republican leaders be willing to turn their backs on a small but vocal group of conservatives who believe granting the so-called d.r.e.a.m.ers any status would amount to amnesty. >> reporter: this is a president who promised to be a deal maker and so far he's come up short. he is frustrated with republicans and he wants a win. but it's not like he is making nice with the democrats here. in addition to his many comments today, the president sent out a campaign e-mail saying that liberals in congress need one more reminder that building the wall is non-negotiable. president trump stepped away from the immigration debate gripping washington to visit the irma disaster zone in florida.
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carter evans has that part of the story. >> reporter: on the tarmac in ft. myers, president trump praised florida governor rick scott for the response to hurricane irma. >> the job that rick has done is being talked about all over. >> reporter: and couldn't resistant injecting a little politics. >> what do i know? but i hope this man right here, rick scott, runs for senate. >> reporter: the president and first lady got an aerial view of the destruction in naples below. on the ground, they visited a mobile home park that was badly damaged. >> we love the people of florida and they went through something the likes of which no one has seen before. they never have seen a category like this before. it came in at a 5. all you have to do is look at what happened in the keys. >> reporter: hurricane irma made landfall on sunday on cudjoe key as a category 4. later the president handed out sandwiches and met with supporters. >> he has a couple of questions. go ahead. >> we were with obama on the last hurricane. he was playing golf.
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he said the best vote of his life. >> reporter: after the president left the airport here at ft. myers he told reporters he hopes to visit puerto rico, the u.s. virgin island and the florida keys to see the damage for himself, perhaps as early as next week. in hollywood florida, a criminal investigation is underway into the deaths of eight nursing home residents. they died in sweltering conditions when the air-conditioning at the home went dark. jon vigliotti reports. >> shame on you. shame on you. >> reporter: vendetta craig's mother, edna jefferson was one of the 158 patients rescued after spending three days in the sweltering heat. >> reporter: what do you want to say to the owner of this facility? >> we coming for you. we coming for you. this is unacceptable. you mess with my mom.
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you mess with my mom. i'm not taking it. >> reporter: now police have launched a criminal investigation. one inspection last year found 29 violations, including patients being given the wrong medications, overflowing trash, and insects in the kitchen. residents complained they were hungry and were calling out for food. the facility was ranked much below average by the agency for health care administration and its owner was fined $15 million in a 2006 health care fraud complaint. yet the center was allowed to stay open. how could something like this, a facility like this still be open? >> that's another question for the state agencies that regulate these nursing homes. at what point do you pull the license? at what point is it enough? >> reporter: when the home lost power, police believe the backup generators were not big enough to cool the space. records show several 911 calls came from the center starting at 3:30 in the morning.
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but it was nurse judy fromme at a hospital just across the street who walked over with colleagues to find out what was happening. >> it was a situation where we knew we had to get those patients evacuated. >> reporter: and vendetta craig wonders why the staff did not take the patients to the air-conditioned hospital steps away. >> i hope the truth comes out. it's senseless. >> reporter: we have called the nursing home for comment and have not heard back. we also visited the owner's home. it was still boarded up for the hurricane. and the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." anthony bourdain has gone from being a celebrity chef to perhaps the hardest working man in show business. he took time out from his busy schedule for a chat with our own anthony mason. >> mm. magic. >> reporter: after a life on the road traveling to parts unknown, eating wit rh novaesertions, anthony bourdain is very particular when he gets back home. >> so you don't like being fussed over? >> i don't want to be comped or want extra courses. just serve me like anyone else. >> reporter: which is why we met at pastrami queen. on new york's lexington avenue.
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>> this is your place when you come home? >> this is my go-to. this is what i crave. no matter how well i have been eating, this is the first thing i want and need. >> reporter: in his travels, he has eaten everything from rotten shark to -- >> sheep testicles. >> reporter: is there anything you won't eat? >> i have eaten a lot of bad food. it's when no one cares at all, that's soul destroying. i can't take it too seriously. i will literally, really carelessly made burger by a cynical, large company, the contempt implicit in that transaction can really send me into a spiral of depression that will last for days. >> reporter: little seems to slow him down. >> so how many pots do you have on the stove? >> i don't know.
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>> reporter: they include producing, writing and starring in his cnn series, "parts unknown." his web series, "raw craft" he is authoring a new cookbook and a speaking tour. >> how much are you on the road? >> about 250 days a year. it's been like this for the better part of 15 years. >> and you're okay with that? >> i am -- i've been sentenced to the best job in the world. >> reporter: it started in 1999 when the then struggling chef wrote an article for the "new yorker" entitled "don't eat before reading this". >> which mushroomed into a book deal? >> overnight. "kitchen confidential" published in 2000 turned the restaurant world inside out and his life up side down. >> this book changed everything? >> everything. i mean, i was 44 years old. uninsured. hideously and hopelessly in debt.
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behind on my tacks. behind on my rent. >> reporter: it would sell a million copies. and launch a new career for the culinary bad boy. how is this guy different from that guy? >> i think when you travel as much as i have, you -- i don't want to say i'm more humble. but i think you become aware of how other people live, how hard their lives are, how big the world is. and of course fatherhood changes everything. i became a father at 50. and you know, at that moment you stop being the star of the film. >> that's the truth. >> for me, that was an enormous relief and a gift. >> reporter: his daughter is the inspiration for his new cookbook, "appetites". >> the person i'm trying to please more often than not is a 9-year-old and her friends. and it would put a stake through the heart of the bad boy image
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>> reporter: this wouldn't be the dish if we didn't have a drink. >> this is very good 30-year-old whiskey. >> there is a bad joke in here. anthony walks in a bar at 9:00 in the morning. >> yeah. >> reporter: at the bar in the carlisle hotel, we sampled some of their best scotch that sells for $1,000 a bottle. >> this is very smooth. >> it better be. >> reporter: he has partnered with the scottish distillery on his new web series "raw craft" to profile great artisans. >> what do you admire about them? >> i worked in an industry where everything was temporary, food. you have one second of satisfaction. there's a little part of me that's always thought wouldn't it be nice to make beautiful things with my hands that last. >> reporter: he's had a lot of unlikely encounters in his travels.
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in "parts unknown" he met up with president obama in a hanoi restaurant in vietnam. >> it was not an ideal situation from the secret service's point of view. it was a room about this size. i think one exit. second floor of a not particularly clean noodle shop. he is very good with chop sticks which endears anyone to me. and you know, it's nice seeing the president of the united states drinking a beer out of a bottle. >> is there anybody out there you would like to have a meal with? >> keith richards. i have been trying for years to eat bangers and mash and talk with him about british naval history, which he is a big fan of. i think that would be super cool. ...oh jeremy. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things.
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i'll have the langoustine lfor you, sir?i. the original call was for langoustine ravioli. a langoustine is a tiny kind of lobster. a slight shellfish allergy rules that out, plus my wife ordered the langoustine. i will have chicken tenders and tater tots. if you're a ref, you way over-explain things. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. sir, we don't have tater tots. it's what you do. i will have nachos!
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the federal aviation administration is under new pressure to regulate the seating on commercial airlines. seats and leg room have been shrinking for years and now critics say it's a safety risk. here's kris van cleave. >> reporter: the manufacturers that build airplanes have to certify they can get everyone off a completely full airliner within 90 seconds even with half the exits blocked. that is enough time to get people off before fire, smoke or water can turn deadly. but evacuations don't always go smoothly.
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last fall this american 767 had to evacuate after an engine caught fire during takeoff in chicago. on board, passengers pushed and shoved to get out. ssometopped to grab their luggage. it took 116 passengers and nine crew more than two minutes to get off. hector was on that flight and captured the mayhem on his phone. >> everyone is shoving and pushing against you in such a way where you're pretty much almost squashed. >> reporter: passenger safety advocates worry the shrinking airline seat is creating another potential danger during an evacuation. just as the passengers are getting bigger, the space between rows has shrunk from 35 inches to 31 or even 28. >> the biggest fear is people won't be able to get out in time. >> reporter: paul hudson is president
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group that sued the faa to regulate seat size. >> they claim they have no jurisdiction over comfort. >> isn't it safety? >> they view safety narrowly. >> reporter: a federal court agreed there was the possibility of plausible life ore death issues. >> it's a true safety problem and the faa needs to protect us. >> reporter: steve cohen issued legislation to require the faa to establish a minimum airline seat size. >> we don't have seats and aisles that are capable of facilitating a safe exit. >> reporter: boeing tells cbs this morning that it conducts its evacuation tests in full accordance with regulations and that's typically done in a hangar and doesn't factor in passenger behavior like grabbing bags.
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to be a big winner at the emmy awards. she sat down with a chat with cbs contributor, krista smith. >> reporter: the mothers of monterey are the belles of the ball at this sunday's emmy awards. >> you're so nice. thank you. >> monterey. we pound people with nice. >> to death. >> reporter: the darkly comic hbo series about mischief and murder among coastal california women is up for 16 awards, including one for star, reese witherspoon. >> i think five women who are so dynamic and complex and it was fascinating to people. >> i'm madeleine martha mckenzie. i always say the martha but they never call me that. . >> why did you pick madeleine? >> madeleine picked me. david kelly said he had written a script. he is like you're playing madeleine. i'm like, what are you talking about? he's like, you are madeleine. >> do you surf? do you havhu
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boyfriend, girlfriend? i'm open to all possibilities. >> i'm not a busy body at all. i'm just interested in other people's lives. is that so wrong? just trying to be helpful. >> you're southern. >> we're friendly. >> i want more of that feeling. >> reporter: she's also real powerful. besides starring in the show she produces it. a role she transitioned to in 2012 and started acquiring the rights to popular books. >> i was voracious reader and i bought "gone girl" and "wild" were the two i bought. i had no idea. i self funded a company for five years. >> you got me out here, is that where your plan ends? >> reporter: she made the move after she won an academy award for playing june carter cash in "walk the line." >> where is my friend john is he high or incognito or is he gone. >> reporter: and fell into a post-oscar slump. >> there was one moment where i
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read this script that came in and my agent sent it to me and it was just awful. and i called my agent and said i'm not going to do this. who would want to do this? and he said every actress in hollywood wants this part. and it was a light bulb moment for me and i said i have to do better and create more and do better for other women and create opportunities for other women. >> i'm elle woods. and we're both gemini vegetarians. >> reporter: but that doesn't mean that the actress who created elle woods is giving up her time in front of the camera. >> did you wash these? >> i did. but only because i have been doing a load. >> reporter: she is revisiting romantic comedy territory in "home again" and time for a highly anticipated reunion. >> oh, my god, jill. >> rachel. >> reporter: with her big sister from "friends" with jennifer aniston. the pair will reteam
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upcoming series about the world of morning television. >> you really think that's going to work on me? i invented that. >> right. >> one of the great things is just getting to work together again. like over the moon. we keep texting each other. this is so fun i can't believe we're doing this. this is so good. >> it's based on morning news shows. >> yes. >> it's not lost on me that we're on a morning news show. >> and it's great to talk about women's role in media. and how women are treated on the morning news. and what that journey is like. >> reporter: her journey has taken her into the business as the driving force behind the women's lifestyle brand draper james. >> it's named for your grandmother, isn't it? >> yeah. my grandmother is my biggest inspiration. it was just a little bit hard for her, i think because there weren't a lot of jobs for women at that time. and you were expected to stay home, particularly in the south. and i feel like in some ways i'm getting to live the life she >>dn't get to live.
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just leaned in.
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a promise that hit the beaches of normandy. a covenant that split the skies over berlin. a vow that captured iwo jima. a promise was made. a solemn oath that liberated seoul. a sacred trust that defended khe sanh. a pact that dug in in da nang. a contract that weathered tet. a promise was made. a pledge that stormed the desert in iraq. a bond that patrolled door-to-door in fallujah. an iou that braved ieds in kandahar. a promise was made. to america's veterans. a promise we all must keep. dav fights for all veterans and their families so they get the health care, financial benefits and support they earned. if your'e a veteran who needs help, or you'd like to help us keep the promise,
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visit dav.org.
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captioning funded by cbs it's friday, september 15th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." defying new end sanctions. north korea firing another missile despite warnings from japan. they're in limbo as democrats and republicans are looking at whether a deal has been struck on the so-called d.r.e.a.m.ers. and a no-show at harvard. >> i'm very sorry to have to announce the cia director will

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