multiple people injured in a mass shooting at an ohio walmart. >> this guy walked right past me with an assault rifle. and he started shooting. >> jericka: as millions take to the skies for thanksgiving, tracking a major storm that could impact your flight. >> this is united's newark airport's operation center everyone here is watching the weather and about 370 departures and 50,000 passengers trying to get out and get home on time. >> jericka: our living well series, raising spirits without alcohol. >> i just a sense of calm that i hadn't felt when i was drinking pit >> mr. david letterman. [applause] >> jericka: and david letterman returns to late-night to find some surprising changes. >> is anything like what you had over there down there? >> what, all of this weed? [laughter] >> david letterman, everybody! [applause] ♪ ♪ >> jericka: good evening, and thank you for joining us on this tuesday night. i'm jericka duncan in for norah. we begin tonight with israel and hamas on the verge of a deal that would free a number of hostages in gaza in exchange for a temporary pause in fighting. the long anticipated agreement is expected to be for the release of 50 hostages, namely women and children. in addition to the four-day pause in fighting, the deal would include the freeing of at least 150 palestinian prisoners currently being held by israel. the number of hostages freed could increase in the days ahead. today's news comes as we learned 14,000 people have been killed in gaza, according to hamas-run health ministry. tonight, israel is preparing to escalate the war by moving its devastating ground invasion from northern gaza further south. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu today announced that the militaries push into southern gaza is not a question of if, but when it will happen. cbs's holly williams will start us off tonight from tel aviv. good evening, holly. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. hamas have told us that 50 hostages they released would all be civilians and all women and children. around ten americans are still unaccounted for after the october 7th attacks, and it is thought some of them were taken hostage, including a 3-year-old girl. we don't know at this point if they would be released. the proposed deal was brokered by the u.s. and qatar. hamas would be incentivized to release more than 50 hostages, with three palestinian prisoners, mainly women and children, freed for every hostage return to israel. there would be a 6-hour daily pause in fighting, which could be extended, during israel's israel's aerial surveillance would be halted. and around 300 trucks each day would carry aid, including cooking oil and fuel for hospitals into the gaza strip. but tonight, israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu vowed this won't be the end of the war, saying his country will continue fighting until it has eliminated hamas. israel says there are 236 hostages. only four have been released until now, while israel's military has retrieved the bodies of two others from gaza and rescued one soldier who had been taken captive. it's an agonizing wait for the fast know my families of the hostages beer of some of them gathered here, along with their supporters in central tel aviv. in a rare interview this past weekend, a senior hamas leader, moussa abu marzouk, claimed some of the hostages are being held by other palestinian militants, and some by palestinian families. so you don't know exactly how many civilian hostages there are? and you don't know where all of them are? >> we don't know. because, on the ground, nobody can move. nobody can make a list. nobody can say about this, it's a war. >> jericka: marzouk, who is designated a terrorist by the u.s. government, also claims that around 60 of the hostages have been killed in isi air strkes. we cannot independently confirm that. but the chaos and devastation in gaza are plain to see. today, cbs news producer marwan al-ghoul sent us this report from refugee camp. palestinian media say it was hit late at night by an israeli bombardment. >> at least 20 were killed in this. women still here. women body under this, also children. >> reporter: there is new hope here tonight in israel and also in gaza. but the hostages aren't out yet. if the hostages are released, the relief group red crescent would take them from hamas and hand them over to israel's military. a u.s. official said today that they will need immediate medical attention because they have been held in "abhorrent conditions." jericka? >> jericka: holly williams, thank you. cbs's cheap corn if they are and moderator of "face the nation" joins us now. margaret, you've been telling us talking to your sources all they. tell us about how this agreement came to be. >> reporter: intense diplomacy by the u.s. in qatar, and a deal came together over that weekend. it is six pages long. hamas agreed this morning. israel still has not approved at. we know since late october, cia director bill burns has been in direct contact with mossad chief david darnay and it was around g the release of two american citizens, natalie and judith raanan on, that the u.s. had proof qatar could continue as a. we had had a deal at the end of october but it fell apart right before israel launched its full-scale incursion of gaza and hit another hitch around the israeli siege of al-shifa hospital, so this past weekend a 2-phase agreement was settled on. phase one, 50 confirm hostages. the u.s. has proved they are alive, will be released over four days and 6-hour pauses, israel will lead in aid and release palestinian prisoners. if these two daystar, roughly two dozen civilian will be released, more hostages means a longer pause in fighting so president biden, jericka, himself has had to pick up the phone and really press for this to close. >> jericka: again, israel has not agreed to this. >> reporter: not yet. >> jericka: thank you, margaret. well, several u.s. troops were wounded today at an attack at the al-asad air base in western iraq. the pentagon said this was the first time in recent weeks that u.s. troops were targeted with a close range ballistic missile. officials say heavily armed u.s. attack plane like this one quickly retaliated, killing several iranian-backed militants. over the past month, dozens of u.s. troops have been wounded in 66 attacks on bases where americans are operating in iraq and syria. well, tonight, airlines are preparing for the busiest travel day of the thanksgiving week and severe weathe is threatening to put a damper on some plans. the number of air travelers heading to visit family and friends is expected to break records. cbs's kris van cleave is at newark liberty international airport. >> reporter: tonight, home for the holidays feels more like a race against mother nature. >> the roads were light. traffic to the airport has been nice beard >> reporter: jennifer murray and patrick stayer are off to wisconsin to meet their brand-new niece, if they can beat the weather. >> i was trying to avoid the crazy crowds that i am anticipating tomorrow. we will also come back on saturday instead of sunday. >> gate 107. >> reporter: from united's newark airport operation center, the airline is tracking about 370 scheduled the partners. >> if anything is going wrong, we tried to minimize disruption both to the customers and all of the people working here. we try to have an aircraft and a game plan that works for everybody. >> reporter: united expects nearly 6 million passengers during the holiday, up 13% from last year, and the airline is using a new boarding system dubbed wilma. after wheelchairs, elite fires, window seats, finally those in the aisle, hoping to save a few minutes per flight. senior vice president mike hanna. do you guys feel an added pressure that this goes right? >> well, there is definitely that added pressure because you want to do everything you can to serve our customers. many customers in this time. my travel one time a year so it is critical we are doing our absolute best to deliver for them. >> reporter: the wet, windy weather is already a factor on the roads, with more than 49 million expected to drive this week. some choosing to move up their plans and leave as soon as possible. >> the weather is kind of not great, so we didn't want to travel at night. >> reporter: the aaa says the worst time to drive, tomorrow, will between 10:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. peered so far because of the storm we have only seen f cancellations, which is good news for the airlines because tomorrow is expected to be the busiest day to fly ahead of the holiday. jericka? >> jericka: all right, it looks pretty busy behind you already. kris van cleave, thank you. heavy rain and even some snow could cause headaches for travelers in the southeast up through new england over the next 24 hours peered for the latest on that, let's bring in chris warren from our partners at the weather channel weather channel. good evening, chris. >> good evening, jericka. once again tracking the potential for severe weather across the south. this evening, overnight tonight, it is possible damaging wind gusts and brief tornadoes, the same system helping to produce this also bringing some messy weather for prethanksgiving travel in the northeast. winds peeking tonight 25-30 miles per hour. those will be the wind gusts. some snow, possibly some ice. mainly the higher elevations. considerable full improvement by tomorrow evening as cooling off period and considerable he drive for most people in the u.s. on thanksgiving day. significant precipitation will be the intermountain west in the form of snow. >> jericka: thank you my chris warren, thank you peered police in ohio are investigating a mass shooting at a walmart near dayton that left four shoppers wounded. police say the gunman took his own life. cbs's tom hanson has newly-released body cam video showing the tense aftermath. >> what does he look like? >> reporter: body cam video captured the dramatic moment officers rushed inside this walmart in beavercreek, ohio. >> got him. >> reporter: just moments ago. >> what's going on cosmic >> there is a dead human in the store. >> reporter: called 911. >> sheltering in place in the we have reports of an active shooter in the area. >> reporter: the gunman opened up gunfire with a long gun, wounding four people appear tonight, three are in stable condition. a fourth victim is in critical but stable condition. >> just shopping for thanksgiving. and this guy walked right past me with an assault rifle. and starting shooting. >> reporter: the suspect was later found dead with a self-inflicted wound, but the shooting leaving the community stunned just ahead of the holiday shopping rush. >> i am so lucky to be alive. [sobbing] he literally walked right past me. how do you process something like this? >> the fbi is looking at the shooter. his background, his motivation. >> reporter: with over 130 million shoppers expected on black friday, experts are urging americans to be aware. >> mall security is homeland security. it is just important for people to go about their business, but to be aware of their surroundings. god forbid you be in one of those situations, run, hide, fight is what everybody needs to remember. >> reporter: and walmart says it is working with investigators to try to find a motive. according to the gun violence archive, there have been at least 611 mass shootings so far this year. that is nearly two mass shootings every single day. jericka? >> jericka: yeah, making it harder for people to go about their business. tom, thank you. there's breaking news in a search for a colorado suspect in the shooting and killing of three people and critically injuring another over a property dispute. the 45-year-old suspect was captured today in new mexico. he had been on the run since monday afternoon following the shootings in custard county, about 150 miles south of denver. well, tonight, the new york city police department says there are growing concerns about security with the escalating violence in gaza. cbs news has learned about heightened threats of possible terror attack on the u.s. and new york state is a focus. cbs's catherine herridge joins us now with more on these concerning details peered catherine? >> reporter: thank you, jericka. cbs news has obtained a security alert suggesting an increase in terrorist threat to new york state peered with new yo state intligence bulletin points to israeli operations against hamas and specically that the increase in civilian casualties raises the likelihood that violent extremist threat actors will seek to conduct attacks against targets in the west, with new york state being the focus. the alerts as possible targets include protests and other public events. police in new york maintaining a highly visible security presence around potential targets like synagogues. while there is no specific or credible threat, security for this week's thanksgiving day parade is at a high level, with a full deployment of thousands of new york city police officers. the intelligence bulletin emphasizes that anti-palestinian chatter has also been observed on multiple social media channels, with pro-israeli advocates calling for violence against palestinians and those who support them. the greatest threat comes from lone actors who take inspiration from violent rhetoric, much of it online. today, new york's governor called on social media companies to take an aggressive approach to shut them down. jericka? >> jericka: catherine herridge, thank you for that. tonight, a major shake-up at the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange. billionaire founder and ceo of binance changpeng zhao pleaded guilty to failing to prevent money laundering on the exchange and abruptly stepped down. binance agreed to pay more than $4 billion in fines for allowing more than 100,000 transactions that supported hamas and other terrorist activity, along with illegal drug sales. binance will continue to operate with a new ceo. well, an investigation is underway after an 80 plane overshoots a runway in hawaii and lands in the water. we will have the details next. one simple member card that opens doors for what matters. what if we need to see a doctor away from home? we got you — with medicare advantage's largest national provider network. only from unitedhealthcare. the long-lasting scent of gain flings made it smell like dave was in his happy place... ...the massage chair at the mall. but...he wasn't. gain flings with oxi boost and febreze. when my doctor gave me breztri for my copd things changed for me. breztri gave me better breathing, symptom improvement, and reduced flare-ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. ask your doctor about breztri. my mom's alzheimer's never changed how much we love her. but it did change her. she developed agitation that may happen with dementia due to alzheimer's disease. she started yelling. pacing around. kept repeating the same questions. she got agitated often. so we asked her doctor for help. rexulti is the only fda-approved medication proven to reduce agitation symptoms that may happen with dementia due to alzheimer's disease. rexulti can cause serious side effects. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. report fever, stiff muscles, and confusion, which can be life-threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements, which may be permanent. high blood sugar which can lead to coma or death; weight gain; increased cholesterol; low white blood cells; unusual urges; dizziness on standing; falls; seizures; trouble swallowing, or sleepiness may occur. take action for your loved one. ask their doctor about rexulti. how white do you think your teeth really are? 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[stomach growling] it's nothing... sounds like something. ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion♪ ♪upset stomach, diarrhea♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief when you need it most. >> jericka: a recent report from the american heart association found that drinking alcohol may contribute to increased blood pressure even in adults without hypertension. in tonight's "living well" series, cbs's adriana diaz shows us some of the benefits to cutting back on alcohol. @>> reporter: one of the newest party scenes in new york's party new york city is missing alc alcohol. started this alcohol-freak event company called absence of proof after deciding to stop drinking two years ago. >> the biggest difference i see is with my mental health and anxiety levels. i just feel a sense of calm that i hadn't felt when i was drinking. >> reporter: research analysis from the american heart association has another reason to cut back. chose drinking just one alcoholic beverage a day can contribute to increased blood pressure. >> the main risk factor with high blood pressure is cardiovascular disease, heart attack, stroke, and it can also put you at risk for kidney disease. >> reporter: leigh frame is program director for medicine at george washington university. a lot of people say they drink because it wants to relax and helps them de-stress. is that the case? >> that is a very common misconception. there are a lot of ways to manage stress, take a bubble bath or take a walk in nature or spend time with friends and family. those all have actually help manage stress. alcohol does not. >> reporter: frame also suggest creating a ritual without alcohol to end the day and finding a nonalcoholic beverage you enjoy like t. >> one of the things we struggle with is the social aspect. you can try and do a different activity. >> reporter: that includes her alcohol-free events. >> you feel great, the biggest life hack i tell people what they want more energy, to remove alcohol. >> reporter: proof that for gascoigne, living without alcohol. adriana diaz, cbs news, washington. >> jericka: love a good ginger ale with cherries. well, david letterman returns to his old stomping grounds on "the late show with stephen colbert. that's next. ♪ ♪ >> announcer: if you can't watch the "cbs evening news," you can listen. subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. this is a hot flash. this is a hot flash. but this is a not flash. ♪ i got a good feeling ♪ there's big news for women going through menopause. veozah - a prescription treatment for moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms - the medical name for hot flashes and night sweats. with hormone-free veozah, you can have fewer hot flashes, and more not flashes. veozah is proven to reduce the number and severity of hot flashes, day and night. for some women, it can start working in as early as one week. don't use veozah if you have cirrhosis, severe kidney problems, kidney failure, or take cyp1a2 inhibitors. increased liver blood test values may occur. your doctor will check them before and during treatment. most common side effects include stomach pain, diarrhea, difficulty sleeping, back pain, and hot flashes. ♪ i got a good feeling ♪ ask your doctor about hormone-free veozah and enjoy more not flashes. honey, i think i heard something. ok. ♪ from christmas tree mats... to floorliners... cargo liners.... no drill mud flaps... seat protectors... and more... weathertech has the perfect holiday gift. honey, is everything ok? oh yeah. order at weathertech.com and don't forget weathertech gift cards. head & shoulders is launching something huge. ordthe bare minimum..com anti-dandruff shampoo made with only nine ingredients - no sulfates, silicones or dyes and packaged with 45% less plastic - giving you outstanding dandruff protection and leaving hair beautiful and moisturized. major dandruff protection, minimal ingredients. job done. new head & shoulders bare. not flossing well? then add the whoa! of listerine to your routine. new science shows listerine is 5x more effective than floss at reducing plaque above the gumline. for a cleaner, healthier mouth. ahhhhh. listerine. feel the whoa! around here, we like to keep things simple and honest. sure do. that's why at progressive, we show you rates from other companies, even if they're lower than ours, so you can choose what's best for your family. comparing rates used to be a hard day's work, but not with autoquote explorer. -need me to help again? -no. so join us and taste why progressive is the name people trust. sorry, are we talking about apples now or insurance? [ laughter ] why is that funny? rsv is out there. for those 60 years and older protect against rsv with arexvy. arexvy is a vaccine used to prevent lower respiratory disease from rsv in people 60 years and older. arexvy does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients. those with weakened immune systems may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects are injection site pain, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, and joint pain. i chose arexvy. rsv? make it arexvy. >> jericka: finally, tonight, for the first time in more than eight years, david letterman returned to. sullivan theater and to the show he hosted for more than two decades. the former king of late night was a guess on -- a guest last night on "the late show with stephen colbert." letterman was greeted with a rousing standing ovation from the audience. >> this is the most enthusiastic audience i have been near since the night i announced i was quitting. >> jericka: letterman's final late show aired in 2015 and said he misses everything, when asked what he misses most about hosting the show. he even jumped behind the desk for a photo, joking he wanted to do it because his son doesn't believe he had his own show. well, i'm sure he believes it now. well, that is tonight's "cbs evening news." for norah o'donnell and all of us here, i am jericka duncan in washington. have a great night. ♪ ♪ >> judge judy: so far, you've got thousands of dollars of her money, and she can't move in to her house. >> announcer: this contractor says he put in the time. >> judge judy: how many days did you work there, mr. joyner? >> two weeks. >> he was only there maybe two or three days. >> announcer: then he began to feel unwanted. >> judge judy: you were supposed to fix the house so that she could live in it. >> she hired my people out from underneath me. she started to pay them directly and told me she doesn't need me anymore. >> announcer: "judge judy." you are about to enter the courtroom of you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. captions paid for by cbs television distribution sharon groleau is suing her former contractor, william joyner, for failing to complete work on her home. >> byrd: order! all rise! this is case number 174 in the matter of groleau vs. joyner. >> judge judy: thank you. >> byrd: you're welcome. parties have been sworn in. you may be seated. sir, have a seat. >> judge judy: mr. joyner, you're a contractor? >> yes, ma'am. >> judge judy: do you have your own company, or do you work for someone else? >> i have my own business. >> judge judy: how long have you been in the business? >> since 2010. >> judge judy: how many employees do you have? >> depending on the jobsite, between two and five. >> judge judy: are these full-time employees or people -- sit up. >> judge judy: are these full-time employees or people that you pick up? >> two of them were full-time. the other guys would be as needed. >> judge judy: how did you find mr. joyner to refurbish your house? >> through my witness, anthony perkins. >> judge judy: you mean he came recommended to you through this witness? >> yes, ma'am. >> judge judy: you had purchased a house? >> i was given a house. >> judge judy: by whom? >> a friend of mine. it was a handyman special. it needed some wor