remaining court cases. and why the former president is considering this a victory. >> the chances of a trial before the election are zero at this point. >> major: plus the strong chilling words from the dissenting justices. the "cbs evening news" starts now. ♪ ♪ good evening, everyone. i am major garrett in for norah o'donnell. the groundbreaking decision from our nation's highest court. presidents have absolute immunity for official acts while in office, but they do not have immunity for unofficial acts. that means donald trump can and most certainly will claim broad immunity in his pending federal election interference case. a case that is now unlikely to be resolved before election day. chief justice john roberts penned the opinion writing "the president may not be prosecuted for exercising his core constitutional powers." as for the dissent, justice sonia sotomayor forcefully pushed back and deployed bleak hypotheticals "orders the navy seal team six to assassinate a political rival, immune. organizes a military coup to hold on to power, immune. takes a bribe in exchange for a pardon, immune." we have team coverage of the legal and political implications of all of this. cbs's jan crawford starts us off at the supreme court. >> reporter: the landmark decision on the scope of presidential immunity sends the case back to a lower court to determine the specifics. which of donald trump's actions to allegedly overturn the 2020 election go beyond the official acts of a sitting president and are open to prosecution. "not everything the president does is official," wrote chief justice john roberts. "the president is not above the law." >> presidential immunity is imperative, or you practically won't have a country anymore. >> reporter: the court rejected trump's sweeping claims he was absolutely immune for prosecution for his actions around january 6. but said "presidents must have some immunity to execute the duties of his office fearlessly and fairly, and so official acts are largely shielded from prosecution." the 6-3 decision sharply divided the justices along ideological lines. justice sonia sotomayor wrote a fiery dissent for the liberals with fear for our democracy and predicting disastrous consequences as a result of the decision she called "deeply wrong." "the president," sotomayor wrote, "is now a king above the law." that prompted an unusual fierce response from roberts accusing the dissent of fearmongering on the basis of extreme hypotheticals. the court emphasized the lasting significance of its decision well beyond trump, noting concerns about opening a pandora's box of criminal prosecutions of former presidents. the prospect trump teed up in last week's debate when he suggested president biden being prosecuted for his immigration policy. >> this man is a criminal. >> reporter: said the court, "virtually every president is criticized for insufficiently enforcing some aspects of federal law. without immunity, such types of prosecutions of ex-presidents could quickly become routine." as for the immediate case, applying the court's decision on what unofficial acts that special counsel jack smith can prosecute trump for will take time. >> this is not the end of the prosecution of donald trump. i strongly suspect that jack smith will find allegations that he thinks survives. >> major: jan crawford joins us now. jan, jack smith's case is now very much more complicated, what's next? >> reporter: that's right, major. this case has been on hold. today's decision from the court means probably new hearings in thelower courts which will significantly delay the start of any trial. now as for those other trials, trump is facing that documents trial in florida is moving slowly. the georgia election subversion case is on hold. all of these trials highly unlikely before the election. >> major: jan crawford, thank you. former president trump is making it clear he is happy with the court's decision tonight. at cbs's robert costa is with us. what is the reaction from the former president? >> reporter: on social media, former president trump called the supreme court ruling a big win, but there's still apprehension. he might not face prosecution this year on january 6 or classified records, but it still does face criminal sentencing coming up in new york on july 11th. and he still has the possibility of being tried down the line. >> major: robert costa, as always, thank you. trying to bounce back from that disasterous debate, cbs's weijia jiang reports from the white house where the president spoke a short time ago. >> no one, no one is above the law, not even the president of the united states. today supreme court decision of presidential immunity, that fundamentally changed. >> reporter: tonight president biden delivered a stark warning about the supreme court's ruling on presidential immunity. >> american people must decide if they want to trust the president once again, the presidency to donald trump. now knowing he will be even more emboldened to do whatever he pleases whatever he wants to do. >> reporter: it was his first time making remarks at the white house since the debate, despite his poor performance, first lady dr. jill biden downplayed the impact telling "vogue" magazine for its august cover story, they would not let those 90 minutes define the four years he has been president. we will continue to fight. >> i know i'm not a young man. >> reporter: the biden campaign is making the same case with a new ad just released it this morning showing the president at a rally the day after the debate. >> but i know how to do this job! i know right from wrong! >> reporter: considerably sharper and more energetic than when he was on stage with donald trump. >> if we finally beat medicare -- >> reporter: a new cbs news poll shows how the debate impacted voters. with 72% saying biden does not have the mental and cognitive health to serve as president. compared to 65% before the debate. 50% believe trump does. among registered democrats, 54% think biden should run for president. 46% say, he should not. trump weighed in on a radio show. >> they say getting him out is very hard because he has the delegates. he has the votes. and if he does not want to get out, there is not a thing they it. >> reporter: election expert david becker says the decision is for biden alone to make. >> the primaries were held, the voters have spoken. i expect that we will see a rematch of president biden against former president trump. >> reporter: tonight the biden campaign is circulating a new internal poll, even though it has trump leading by one point, it also shows support of the president has not changed following the debate. top advisors brought up the results during a call with donors this evening trying to calm nerves about biden's viability. major? >> major: nervous voters indeed. weijia jiang at the white house. thank you. turning to a life-threatening situation in the caribbean. hurricane beryl made landfall and history in grenada as a dangerous category four storm with 150-mile-per-hour winds. cbs's tom hanson is in jamaica tonight where the storm is heading next. >> reporter: the caribbean is on high alert. hurricane beryl made landfall around 11:00 a.m. this morning on granada's carriacou island, packing catastrophic winds of 150 miles per hour and a life-threatening 6-9-foot storm surge. >> we have reports of extensive storm surge, we have reports of extensive loss of life and damage to buildings. >> reporter: in barbados, the storm caused flooding and destroyed about 20 boats in this bay. the storm is a first category four hurricane ever recorded in% june, when it strengthened over the weekend. and it's the first to increase from a tropical storm to an intense category four storm in just 48 hours before september. hurricane beryl is on a path to jamaica coming and officials there are asking residents to prepare. >> we will keep an eye on the forecast and the forecast is saying that it's not supposed to be much. so we are just going to batten down and ride it out and see what happens. >> reporter: and to give you an idea of just how unprecedented this storm is, the average date of the first major hurricane is september 1st. experts say the power of beryl this early is driven by abnormally warm waters due to climate change that are fueling the storm. major? >> major: tom hanson, thank you so much. the latest track on hurricane beryl and a look at the extreme heat this july 4th week, we will bring in cbs's chief meteorologist ivan cabrera. ivan, good evening. >> reporter: hey, major, good to see you. absolutely, the storm is maintaining strength right now and it's very impressive on satellite perspective as we are watching something we typically see in the peak of hurricane season, in september, not in june and now on july 1st, now moving to the west, north west, but the good news for jamaica is that this system is going to be encountering someone chill, so you see the forecast that will be a diminished hurricane, a hurricane nonetheless, which is why watch is posted for jamaica. but an improvement from what just happened across wayward islands, but where does it go? computer forecast over the next several days, we will watch to make a first, then eventually headed towards the yucatan peninsula. thereafter, just too early to call. if you are watching us from the western gulf states, keep an eye on the storm as it can be unpredictable towards the end with the spread. july. the way for a fourth of july. triple-digit heat indices, and we have millions of americans now under either a heat advisory or an excessive heat warning across the south. major? >> major: ivan cabrera, thank you. now look at tonight's other top stories starting in central new york, where residents are demanding justice after a police shot and killed a 13-year-old boy they say had a gun. cbs's michael george has the newly released body cam video. >> reporter: major, there is a growing memorial at the spot where 13-year-old nyah mway was shot and killed by a utica police officer. now police body camera video shows mway running from officers after they stopped him friday night. police say he pointed what appeared to be a handgun at police officers and later determined to be a pellet gun. today more than 100 people protested outside city hall, among them, mway's brother. >> my brother went with them violently. >> reporter: police say they stopped mway and another teen because the matched the description of robbery suspects. the attorney general is now investigating. >> major: now to the fallout from those deadly 737 boeing max crashes back in 2018 and 2019. cbs's kris van cleave reports the justice department will soon criminally charge the aerospace manufacturer. >> reporter: major, boeing has to take a choice, make a plea deal or face a very public criminal trial. under the deal they would plead guilty to a conspiracy charge stemming from the two deadly 737 max crashes, pay a fine, spend three years on probation. lawyers for some of the victims families called it another sweetheart deal for boeing and pledge to fight it. and this morning, boeing announced plans to acquire the troublemaker of 737 fuselage is spirit aerosystems in a deal worth more than 8 billion in stock and debt. >> major: and overseas now where france's far right party just won the first round of legislative elections. cbs's elaine cobb is in paris and explains why that's so significant. >> reporter: in a historic result, france's far right national rally party which which is accused to being anti-immigration, anti-semitic, and anti-muslim led the first round of voting. that lead has sent shock waves through the country, major. the parties that usually don't cooperate from the left and center ground are now scrambling to form a united front. if they don't stop the national rally, winning the second round, france could see its first far right government since world war ii. >> major: thanks to our cbs news teams around the globe. 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[typing] >> wilson county 911, where is your emergency? >> there is a man trying to shoot a woman with a shotgun. >> reporter: on april 12, 2021, outside nashville, debbie sisco and her daughter marie varsos were shot and killed by marie's estranged husband who later took his own life. >> three people are dead after a murder/suicide in lebanon. >> reporter: shaun varsos broke into his mother-in-law's house where marie was staying, he had guns, zip ties, and battery acid ready to hunt them down. varsos was out on bail after strangling his wife and threatening her with a gun the month before. >> yes, he went running that way. had a shotgun. >> you know, i remember, you know, screaming, you know, i was strangling his wife and >> reporter: alex youn is marie's brother and debbie's son. >> two people that i loved dearly were very quickly ripped out of my life. >> reporter: judges can require gps as a condition a bail, but often don't. varsos was considered enough of a threat that the judge had the ability to put a gps tracking device on him, but he didn't, why not? >> that's a question for the judge. it's one that infuriates me. my sister, my mother -- >> reporter: youn turned his pain and anger into a successful push for mandated gps tracking of aggravated assault offenders in domestic violence cases. tennessee's new law is called the debbie and marie domestic violence protection act. do you believe if varsos had been wearing a gps tracking device that your mother and sister would still be alive today? >> absolutely. >> domestic violence is everywhere. >> reporter: jennifer waindle is with the battered women's domestic project. how likely is it for them to repeat their actions? >> when there's firearms at play, when there is strangulation, elevated stalking, they are more likely to do it again. >> reporter: here's how it works, victims are identified through a phone app or electronic device when an offender violates a protection. that can mean moving within a certain radius of the victim or reaching an exclusion zone like their house. when that happens, victims can receive multiple alerts by text, email, and a monitoring service calls law enforcement. >> every second matters. >> reporter: ray gandolf is helping to lead the charge on using gps technology is a safety tool. >> they can look for help, they can find cover. they can position themselves in a safe place, lock themselves in place where if they have the opportunity to call 911 or to get help dispatched to them immediately. >> reporter: is that the difference between life and death? >> certainly. >> reporter: alex has made sure that the names of debbie sisco and marie varsos live on. >> i'm hopeful that other states will be able to look at this and adopt it moving forward. >> reporter: all it takes is a well of lawmakers to use the technology of today to prevent the tragedy's have tomorrow. for "eye on america," i am meg oliver in nashville. >> major: severe turbulencence injures dozens and forces a heavily damaged plane to make an heavily damaged plane to make an emergency landing. the details next. ♪ ♪ an emergency landing. the details next. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i got the power of 3. i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. i'm under 7. ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as stroke, heart attack, or death in adults also with known heart disease. i'm lowering my risk. adults lost up to 14 pounds. i lost some weight. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. gallbladder problems may occur. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. living with type 2 diabetes? ask about the power of 3 with ozempic®. oh no. running low? with chewy, always keep their bowl full. save 35% on your first autoship order. get the food they love. delivered again and again. 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