Transcripts For KPIX CBS Overnight News 20180116

Card image cap



many people in your area will jump on and utilize to change their lives forever. i invite you to be one of them. real estate has changed my life, and i know it can change yours. i know when you attend the event, it'll be a day you mark on your calendar as the moment your financial future and your life took a giant leap forward. thanks for watching. i look forward to having you at the event. (upbeat music) >> dr. stanley: remember this: cannot change the laws of god. when he has visited you in some form of adversity and he brings you through that, that's like he has increased the strength of the foundation of your life and your faith in him. [music] gold medal gymnast simonebiles wrote on social media she is a victim of larry nassar, the former team doctor. biles won the individual all around in rio in 2016 and joins more than 140 women including three other olympians accused nassar of sexual abuse. expected to receive a life sentence this week after pleading guilty to six wall salt charges. dolores oriordan lead singer of the irish rock group, cranberries, died suddenly today in london. ♪ ♪ in your hand ♪ >> cranberries had a string of hits in the 90s "zombie" and "linger" and "dreams." no word on what cause herd death. she did recently cut short a tour because of back problems. dolores oriordan was 46 years old. ♪ now i tell you openly you have my heart so don't hurt me ♪ and now to other stories we are following in the evening news feed. a mezzanine walk way collapsed without warning today at the stock exchange in jakarta indonesia. no one was killed. 80 hurt. mostly college students touring the exchange. >> the pilots of a turkish jetliner that skidded off the runway told investigators an engine problem forced the plane to swerve left as it landed saturday. the boeing 737 veered down a slope and stopped just yards from the black sea, none of the 168 people on board were hurt. and girls ages 7 to 10 are allowed to become cub scouts. that is a first in the organization's 108 year history. next-year-older girls will be eligible to join the boy scod p scout. new car buyers have a new option. pull on a virtual reality headset and go for a virtual test drive. >> what happened? >> there has the got to be a logical explanation for this. >> in 1968, this memphis sanitation worker found himself marching with dr. king. for equal pale and better working conditions. >> you felt you had a shot. >> i know i had a shot. hold together. a little to the left. 1, 2, 3, push! easy! easy! easy! (horn honking) alright! alright! we've all got places to go! we've all got places to go! washington crossing the delaware turnpike? surprising. what's not surprising? how much money sean saved by switching to geico. big man with a horn. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. okay - let's try this. it says you apply the blue one to me. here? no... make every day valentine's day with k-y yours and mine. two sensations. one great way to discover new feelings together. ♪ tired of wrestling with seemingly impossible cleaning tasks? using wipes in the kitchen, and sprays in the bathroom can be ineffective. try mr. clean magic eraser. simply add water, and use in your kitchen for burnt on food, in your bathroom to remove soap scum, and on walls to remove scuffs and marks. it erases 4x more permanent marker per swipe. for an effective, multi-surface clean, use mr. clean magic eraser. brand power. helping you buy better. john blackstone on how you can do a test drive without getting into the vehicle. >> reporter: at the silicon valley auto show, car buyers can get a glimpse of the future where car shopping doesn't require a real car at all. pull on virtual reality goggles for a close look at the latest lexus models. you don't have to walk around the dirt. >> it's not there. just walk right through the door. >> come in. kneel down. poke your head in the car. >> look right through the window here. >> put your head right in. >> virtually every option if you get close to the car you will see metallic flake in the paint there. >> can be seen virtually. how does it drive? >> ready to go and test drive? >> kiosk of flow found, offers virtual test drives in several different cars. >> now you are in the ford. >> kiosks at dealerships around the country. one disappointment you are stuck in the virtual passenger seat. i tried it. i didn't get to drive. >> you didn't. >> the flow found ceo designed des driv test drives. buyers are likely to never encounter in a real test drive. >> so many, driving features you can't just try. lunch mode. collision avoidance. these things work. >> car shoppers may have another reason to put on the goggles. dodging the sales pitch. and using the virtual test drives. able to avoid a lot of social pressures. and car shoppers, relax. in the virtual world. the car salesman doesn't exist. john blackstone. cbs news, san jose. >> there was nothing virtual about this ride. what really happened next. do i use a toothpaste that whitens my teeth or... ...one that's good for my teeth? now i don't have to choose! from crest 3d white comes new whitening therapy. it's our best whitening technology. plus, it has a fortifying formula to protect your enamel. crest. healthy, beautiful smiles for life. okay - let's try this. it says you apply the blue one to me. here? no... make every day valentine's day with k-y yours and mine. two sensations. one great way to discover new feelings together. so many who have seen the picture wondered how did that happen? a car dangling from a second floor dentist's office in santa ana, california. surveillance video shows the car flipped a median, took flight. no one was seriously hurt. the driver told police, he had used drugs. britain's highest award for animal gallantry presented posthumously to chips, a u.s. army dog who risked his life attack a german machine gun nest during world war ii. chip's owners donated him to the war effort after he bit the garbage man. when general eisenhower bent done to thank chip for heroism. chips bit him too. up next, they were with dr. king on his final march. honors for dr. martin luther king jr. on the 89th anniversary of his birth. assassinated 50 years ago this april in memphis. he had gone to support striking sanitation workers. here is michelle miller. >> reporter: in the winter of 1968, the garbage men of memphis put the city on notice. men like elmor nickelbury and baxter leach they've went on strike demanding equal pay and better working conditions after two co-workers were accidently killed in a trash compactor. >> what were the marchers saying? >> saying we will overcome some day. >> reporter: were you ever fearful for your life? >> sure. >> a korean war veteran, nickelbury and others were now fighting for justice. and the simple right to wash off the stench of a nine hour day, a sink. his fay, just $1.25 a day. on april 3, 1968, he found himself in lock step with martin luther king there there. >> that day was a good day. it was a marvelous day. when i saw him. this man. he is going to change a lot of things. >> you felt you had a shot. >> i know i had a shot. >> 1,300 of god's children are here suffering. going through dark and dreary nights. >> the speech he give, you know, that did something to me. >> what did it do to you? >> i was thinking everything was going to be all right. >> but the next day, standing on the balcony of the lorain motel. king was assassinated. >> like losing one of my family members. >> did you see, justice? after his death? >> yeah. we had belter working conditions. >> leach worked another 43 years. nickelberry is still on the job today. the longest serving employee in the city's history. tonight the naacp is honoring them in the role they played in fight for human dignity. michelle miller, cbs news, memphis. that's the "overnight news" for tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm aejeff glor. >> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." hi, welcome to the "overnight news." i'm demarco morgan. people in hawaii are still steaming mad over this weekend's false alarm that sent them scrambling for shelter from a missile strike. of course there was no missile strike. state officials say it was all a big mistake. the person responsible has been reassigned. but that's not the end of it. david begnaud begins our coverage. >> the agency that made the mistake, said it is receiving threats after the chaos and confusion that sent people panicking. this little girl was low neared a manhole. 5500 people called 911. >> it was a mistake on our part. i regret -- the stress and concern and worry that you went through. >> hawaii's emergency administrator, said an employee clicked the wrong button twice. he was supposed to select the option for drill. but he clicked the real thing. at 8:07 this alert of ballistic missile threat was issued by the state emergency management agency. for what felt like an eternity, islanders heard this. >> a missile may impact on land or sea within minutes. this its not a drill. within three minutes the person who made the mistake realized it. it would take 38 minutes to send out a correction. we went to see where the mistake happened at hawaii emergency management agency tucked inside the bunker in honolulu. with all due respect are you sure this was an accident? >> yes. i know the individual. this was an accident. not intentional at all. >> definitely the safest place. no windows. interior of our house. >> amanda thompson screamed when sheep read the alert. she and her husband took the kids and hid in a closet. >> we grabbed everything we could, food, water bottles as i'm crying my eyes out. i'm crying so hard they can't understand me. >> since december 1, state officials have resumed drills of at take warning signal. used to notify the public of an in bound missile. so here is what is being done to make sure this doesn't happen again. the governor wants two people to be involved in every drill. now on the computer seen a false alarm template, shoe some one make a mistake, jeff it shouldn't take 38 minutes to correct it. >> first, you duck. and then, you cover. >> reporter: for a generation in the cold war, the threat of a nuclear attack was ever present. >> there might not be any grownups around when the bomb explode. then, you are on your own. >> today's warheads are many times more powerful and deadly. and information comes faster than ever. raising the risks of a panic public. or endless call the nightmare scenario. false alarm that triggers accidental nuclear war. bruce alexander is a national security expert. >> we need to have some authority of authentication system. we have to look at who is authorized to launch these particular alerts and what particular situations. >> false alarms are nothing new. in 1971, norad center this erroneous teletype to thousand of broadcast stations. activating emergency broadcast system to announce the united states was under nuclear attack. and in 1979, computers at norad headquarters detected what appeared to be a massive soviet missile attack. the u.s. went on high alert. but it was actually a war game tape mistakenly loaded into norad's computers. officials had only minutes to decide whether the warning was accurate and whether or not to retaliate. >> the overriding concern is the threat of north korea. so in this case, minutes really do matter, given that, the proximity that they have and ability to respond or, or, or, prepare for that. >> in the case of a true emergency. a wireless alert to the public could come from national. state. local authorities. all of whom are supposed to have had fema training. in this case, fema is investigating what happened to prevent it from happening again. now the current emergency alert system has been in place since 2012. experts we talked to said better training and more controls can fix these, use. and it is fortunate that we know of these problems because of a false alarm. and instead of a failure during an actual event. we turn now to a disturbing story that is emerging out of southern california tonight. the mudslide devastated montecito. hope of finding any more survivors in the rubble is fading fast. jamie yuccas reports. >> on blocks where the river of mud destroyed homes as the people slept, cadaver dogs continued an exhaustive search for the missing. >> you are trying to find people's family members. >> yes. >> give them some closure. >> exact low. yeah. the whole community too. >> it's, tight nigt community. >> closure is a long way away. there its nothing left. main highway 101 is shut down for 30 miles. turning commutes into 250 mile, four-hour back road detours. >> utility come pans are trying to restore power, and communications, to mud encased neighborhood. there its no water. drone footage shows the slow process of removing so much mud, some of it is trucked to once pristine beaches where it can drain into the sand. the local grocery store giving out free water and food to rescue workers after three employees lost family members. off awe when you work in a community, as we all do, you know these people. and, you see them every day. and you know their families. you watch their kids grow up. it is pretty emotional for everybody involved. >> crews are working around the clock to clear that mud and debris from the freeway. but it will likely be another week before the 101 is back open. the 42-year-old woman among 50 people forced to jump into the gulf of mexico when the bolt burst into flames. a hospital spokesperson said the woman went home after the incident later felt ill and was taken to the emergency room. >> in the shuttle to tropical breeze runs to and from port ritchie every day. people on the shores notice the the boat sounded different sunday moments before they saw a cloud of thick, black smoke billowing up from the ship's stern. >> dramatic video taken from the shore shows the passengers jumping from the flaming shuttle boat. police say the vessel had just started a roughly three mile journey to an offshore ka scasi cruise when the captain noticed something was wrong. >> seeing smoke. beached the boat up on the shore. >> we're coming in fast as we can. my god. >> videos taken by lisa schultz so flames engulfing the bolt in minutes. >> well were nervous it was going to blow up. you could feel the heat off of it. >> she and her husband rushed to help those forcing eforced into gulf water. >> we had to get into the water at one point. it was just freezing. they were jumping off the front of it. >> we had to jump. what, eight, ten feet to the water. o all made it safe low to shore. they waded through 100 yards of shallow watter to reach personnl and homeowners who had come to help. a they were pulling out clothe to put on. >> 15 people were taken to the hospital with minor injuries. authorities say the decision to turn the boat around prevented a majo jimmy's gotten used to his whole room smelling like sweaty odors. yup, he's gone noseblind. he thinks it smells fine, but his mom smells this... luckily there's febreze fabric refresher for all the things you can't wash. it finds odors trapped in fabrics and washes them away as it dries. and try pluggable febreze to continuously eliminate odors for up to 45 days of freshness. pluggable febreze and fabric refresher. two more ways to breathe happy. okay - let's try this. it says you apply the blue one to me. here? no... make every day valentine's day with k-y yours and mine. two sensations. one great way to discover new feelings together. navigation apps, like google maps can route around accidents and road construction and make secret short cuts through small towns very public. leonia new jersey has had enough. >> the town of leonia may have 9,000 residents but proximity to the george washington bridge makes it susceptible to intense traffic. commuters seeking short cuts are using navigation apps that follow traffic through residential neighborhoods. but now the town is fighting back. this will change life in leonia. >> it should. >> this new sign in new jersey is a low tech solution. >> stay off to the right. >> to a high tech problem. >> there its 60 streets going to be closed. the one square mile town lies in the schadd dope of the george washington bridge. a small town with a big problem. for years, whenever traffic would back up at the bridge, savvy commuters would get off the highway and take a short cut through leonia if you knew the secret. >> stay off to the right to exit 78, leonia. >> you could beat the jam. now navigation apps, like, google maps are sending commuters through side streets. turning this quaint residential area into a parking lot. the mayor -- >> you are driving on streets that quiet residential streets. why people live here. little really they're bump er u bumper-to-bumper to traffic. >> how long does it take? >> some times 10 minutes. 15 minutes. who is going to be nice? how much i will push up against their car until they let me out. >> the town's plan its to restrict access to 60 side street dez renss during rush hour. using the new street signs. >> giving this yellow hang tag for street access. if you don't have one, you risk getting a ticket. >> not talking $20. >> talking $200. >> $200 has teeth. >> once the law talks effect, january 22nd. apps will lose side streets from short cuts menu. >> they'll start pulling them out. and saying, guess what, our law changed. these streets, no longer viable options during these hours, etc. >> town officials say all lee gachlt last month. leonia votes to pass the ordinance. >> for years, itch there was a backup at the gb. there were ways to get off to the gw. >> yes. yes. now there is ways. >> there is ways. >> police chief, tom row. >> the traffic navigation apps, modern day pied piper. no question about that in my mind. people will do whatever the app tell them to do. >> reporter: rose stresses nult law isn't all about preventing traffic jams. >> when we have this traffic where -- motorists have no concern for pedestrians. they want few gemt how to their end destination quick as possible. speed limits beat damned. >> for those residents who want to get around town, the new law can't come stoon much. >> everybody is coming up. from all over the place. 6. >> this is a good idea? all a all. >> super. great idea. >> the new law won't prevent commuters from going through leonia. they can use the town's main road. in a statement to abc news, the maps are reflected to reflelkt local law and changing road conditions to gi hey julie, i know today's critical, but i really need... ...a sick day. dads don't take sick days... dads take dayquil severe. the non-drowsy, coughing, aching, fever, sore throat... ...stuffy head, no sick days medicine. officials of 20 nations will meet in vancouver to discuss ways. the north's leader, kim jong-un shows no sign of bowing to in the national pressure. nuclear tests and missile launches are designed to show the world how far their nuclear program has come. years agoat north took a different tact, inviting in a u.s. scientist and handing him the product of his research. wasn't any scientist, but a man in charge of america's nuclear weapons. david martin reports for 60 minutes. >> i was immensely surprised by how much they showed me and with the openness with which they showed and explained it to me. >> reporter: for 11 years, sig hecker had been director of los alamos laboratory, birth place of american atomic bomb. he was more than a little surprised when in 2004 he was invited on ape tour of north korea's nuclear complex. >> there is no way in the world, they're going to let me in. by the way, i also thought the u.s. government wouldn't let me go. it turns out, i was wrong on both accounts. >> the north koreans took them to a place, where they had been operating a small, nuclear reactor. >> i would call it, a primitive, but functional. and in fact, all of the instrumentation, sort of receive -- reminded me when i got to los alamos. no modern electronics. this its a reactor not good for producing electricity, but very good for making plutonium. >> after showing him the reactor, the north koreans took him to a building where they claimed to be reprocessing spent fuel from the reactor into weapons grade plutonium. >> they just sthoed howed me th facility. said, you have to believe us, we extracted plutonium. >> did you believe them? >> the answer was yes. but i didn't let them think that i believed them. >> soap hecker's guide and director of the nuclear complex, offered to show him the plutonium. >> they bring in. a revved metal box, yea big. this thick. they open the metal box. they take out a white wooden box. white wooden box has a slide off top. they slide off the top. i look in there. the director says, over here, this glass jar, that's our product. that's the plutonium. >> you know plutonium when you seep it? >> plutonium by itself, silvery color if not oxidized. if it was ox dietz dietzed, gra black. >> this is what plutonium looks like, the radioactive element that produced the first nuclear explosion in july 1945. >> so i said i would look to hold the jar with the metal in it. and they allowed me to hold it. so what i learned from holding. first of all, plutonium is dense. ought to be heavy. it was. the other thing, plutonium its radioactive. so it, glass jar ought to be warm. it was warm. >> they wanted to show sig, that they really did have plutonium. >> robert carland has spent his career studying north korea. first as intelligence analyst at the cia and state department. now, as a consultant to cbs news. >> here is this piece of plutonium. which in any government in the world would be one of the most tightly guarded secrets. and they hand it to an american. >> nobody would believe them other wise. right? people would say they're just posturing. oh, propaganda. how you going to convince the americans? get an expert who knows plutonium when he sees it. and you hand it to him. you say, here it is. what do you think? >> what impact did the information you came back with have on u.s. intelligence assessments of the north korean nuclear program. >> it changed from whe don't know what they have if they have enough to make anything. two to the fact that they could have four to six bombs. >> major change. >> big change. >> u.s. intelligence relied on satellite photos of the complex to monitor how much pluf tone yum was being produced by the reactor. >> this area is where the small plutonium production reactor is. >> david albright is director of the institute for science and, leading expert on north korea's weapons program. >> how dupe you know it is operating. just in idle. >> you have evidence of heat. what you see in this picture its, there its stain rising here. >> sat lied photos could dmot solve the mystery if north korea was building second time of bomb with made uranium. using gas off to enrich the uranium to bond grade levels. >> had meetings with north korean officials. denied they had a centrifuj. >> the plant was hiding in plain sight. but no one knew it until 2010, when sig hecker was in viechted back and taken inside that blue roofed building. >> on the way in i had a cheech cheech -- chief engineer. he stopped outside. he said dr. hecker, we didn't want to show you this fa sill team. but o we got up to the second floor. looked down. >> you saw. >> just flabbergasted. i could not believe what i was seeing. essentially, 2,000 centrifuges lined up. looked aboutful. modern. >> so why flabbergasted though. everybody suspected they were secretly enriching uranium. here they are? >> we had no idea they had this many centrifuges and that modern. most amaze thing. put a blue roof on the facility. not is so visible from overhead iffagery. nobody knew. awe all they build this modern uranium enrichment plant under the noses of u.s. spy satellites. >> all the spy sat loilts. a lomt of people show how bad that they is our intel agencies are. it doesn't. it shows the how easy it is to build the centrifuge facilities and hide them. >> heap visit ed north korea seven times. inviting in nuclear scientist who would report everything he saw to u.s. intelligence. >> in all of my visit its. that's a calculus they always made. how much do they show me in order to convince me of something they would like me to take away. bumt not show me so much that it takes mem more vulnerable because the they have given me information that they would rather not give me. so they took that chance with every viz i. >> since hecker's last visit, the blue roofed building which held 2,000 centrifuges. ,000 it its certain leach not the only enrichment plant in north korea. >> we are going to buy enough materials, equipment, to build . >> when they go on the market to buy that material. its it etch dent. >> yes. north korea could have enough bomb grade material for as many as the 60 weapons. >> estimate considerably hyperthan albright, who believes the break down a lot. >> what is yourest matt of a number of floouk nuclear weapons that north korea has the. >> 13-30 nuclear as the for some people a vacation include a low cal and good book. for book lovers nothing compares to a b & b in scotland. there is no easy way to get to wigtown. planes and trains stop hours shy of the remote village on scotland's west coast. with so much peace and quiet, it almost makes sense that the tiny town, population, 900, has 14, yes, 14, book themed shops. but nothing compares to the relative newcomer, the open book. it is part of a unique air b & b listing by aspiring los angeles screenwriter, jessica fox. >> what is it about books? that attracts you stow muo much? lifestyle. the lifestyle. really odd. i am not a big reader. this is really. >> really? >> not at all. >> ha-ha. >> like the movie version of things better. >> of the open book fails like it belongs in a movie. all the product of fox's imagination. >> come to see myself in a woolie jumper. hear the rain. smell the box shop. >> that's the bathroom in there. you have the bedroom in here. which is really sweet. >> when her air b & b listing went life. many followed. guests pay $50 a night to work for free. they can change the window displays, business hours and even the prices. >> i had a bit of a look into it. it is up my alley. >> right up your alley. what is your alley? >> books. i'm an english teacher. >> she is an english teacher with a dream of owning her own bookshop. here t. that dream its brought to life. >> spend a week. meet the people. run a bookshop the way i wanted to for week. >> great little tips here. >> other tips of the temporary trade are penned in the open book's divy. >> ax cement invitations to stop by. people are very friendly. make it a priority to meet them. >> for christy, a holiday for the imagination. >> lock through the window. watch the world go by. >> a world that in one week's time will be headed to another wonder list. >> well before you log on to air bnb, know the place is booked solid for two years. that's the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and of course, cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm demarco morgan. captioning funded by cbs it's tuesday, january 16th, 2018, this is the "cbs morning news". trapped in a house of horrors. a california couple faces charges of starving and chaining their 13 children. four-time olympic gold medalist simone biles says she, too, was a victim of dr. larry nassar, former usa gymnastics doctor. and moments of terror as babies and children are tossed from a burning building. the rescue caught on camera.

Related Keywords

Germany , Mexico , United States , United Kingdom , Vancouver , British Columbia , Canada , California , Honolulu , Hawaii , North Korea , London , City Of , Britain , North Koreans , America , Scotland , American , German , Bruce Alexander , Jessica Fox , David Martin , David Albright , John Blackstone , Michelle Miller , Demarco Morgan , Landor Sea , Amanda Thompson ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.