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anyone other than the senate judiciary committee investigating? >> at this point our local law enforcement sources tell us that there are no open cases or complaints based on these allegations. now, the white house could potentially encourage the fbi to look into this as part of his extended background check, but so far there's no indication they intend to do that. >> paula reid, thanks very much. the senate judiciary committee hearing is now just hours away and nancy cordes is on capitol hill with more on that. >> i'm not in a good mood. >> reporter: utah's orrin hatch wasn't the only one as republicans reeled from the latest allegation about kavanagh being present at a gang rape. >> anything coming out of the avenatti lane two days before a vote i treat very suspiciously. >> reporter: democrats called on kavanagh to withdraw. >> there is no way, absolutely no way that this nomination can proceed to a vote without an fbi investigation. >> our lawyers are on it right now. our staff investigators. >> reporter: republican chuck grassley, the judiciary chair,e seriously, but -- >> we have had accusation after accusation, accusation, very few of them are kroob rated. >> reporter: the 21 senators will get five minutes each to question christine blasey ford and another five for kavanagh. republicans plan to cede most of their time to arizona prosecutor and sex crimes expert rachel mitchell who they have hired just for this hearing. >> i'm not interested in seeing miss mitchell go cat woman on anybody. she has an extraordinary reputation for being able to ferret out the truth and sexual allegations of sexual assault. >> reporter: ford's lawyers released photos today of her undergoing a polygraph test in august. a former fbi agent found her responses about the alleged high school groping incident were not indicative of deception. >> yes, people might have had too many beers on occasion. >> reporter: in his prepared testimony, kavanagh was more frank about alcohol than he was on fox news, admitting, i drank beer with my friends usually on weekends, sometimes i had too many. but i never did anything remotely resembling what dr. ford describes. >> there's plenty of reason for people to think that this is a smear campaign. >> but doesn't that imply that the women are lying? >> it doesn't, it doesn't hold them in high esteem, put it that way. >> reporter: ford's attorneys have released her extensive written testimony. she is expected to say tomorrow, i believed kavanagh was going to rape me. i tried to yell for help. when i did, brett put his hand over my mouth to stop me from screaming. this was what terrified me the most. and has had the most lasting impact on my life. so you just walk around telling people geico could help them save money on car insurance? yea,that and homeowners, renters, motorcycle and boat insurance. huh.that's nice. what happens when you catch a fish? gecko: whoa. geico. more than just car insurance. see how much you could save at geico.com. i'm ok! stop fearing your alarm clock... with new*! zzzquil pure zzzs. a drug-free blend of botanicals with melatonin ...that supports your natural sleep cycle... ...so you can seize the morning. new! zzzquil pure zzzs. ♪ ♪ degree motionsense™. ultimate freshness with every move. the more you move, the more it works. degree®, it won't let you down. the more you move, the more it works. alice loves the smell of gain so much, she wished it came in a fabric softener too. [throat clears] say hello to your fairy godmother, alice. oh and look they got gain scent beads and dryer sheets too! >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> ricky clee man is our legal analyst. both will be with us tomorrow as well. jan, first to you, what are you expecting tomorrow? >> jeff, in some ways it seems like the same play book in 1991 with the thomas hill hearings where you have republican nominees heading for confirmations and these last-minute bombshell allegations, thomas and kavanagh flatly deny. if history is repeating itself you'd expect to hear new details tomorrow. when anita hill testified she gave graphic details she hadn't mentioned before, not even to the fbi. but here ford has said she doesn't remember anything more than what she has already described. so she's going to be asked about that one event at a party she said happened in high school while kavanagh is going to be asked about all of his personal behavior over his entire life. now, i talked to senator jack dan forth today, justice thomas's chief sponsor in the senate for those hearings in '91. his advice to thomas then was to be yourself. we saw that, the full emotions from justice thomas on display, anger, that his reputation was destroyed thanks to the senate for a forum of what he called lies. that was him being himself. brett kavanagh is very different, but his friends are telling the same thing. just be yourself. >> all right. now to you, as a former prosecutor, what are the challenges facing rachel mitchell, the prosecutor the republicans have brought in? >> well, she is a prosecutor. remember, the person they reall needed here was a criminal defense lawyer, someone who cross examines accusers and props up the accused. so here this prosecutor is acting contrary to what she usually does. also remember, prosecutors' biggest challenges are the facts that they do not cross-examine people as a normal course of events. most cases go in on the burden of proof on the government and then to defendants rarely testify. >> rikki clee man and jan, thanks to both of you. the "cbs this morning" team will be in washington to bring you live gavel to gavel coverage of the hearings. we begin at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. the cbs evening news will come to you from washington as well. coming up next, the fa therl of a missing boy with autism tells us what happened. harry's meeting clients... ...from far away. but they only see his wrinkles. if only harry used some... ...bounce, to dry. he would be a less wrinkly, winning guy. dozens of law enforcement officers join the search for a missing 6-year-old boy in north carolina. more than 300 officers are now looking for maddox rich. the boy has autism and has not been seen since saturday. his father is speaking out tonight in an interview with david begnaud. >> it's been torture. i'm not eating, not sleeping. i'm just worried about getting my little boy back. >> reporter: appearing with police this afternoon at a news conference was ian rich. he hasn't seen his 6-year-old son maddox since saturday. that's when ian and his girlfriend took maddox who cannot speak to a local park where there is a track and a lake. >> a jogger passed by and as he was jogging past us, that's when maddox started to jog out behind him. so i usually just give him a little space and let him do his thing. and once we got so far, he took off from me running. and i just never could catch up with him. >> you're a grown man, he's a little boy. how did he outrun you? >> he can run. he can run. >> reporter: oday. >> i couldn't keep up with him. not that fast. >> reporter: ian later said he has neuropathy in his feet due to diabetes and that makes it difficult to run. what do you think happen? >> i don't know. i thought he might have got lost in the woods. after all this time, it's giving me doubts. that makes me wonder if somebody got him in the parking lot. >> reporter: if somebody kidnapped him? >> right. >> reporter: did you do anything to harm maddox? >> no. >> reporter: did anyone you know do anything to harm maddox? >> no. >> reporter: fbi agent jason kaplan says maddox's parents are cooperating. >> we feel very confident that a lot of the information that they have provided to us is accurate and it's helped us in a great deal in finding out the last place we saw maddox. >> despite the rain, the search continues right now. you know, ian rich tells me he feels like suspect number one. he's the dad. he was the last person to see maddox alive. he's turned over his phone records, let police search his car and his house. police will not confirm this, but ian has taken and passed two polygraphs. >> good interview, davi when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you. in southern tennessee today, schools closed early as shelters opened ahead of more rain and flooding. one person dro whed out roads near chattanooga. president trump spoke out strongly today against alleged election interference from china. he accused china of wanting him to lose the next election. at his news conference he said he may no longer be friends with chinese president xi jinping. in colorado springs teenagers rammed a van in a marijuana store overnight. the perfect crime, except what they stole in the display jars was filled with oregano. we end here tonight in baltimore. students celebrated a fresh start today. here's chip reid. >> reporter: it wasn't toys or video games that got these 5th graders in baltimore so excited today. it was school supplies and other necessities that many of them can't afford. >> a tablet. >> and i got -- >> reporter: it's the result of a campaign that's gone viral on instagram. it started a few weeks ago with a challenge from singer ed drost asking fans to send school supplies to teachers in poor neighborhoods who pay for them out of pocket because their students cannot. the response was overwhelming. >> i am taking on ed drost's challenge. >> reporter: a lot of celebrities took up the cause, asking their fans for help. one of them was kristen bell. >> i think this is such an incredible way to get kids what they need and deserve and help the teachers that are fighting for everyone's educations. >> reporter: kristen johnson, a 5th grade teacher at baltimore's sinclair lane elementary posted her wish list and was stunned that bell chose her. >> less than 30 minutes later she messaged me back saying, you got it! >> reporter: she was even more surprised when all the packages started arriving. >> they're like, well, you'll need a moving truck. >> reporter: a moving truck? she does not re sent having to buy supplies. >> it's hard knowing they don't have what other people have. >> reporter: and now at least for the moment they do. >> yes. >> reporter: johnson has nothing but gratitude. >> i'm just blown away by everyone's kindness. >> reporter: a lesson her students won't soon forget. chip reid, cbs news, baltimore. >> that is the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news". >> welcome to the overnight news. i'm errol barnett. the show must go on. the senate judiciary committee plans to go ahead with its hearing of the supreme court nominee brett kavanagh. this despite explosive new allegations against him. kavanagh as well as one of three women who accuse him of sexual misconduct are set to testify at 10:00 a.m. eastern. on the eve of the most anticipated supreme court hearing in nearly 30 years, new charges are shaking washington. president trump called it a democratic con game and says he wants kavanagh confirmed by next week. >> are you saying that all three of those women are liars? >> this is one of the highest-quality people that i've ever met, and everybody that knows him says the same thing. and these are all false to me, these are false accusations in certain cases and certain cases even the media agrees with that. 36 years, no charge, no nothing everybody -- >> but that happens often. >> people are going to have to make a decision. >> they're giving the women a major chance to speak. now, it's possible i'll hear that and i'll say, hey, i'm changing my mind. i'm going to see what happens tomorrow. i'm going to be watching. you know, believe it or not, i'm going to see what's said. it's possible that they will be convincing. >> it sounds like what you're saying is there is a situation, there is a scenario under which you would withdraw brett kavanagh's nomination. is that correct? >> if i thought he was guilty of something like this, sure. i've had numerous accusations about me. >> right. >> they made false statements about me. >> if i could just actually ask my question, mr. trump. you didn't let me ask my question. >> you've been asking the question for ten minutes. please sit down. please, go ahead. go ahead. >> how do those impact your opinions on the allegations against -- >> well, it does impact my opinion, you know why? because i've had a lot of false charges made against me. i'm a very famous person unfortunately. i've been a famous person a long time. but i've had false charges made against me, really false charges. i know friends that have had false charges. people want fame. they want money. they want whatever. so, when i see it i view it differently than somebody sitting home watching television where they have a, oh, judge kavanagh this or that. it's happened to me many times. i've had many false charges. so when you say does it affect me in terms of my thinking with respect to judge kavanagh, absolutely, because i've had it many times. >> paula reid begins our coverage. >> the accusations are serious. 55-year-old julie swetnick said she knew brett kavanagh in high school, attending more than ten house parties with him between 1981 and 1983. in a signed statement, swetnick alleges that in high school, kavanagh would drink excessively and engage in abusive and physically aggressive behavior towards girls. and that kavanagh was involved in efforts to spike drinks at the parties and then have sex with girls who had lost their ability to say no. she claimed she was the victim of one of these gang or train rapes and that kavanagh was present. she does not allege that kavanagh himself raped her. records show julie swetnick graduated from gaithersburg high school in maryland in 1980. kavanagh graduated from the private georgetown prep high school in 1983. the schools are some ten miles apart. in a statement, kavanagh said the allegation was from the twilight zone and it never happened. kavanagh's lawyer beth wilkinson. >> he's outraged as you might imagine by this most recent allegation. he has never met this woman. he doesn't know miss swetnick. he didn't go to parties with her. >> reporter: kavanagh himself was asked about the house parties earlier this week. >> did you ever participate in or were you ever aware of any gang rape that happened at a party that you attended? >> that's totally false and outrageous. never done any such thing, known about any such thing. >> reporter: the allegations were made public by swetnick's lawyer, michael avenatti who also represents porn star stormy daniels in her legal case against president trump. the goverment karatcontractor reached out to him. >> this is a woman who received numerous security clearances over the years issued by the u.s. government, including secret security clearances as well as public trust security clearances that require very detailed vetting performed by the u. gont. >> reporter: this afternoon president trump fired back at avenatti. >> you look at this lawyer that just came out. he's a low life. he represented democrats. nobody ever talks about that. he's a democrat lawyer, not a very good one, but he's a democrat lawyer. >> reporter: this afternoon 64 people who say they knew brett kavanagh in high school sent this letter to the senate judiciary committee. they say that they don't remember anyone named julie swetnick. they call her allegations nonsense and reprehensible. >> i'm not in a good mood. >> reporter: utah's orrin hatch wasn't the only one as republicans reeled from the latest allegation about kavanagh being present at a gang rape. >> anything coming out of the avenatti lane two days before a vote, i treat very suspiciously. >> reporter: democrats called on kavanagh to withdraw. >> there is no way, absolutely no way that this nomination can proceed to a vote without an fbi investigation. >> our lawyers are on it right now. our staff investigators. >> reporter: republican chuck grassley, the judiciary chair, said he's taking the new claims seriously, but -- >> we have had accusation after accusation and accusation, very few of them if any are corroborated. >> reporter: the 21 senators on his committee will get five minutes each tomorrow to question professor christine blasey ford, and another five for kavanagh. republicans plan to cede most of their time to arizona prosecutor and sex crimes expert rachel mitchell who they have hired just for this hearing. >> i'm not interested in seeing miss mitchell go catwoman on anybody. she has an extraordinary reputation for being able to ferret out the truth and sexual allegations of sexual assault. >> reporter: ford's lawyers released photos today of her undergoing a polygraph test in august. a former fbi agent found her responses about the alleged high school groping incident were not indicative of deception. >> yes, people might have had too many beers on occasion -- >> reporter: in his prepared testimony, kavanagh was more frank about alcohol than he was on fox news, admitting, i drank beer with my friends, usually on weekends. sometimes i had too many, but i never did anything remotely resembling what dr. ford describes. >> there's plenty of reason for some people to think that this is a smear campaign. >> doesn't that imply that the women are lying? >> it doesn't -- it doesn't -- it doesn't hold them in high esteem. put it that way. >> reporter: ford's attorneys have released her extensive written testimony. she is expected to say tomorrow, i believed kavanagh was going to rape me. i tried to yell for help. when i did, brett put his hand over my mouth to stop me from screaming. this was what terrified me the most and has what's the #1 new skincare product in 2018? omg! it's olay. that's crazy! olay regenerist whip. olay whips absorbs faster than the $100, $200, an40m. i feel like it just melted into my skin better. it's really smooth and it's not heavy. i really really love this. i will 100% swap up my moisturizer. can i have it? olay whips. try whips with spf 25. finally, sun protection that feels light as air. a women's natural lubrication varies throughout her cycle. this can effect how pleasurable sex can be. to supplement your lubrication for even better sex try ky natural feeling. the lubrication you want, nothing you don't. ky natural feeling get what you want >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news". >> it is r's been a year since hurricane maria devastated puerto rico. the storm knocked out power to the entire island, washed out roads and bridges and by one estimate led to the deaths of 3,000 americans. president trump calls the federal response to the hurricane, quote, an idible cces our own david begnaud went back to puerto rico to see for himself and this morning he has the story of the small island of v . >> reporter: we realize social media has been so crucial to our reporting. what we did was cull together the suggestions, talk to this person, go here, see this. that's exactly what we did. that airplane is a life line. it ferries desperate patients in need of lifesaving treatment. three times a week, since hurricane maria struck, elias delgado has been among those flown from vee vieges to the center. >> it is very difficult. a lot of them didn't make it, you know, because they died. >> reporter: how long will the dialysis take? >> it's going to take about four hours. >> reporter: and then you'll come back to the airport and fly -- >> come back about 2:00 or 3:00. they come back to the airport again, and then we go to vieges again. it's a long day. >> reporter: long tourist destination for its beautiful beaches, it was ravaged by hurricane maria. its population of less than 10,000 people now relies solely on generators to get power. >> we decided to charter a boat. it's taken an hour to get here. what i'm thinking now is the people who messaged us for months and asked us to travel to the island to tell their stories because a lot of them feel as though they've been forgotten. we made it. one of the first messages i got from a viewer was someone who said, please go see betty at the car rental. she was a one woman power house during the recovery and will give you the unvarnished truth. we have to get a rental carney way so we're going to look for betty. >> i'm looking for betty. >> i'm betty. >> hi, betty. >> reporter: what's the worst you saw? >> my neighbor's husband died. and every agency failed the system so we raised money not only to help with funeral expenses, but to get tarps up. >> reporter: how did he die? >> heart issues. the back of the house was destroyed. the anxiety and the lack of getting medication. >> reporter: is there a hospital to take him to? >> no. we're goino man. he's out -- not even ten minutes. his name is david maldonado. he got attention for us, too. he did a lot of help, a lot of good things. >> reporter: let's go talk to him. >> welcome. >> reporter: the president of the united states loves to give grades. what grade would you give the municipality government? >> oh, wow, that's tough. if it comes to -- well, as far as leadership, there is no grade. they don't even qualify for one right now because i haven't seen any leadership since day one. >> reporter: where is your mayor? >> exactly. >> reporter: this is it. maldonado wanted to show us the island's only hospital. this is what they condemned? >> yes. >> reporter: shutdown after hurricane maria, he says, because of mold. >> and there's the veterans. they gave them a trailer. they gave them a nice trailer. >> reporter: that's it? >> that is it. >> reporter: you've got to be kidding me. that's the motor home that now serves as the only clinic for veterans on the island. so this is the new hospital, so to speak. i'm told it had been used as a homeless shelter prior to this. when we walked through, we didn't see a patient. we didn't even see much medical equipment. from there, maldonado took us to see the mayor, victor emrick. i'm david. how much money have you gotten from fema? >> reporter: i've gotten a lot of complaints fro after the storm. people told me you were at the bar and they couldn't find you when they needed help. >> reporter: we circled back to the money issue and i called a representative from the federal emergency management agency, which has already allocated billions of dollars and relief aid. i'm sitting in front of the mayor and he's telling me they have only gotten $260,000. is that true? let him know this. the man from fema just told me that the money is given from fema to the central government. and it's up to the -- it's incumbent on the central government to then distribute it to the municipalities. you were aware of that. have you called san juan to ask -- [ speaking in spanish ] >> reporter: david maldonado handed us off to mark martin. thank you for idung us to him. whsor 25 ar ound t nonprofit that has raised more than a million dollars in donations. >> thank you for all you're doing. >> yes, sir. >> see you, buddy. >> reporter: so, let's go to the ferry. this ferry is how most of the people get to and from the main island of puerto rico. over lunch mark martin told us the prices for the ferry may be going up soon. >> i think the people didn't realize that we are -- there goes the ferry. >> tied to the ferry as a life line. the ferry gets put away during a hurricane in san juan, days before here. even before they clear the harbor. >> reporter: one man said that is our road. >> legally that is our road. and they're about to change all the price and immediately erase the quality of life -- the cost of life here, lower the quality of life by putting higher tariffs on the ferry for the people that live here, for the people who are coming here, for the suppliers, everything comes through there. >> reporter: what is a good use of the millions of dollars the island is going to get? >> you have to start with basic things you don't have. health, security, safety. in our case, transportatio stop fearing your alarm clock... with new*! zzzquil pure zzzs. a drug-free blend of botanicals with melatonin ...that supports your natural sleep cycle... ...so you can seize the morning. new! zzzquil pure zzzs. spray paint that covers walls in many neighborhoods used to be called graffiti, right? now it goes by the name street art. one company has turned its street art into a big business. don dahler has more on this. >> reporter: street art attracts those looking for the perfect selfie backdrop. they are grand and intricate, colorful and sometimes controversial. and increasingly, they're selling something. >> you don't often think of advertising as art. >> you don't. i think what's unique about what we do is that it's art first, right? >> reporter: paul is the co-founder of colossal media. his brooklyn-based company may be the largest hand painted advertisement firm in the u.s. with clients including samsung, delta, comedy central, and nintendo. what is the allure to these companies that are hiring you to do these? >> i think the allure is that they get access to these neighborhoods that we live in and that we work in. we really know about brooklyn, we really know about the arts district in los angeles. i think that if you're a brand, it's about, you know, getting connected. it's about getting people's attention, you know? we do that in a real truthful way. >> reporter: he and his crew have been getting attention since 2004. it took awhile to change the perception of hand painted ads as outdated and time consuming and worth the additional cost. but now colossal media leases 120 walls in various cities. the company raked in $24 million in sales last year. how much does social media play in this? >> now with social media and being able to put out a message, somebody across the world might be able to see, you know, like the work that you've done. >> reporter: he says it's important for people to be able to see the painstaking process that leads to the final product. outdoor art isn't easy to do. >> we were working through the bomb cyclone. we pushed through that entire thing. we put something up on social media that showed the guys banging away while the wind was rushing by at 60 miles an hour. >> what's going on here? >> this is the room where we're mixing all of our colors. every job that we do, we have to take the artwork and literally dissect it. so we find places on the artwork and isolate colors. >> reporter: at the end of the day when we walk away and we leave -- >> the result needs to look like a banner. you shouldn't be able to tell that it's painted, right? it has to be as good if not better. >> reporter: murals can be a big draw for tourists, like in miami's wind wood arts district where art breathed new life into a dying neighborhood. >> as the neighborhood grows, you'll be able to see pieces li. >> reporteoldman property ceo jessica goldman curates the street art museum. >> to me it's a pure expression of creativity to be able to do what these artists do. >> reporter: in 2009 she and her late father tony goldman opened the wind wood walls, transforming concrete into canvas. and blight into light. >> we have from no visitors to over a million visitors a year coming through the wind wood wall. you hear every language. and so that to me is what makes for a really vibrant, beautiful neighborhood. and i think the wind wood walls has done a beautiful job of democratizing the world of art and making it accessible to everybody. >> reporter: with an estimated 44 murals inside these walls, she says this area has the highest concentration of street art in the country. this street art created a tourist industry. it created retail. it created a neighborhood. >> it's pretty extraordinary how one idea can have effects around the world and on so many levels. and i think we're just seeing the beginning. i think you're going to see so ch more bif much more public art, so much more art integrated into brand and products and, you know, why not? it just makes life so much more exciting and interesting. >> reporter: and for once starving artists like paul lendal, it makes for good business. >> most artists i know have to have a second job. how are these guys doing? >> well, you know, to me i found something that was, that was really important and i really fell in love with it. i wanted to build some sort of sustainability around that. i wanted to know where i was going to be at when i woke up the next day. and so -- >> reporter: you wanted to make a living? >> yeah, yeah. i wanted to make a living. when we started the company, that was the objective. i thought to myself, if i could do this myself the rest of my dent. y're corporate. >> it's not about me any more. there are 80 people with families that have their own reasons for being at colossal. it's become something in its own a lot of people who work nights have a hard time remembering what day it is. susan spencer found one man who made an art form out of knowing what day it is, or was. >> reporter: how many galleries have you been in? >> oh, i'm in three galleries at the moment. >> reporter: artist george wideener could spend countless hours happily counting. >> 19, 26, february -- >> reporter: and counting. >> 23, 24 -- >> reporter: and counting. you get the idea. >> is awash in numbers and dates and days, and so is his head. >> if you look at august of 1968, august 7, 14, 21, 28 are dnesdays. >> reporter: pardon? george is what's known as a calendar savant. what exactly is a calendar savant? savant expert dr. darrell treffort. >> savants are able to identify what day a date will fall on in the past or in the future. >> reporter: most of us need google. george needs a few seconds. let me throw a few dates at you here. >> all right. >> reporter: his skill is so remarkable, you really do have to see it to believe it. december 2nd, 2018. >> december 2nd, 2018 is a sunday. >> reporter: january 3rd, 2015. >> january 3rd, 2015, looks like a saturday. >> reporter: valentine's day, 1956. >> tuesday. >> that's my sister's birthday. okay. when is chris matmas next on wednesday? >> 2019 looks like, yeah. >> reporter: you haven't missed one yet. >> no. >> reporter: we moved on to the celebrity bonus round. elvis died august 16, 1977. >> and that was a tuesday. >> reporter: lieu chan owe pavoratti was born october 12, 1935. >> october 12, '35 is a saturday. >> reporter: president lincoln, february 12, 1809. >> looks like a sunday. >> reporter: indeed. now, when george produces a date, is this a conscious thought? >> it's intuitive. he doesn't need to think about it. it appears. >> reporter: george is a high-functioning savant able to live independently and he doing quite well. >> i love doing this stuff. >> reporter: you clearly love doing this stuff. at the manhattan gallery where we met him, his art sells quickly for tens of thousands of dollars. but george seems happiest about something far more fundamental. >> it's been wonderful that i've been able to use, you know, what's inside of me it's thursday, september 27th, 2018. this is the it's thursday, september 27th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh and his accuser christine blasey ford are about to testify on capitol hill over sexual assault allegations. how this historic event will play out. we are also learning more about the new allegations against judge kavanaugh by a third woman. we'll get reaction. and, a troubling new report on deaths from the flu.

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