Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Norah ODonnell

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saying after the bombshell meghan and harry interview. f.b.i. manhunt-- new security footage of the person suspected of placing pipe bombs in the nation's capital ahead of the capitol riot-- the $100,000 reward. covid relief plan: could the ne tax credit help 10 million children currently living in poverty? george floyd murder trial: jury selection begins in the trial of ex minneapolis police officer derek chauvin. pandemic prediction: we speak to a harvard epidemiologist who predicted the severity of the coronavirus outbreak. his projection tonight for the rest of the crisis. and we'll introduce you to officer l.c. buckshot smith-- still on the beat at 91 years old. you won't want to miss this one. this is the "cbs evening news" with norah o'donnell, reporting from the nation's capital. >> o'donnell: good evening to our viewers in the west, and thank you for joining us. we are going to begin with some new warnings and some signs of progress in the fight against coronavirus. just hours before texas will fully reopen its businesses and end its statewide mask mandate, tonight there are concerns that one of those highly contagious variants of the virus is spreading rapidly in that state. houston's health department says new tests of the city's waste water shows ongoing and uncontrolled community spread of the u.k. variant. that news comes as more states are joining texas loosening restrictions as the rate of new infections continues to decline nationwide. tonight, the number of hospitalizations for the virus have dropped, too, down to a level not seen since october. and as we come on the air, more than 32 million americans have now been fully vaccinated, as states expand who is eligible to get a shot. meantime, here in washington, the u.s. house is expected to pass that nearly $2 trillion covid relief bill as soon as tomorrow morning, clearing the final hurdle before president biden signs it into law. we'll have more on just how soon you could be getting a $1,400 stimulus check from the government in just a moment. we've got lot of a new reporting for you and your family tonight. our team of correspondents is standing by. cbs' jonathan vigliotti is going to lead off our coverage in los angeles. good evening, jonathan. >> reporter: good evening, norah. here in california, nearly one in five people have received at least one dose of the vaccine at sites like this one. the c.d.c. is prioritizing overweight and obese people because they are more likely to get significantly sick. meanwhile, there is a lot of concern tonight some states are reopening too fast. tonight, there may be trouble in texas, the state set to reopen tomorrow, all businesses, including restaurants, able to operate at 100% capacity. >> no more six people in the store, waiting in a line outside. so silly. done. >> reporter: but it comes as the houston health department issues this warning: the highly contagious u.k. variant has been found at 31 of the city's 39 wastewater treatment plants. >> there is a fairly large amount of the u.k. variant in our community, and it is spreading. >> reporter: texas ranks 47th out of 50 for vaccinations in percent of population that's received at least one dose. >> i worry we're in for the perfect storm. we're lifting restrictions, the b117 variant's here in a big way, and we're lagging behind on vaccinations. none of that is good news. >> reporter: it sounds like what you're saying is it's dangerous at this point. >> i don't quite understand the urgency to lift restrictions. >> reporter: businesses and schools in texas are still allowed to require masks, but one school district outside of houston has already voted to make them optional. >> it just doesn't make sense to cover our faces and not be able to breathe. >> reporter: here in california, just two months ago, l.a. hospitals were at a breaking point, with patients in the hallways and no i.c.u. beds. now, l.a. county no hospitalizations are down 86%, and average new cases have plummeted 92%. masks are still mandatory in the golden state. ( coughing ) this uber driver, who asked his passengers to comply, was assaulted and coughed on in san francisco. police are investigating. but tonight, there is optimism for better days ahead as the vaccine rolls out and sleeves roll up. >> it's been a year, and it's just nice to see light at the end of the tunnel. >> reporter: and the c.d.c. is confirming women make up nearly 80% of those who are experiencing side effects from the vaccine. most of those cases are mild. and, norah, it's important to point out, doctors stressing tonight everyone still needs to get vaccinated. >> o'donnell: it's a good point. jonathan vigliotti, thank you. and tonight, britain's queen elizabeth has broken her silence on the allegations of racism within the palace made by her grandson, prince harry, and his wife, meghan. the statement was carefully worded on an issue that has rattled the royal family.ya cbs' holly williams reports from london. >> reporter: buckingham palace has finally responded nearly two days after harry and meghan's incendiary interview aired in the u.s. the issues raised, particularly that of race, are concerning, said the palace, a direct reference to meghan's damaging allegation that at least one royal family member raised concerns about what color their son's skin would be.ou were to >> if he were too brown, that that would be a problem? are you saying that? >> i wasn't able to follow up with why, but if that's the assumption you're making, i think that feels like a pretty safe one. >> reporter: oprah said harry told her it wasn't the queen or her husband, prince philip. while some recollections may vary, they are taken very seriously, said the statement, and will be addressed by the family privately. but this is no normal family, and it's no longer a private matter. over 12 million people watched the interview when it aired on television here last night in a country of around 70 million. the tabloid papers, as usual, lambasted meghan and harry today, but others in this multicultural nation have told us the racism they described is widespread. >> i think it's really unfair the way she was treated, but it represents how a lot of black people are treated. >> reporter: will the palace's attempt at damage control be enough? >> they probably hope that it will give the public some reassurance that they're not just going to brush it under the carpet. >> reporter: the queen's statement is just 61 words in response to a two-hour-long interview and some extraordinary accusations. one of many still-unanswered questions is who in the royal family is alleged to have made the comments about skin color. norah. >> o'donnell: the queen saying she is saddened. holly williams, thank you. now to breaking news from the f.b.i., which has just released new video of a suspect wanted for placing two pipe bombs not far from the capitol the night before it was stormed by that angry mob. cbs' jeff pegues is outside republican headquarters, where one of the pipe bombs was found. and, jeff, what are we learning? >> reporter: well, norah, investigators believe the suspect planted those two viable pipe bombs on january 5. now, check out this new security camera video which shows the suspect, who is hooded, walking in the alley behind republican committee headquarters, also on a neighborhood street as a man walks by. you can also see the individual sitting on a bench near democratic committee headquarters where one of the devices was found. now, investigators are hoping that all this new video leads to tips, and they're offering a $100,000 reward for information. norah. >> o'donnell: jeff pegues, thank you. tonight, house democrats are just hours away from pushing through one of the largest direct-cash infusions to americans. the nearly $2 trillion covid relief bill is the first item on tomorrow's agenda. cbs' kris van cleave has more on who's getting the money. >> reporter: sarah mealey is among the roughly 40% of americans who say they're still feeling the financial impact of the coronavirus. not able to work for months, mealey was only able to make about $20,000 cleaning homes in texas last year. she spent her savings trying to weather the pandemic. >> things are tight right now. >> reporter: mealey, a single mother, and her nine-year-old, are poised to get $1,400 stimulus checks and see their child tax credit grow by about $1,000. >> it will definitely help me, at least for the next 2-4 months, for sure, in a very big way. >> reporter: tonight, the 600+ page covid relief bill is back in the house and it is expected to pass tomorrow morning. >> i'm so excited. i just can't hide it. >> reporter: likely without any republican support. >> we are going to be saddled with a burden, a spending burden and a tax burden that is really indefensible. >> reporter: democrats say the child tax credit, up to $3,600 per child, will help lift nearly 10 million children above or closer to the poverty line. for sarah mealey, it could be a bit of breathing room. but the credit disappears from the tax code after this year. >> getting something out of the code is oftentimes harder than getting something in the code. what we did is unlikely to go away. >> reporter: renewing that tax credit will face congress just as it's entering an election year. now, as for those stimulus checks, the white house says they should go out by the end of the month, but unlike the trump administration, they will not bear the president's name. norah. >> o'donnell: kris van cleave, thank you. today, the highly anticipated murder trial of fired minneapolis officer derek chauvin began with jury selection. it won't be an easy process finding impartial jurors in a city deeply impacted by the image of george floyd's last the moments. cbs' jamie yuccas reports tonight from minneapolis. >> you have been summoned as potential jurors. >> reporter: jury selection started a day late, so lawyers wasted little time. >> i want to make sure that what you would apply would be the minneapolis police departments' standards versus your personal experience being trained in jujitsu. you would do that? >> i would do that. >> reporter: the dismissal of minority potential jurors drew an objection from the prosecution. >> for the record, the defense has made its challenge now on its second person of color in the jury pool. >> reporter: the streets were calmer after hundreds marched around the courthouse monday. but in a city that has seen violence surge since george floyd's death, including a 14- year-old who was killed last night, many young people feel trapped between the violence and the police that patrol the community. >> i feel like i'm hunted. >> reporter: 17-year-old marcus hunter lives with that threat every day. when you go to bed, what do you hear in the neighborhood? >> constant gunfire. >> reporter: have you felt targeted by police in the past? >> yes. >> reporter: in what way? >> every encounter that i've had with the police has been unpleasant. >> reporter: he's written two editorials for the "minneapolis star tribune" trying to explain how he sees what's happening and what's at stake in the trial downtown. >> i compare a lot of myself to george floyd and michael brown and trayvon martin and those who have died to police brutality. to me it means-- it means change. >> reporter: there were three jurors selected today, including a woman related to a rural minnesota police officer. jury selection will continue tomorrow, despite prosecutors saying that the judge doesn't have jurisdiction over the case as they await a ruling on a lesser murder charge. norah. >> o'donnell: jamie yuccas, thank you. tonight, we're revisiting some of the predictions that were made a year ago,just before the covid outbreak forced the nation to lock down. we spoke then to a professor of epidemiology at harvard. cbs' jim axelrod revisits the health expert again tonight. talk about his projections for the next year. >> reporter: if the images from a year ago shocked, stunned, and brought the country to its >> reporter: if the images from a year ago shocked, stunned, and brought the country to its knees, then harvard epidemiologist marc lipsitch has a new picture to paint about covid. >> it won't be gone, but i think we'll be in a much more normal place in the fall. >> reporter: a striking contrast to the dire projection he made this time last year. >> 200 million adults, 40%, becoming infected. >> reporter: 80 million people. >> a lot of people, yes. >> reporter: turns out he was right. the c.d.c. estimates at least 83.1 million americans have been infected so far. how did the united states do compared to the rest of the developed world? >> it's on the worst end. >> reporter: compare the u.s. to pacific rim countries that took unified, intense control measures early, and didn't argue about masks, distancing, and testing. and the lesson there is that aggressive, early action will reduce the intensity of the spread? >> i think that's the lesson, and i think that action requires national, very focused leadership. we really do hold our own fate in our hands. >> reporter: not that he's sounding the all-clear, not with variants lurking. >> i think the variants are concerning. it appears that immunity to severe disease probably is more robust than immunity to infection. and so, the hope is that vaccines will still be good at protecting us against severe disease and death. if the vaccines really are as protective against transmission as we hope, it's going to be like flu, but it's not something that changes our lives as a society. >> reporter: which, after the last year, is the kind of projection we can live with much more easily. jim axelrod, cbs news, cambridge. >> o'donnell: and some sad news to report. we learned today that former cbs news correspondent and anchor roger mudd has died of kidney failure. he reported on some of the biggest stories of his time and oftenfilled in for walter cronkite, right here on the "cbs evening news." mudd was in the anchor chair for the 1963 march on washington. >> here at the lincoln memorial, the sight is almost something no washingtonian has beheld before. >> o'donnell: mudd also interviewed senator robert f. kennedy in 1968, just minutes before he was shot by an assassin. 11 years later, mudd's simple question to senator ted kennedy, "why do you want to be president?," caught the candidate off guard and may have cost the youngest kennedyd and may have cost the brother the democratic nomination.emocratic mudd later went on to anchor and report at nbc news and pbs before retiring in 2004. roger mudd, a giant of journalism, was 93 years old. and there is still much more news ahead on tonight's "cbs evening news." flooding in paradise-- more than a foot of rain swamps parts of the hawaiian islands. and why younger smokers are being urged to get scanned for lung cancer. and the fearless girl statue pays tribute to women who have shattered the glass ceiling. s no way. more exercise. more water. and more fiber is the only way to manage it. is it? 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'cause i do things a bit differently. wet teddy bears! wet teddy bears here! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ >> o'donnell: an update tonight on the hawaiian islands, which remain under a flash flood watch. the north coast of maui got more than a foot of rain since monday, and the rain isn't expected to let up until tomorrow. one neighborhood was evacuated over fears that a dam could be breached. two bridges were damaged and at least six homes were destroyed. all right, important warning tonight as a panel of medical experts is seeking to nearly double the number of americans who have yearly c.t. scans to screen for lung cancer. these new guidelines lower the age for the start of screening g from 55 to 50 from 55-50 years, and for those pack-a-day smokers, screening should start after 20 years, not 30. the panel believes this will lead to more african americans and women getting screened and ultimately save lives. all right, the fearless girl statue outside the new york stock exchange took on a new look for international women's day on monday. the bronze statue , a tribute to women who have broken the metaphorical glass ceiling wo have taken leadership roles in politics and in business. all right, coming up next, the secrets of good policing from one of the oldest officers on the job. next, the secrets of good poli as carla wonders if she can retire sooner, she'll revisit her plan with fidelity. and with a scenario that makes it a possibility, she'll enjoy her dream right now. that's the planning effect, from fidelity. she'll enjoy her dream right now. in a recent clinical study, patients using salonpas patch reported reductions in pain severity, using less or a lot less oral pain medicines. and improved quality of life. that's why we recommend salonpas. it's good medicine. hi, i'm debra. i'm from colorado. i've been married to my high school sweetheart for 35 years. i'm a mother of four-- always busy. i was starting to feel a little foggy. just didn't feel like things were as sharp as i knew they once were. i heard about prevagen and then i started taking it about two years now. started noticing things a little sharper, a little clearer. i feel like it's kept me on my game. i'm able to remember things. i'd say give it a try. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. (vo) pro plan liveclear, a breakthrough 10 years in the making that reduces allergens in cat hair and dander. outstanding nutrition with the power to change lives. this is purina pro plan liveclear. these are real people, not actors, who've got their eczema under control. with less eczema, you can show more skin. so roll up those sleeves. and help heal your skin from within with dupixent. dupixent is the first treatment of its kind that continuously treats moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, even between flare ups. dupixent is a biologic, and not a cream or steroid. many people taking dupixent saw clear or almost clear skin, and, had significantly less itch. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur, including anaphylaxis, which is severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems, such as eye pain or vision changes, or a parasitic infection. if you take asthma medicines, don't change or stop them without talking to your doctor. so help heal your skin from within, and talk to your eczema specialist about dupixent. if your financial situation has changed, we may be able to help. >> o'donnell: it's often said age is just a number, and there's no better example than an officer in southern arkansas. here's cbs' omar villafranca. >> reporter: he drives around in an unmarked police car, but everyone in camden, arkansas, knows his name. >> hey! >> hi! >> reporter: 91-year-old l.c. buckshot smith is the oldest police officer in the state. he moves a little slower now, but he still walks the beat of his home town four days a week. >> how y'all doing? >> reporter: what makes you a good police officer, even at 91? >> this badge and gun don't make you a police officer. >> hello, mr. buckshot. >> you got to respect people. >> reporter: he earned his popularity by working more than four decades for the washta county sheriff. that's him in the photo holding the shotgun. after 46 years as a deputy, he retired, for only five months. >> i don't hunt, i don't fish. >> reporter: so, in his 80s, he became a rookie camden cop. he carries a firearm-- ( gun shot ) but he doesn't have to use it. >> he knows your momma and he knew your grandmother. so he has the authority to speak into our lives. >> reporter: how many people do you think you've arrested in your career? >> oh, i've taken more people home than i arrested, taken to jail. >> reporter: officer smith says he'll retire when the good lord tells him to. until then, buckshot plans to keep rolling and patrolling. omar villafranca, cbs news, camden, arkansas. >> o'dnell: may we all b rolling and patrolling at 91 years old in our own professions and way. we'll be right back. who will or won't clear the virus. but you can help protect your child by taking a first step. the cdc recommends hpv vaccination at age 11 or 12 to help protect against certain cancers. hey cancer! not... my... child. don't wait... talk to your child's doctor about hpv vaccination today. to support a strong immune system, your body needs routine. don't wait... centrum helps your immune defenses every day, with vitamin c, d and zinc. season, after season. ace your immune support, with centrum. my hygienist cleans with a round head, so does my oral-b. my hygienist personalizes my cleaning, so does my oral-b. my hygienist uses just the right pressure, and so does my oral-b. oral-b combines a dentist-inspired brush head with the gentle energy of micro-vibrations for the wow of a professional clean feel every day. my mouth says wow and so does my oral-b. the ups and downs of frequent mood swings can take you to deep, depressive lows. or, give you unusually high energy, even when depressed. overwhelmed by bipolar i? ask about vraylar. some medicines only treat the lows or highs. vraylar effectively treats depression, acute manic and mixed episodes of bipolar i in adults. full-spectrum relief for all bipolar i symptoms, with just one pill, once a day. elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis have an increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. side effects may not appear for several weeks. high cholesterol and weight gain, high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, may occur. movement dysfunction, sleepiness, and stomach issues are common side effects. when bipolar i overwhelms, vraylar helps smooth the ups and downs. >> o'donnell: tomorrow on the "cbs evening news," our series "women and the pandemic." why moms feel forced to choose between work and caring for their children. it's all part of the "she- cession." and a reminder: if you can't watch us live, don't forget to set your dvr so you can watch us later. that is tonight's "cbs evening news." i'm norah o'donnell in the nation's capital. stay positive, test negative. i'll see you right back here tomorrow. good night. apti right now at seven:00. breaking news, governor newsom wrapping up his state of the state address moments ago. he acknowledged the price of the pandemic. widespread rain across the bay area with pockets of heavy rain even cloud to ground lightning strike near san jose within the last five minutes. more waves of rain over the next 24 hours. i will be tracking it along with details or possibilities for lightning including small hail, coming up. police looking for some suspects in yet another shocking bay area attack against an asian american. tonight we are learning the victim may not survive. >> i hope you guys catch him real soon because nobody deserves that. nobody. right now at seven:00 and streaming on cbsn

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