Transcripts For KYW CBS Evening News With Jeff Glor 20180129

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>> check. this is the "cbs evening news" with jeff glor. >> glor: good evening. the number-two man at f.b.i. surprised senior staff today by stepping down immediately. deputy director andrew mccabe had been planning to retire in march but proved up his departure under pressure. president trump had been critical of mccabe. he fired mccabe's former boss, james comey. the white house says the president had nothing to do with this. here's justice correspondent jeff pegues. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news f.b.i. deputy director andrew mccabe was strongly encouraged to step down and the investigation into the clinton private e-mail server may have played a role. in a message sent to f.b.i. employees this afternoon, director christopher wray mentioned the results of an inspector general review of that probe and said the f.b.i. must perform at the highest standards. >> i fully complied with every rule that i was governed by. >> reporter: macabre oversaw the clinton investigation but became a lightning rod for critics, especially president trump, after it was revealed his wife received almost $700,000 from democratic party sources in her unsuccessful paul biddinger for the virginia senate. >> she got more than $500,000 from essentially hillary clinton, and is he investigating hillary clinton? report mccabe also oversaw the russia investigation when it was run by the f.b.i. after president trump fired james comey as director in may of last year, mccabe became acting director. he also remained lowell to comey. >> is it accurate the rank and file no longer supported corrector comey? >> no, sir. that is not accurate. >> reporter: in recent weeks, president trump has stepped up his criticism of mccabe, tweeting he was racing the clock to retire if full benefits. >> there is a perception problem out there that's not going away. >> reporter: ron hosko is a former assistant director of the f.b.i. >> i think white house has applied its fair share of pressure, but what's unknown is what did christopher wray know? the new director of the f.b.i., something presumably caused the director to act. >> reporter: attorney general jeff sessions had also pressured f.b.i. director wray to get rid of mccabe. while the white house says the president had nothing to do with today's action, he stands by his criticism. jeff? >> glor: jeff pegues, thank you very much. the president makes his second appearance before a joint session of congress tomorrow evening to deliver his first state of the union. he is expected in part to talk about the strong economy, including the stock market. margaret brennan has more on this. >> it's going to be good. we worked on it hard, covered a lot of territory, including our great success with the markets and with the tax cuts. >> reporter: for a president who often complains that his successes are underreported, the unfiltered prime time address is a key opportunity to push his agenda. >> it will obviously be must-watch tv. >> reporter: advisers say the president will echo many of the business friendly themes he spoke about last week in davos. >> america is open for business, and we are competitive once again. >> reporter: the highlights, a promise of improved trade deals, a $1.7 trillion plan to revitalize infrastructure, and a request to congress for $25 billion to construct a border wall with mexico. in exchange, heel offer to make $1.8 million young undocumented immigrants future citizens. >> we'll get something done. we hope it's going to be bipartisan. the republicans really don't have the votes to get it done in any other way, so it has to be bipartisan. >> reporter: one thing absent from the speech, the russia investigation hanging over the white house. he doesn't feel a need to address it? >> i think we've addressed it every single day that we've been here. frankly, no one cares about this issue and it's certainly not the thing that keeps people up at night. we'd love to talk about all of the things that, do and my guess is that will be the focus of the president's state of the union tomorrow. >> reporter: the president and first lady have invited 15 guests to attend the address. they include two injured veterans and five individuals who have personal ties to the immigration crackdown, including victims of ms13 gang members. jeff? >> reporter: margaret, thank you. in advance of the president's address, cbs this morning co-host john dickerson sat down with a group of voters in the orlando, florida, area, some voted for mr. trump, others for hillary clinton. >> reporter: it's a year into the trump presidency. is the country better off? >> i believe it is doing much better. the stock market, i know eventually it will end, but i think the economy is doing much better. i'm seeing more jobs. >> i completely disagree. i don't think it's doing any better. sure, the my is getting better, it seem, but the economy is not the only thing that we have the look at when we're describing the country as a whole. you know, racial tensions are increasing among whites and blacks, healthcare is a crisis in this country. we've got the opioid crisis. i don't think ultimately as a whole the country doing any better than it was. >> financially we're doing much better. i think that with the addition of gorsuch our supreme court has improved. on the flip side, as debbie pointed out there, are breaks in the american culture. it used to be a homogeneous culture. it's not anymore. it is unfortunate. i wish... i hope that we can get back to a point in which americans look at america and we're proud to be americans and we're not divided up into african americans and hispanic americans. we're all just americans. i wish we could go that way. >> glor: it is a very interesting listen. there will be much more of john's panel first thing tomorrow on cbs this morning. then john, norah o'donnell, gayle king and i will bring you live coverage of the tuneon address and the democratic response tomorrow evening at 9:00, 8 crock central, that is 6:00 in the west. much of the country is battling the flu, the worst case in nearly a decade. it is taking an especially heavy toll on school kids. here's omar villafranca. >> reporter: schools across the country are fighting the flu. classroom by classroom. today bishop lynch high school in dallas resumed classes after it closed last week to let work crews disinfect the entire school property. caitlin casner is a senior with a low-grade fever and isn't taking any chances after her brother was sick with the flu. school nurse patty barton saw more kids in the clinic than in the classroom. >> this year it really is unprecedented. i probably saw about 30 kids in here on monday and sent ten home. >> reporter: the flu is widespread in 49 states, and the c.d.c. says 39 of those have especially high activity. schools in at least 12 states have canceled classes for a few days for clean-up and recovery. the flu shut down classes today for the 815 students at saint thomas aquinas in dallas, more than 10% of the student body got sick. the school superintendent. >> even if we miss anything, the kids will have chance to go home, get healthy, and hopefully not bring that virus back to school. >> it's been a tough influenza season so far this year. >> reporter: dr. daniel jernigan with the c.d.c. says the h3n2 strain of the flu is hitting patients over 65 very hard. but other strains of the flu are taking a toll on younger patients. >> since the winter holidays, we've seen kids are making up the predominant amount of influenza-like illness. you're taking that back to school. it's getting transmitted there. i thinkjñ that's what's drivinga lot of these visits to the outpatient clinic right now. >> reporter: one of the reasons the flu spread so fast in schools is that students are in close quarters and they share everything. one of the biggest problems, cell phones. the students type on them and share them and end up spreading the virus. jeff? >> glor: omar villafranca, thank you very much. we have much more information about the flu on our web site. the address is cbs muse.com/flu2018. there was another dangerously close encounter today between u.s. and russian military planes. this one in international air space over the black sea. a russian fighter jet intercepted navy reconnaissance plane and hung around for two hours and 40 minutes. at one point the two planes were just five feet apart. president trump today ruled out negotiating with the taliban while, as he put it, innocent people are being killed left and right in afghanistan. the taliban claimed responsibility for saturday's attack in kabul. more than 100 were killed and twice that number were hurt when an attacker drove an ambulance packed with explosives into the heart of the city. charlie d'agata reports tonight the fear is terrorists could mount similar ambulance attacks in the west. [siren blaring] >> reporter: it's not hard to buy a used ambulance. we posed as buyers and found this one on ebay. but according to security experts like kris phillips, the resale of emergency vehicles is handing terrorists a lethal weapon. >> the terrorist threat is wider, is more diverse, and it's evolving. an one of those effects -- tykes will almost certainly be a vehicle bomb. >> it's a threat british security forces tagged a deng cade ago when they were being used in iraq. they're called trojan vehicles, seemingly ordinary ambulances that are instead packed with explosives. >> you're not going to know that the ambulance coming toward you is a real one or fake one. >> reporter: phillips says the fear is that tactic will be imported here as terror attacks by islamic militants grow. >> there needs to be some kind of legislation to stop the use of these vehicles. our we're going to have major problem. >> reporter: we found plenty of examples on ebay. a police car with original equipment in the trunk, an ambulance with full emergency markings. most run for just a few thousand dollars. >> anybody can turn up. they can pay cash for the vehicles, and within hours those vehicles can be in the hands of a terrorist cell. >> reporter: lord carlile led calls to outlaw the resale of emergency vehicles. so the very thing you had warned against a decade ago is still there? >> yes. here it is. >> reporter: there is still no clear regulations governor earning the resale of ambulances. lord carlile pointed out last year's ariana grande concert where 60 ambulances raced to the scene, exactly the scenario where a trojan vehicle could exploit the chaos after this initial blast. >> that is the sort of place where the risk of one of these vehicles entering a cordoned off zone in the minutes immediately after the explosion takes place is a very high risk. >> reporter: we contacted the home office, britain's counter-terrorism authority repeatedly, and were told they're looking into it. ebay says fully operational emergency vehicles are not allowed on their web site, and they're reviewing the ads we pointed out. jeff? garlie d'agata, thank you very much. now to some other stories we're following. the evening news feed, police in detroit held a vigil today for one. of their own. officer glen goss died yesterday. roses covered his patrol car. doss was 25. his father was heard on the police radio after the shooting pleading for prayers. a suspect was arrested at the scene and is now charged with murder. jackpotting has come to the u.s. hacker are installing malware that forces atms to spit out money like slot machines. they've stolen more than $1 million so far. the secret service is warning companies that operate atms to update their computer systems. cleveland's baseball team will still be called the indian, but chief wahoo will be dropped. critics consider the smiling chief racist. it's been part of the team's uniform for more than 70 years. there is much more ahead on tonight's "cbs evening news." >> who knew a fitbit could give away valuable information about the military? >> an enemy could just basically scrape this entire information off the internet. >> glor: tom versus talk radio. brady defends his five-year-old daughter. >> my daughter or any child, you know, they certainly don't deserve that. >> kids on chicago's south side are learning to make their next side alongside police officers. side alongside police officers. >> i can't believe it. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. aleve pm for a better am. richard: oh! ernie: was that too hard for yo? richard: no. is this too hard for you? ernie: woo! we're playing catch now! richard: ugh! ernie: sorry, sorry, sorry ! you may be at increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia, that can take you out of the game for weeks, even if you're healthy. pneumococcal pneumonia is a potentially serious bacterial lung disease that in severe cases can lead to hospitalization. it may hit quickly, without warning, causing you to miss out on the things you enjoy most. prevnar 13® is not a treatment for pneumococcal pneumonia... it's a vaccine you can get to help protect against it. prevnar 13® is approved for adults to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13® if you have had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients. if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects were pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, limited arm movement, fatigue, headache, muscle pain, joint pain, less appetite, vomiting, fever, chills, and rash. help protect yourself against pneumococcal pneumonia. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13®. 3 toddlers won't stop him.. and neither will lower back pain. because at a dr. scholl's kiosk he got a recommendation for our custom fit orthotic to relieve his foot, knee, or lower back pain, from being on his feet. dr. scholl's. born to move. >> glor: u.s. service members in war zones run the risk of being discovered by the enemy every time they go for a run wearing exercise trackers, including fitbits. david martin reports the pentagon is now doing a broad review of these devices. >> servicemen working out in this digital age have unwittingly produced a map of their low cations and activities worldwide. the security breech the pentagon did not find out about until a 20-year-old australian student discovered it. nathan ruser came across matt put out by strava, a social media network for athletes, which showed two years worth of satellite tracking data uploaded from fitbits and other digital fitness devices. u.s. bases are clearly identifiable and mappable, ruser tweeted, like this american special operations base in syria. >> it took us seconds to really gather some information that really should not be publicly available. >> reporter: topbias schneider of global public policy says the locations of these and many other base, such as these spots of light in afghanistan, were previously known. commercial satellites had already exposed the layout of this american base in the horn of africa before it lit up the strava map, but mining the g.p.s. data collected by strava can reveal a pattern of activity at the base, down to the identifies of individual soldiers and the routes they take. >> we cannot only find out how many soldiers are stationed there, but how do they move? how this they connect with other bases? what kind of patrol routes do they have around the area. >> reporter: social networks are a hallmark of the modern era, but jeffrey lewis of the middlebury institute says a lot more than just personal information ends up on those networks. >> there's actually one trace that shows the person doing loops as he or she jogs around some nuclear weapons stored in turkey. so while, yes, i think to some extent this is the new era we live in, this is a particularly frightening example of that era. >> reporter: jeff, this breech could go well beyond the military to include intelligence officers and anyone else who used a fitness device while working at a sensitive location. >> glor: david martin, thank you for that report tonight. still ahead here, the man who heads the recording academy and why so few women were nominated for grammys. when you have a cold, stuff happens. 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[burke] that's one way to fire up the crowd. but we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ coaching means making tough choices. jim! you're in! but when you have high blood pressure and need cold medicine that works fast, the choice is simple. coricidin hbp is the #1 brand that gives powerful cold symptom relief without raising your blood pressure. coricidin hbp. essential for vinyl, but maybe not for people with rheumatoid arthritis. because there are options. like an "unjection™". xeljanz xr. a once daily pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz xr can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. needles. a must for vinyl. but for you, one pill a day may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about xeljanz xr. an "unjection™". but their nutritional needs (vremain instinctual.d, that's why there's purina one true instinct. nutrient-dense, protein-rich, real meat number one. this is a different breed of natural nutrition. purina one, true instinct. if you spit blood you may have gum problems,s and could be on the journey to much worse. try parodontax toothpaste. it's clinically proven to remove plaque, the main cause of bleeding gums. for healthy gums and strong teeth. leave bleeding gums behind with parodontax toothpaste. my doctor recommended i switch to miralax.on, stimulant laxatives make your body go by forcefully stimulating the nerves in your colon. miralax is different. it works with the water in your body to hydrate and soften. unblocking your system naturally. miralax. >> glor: finally tonight, 187 people have been shot in chicago so far this year. now a woman touched by the violence is helping shield kids from it, taking them from some of the toughest blocks to some of the friendliest squares. adriana diaz is there. >> reporter: 11-year-old stephon edwards as his opponent on the run. >> check. >> reporter: one who is usually in the business of pursuing others. >> oh, man. >> reporter: on chicago's south side. officers meet neighborhood kids on equal ground. >> that's your first move? >> reporter: the squares of a chess board. they're brought together by radel lacy, who starred a program called "not before my parents." >> that's his dad. >> reporter: who two years ago we sat down with her. >> he got hit in the head. he was slumped over. >> reporter: just days after her grandson e.j. was shot in the head at 19. >> oh, god. oh, god. >> reporter: he was one of 771 chicagoans killed in 2016. it's an agony relived 21 years before that her daughter was also murdered in their memory she vowed to be part of a solution. >> no parent should have to bury their child. that's just... they don't go together. that's just not right. >> reporter: two years later, she's delivered on that promise, and not before my parents uses chess as the tool. >> with chess, you think. you focus. i want to beat him. and i don't have to beat him with these. i can beat him with this, right here. >> reporter: she even drives kids to weekly lessons and monthly matches with police officers that she hopes will build trust. >> how are you doing now against this officer? >> demolishing him. >> you're demolishing him? >> i'm sure every time he sees me, oh, that's officer mcclain, i beat him in chess. >> reporter: is this your grandson e.j.'s legacy? >> yes, it is. i know he's looking proud. way to go, nana. go, nana. you all go. >> reporter: radel lacy lost her cherished grandson, but her family and her impact continue to grow. adriana diaz, cbs news, chicago. >> mason: and we are looking at her proud, as well. that is the "cbs evening news" tonight. i'm jeff glor. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org super bowl flu. >> every effort is being made to sanitize and clean all of this equipment before tens of thousands of people come in here. >> inside edition's special super bowl correspondent nancy kerrigan reports for duty. >> we've got our credentials. we have our hand sanitizer. let's go. >> then, who's the boss. >> the moment everyone is talking about. >> 6-year-old blue ivy telling beyonce and jay-z to shush at the grammy's. >> plus, hillary fire and fury. >> he liked to eat at mcdonald's. >> and actor scott baio fights back. >> if you have a claim, go to the police. >> why he's blasting former

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