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Transcripts For KGAN CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 2016

Transcripts For KGAN CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20161013



wind ? this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: today, the republican candidate for president stood on one stage and denied accusations of sexual assault, and the first lady stood on another and chastised him over his treatment of women. since friday, five women have told newspapers that donald trump assaulted them years ago. accusationsalize, spun by an alliance of the clinton campaign, and what he called "the media." >> they will attack you. they will slander you. they will seek to destroy your career and your family. they will seek to destroy everything about you, including your reputation. they will lie, lie, lie. they will do whatever's necessary. the clintons are criminals. remember that. they're criminals. ( applause ) people who are capable of such crimes against our nation are capable of anything. and so now wecracy the slander and libels that was just last night thrown at me by the clinton machine and the "new york times," and other media outlets as part of coordinated, and vicious attack. these vicious claims about me of inappropriate conduct with women are totally and absolutely false. >> pelley: trump has already apologized for his vulgar remarks on that 2005 video that surfaced last week. in counter-point to trump today, this was michelle obama. this. it has shaken me to my core in a way that i couldn't have predicted. it's like that sick, sinking feel you get when you're walking down the street minding your own business, and some guy yells out vulgar words about your body. or when you-- you see that guy at work that stands just a little too close, stares a little too long, and makes you feel uncomfortable in your own violation that too many women have felt when someone has grabbed them or forced himself on them, and they've said no, but he didn't listen. the shameful comments about our bodies. the disrespect of our ambitions and intellect. the belief that you can do anything you want to a woman? it is cruel. and the truth is, it hurts. this is not normal. this is not politics as usual. ( applause ) this is disgraceful. it is intolerable. and it doesn't matter what party you belong to-- democrat, republican, independent-- no woman deserves to be treated this way. none of us deserves this kind of abuse. ( applause ) >> pelley: now, let's bring in major garrett covering the trump campaign and nancy cordes who is on the clinton campaign. major, first to you. trump also said today that very soon he would release evidence to refute these allegations of sexual assault. >> reporter: scott, those familiar with the inner workings of the trump campaign tell us if the republican nominee had such hard evidence, he would have released it publicly already on facebook, twitter, and elsewhere. now, trump demanded the "new york times" retract a story in saying trump accosted them in unwanted and sexually aggressive ways. the "times" said the story was thoroughly reported in the national interest and said it welcomed a threatened legal challenge from trump. and only last sunday, trump's campaign manager, kellyanne conway tweeted that hillary clinton was right several months ago when she said every victim of sexual assault should be heard, believed, and supported. but, scott, i must tell you at this really here in cincinnati and elsewhere today, trump supporters hav simply do not care about these allegations. >> pelley: major, thank you. nancy cordes, what has hillary clinton said about all this today? >> reporter: well, first of all, she said twice that everyone should go and watch michelle obama's speech. he also told supporters at a fund-raiser here in san francisco, that she's worried that some of the rhetoric coming from her opponent will discourage voters from both sides from getting out to the polls on election day. she said somewhat tongue in cheek, scott, that if her her supporters go and vote, then the upside is in 26 days donald trump won't innocent news anymore. >> pelley: and every day, wikileaks has been leaking out more internal e-mails from the clinton campaign. what did we see today? >> reporter: 1800 more sensitive documents, staffers talking about everything from tensions between top aides to clinton's e-mail scandal. her running mate suggested today that some of these hacked e-mails might be faked, but so given us any specific examples of that. >> pelley: make, nancy cordes, thanks very much. make note of this-- trump's running mate, mike pence, will be a guest tomorrow on "cbs this morning." don't miss it. those hacked e-mails are a plot by the russians to disrupt the election, at least according to the u.s. government, which also alleges that the russians are trying to break into state voting systems. arizona where we find jeff pegues. >> reporter: the hacking attempt on arizona's voter database start immediate rural hela county when an elections worker opened an e-mail attachment. >> very scary stuff. >> reporter: michelle reagan, arizona's secretary of state says, it was malware meant to attack these servers holding the voter information of four million people. >> we had a cyber-security team in place. >> reporter: reagan was alerted by the f.b.i. experts believe the russian government is to blame. what was your initial reaction? >> shock. and dismay, obviously, because we've never had to worry about foreign invaders coming in and trying to mess with our confidence in our election system. >> reporter: arizona, illinois, florida, and nearly two dozen other states have seen similar scanning, probing, or braeches of their election systems. >> the russians have a different decade, jim lewis has advised the u.s. government on cyber attacks. >> they're using information as a way to achieve their political goals. they don't need the red army anymore. they have the internet. >> reporter: president vladimir putin and other senior russian officials have denied involvement, calling u.s. accusations nonsense. >> the biggest thing we were worried about was did they take any information? >> reporter: reagan says she is confident the voter database wasn't continue. in september alone, officials here say that there were 192,000 intrusion attempts, about 11,000 of them posed a serious threat. reagan and 32 other secretaries of state have asked the department of homeland security for help. >> i liken it to when you're being invaded by russia, you don't call in your national guard. at some point, you have to say, >> reporter: changing actual vote totals is difficult because most voting machines are not connected to the internet. but throwing confusion into an already-contentious election, that's a lot easier. and, scott, that's what officials believe the russians are trying to do. >> pelley: jeff pegues for us tonight. jeff, thank you. and another note-- cbs news will be bringing you live coverage of the third and final clinton-trump debate. that's in las vegas next wednesday at 9:00 can:00 central. today, nicole hit bermuda as a powerful category 3 hurricane. and don dahler is there. >> reporter: since 1851, bermuda has only had seven major hurricanes come close. number eight has just arrived. category 4 nicole has just gotten close enough for us to start experiencing the early rain bands and high wind. within hours, nicole slammed ashore with a fury this island has rarely seen. protective reef that cut the legs out from under what could have been a deadly storm surge of over 30 feet. even with the fierceness of this storm, most of the damage was contained to downed trees and some flooding. one minor injury was reported. with the cleanup now under way, the people here count themselves lucky. don dahler, cbs news, bermuda. >> pelley: the f.b.i. is checking out a bomb that was found in a backpack yesterday outside netterland, colorado, outse there. an officer picked up the backpack, thinking that a colleague had left it. the bomb was active but it did not explode. the man accused of setting off bombs in new jersey and new york last month was arraigned in his hospital bed today. ahmad raheemy pleaded not guilty to charges he tried to kill officers as they captured him. raheemy, an afghan-born u.s. citizen, was wounded in a gun police. more than 30 people were injured when one of the bombs went off in manhattan. overnight, u.s. warships fired missiles into rebel-controlled areas of yemen on the arabian peninsula. this was retaliation for missiles that were fired on a u.s. navy ship in the red sea. and david martin is at the pentagon. >> reporter: it's an all-too-familiar sight-- a u.s. against targets in meeft. but this was different. this was the first time the u.s. has fired at one of the warring sides in yemen's civil war, which pitched rebels backed by iran against government forces backed by saudi arabia and the united arab emirates. the war has claimed an estimated 10,000 lives, many of them civilians, some of them killed by saudi air strikes flown with the help of american aerial refueling and intelligence. the strike at 4:00 this morning destroyer "mason" reported coming under attack by antiship missiles fired from territory held by the iranian-backed rebels. a second destroyer, the u.s.s. "nitze," launched cruise missiles at three unmanned radar stations u.s. fortunes believed had been used against the attacks against the "mason." knocking out the radar will severely degrade the accuracy of future attacks. the weapon fired against the "mason" was an missile, which has poor accuracy to begin with but carries a large warhead. this video purports to show what happened when one of them hit a ship belonging to the united arab emirates earlier this month. none of the missiles fired at the "mason" reached their target. even without radar, the rebels could still fire missiles aimed at american ships. and if they do, the pentagon has already vowed to retaliate again. pentagon for us this evening. david, thank you. coming up next on the cbs evening news, elizabeth palmer is inside aleppo, syria, as a trip to school turns deadly. you know...diarrhea? abdominal pain? but we said we'd be there... woap, who makes the decisions around here? it's me. don't think i'll make it. stomach again...send! if you're living with frequent, unpredictable diarrhea and abdominal pain, you may have irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea talk to your doctor about viberzi. a different way to treat ibs-d. viberzi is a prescription medication you take every day that helps proactively manage both diarrhea and abdominal pain at the same time. so you stay ahead of your symptoms. viberzi can cause new or worsening abdominal pain. do not take viberzi if you have or may have had pancreas or severe liver problems, problems with alcohol abuse, long-lasting or severe constipation, or a blockage of your bowel or gallbladder. if you are taking viberzi, you should not take medicines nstipation, nausea, and abdominal pain. stay ahead of ibs-d... with viberzi. there's nothing more important than your health. or the freedom to choose what doctor you want to see. so if you're on medicare, consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like any standardized medicare supplement plan, you'll be able to stay with the doctor or specialist you trust... or look for someone new -- as long as they accept medicare patients. . so why wait? call now to request your free decision guide and learn more. boost it's about moving forward not back. it's looking up not down. it's feeling up thinking up living up. it's being in motion... in body in spirit in the now. boost. it's not just nutrition, it's intelligent nutrition. with 26 vitamins and minerals it's choosing to go in one direction... up. boost. be up for it. >> pelley: the u.s. and russia will meet in switzerland this tweaked try to revive the collapsed cease-fire in syria. fighting sphwensified this week in syria's largest city, aleppo, leaving another 150 dead. elizabeth palmer tells us that among them were two children. >> reporter: lamar and henadi should be in class right now, not lying in the hospital morgue. out in the parking lot, lamar's grandfather is in shock. calling for god to punish the killers. but this is war. we'll never know which rebel fighters shot the mortar that ripped into eight-year-old zeina's body. zeina died of devastating shrapnel wounds, and so did five-year-old ismael, who never even made it out of intensive care. samir hellaq, deputy director of education in aleppo, was overcome by the senselessness of it all. "these kids committed no crime, "he says. "they were unarmed. they just wanted to learn." this is exactly where that lethal mortar fell, 7:45 in t morning in a perfectly ordinary residential street in government-held aleppo. and the kids who were hurt and killed. they were just walking along on their way to school. nearby, the men of telal neighborhood are clearing up after a rocket smashed into this street and killed another five-year-old boy. it's been an especially violent 48 hours in aleppo with bombs and artillery thundering down on the rebel-occupied east side of crashing into the west. samer samani's shop was destroyed in this lethal tit-for-tat. when you hear the bombing is heavy on the other side do you be it's going to start up here as well? >> yes, always. >> reporter: so when they're getting hit, they hit back. >> they hit back, and they hit back on us, civilians. >> reporter: civilians on both sides of this war, who were never asked if they wanted to and the hard truth is that no matter how many precautions people take, scott, there is no way to stay completely safe. >> pelley: war correspondent liz palmer for us in syria tonight. liz, thank you. viagra single packs... so guys with ed can... take viagra when they need it. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain your blood pressure could drop to an unsafe level. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. >> pelley: new jersey governor chris christie is facing a legal battle now over the so-called a citizen filed a complaint, alleging christie failed on stop a scheme by his aides to create a multi-day traffic jam in order to punish a local mayor. today, a judge approved that complaint and set a court date. they are known as the chibok girls. nearly 300 were abducted from a school in chibok, nigeria nearly two and a half years ago. today, 21 were released in an exchange with boko haram, the militant group that stole them. escape. the fate benefit 200 others is not known. today, the u.n. general assembly elected a new leader, antonio guterres will become secretary-general january 1. he succeeds ban ki-moon. president obama couldn't tell you how many hands he's shaken over the years, but he'll remember this one in pittsburgh today, the president met had been paralyzed in a car accident. copeland used a mind-controlled robotic hand to fist bump the president. signee chips implanted in coped land's brain allowed him to feel the president's touch. up next, a surprising twist of fate for a rock icon. how does it feel to be a nobel laureate? ? how does it feel ? (burke) at farmers, we've seen almost everything, so we know how to cover almost anything. even mer-mutts. 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 ? yeah, so mom's got this cold. hashtag "stuffy nose." i got it. hashtag "mouthbreather." yep. we've got a mouthbreather. well, just put on a breathe right strip and ... pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than cold medicine alone. so you can breathe ... and sleep. shut your mouth and say goodnight mouthbreathers. breathe right. impressive linda. it seems age isn't slowing you down. but your immune system weakens as you get older isk for me, the shingles virus. i've been lurking inside you since you had chickenpox. i could surface anytime as a painful, blistering rash. one in three people get me in their lifetime, linda. will it be you? and that's why linda got me zostavax, a single shot vaccine. i'm working to boost linda's immune system to help protect her against you, shingles. zostavax is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults fifty years of age and older. and cannot be used to treat shingles or the nerve pain that may follow it. you should not get zostavax if you are allergic to gelatin or neomycin, have a weakened immune system or take high doses of steroids are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. the most common side effects include redness, pain, itching, swelling, hard lump warmth or bruising at the injection site and headache. it's important to talk to your doctor about what situations you may need to avoid since zostavax contains a weakened chickenpox virus. remember one in three people get shingles in their lifetime, will it be you? talk you to your doctor or pharmacist about me, single shot zostavax. you've got a shot against shingles. >> pelley: bob dylan is performing tonight in las vegas, maybe not the first place you'd prize in literature would celebrate. but dylan, who took his stage name from the poet, dylan thomas, is not your typical nobel laureate. anthony mason tells us why he is joining the ranks of hemingway, faulkner, and steinbeck. ? hey, mr. tambourine man play a song for me ? >> reporter: in his early appearances, this one at the newport folk festival in 1964, bob dylan quickly emerged as the generation, though he could be as enigmatic as his own lyrics. >> do you think of yourself primarily as a singer or as a poet? >> i think of myself mostly as a song and dance man, you know. ( laughter ) >> reporter: with songs like "like a rolling stone" the magazine "rolling stone" said >> the nobel prize for literature. >> reporter: in announced the award, the nobel committee praised dylan. >> would you say that the word were more important than the music? >> the words are just as important as the music. there would be no music without the words. ? johnny's in the baix mixing up the medicine >> reporter: dylan is the first singer/songwriter to be awarded the prize, a controversial decision, but the swedish academy said dylan had the status of an icon ? you helped her out of a jam, i guess ? >> reporter: picasso fractured the art world and cracked it wide open, dylan once wrote. "he was revolutionary. i wanted to be like that." mark in the folk era, with songs that became civil rights anthems, the 75-year-old artist has continually reinvented himself. >> reporter: but dylan has always downplayed his own influence. ? come gather around people wherever you roam dylan," the singer has said "i would probably think bob dylan has a lot of answers himself." ? the timeses they are achangein >> reporter: anthony mason, cbs news, new york. >> pelley: america's troubadour. and that's the cbs evening news for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. captioning sponsored by cbs right now on cbs 2 news, vote 2016 coverage of president bill clinton's visit right now on cbs 2 news , president bill clinton's visit to the corridor. donald trump is back on the defensive. in north liberty bus services up and running. who it is designed for and where you can catch a ride. after weeks of being cl what is next for the market. you may have donned a sweater today, but warmer weather is on the way. let's go to meteorologist rebecca kopelman for a look at your weather first forecast. by the time we get to the this weekend, it will feel nice outside, especially after a cold start this morning. it is all things to high- east and the wind will turn out of the south bringing warmer air. the cloud start to move in later friday and into saturday as a cold front approaches the area. we will actually have some warmth around this weekend. for tonight we have to get through curler -- cooler weather first. temperatures will fall to the mid-to upper 30s by morning and there could be patchy frost near and north of highway 30. it will not be as cold as night. corridor today--the most recent in mount vernon campaigning for his wife - democratic presidential nominee hillary clinton. clinton.cbs 2 news reporter joe huisinga was there and he joins us live with what people heard. president clinton spoke right here in front of cornell's armstrong hall.the people who came had a lot of energy and were clearly happy with what they heard. heard.the former commander in

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