Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News 20150614

Card image cap



>> axelrod: good evening. i'm jim axelrod. and this is the western edition of the broadcast. imagine the scene at police headquarters in dallas, texas early this morning, just after midnight, a man opened fire from his armored van, shooting up the lobby of police headquarters in america's ninth largest city then spraying a stream of bullets at the officers responding to their headquarters coming under attack. what started in front of the dallas p.d. ended with a sniper's bullet in the parking lot of a fast food restaurant. here is vicente arenas. >> reporter: it was just past midnight when an armored van pulled up to the dallas police headquarters and the driver sprayed the building with gunfire from the and you can weapon. the van rammed the patrol unit and sped away under a barrage of police gunfire.sped [gunfire] police later discovered the van's driver left four duffel bag bags around the building and f under a police car. two of the bags had pipe bombs which were later detonated by a robot. the chase went on four 14 minutes. the driver tipped to fire from his open door during the pursuit and made an emotion call to 911e operators with an angry list of grievances against the police. david brown is the dallas chief of police. >> first of all, that we had --ha police had caused him to lose custody of his child. secondly, we had accused him of being a terrorist, and that he as a result, was going to blow us up. >> reporter: the pursuit ended in a fast food restaurant in hutchins, texas. officers used a 50 caliber gun to disable the van's engine,er then a sniper then shot and killed the man. police have not confirmed hispo identity, jim boulware says his son james was the shooter. >> i thought oh, my god, what has he done? boulware told us that he recognized the van as his son's. >> reporter: there were two loud bombs as the bomb squad tried to set off explosives believed tos be in the van. b police say they found two more bags with pipe bombs inside. and one case, several bullets went through squad car, right where two officers had been sitting. b the police chief said it's a blessing that no one was hurt. >> axelrod: vicente, thank you. also in texas today, governor greg abbott signed two new bills into law. one allows texans to openly carry handguns virtually everywhere.he the other allows concealed handguns on public college campuses! now to the long awaited report on the tamir rice shooting in cleveland. t the sheriff's department in ohiotm conducted the investigation into co what happened when a clevelandpe police officer shot and killed the 12-year-old who was holding a toy gun.ng the report is what the prosecutor will largely use in deciding who to move forward with charges. as dean reynolds tell us, the report contains new accounts about what happened on the playground last november. >> reporter: that's 12-year-old tamir rice waving a toy pellet-o gun at a cleveland park last november.ast witnesses that day said they had seen him and another boy aiming at the tires of parked cars. c and eventually an unidentified bystander called 911 because911 rice was, "acting gangster,"in waving a pistol and scaring people. but then he added this. >> reporter: according to the t sheriff's report separate constance hollinger transmitted information electronically to police dispatcher beth mandl. but mandl said she was not made aware that the officer called said the suspect may be a jewel knife or that his weapon could be fake. hollinger, the 911 operator, refused to answer questions about that. in any case, rookie officer tim loehmann and his trainingan partner frank garmback were told there was a man in the park with a gun.re the report said as the squad car pulled up, surveillance video showed rice pulling up his outer garment with both hands near the right side of his waist. in less than two seconds and from four to seven feet away loehmann fired. the two policemen said right after the shooting that rice was warned three times t0 show this hands before loehmann shot him. but no bystander heard that or any warning before the shots.rr loehmann and frank garmback declined to talk to investigate evers. another officers who arrived say later described loehmann as distraught and saying "he gave me no choice. he reached for the gun and there was nothing i coul do." all of the officers on the scenef told the investigators they thought the toy was a real gun the first time they saw it.st t even the friend who lent it to w tamir rice on that day testified on that he told the boy to be careful with it because itca "looked real." jim? >> axelrod: dean, thank you. the search for two killers that broke out of a maximum security prison in upstate new york to isn up now in its second week. today the prison worker accused of helping the fugitives escapees was moved 200 miles south to a jail cell of her own. here is anna werner. >> reporter: hundreds of police went out to search for richard matt and david sweat and could be scene walking along a trail in field near a large home. the area is about four miles from the prison. officials say police saw a trail through the woods and brought in dogs who picked up the convicts' scent which could indicate the escapees were there recently. food wrappers, a footprint and a bedded down area of leaves were found. but the area is heavily wooded and likely swampy since yesterday's heavy rains. residents in the blocked off area like elizabeth poolen are concerned. >> thursday night when the helicopters were right over our house i have to admit i was a little nervous. we locked the doors and turned on the outside lights and we don't do that usually. >> reporter: one person police did arrest yesterday is joyce mitchell, the prison employee who officials say admitted helping the two men escape. she is charged for that and for bringing contraband into the prison. court documents allege she gave richard matt and david sweat hacksaw blades, a chisel, a punch and screwdriver bit. >> and you are joyce mitchell. >> yes. >> reporter: mitchell pled not guilty to a felony charge of promoting prison contraband and a prison misdemeanor. if convicted of the felony she faces seven years in prison. mitchell was moved to another jail two hours away earlier this morning.s officials said to limit the distractions. she has now hired a lawyer and has a court appearance, jim, on monday. >> axelrod: anna werner thank you.s hillary clinton held another in a series of campaign kick off events for the 2016 presidential run today.oday this the biggest yet was on roosevelt island between manhattan and the boroughpm queens. b the island may be named after be fdr but today it was all about hrc. here is nancy cordes. >> reporter: it was months in the making and looked it. the podium position just so to capture the view of the world trade center. >> i'm not running for some americans but for all americans. >> reporter: clinton told aon crowd of 5,500 she's a proven fighter who will tackle inequality. >> i believe that success isn't measured by how much the wealthiest americans have but by how many children climb out of poverty. >> reporter: she accused her>> republican opponents of outdatedbl views on climate change,ws immigration, and gay marriage.im >> they're all singing the sameag old song. a song called "yesterday." you know the one? "all our troubles look as though they're here to stay." >> reporter: as for opponentsy's whose say that at 67 she isdate yesterday's news -- >> well i may not be the youngest candidate in this race, but i will be the youngest woman president in the history of the united states. >> reporter: kimberly lattimoreep and jackie weatherspoon were first in line at 6:00 a.m. some people asked why she is running for president.ome do you think she answered that question today? do y >> i think she did, i think she? covered a lot of areas. she's going to be a different type of candidate. first of all she has the experience and here is a woman a first lady, a u.s. senator, a secretary of state. she knows how to handle business. >> reporter: that's the kind of enthusiasm that the campaign isam trying to instigate in this next phase where clinton will alternate between big ralliesnt like this one and smaller eventse had in states where she can meet and potentially recruit volunteers. >> axelrod: nancy, thank you.th california's ongoing drought led state regulators to take drastic action. as carter evans reports, newc rules are now in place governing water rights that many had depended on.en >> reporter: with california's rivers running low, the new restrictions are forcing farmers in the state's central valley to make difficult choices. >> it's going to be a devastating thing.we h we have 125 employees that work for us. they're all going to be out of work. we have crops that are in theer ground growing right now that if they cut off the water, they're going to die. >> reporter: paul simone is a vegetable farmer who gets his water from an irrigation district that is one of california's legal rights holders with legal claims on water dating back more than a century.mo now the senior rights holders s are being told to stop diverting river water immediately. >> this is a day from hell. we have pre-1914 rights that we were told could not be taken away from us. >> reporter: and it's not just farmers. with sprinklers running and new homes under construction, the mountain house community, south of stockton, gets its water from the same irrigation district and could soon see the main watern source cut off. paul is one of 12,000 people that live here. >> i am out of work and i cannot comprehend what to do. >> this is like using a bulldozer when you need is a scalpel. >> reporter: steve manages another district that is being forced to find a new way to supply 2,900 farms without using river water. this year alone california's agriculture industry is expected to lose $1.8 billion and more than 18,000 jobs because of the drought. >> we are hoping they wouldn'tgh get to this level but it has. >> reporter: and with resources drying up quickly... >> were not going to sit down and take this. >> reporter: ...lawsuits are already in the works. carter evans, cbs news, los angeles., >> axelrod: a civil rights official in the midst of a racial identity crises reveals her next move. and like father, like son, the british royals in a fashion flashback when the "cbs evening news" continues.ni continues. do you want to know how hard it can be to breathe with copd? it can feel like this. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva respimat does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva respimat. discuss all medicines you take even eye drops. if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells you get hives, vision changes or eye pain or problems passing urine stop taking spiriva respimat and call your doctor right away. side effects include sore throat cough, dry mouth and sinus infection. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. to learn about spiriva respimat slow-moving mist ask your doctor or visit spirivarespimat.com there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber. try phillips' fiber good gummies plus energy support. it's a new fiber supplement that helps support regularity and includes b vitamins to help convert food to energy. mmmmm, these are good! nice work, phillips! the tasty side of fiber, from phillips'. >> axelrod: we're learning more tonight about rachel dolezal.od: she is the n.a.a.c.p. leader in spokane washington that has been living as an african-american. this week was revealed she is white. we have more on why she did what she did. s >> reporter: rachel dolezal said she will address the controversyov over her race monday night aty her regularly scheduled meeting of spokane's n.a.a.c.p. chapter. city officials are investigating whether she lied about her ethnicity when she applied to be on a police oversight commission. >> yes, i did consider myself to be black. >> reporter: in an interview this week, with our cbs affiliate, krem, rachel dolezal made no apologies. >> i don't feel like i need toie set the record straight in any particular way, except that i know who i am. >> reporter: b biological parents in montana came forward to dispute their daughter's claim. >> i feel like rachel is ill. in terms of reality. >> reporter: the family said rachel grew up as a blond, blue- eyed girl who in her late teens became the big sister to four black children they adopted. it was around that time, hery parents say, she developed an affinity for african-american culture.ev in 2000 she married a black man and they had a son. >> she identified with the african-american community and that was all good until it kind of turned to be a dishonest representation of who she was. >> reporter: social media hashe exploded with reactions and conversations about the complex of race. rachel explained her views open that. >> race is the biggest fiction that it's real. it's not thing. there's a human race. right? we're human. >> i agree with her completely open that score but she is right. >> reporter: anne teaches sociology at new york university.bo >> i understand it's hard for us to wrap our minds about that because we're so used to lookinge at people and thinking we can see their race, can i see who is black, who is asian. but what we don't realize when we're looking at people is actually pigeonholing them in categories that society has given us. >> reporter: the n.a.a.c.p. continues to support rachel dolezal saying she is going through an unspecified legal issue with her family. >> axelrod: up next, a rock star breaks his leg on stage and barely misses a beat. your immune system weakens as you get older and it loses its ability to keep the shingles virus in check. after almost 3 weeks, i just really wanted to give it a shot. the shingles rash can last up to 30 days. you know i'm not feeling it today. don't worry about it buddy. we'll do it another day. don't wait until you or someone you care about develops shingles. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about your risk. we all enter this world with a shout and we see no reason to stop. so cvs health is creating industry-leading programs and tools that help people stay on medicines as their doctors prescribed. it could help save tens of thousands of lives every year. and that would be something worth shouting about. cvs health, because health is everything. i love making sunday dinners. but when my back hurt, cooking all day... forget about it. tylenol was ok, but it was 6 pills a day. but aleve is just 2 pills all day. and now, i'm back! aleve. unbelievable! toenail fungus? seriously? smash it with jublia! jublia is a prescription medicine proven to treat toenail fungus. use jublia as instructed by your doctor. look at the footwork! most common side effects include ingrown toenail, application site redness, itching, swelling burning or stinging, blisters, and pain. smash it! make the call and ask your doctor if jublia is right for you. new larger size now available. >> axelrod: there is no better known ride on new york's coney island than the iconic cycloneere roller coaster. but this is not the kind ofs thrill riders are generally looking for. they had climb down after it got stuck in the middle of the ride i and this is the second cyclonein failure this year. the rock star dave grohl provided a remarkable demonstration last night of hisbl commitment to the idea that thef show must go on.t dave grohl, the foo fighters front man fell and broke his legoo during a concert in sweden. as contessa brewer shows us, he got back up and finished the show. >> reporter: the foo fighters dave grohl tried to catch himself. but watch in slo-mo. he just stumbles right off the stage. >> i think i really broke my leg. >> reporter: he's not a doctor but he was right. foo fighters later tweeted grohl's x-ray, a bad break. the fall was made immediately famous. the man who was called rock's nicest guy apologized for disrupting the show. >> i'm going to fix my leg and then i'm going to come back. >> reporter: medics apparently didn't like that. l >> and the one guy was like, no, no, no, you have to keep your foot in one place, don't move y it, don't move it. and i said ok. i'm going back on stage. >> reporter: that really impressed swedish student adam lunde at the concert with his dad. >> everyone would have understood if he wanted to go to the hospital and get a morphine shot and be done but he wantedge to give us a great show. >> reporter: maybe that's why beyonce got back up and justin bieber and lady gaga, again and again. a "cbs news sunday morning" cameras were in vancouver and caught u2's edge going off -- well, off the edge. >> i lost where i was on stage. >> reporter: yet what they do is play on. dave grohl did with his leg immobilized in a chair and then on crutches. >> what they did was, he kept going and did a really great show.d it was amazing that he finished. >> reporter: you know jim, even though that show went on, the foo fighters canceled their concert in the netherlands and another one in switzerland because of his injury. >> axelrod: the british actor ron moody has died. you may remember him as fagin as the stage screen adaptations of "oliver." he had a long and eclectic career but never minded being closely associated with one character he called the roll of a lifetime. ron moody was 91. still ahead, a love story with a twist. ahead a love story with a twist ogether can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. with the tools and the network you need to make working as one easier than ever. virtually anywhere. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. my feet felt so heavy at the end of the day. they used to get really tired. until i started gellin'. i got dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles. when they're in my shoes, my feet and legs feel less tired. it's like walking on a wave. dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles . i'm a believer! meet the world's newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue... and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it's red, white and blue. log on to learn more. you know, in any job any profession image matters. i want some gray...but not too much. only touch of gray uses oxygen to gently blend away some gray but not all for that perfect salt and pepper look. satisfaction guaranteed. just you and the look you want. just for men touch of gray get the complete balanced nutrition of ensure. with nine grams of protein... and 26 vitamins and minerals. and now with... ...twice as much vitamin d ...which up to 90% of people don't get enough of. the sunshine vitamin! ensure. take life in. attention. did you or anyone in your household work around asbestos-containing gaskets and packing? the garlock bankruptcy may affect your rights even if you do not presently have an asbestos-related disease. garlock's products were used in industrial and maritime settings, where steam, hot liquid or acid moved in pipes. certain personal injury claims must be filed by october 6, 2015. you may have a right to vote on garlock's plan to reorganize and pay claims. call 844-garlock or go to garlocknotice.com >> axelrod: one perk of wearing the crown, you celebrate your birthday twice. today was queen elizabeth's official birthday marked by theof elaborate ritual known at "trooping the color." even the queen's great grandson george participated. looking remarkably similar to his father william at the same age. the queen's actual birthday was in april.kabl she's 89. the wedding of george kirby and doreen luckie is one for the record books. >> reporter: george and doreenrd will be celebrating tonight, proving you're never too old to fall in love. sure, at 103, george kirby'st hearing is not what it used to be. >> i george, take thee. >> what? >> take thee. >> reporter: the vows needed repeating a couple of times. ( laughter ) but his heart beats just as h strong as it ever did. and the blushing bride, 91-year- old doreen luckie was beaming. >> it's a surprise really after >> all of this time getting married again. >> reporter: doreen was bride, v 92-year-old doreen luckie was beaming. >> it's a surprise really after all of this time getting married again. >> reporter: doreen was a widow when they became an item 27 years ago. but last valentine's day george decided it was time to take things further with a little? prodding from his son neal. >> they have been together 27 years, 28 years they have beenai living in whatever you want to call it and i said, why don't you make an honest woman of doreen?t >> reporter: so he popped the abl question but george said he didn't get down on one knee because he didn't think he would be able to get back up. before retirement, doreen worked as a legal secretary. george was in the royal air force. a boxer and a good one undefeated in all 60 fights he entered. >> husband and wife. >> reporter: when they made their vows, they broke some records. with a combined age of 194 they're certainly the oldest newlyweds in britain, maybe even the world. they're not sure yet where they will spend their honeymoon. what is the rush? they've made a life long commitment to have and to hold at long last, love. charlie d'agata, cbs news, london. >> axelrod: that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight.s later on cbs, "48 hours." for now, i'm jim axelrod in new york. for all of us here at cbs news thank you for joining us. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by b media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org a popular ride at great america is shut down for a second straight night after a bizarre accident involving a park employee. >> water thieves targeting the shopping center and making off with hundreds of gallons of water. coming up in a live report, we'll tell you how they actually pulled it off. >> and just in time for summer, the new high-tech accessories that can help prevent your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. lock up your taps! that's the warning tonight from police in one bay area city where the drought

Related Keywords

New York , United States , Montana , Texas , Vancouver , British Columbia , Canada , Central Valley , California , Stockton , Washington , District Of Columbia , London , City Of , United Kingdom , Cleveland Park , Roosevelt Island , Netherlands , Sweden , Dallas , Switzerland , Texans , Britain , Americans , America , Swedish , British , American , Anna Werner , Carter Evans , Paul Simone , Joyce Mitchell , Grohl X Ray , David Brown , Rachel Dolezal , Los Angeles , Jim Axelrod , Nancy Cordes , Beth Mandl , George Kirby , Linda Marie Macdonald , Justin Bieber , Constance Hollinger , Jackie Weatherspoon , Ron Moody , Dave Grohl , Richard Matt , Greg Abbott , Queen Elizabeth , Hillary Clinton ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.