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his sa ttirical take on this presidential election. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. protests have been going on all evening and getting really ugly. >> a lot of anger out here. a lot of mistrust. >> reporter: chaos on the streets of charlotte. >> this is not how we rise and this is not how we succeed. this is not the way. >> any doubt in your mind a gun was recovered near him at the scene? >> absolutely no doubt. >> we have two more name african-americans killed by police officers. it's unbearable and it needs to become intolerable. >> in particular, in tulsa, this young officer, i don't know what she was thinking, i don't know what she was thinking. but i'm very, very troubled by this. >> the main suspect behind the new york bombings praising osama bin laden in a journal. >> this is a new era of terror. >> he is the leader that will lead us to the promise land. jean jacket with bunch of stuff on. dress up and look presentable. >> blackout affecting all of puerto rico after a major fire at a power plant. >> the lines were endless at a pop-up in-n-out burger! >> incredible catch to save the game! >> and all that matters. >> just a few days to go before the first debate. >> this is going to be a scene no r before in presidential politics. >> we heard the insults. we don't need any more of them. it's the best case and both of them have to make their case. >> on "cbs this morning." >> secretary of state clinton is preparing for anything and everything. in fact, it has been reported that she is actually prepping for two trumps at the debate. and on message, disciplined donald trump and a freewheeling donald trump. by the way, freewheeling donald trump is the worst folk album of announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ? welcome to "cbs this morning." north carolina's lars city is under a state of emergency after a second night of violence over the police killing of a black man. hundreds of demonstrators flooded charlotte last night. they damaged property, blocked a highway, and attacked members of police used tear gas and flash grenades. >> several officers were hurt. one civilian was shot but apparently not by police. the governor ordered the national guard to move in. david begnaud is in charlotte at the scene of some of the worst violence. david, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it's starting to rain. you think if it was raining last night it might have dampened the excitement what was a criminal element giving legitimate protesters a bad name and wet a front row seat. from where i am right now we in front of this hilton garden inn and shattered windows. we heard what sounded like fireworks. the door was locked and they tried to make entry but they couldn't. they shattered these panes here. the glass fell. we kept hearing the noise as we looked inside at the patrons and the people at the front desk of the hotel frightened what they were hearing. i remember the woman standing behind the front desk watching this, almost helpless with a guest in front of her and this went on for hours. people vandalizing uptown charlotte and seemingly getting away with it. it was the second straight night that the city center of charlotte erupted in violence. protesters clash with, and in many cases, taunted police over the death of 43-year-old keith lamont scott. >> looks like you got somebody down. might have been shot. >> reporter: one person was shot that individual had died, but they backtracked and now say he is on life support. we are told charlotte police never fired a shot. >> the whole reason we had to protest was because somebody was shot, unarmed. another unarmed person is shot today. >> reporter: police in riot gear considered unlawful assembly after they were looting business and officers fired tear gas and flash grenades and a hundred of people remained after midnight. police and journalists were attacked. store and car windows smashed. a night that started as a peaceful prayer vigil, descended into chaos. >> we came down here to protest but we can't tear up downtown. that's not going to solve anything. >> reporter: four police officers suffered nonlife-threatening injuries and at least three civilians were at one point protesters ran on the internet 277 stopping traffic and surrounding drivers. >> some of this is insane! like these people didn't do anything to us. if you're going to revolt against somebody, revolt against the people who deserve it. >> reporter: this morning, at the command of north carolina's governor and the request of charlotte's police chief, the national guard and the state police are here in uptown charlotte and will be here protecting the city all day gayle, big banking institutions, which called the city center home, have told their nonessential personnel, look, stay home today, you don't have to come into work. we think it's safer for you to be there, rather than at work. >> thank you very much, david. investigators say they are reviewing body camera and dash cam video of tuesday's shooting. police say that keith lamont scott did have a gun in his hand when an officer shot him. a new picture of the scene shows something at scott's feet. affiliate, that is wb-tv it may be a gun. but people in the neighborhood say that the father of four was holding a book instead. don champion is in another area of charlotte that was hit by violence overnight. don, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. vandals took advantage of the unrest last night and ransacked this store in uptown. keith lamont scott was killed on tuesday when officers tried to serve a warrant on another man and say they saw scott with a this morning, we have learned that scott's family wants to see police video of the shooting. >> he ain't moving. >> reporter: a witness took this video moments after keith lamont scott fell to the pavement, shot by police outside of an apartment complex tuesday. the department says officer brently vincent on the on force for two years, shot the 43-year-old. >> they put handcuffs on him. >> reporter: witness williams differs with the police account >> he had his hands up and the become fell off his lap. he walked to the back of the car and next thing you know, they shot him four times. >> we did not find a book that has been made reference to. >> reporter: police chief kerr putney said scott posed a threat. they obtained a picture that may show a gun near the victim's feet. >> he exited the vehicle armed with a handgun. i don't know that he definitively pointed the weapon specifically towards an officer. >> this is a difficult situation for everyone involved. >> mayor jennifer roberts said she had not seen police footage from the shooting. >> we have a long history of transparency and accountability. >> reporter: community activists say they expect more from the city leader and examine expect peace from the protester. >> i think they need to sit down with us at a table of peace. when the shooting happened and he was not wearing a body-worn camera but we are told that three other officers wore theirs. the department is under increasing pressure to release police video from the shooting, but the police chief says he will not do that right now because of the investigation. gayle? >> don, thank you. in our next hour, we will hear from charlotte mayor jennifer roberts about the shooting and the city's state of emergency. the wife of accused new york and new jersey rahami is reportedly in the united states this morning. asia bibi raha hammie apparentl flew to new york last night from dubai. newly released pages from the suspect's journal obtain an apparent reference to an isis leader killed last month. jeff pegues has more. >> reporter: the reference to that isis leader is significant. because of what he told his that he was influenced by a variety of terrorist groups, including al qaeda and isis. >> this is a copy of mr. rahami's journal. >> reporter: the chairman of the house homeland security security said wednesday, ahmad khan rahami was inspired by isis. >> it's clear from this journal that mr. rahami was receiving inspiration from the isis spokesman mr. na nani second in command urged hi followers to attack targets in the west and he was killed by a u.s. drone strike in august. in rahami's bloodstained notebook he appears to ask for guidance from brother al adnani. new york deputy commissioner john miller. >> i think the recent events in new york city kind of underscores really is a morphing and changing threat picture >> reporter: rahami remains hospitalized in new jersey following a shoot-out with police. >> we are ready to speak to him. of course, he is not medically cleared so that we can speak to him just yet. >> reporter: investigators continue to search the rahami family home for evidence. a charred spot is visible on the property. prosecutors say they have cell phone video of rahami detonating an explosive device in a backyard just two days before the chelsea bombings. >> they are very, v speak with it two men who apparently stumbled upon the bag containing the pressure cooker bomb on 27th street and they removed the unexploded device and then walked away with the luggage. >> we want the bag. where was it shipped to? all traces that come from that kind of stuff. >> reporter: again, investigators emphasize the two men are considered witnesses, not suspects. and aren't in danger of being arrested. at this point, they are still not sure where rahami built his bombs and whether he had any help. the heaviest attacks since the cease-fire broke down three days ago and may have involved a controversial weapon. elizabeth palmer is in damascus, syria's capital. elizabeth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it was both war planes and artillery pounding opposition-held areas last night. some in the countryside around aleppo and some close to the center of the city. activists say frphosphorus was there. there is no way to confirm this. after last week's shaky cease-fire, this war is on again with a vengeance. casualties had dropped to almost nothing but are now climbing again. the opposition reports that 53 people were killed in the last 24 hours of bombing. to halt the current, secretary of state john kerry has demanded that the russians and the syrians ground their planes and helicopters over the battle zones. norah? >> elizabeth palmer in syria, thank you so much. in the presidential race, donald trump is leading hillary clinton in three ballots ground states. -- battleground states. polls show trump is ahead of clinton by five points in north carolina and ohio and his lead in nevada is three points. in a four-way national matchup in front with 43% to trump's 37%. campaigning in florida yesterday, clinton called the recent police shootings unbearable. trump said, in ohio, he was very troubled by the event in tulsa. major garrett is in pittsburgh where trump will speak today. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump struggled with a topic of fatal police shootings of african-americans. on the one hand, he drew complaints from the fraternal order of police when he offered no new ideas on better methods or training to reduce officer-involved shootings. taken together, trump struggles could complicate his ongoing efforts to win the support of african-american voters. >> to me, it looked like he did everything he is supposed to do. >> reporter: campaigning in cleveland, donald trump spoke about the tulsa shooting that left 40-year-old terrance crutcher dead and wondered aloud if the female officer choked. >> did she get scared? >> reporter: when asked how to reduce violence in the black community, trump called for a nationwide use of stop and frisk tactics. >> we did it in new york. it worked incredibly well. and you have to be pro active. >> reporter: recent cbs news polls place trump support among african-americans at only 6%. 2% in ohio where trump campaigned wednesday, and 3% in pennsylvania where he travels today. >> to the african-american i will fix it. >> reporter: trump's minority outreach in ohio featured former boxing promoter don king. >> he is going to fight for the rights of all the people. >> reporter: but king sounded a sour note with his racial epithet used in a conversation about racial stereotypes. >> if you are intelligent, you're intellectual negro. if you are dancing and sliding and gliding [ bleep ] i'm negro. >> how are you doing today? >> reporter: in toledo we made a pastor of oldest baptist churches and one with deep roots in the civil rights movement and asked him -- >> his track record is minimal. and that is going to hold a lot of weight. there is no closeness. there is no trust. that has been developing and i think that is probably going to >> reporter: pastor johnson also told us that trump has kicked off a genuine conversation among african-americans about loyalty to the democratic party, particularlily the presidential debates will make a very big difference. on that topic, trump has five events in pennsylvania today and campaigns through saturday, leaving precious little time for debate prep. charlie, on the other hand, hillary clinton has cleared her schedule completely to focus on monday's first debate. >> thanks, major. the election is just 47 days cbs news political director and "face the nation" moderator john dickerson is here. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> reporter: we will talk about the debate in a moment. the candidates both responding to what we see in tulsa and in charlotte. >> yeah. hillary clinton saying there is too much violence from the police with african-american men dying. and donald trump having a variety, as major said, he struggled, had a variety of responses. he was asked by one questioner in a town hall about black on black violence and he stopped about a national stop and frisk. is turning out their voters, there is, obviously, the policy question but in the african-american community, the notion of stop and frisk as the remedy to a situation in which young black men is being killed. >> is not popular. >> is not popular and essentially a turnout mechanism for hillary clinton. >> one paper put it outcome ward encounter outreach to african-americans and at the same time, he offended >> he's in an issue where he needs to move on. >> he has five stops today in pennsylvania and hillary clinton as major reported is tag the rest of the week off to prepare for the debate. what do you think this says about their strategies going into the debate? >> i think it shows that donald trump is what we have seen from him, a more improizational character. the debates are different kind >> a hundred million. >> how much does the debate matter, do you think? >> in the past we covered them a lot and go over every last little thing. in the end they don't really matter. lots of peaks and valleys in between the three debates or after all three are over but, in the end, they end up reinforcing people's existing views and then those few swing voters in the end, the very few, end up making their determination, maybe on the debate, but very well maybe on other things. >> speaking of the race. how do you look at this new poll of suggesting she's ahead on the other hand, he is doing very well in some important states, north carolina, ohio, nevada. >> well, you know, you look at the national polls but we focus more on these individual states. and, you know, i think you want to pay a lot of attention to a state like pennsylvania where he is now. if he it take that away from hillary clinton, democrats have won that since 1988 so we have to pay attention to those individual states. month. >> thanks, john. >> thank you. the first presidential debate is monday night and we will bring it to you live at 9:00/8:00 central on cbs. your energy-efficient tv may be a energy hog. that story is coming up. first, it's time to check your local weather. >> good morning to you, 72 degrees right now and rather cloudy out of the raleigh- durham international airport. you will notice no steady rain falling at the airplane as some areas dealing with rain across dunn and sampson county and to our north along the virginia line across portions of grandville and vance into mecklenburg county in virginia. take the umbrella with you, despite if you're not seeing the rain this morning. there will be a chance this afternoon, 78 announcer: this portion of "cbs r rogena hydroboost. the fbi decided two years ago that the new jersey/new york bombing suspect was no threat. >> ahead, we take a look the investigation of the bombings and the possible motivation with new york's counterterrorism chief john miller who has just arrived. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by fastsigns. more than fast. more 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[ no audio ] >> looks like we may have lost that signal but will continue to follow what is happening in charlotte also online at wncn.com. now, for a check of the forecast, let eke check in with alyssa corfont. >> good morning to you. temperature of 72-degree and we are looking at more rain as we head into the afternoon hours as well. in raleigh, we are starting off briefly on the live from our tower camera. here's what our radar is doing, scanning the skies, detecting rain. look at this. showers to our south and east, moving through dunn and benson areas and very spotty across sampson county, newton grove. you have been dealing with heavier showers for the morning, showers towards rose borrow and garland as well. roxboro, 70 sanford, 72 fayetteville. we'll take to it 78 this afternoon and 80s into tomorrow afternoon. >> good morning. happy friday eve and happy fall to you. 440 at lake boone trail is what we're looking at, very crowd with the morning rush and we have accidents slowing you down, u.s. 64, cleared. you can see some orange on our screens meaning it's indicating -- still causing moderate delays. u.s. 70, glenwood, a crash near hill burn drive causing moderate delays in yellow and as we take you fur south, we have ponding on the roadways thanks to rain, especially 95 through the dunn area. leave yourself extra time. we will see you again in a few o. john mccain, a war hero. he's not a war hero, he's a war hero because he was captured. i like people that weren't captured ok. donald trump compared his sacrifices to the sacrifices of two parents who lost their son in war. how would you answer that father? what sacrifice have you made for your country? i think i've made a lot of sacrifices, built great structures. i've had tremendous success, i think... ? welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, investigators search for a possible motive in the new york and new jersey bombings. nypd hello, john miller. >> hi. >> in our toyota greene room with the latest on the investigation. if anything could have been done to prevent this attack. takes aim at big screen tvs. how the energy efficient ratings could disguise how much electricity your tv is really using. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "time" reports on millionaire investor leon cooperman charged with insider trading. he is the highest profile in trading at edge funds. his firm manages more than 5 billion in assets and funds managed by cooperman allegedly made 4 million dollars illegally by trading on confidential information and cooperman reportedly denies the charges. "the new york times" reports on a huge fire that darkened puerto rico. an island-wide outage affecting 1.5 million it blacked out traffic lights and they had traffic jams. sacramento mayor kevin johnson tackled a man who hit him in the face with a pie. no one knows why he was hit with a pie in the first place. it happened last night at a charity dinner. one witness says the former nb star repeatedly punched the pie thrower in the face. >> wow. to the hospital and johnson late tweeted he is doing fine. >> top counterterror officials are handling a suspect in the new jersey and new york bombings. the fbi became aware of ahmed rahami in 2004 after a neighbor heard his father call him a terrorist. officials spoke yesterday on capitol hill, including nypd deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism john miller. he spoke about what can be done to stop potential every time someone comes on the radar you're going to be able to follow them or their friends and associates for an extended period of time. while you have investigations that are on the front burner involving people who are demonstrably dangerous. >> he is also our senior correspondent. i know your team worked very quickly to catch him. the front page of "the new york times" points out today he was flagged two times. from paecket andkistan and the where his father called him a terrorist. does this happen more frequently of people we know as suspects? >> there is all kinds of reports to check out this guy and that guy that come in every year and there are legal limits and limits that come within the department of justice guidelines and. the nypd guidelines. the real point here is quarterbacking that is proper, it comes with the territory, but the time not to do that for us is right now in the throes of an important investigation. fbi will do that on its own. inspector generals and congress will come along and do it for them so we will get to that and there is something useful to that. >> are you convinced he acted alone? >> no. and i'm not convinced he didn't. suspect in custody that we have probable cause and plenty of evidence to believe placed those bombs. the question is could one person make that many devices, cover that amount of ground, do all that by themselves and certainly it's possible. but it is equally possible there may be others involved and that is what goes on now. >> when the commissioner was here, he said he was in critical, but stable, condition. have you been able to talk to >> i can't get into that right now. >> why not? >> that is why? >> just kidding, john. why not? you're here with friends. >> gayle, as long as you're asking, let me tell you. >> to charlie's question, what about his wife? there are reports she has arrived back in the united states. >> i think we are in the milled of this thing and who is where and who is talking or not talking is just not a good thing for me to get into. to these men, they are not suspects, we just want to talk to them. we think that they can help this investigation. find these two guys and you're showing this tape, why would i come and talk to you and believe you saying you are not suspects, we want to just talk to you? >> first of all, at this point, we don't really think they are suspects. >> police don't think they are involved in any way? >> gayle, i looked at that tape the first time and i see two guys coming down the street who take the bag, take the bomb out of the walk away. that is highly suspicious. but when with you look the tape a number more times are two guys talking coming down the sidewalk. one guy notices a bag and stops. the other guy keeps walking until he realizes his friend has stopped. this has the appearance of, hey, what is that? picture two guys walking down the street and one of them saying, i don't know how i'm going to get all of this stuff in my luggage to go back home that i bought and i'm probably good bag. this is just me. i open the bag and i see a pressure cooker with a cell phone taped to pot top of it. >> and wires. >> and i'll probably leave it. they take the pressure cooker out and put it down and don't seem to pay too much attention to it and walk away. we need these two guys to figure out who they are and how they encountered the bag. >> they took the suitcase? >> we want the bag. it may have evidence and may >> got it. >> to answer your question. >> you really do -- the police just want to talk -- somebody knows who those guys are. somebody knows. >> there is at least two people who know who they are and that is them. and then unless they live under a rock, they now know that it's a good time to call the police and say, hey -- >> we got it, we got it. >> the picture is clear. >> then a universe of people who want to reach around them and say -- >> pick up things out of trash cans. know, they are going to do that explosive residue test and say where did you get this bag? so it will be better just to come in now. >> do we have any evidence there is a terror cell operating in new york city? >> related to this case? >> any case. >> in general, yeah. >> no, we don't. and that is an important question to answer. did he do this alone by taking a long time to prepare and then spending 48 hours to drive around and drop these bombs off? did he have did he have help transporting them? this is a time you go who were his friends and who were his associates and where were they and what do they know. >> are you learning a lot from the blood-stained notebook? they say there was a lot of gibberish. >> it's telling. when with you try to establish a terrorism charge, you want to see the mindset of an individual and if they were trying to use fear and violence or a series of that is the elements of the definition of terrorism. >> go ahead. >> how hard is it to protect against these lone wolves? >> the lone wolf is perhaps the most difficult kind of tlit we face because if we are dealing with an organization like al qaeda, the network has several stops along the way that offer potential possibilities for intelligence collection. when you've got one person at 1:30 in the morning in the glow of their inspiration from something they are reading or watching online and that conspiracy forms somewhere between the computer screen and their brain, the opportunities to collect that intelligence are very limited. >> can i come back to my question about terror cells? beyond this particular incident, whether there was somebody he was involved with, do we have any evidence there is a possibility that a terror cell may be here? >> at this stage of the investigation, there is zero to indicate that. but that is this stage of the investigation. we are less than a week into at the evidence and see where it takes you. >> but as an ongoing way, that is one of your primary responsibilities, i assume, counterterrorism to see if there is a terror cell anywhere in the metropolitan area? >> so we do that every day. this case gives us opportunities to look. but, charlie, we are dealing with three things -- a terror cell is old style. still on the radar. then there is the enabled attack where they contact somebody through social media. they are not a terror cell but they say her just looks at the propaganda and decides to do it on their own. we don't know which one of these this is until we have all of the answers and, right now, we are still gathering. >> john miller, always good to see you. i know this is a very serious matter and good to have you here but i have to ask this. do you miss us as much as we miss you? >> i miss you guys a lot. >> always nice when you come back, john miller. >> nice to see you guys every day because i got a tv! >> thank you, john miller. energy-efficient could be pushing up your electric bills. ahead, why an environmental group says that consumers could pay an extra billion dollars in electricity costs. if you're heading out the door, take us with you. you can watch us live through the cbs all access app. we know this. don't miss john oliver in studio 57 with his unique take on the presidential race. we will be right back. is depression more than sadness? it's a tangle of multiple symptoms. ? ? trintellix (vortioxetine) is a prescription medicine for depression. trintellix may start to untangle or help improve the multiple symptoms of depression. for me, trintellix made a difference. tell your healthcare professional right away if your depression worsens, nts can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. trintellix has not been studied in children. do not take with maois. tell your healthcare professional about your medications, including migraine, psychiatric and depression medications to avoid a potentially fe-threatening condition. increased risk of bleeding or bruising may occur especially if taken with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners. manic episodes or vision problems may occur in some people. may cause low sodium levels. the most common side effects are nausea, trintellix did not have significant impact on weight. ask your healthcare professional trintellix could make a difference for you. if you have allergy congestion, muddling through your morning is nothing new... ? 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they'd be carried out in a stretcher, folks. i could stand in the middle of 5th avenue and shoot somebody and i wouldn't lose any voters. priorities usa action is responsible for the content of this advertising. ? your energy-efficient tv might be using a lot more energy than you think. a new study by a national environmental group says the number of top selling manufacturers are misleading consumers by gaining the energy star test. mireya villarreal shows us the study's surprising conclusions. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the natural resources defense council looked at several mvergs and came to the same conclusion. the tv did meet the government's stamp of approval for energy efficiency but the council says the tests are not real-live what happens in a house where energy usage is a lot higher. look around any store trying to tell you the latest high-definition tv and you'll see this. an official looking energy guide showing how little this model will cost you in electricity. but that is only if you keep your tv in its mode. >> if the consumer chose to change the picture setting to for example sal inebriate it now the energy saving feature is off and this tv may be using 50% more energy. >> reporter: the national resources defense council claim some manufacturers are not informing consumers like a simple setting change like increasing the brightness level can make a dirns. >> what they did might not be illegal but it's clearly bad get a competitive advantage and have their tv look more efficient than their competitors. >> reporter: the nrdc says the nev tv energy tests are out of date. and while the extra energy costs per howls household might be small, the nrdc says they add up over time. >> we all pay the price. consumers are going to pay an extra billion dollars in electricity costs over the life of their tvs and the envon is suffering as well because we have 5 million more tons of global warming pollution. >> reporter: but industry advocates contend the study is misleading. >> the fact is american don't change the default settings that the manufacturers put on tv sets, but some want to and they should have that right. six cents a day is what we are talking about. >> reporter: part of the study focused on three manufacturers in particular. study and follow the spirit and the letter of the department of energy's testing procedures. gayle? >> thank you. goes to show you it all adds up. thanks a lot. panda loses more his balance when he takes a really bad fall. first, it's time to check your local weather. good morning to you. here's a live picture from davis drive elementary school in cary where we have dark clouds overhead, no rain plenty of rain showers elsewhere so here's a look at showers showing up on our radar, moving -- rain moving through the dunn and benson area, across sampson county and all morning long, on and off again showers along the virginia border. we'll make it to a high today of 78, fall officially announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ? in monaco. ? we were born brothers. competition made us friends. wish bold in the 2017 camry. toyota. let's go places. i don't want to live with or wonder whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it transformed treatment as the first cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. harvoni is a simple treatment regimen that's been prescribed tell your doctor if you've had a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or any other medical conditions, and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni may include tiredness, headache and weakness. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? 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my friends know me so well. was that i had dry, itchy eyes. i used artificial tears from the moment i woke up... ...to the moment i went to bed. so i finally decided to show my eyes some love,... ...some eyelove. eyelove means having a chat with your eye doctor about your dry eyes because if you're using artificial tears often and still have symptoms, it could be chronic dry eye. >> hello and good morning. i'm stefan chase. here's what is making headlines right now a second night of violent protests after a deadly officer- involved shooting prompts governor mccrory to issue a state of emergency. that allows the state to activate the national guard for increased public safety purposes and this started scott. police said he was holding a gun and refused to drop the weapon. his family insists he was not holding a gun but a book. police have not released the dashcam video of the shooting. the naac. will be in charlotte to push for the release of the video. police said a man was shot by a civilian last night and at last check, the person was in critical condition. jennifer roberts continues to call for peace and calm. you can stay with cbsth information on-air and online at wncn.com. raleigh police announced they're investigating a deadly shooting. investigators said officers responded to a shooting around 10:15 last night on capital boulevard. they found aaron jacobs inside a vehicle with a gunshot wound. the 24-year-old died at the hospital. investigators are searching for the gunman. if you have information, please contact police. now for a check of the forecast, here's alyssa corfont. good morning to you at home as well as we approach 7:58 on thursday or friday eve, if you would rather call it that. there's brighter skies here and there, live picture from our tower camera but all in all, we're dry as we start off the morning. roads are wet with no rain falling around wake county. where the rain is falling in northern grandville, vance counties, rain on the southern positioner of mecklenburg county, virginia, sampson county, we have pocket of heavy ra newtonboro and harnett county towards dunn and benson this morning. we have temperatures 71 durham, 68 henderson, 70 lewisburg. 78 this afternoon. best chance of scattered showers developing later today and low 80s return tomorrow. most of us stay drier. 7:58 right now. let's hand it over to ali. good morning, i-40 at southbound on glenwood causing moderate delays there. we have two crashes wakefield pines drive near schoolhouse street. give yourself extra time this morning and rain on dunn on 95 and 40 as well. we will have a slick commute in. a look at your drive time and look back outside now. i-540 at falls and looking better here so. ? it is thursday, september 22nd, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including congress bashing a ceo who sharply raised the price of the ip company makes on those life saving devices. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> this went on for hours. people vandalizing uptown charlotte and seemingly getting away with it. an officer is trying to serve a warrant on another man, they say they say scott with a gun in his car. >> john kerry has demanded that the russian and the syrians ground their planes and helicopters over the battle zone. new ideas on better method or training to reduce officer-involved shootings. as one paper put it an awkward and counterproductive outrage to african-americans. >> donald trump has to move on to a new issue. >> rahami's notebook suggests he was influenced by a variety of terror groups, including al qaeda and isis. >> there is video of the two men police say we want to talk to these men, therapist suspects. somebody knows who those guys. >> lease two people know who they are, and that is them! >> the company hase a new smartphone connected candle that can light or extinguish its on demand. samsung has a phone that can light without a command. ? i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the national guard is patrolling charlotte this morning, after new violence over the police killing of a black man. the city is under a state of one protester apparently shot by a civilian last night is in critical condition. two others were taken to the hospital. police fired tear gas and flash grenades at demonstrators. four officers were hurt. >> investigators are still viewing the evidence in the death of keith lamont scott. a witness took this video moments after scott was shot. police say that he was holding a handgun. witnesses say, though, it was actually a book. police have not released a body camera footage of that shooting. and spoke to mayor jennifer roberts just a short time ago. kris, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the mayor is pledging with the help of the national guard, the state police, the charlotte police will keep the peace tonight here in the city. a lot of people holding their breath as the calls to release that police camera video only mount. have you seen the police video? >> i have not seen it. we know that the family has of respect for their tragic loss and in keeping with that, we are going to let them see it first. we also have a policy that while it's an active investigation, we don't want to release pieces of evidence that don't make a full picture. so we are going to wait and not release that to the public while the investigation is still ongoing. >> reporter: but wouldn't it make sense for you as the mayor to have seen this video so you know what you're defending or not defending? >> i'm hoping to see it as soon as possible. but do want to respect the family today. >> reporter: at the point when you're seeing civil unrest, the national guard being brought in, a state of emergency being declared, doesn't that sort of supersede the investigation? shouldn't you, at least, have seen this? there is really a call for people so say put this tape out and let people see what happened. why isn't the family already seen it and why hasn't this stuff happened faster? >> well, there are people who are also trying to keep the peace and working hard in that area. certain because a couple of of the officers did not have body cameras. >> reporter: we understand a gun was recovered at the scene. is that something the public will see in the near future? there is one account it was a book. officers said there was a gun. there are reports a gun was recovered. are we going to see that gun? >> we are going to work to make sure that the evidence is clear as that investigation goes on and gets completed. i think there are some folks who are going to want to see that. >> reporter: the scott family could see that police video as early as to the mayor says she wants to see it as soon as possible. we also know that mayor roberts is going to receive a briefing from the chief of police in a couple of hours and then be preparing for whatever tonight may bring. norah? >> kris, thank you so much. the ceo of the pharmaceutical company that makes epipen was on capitol hill yesterday. the 500% increase. va npvinita nair has more. >> reporter: breshch wished mylan had better anticipated the problems the patients would face as the company ratcheted up the cost of that device that stops life-threatening allergic reactions but she stood by the decision to push the wholesale cost above $600. >> we believe it was a fair price and we j that price by half. >> why did you lower it by half if you thought it was fair? if you thought it was fair, leave it where it's at. >> reporter: lawmakers were not satisfied with mylan's recent efforts to boost discounts for many patients and didn't seem impress with the numbers ceo heather breshch was trying to show them. >> please, not another chart! >> i'm just saying that the 235 -- >> i'm not talking about that. >> reporter: cbs news obtained documents the company turned over to lawmakers. they show mylan expects the epipen to generate $1.1 billion it depend an estimated 85 million to market the device. >> what was your salary last year? >> about 18 million. >> about 18 million? sounds like you're doing pretty well on this. >> reporter: "wall street journal" reporter jonathan rockoff says breshch handled the pressure well and tells us the hearing revealed nothing we all already. >> the shart sentiment we can't have high drug prices. there was very little discussion already has done. after hundreds of dollars in price increases, committee members cast doubt on breshch's claim that the company only makes $50 per device. >> is that the truth? $50 per pen? >> yes. >> that is the truth? >> our profits approximately $50 per pen. >> i don't know what your lawyers are telling you, but you -- i don't think that you >> reporter: the epipen has a virtual monopoly so lawmakers questioned a representative from the feood and drug administratin it could do. he cannot say what similar product are in the pipeline right now. this was six hours and they want more documents. they felt they weren't given enough evidence. they want to know more. >> the numbers are very hard to understand. much the company makes, how much they make for the drug. what that drug means to people. >> what is mylan's response about why it's more expensive? that they have invested a billion dollars in order to make the pen safer and more widely available, et cetera? >> they also pointed to the fact they have saved health care a lot by making the pen so accessible and making sure it got into so many schools. >> thank you. he is staying quiet on the election in this country. ahead, the british comedian returns to studio 57. hello, john oliver! with his brash commentary. he just won an emmy. look at that >> good morning to you, 72 degrees right now and the clouds continue at the raleigh- durham international airport. the nice thing here is in wake county we're not dealing with the steady rain from the past few mogs vance, mecklenburg county, and in sampson, harnett, johnston counties, very light rain this morning as well. blithe or not, better rain ahead, "48 hours" shows us how a teen's online search for a relationship opened the door to tragedy. >> i'm peter van zandt. a lonely 13-year- online looking for love. she uses an app that millions of teens use every month. instead of love, authorities say she finds murder. that is coming up on "cbs this morning." i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com. wish your skin could bounce back like... ...it used to? 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>> she was stabbed. her throat was cut. caught a break. nicole had brin her social media log-ins on her wall like a road map to murder. it led them to the chat app kik and two unlikely suspects david eisenhower and his friend natalie keepers both virginia tech engineering students. >> ed she was a sociopath and she was a sociopath in training. >> this is a new time. >> when you't phone and answer your password that is a problem. >> reporter: pamela casey has been sounding the alarms about chat appears like kik where communicators can talk anonymous legitimately. >> it's no longer about your child meeting a stranger in the park. you need to worry about your child meeting a stranger on the phone you gave them for christmas. >> reporter: david eisenhower is charged with murder and abduction and keepers as an >> i hope everybody learns from this because it had khappen to you. >> reporter: what happened to elizabeth sirotchen, 15, terrified her parents. she had been community communicating with a 30-year-old man onocmedia appears, including kik. >> this guy wants to kidnap my daughter tonight. >> reporter: the family, with the help of a friend, a former special forces vet, set a trap for the predator. >> i said, do not move or i will shoot you! >> peter van sant joins us at the table. most parents have never even heard of kik. >> i never heard of it until i got involved in this story and discovered one of my teenage children had the kik app. >> what do the kik people say about this? >> the kik people, first off, we wanted to talk to the ceo of the company who is 28 years old, it's a canadian based company but he would not grant the interview. in a written statement, they say they have safety guidelines bunch of clicks to get to it and they actually cite nicole lovell case an an example of how they cooperated are law enforcement but law enforcement says actually, it takes days to get generally information from kik. >> quickly, how many people are on kik? >> 300 million users and 40% of all american teenagers use kik at least once a month and it's parent-proof and it's a rage among kid in high school now and they don't tell their parents. >> we need to do more on this. >> yes, we really do. we have done a already. more surely to come. thank you, peter. you can watch his congratulations on 29th season on "48 hours." that is saturday at 10:00/9:00. >> the new england patriots may turn tonight to their third-string quarterback. jim nantz of cbs sports is standing by ahead of "thursday night football" tonight on cbs. my sweethearts gone sayonara. this scarf all thats left to remem... what! she washed this like a month ago (vo) a lifetime of your dog's nutritional needs... all in one. purina one. healthy energy, and a taste he loves. purina one smartblend is expertly blended... with always real meat #1. all in one. purina one. well she loves to say, "well, fantastic!" a lot. i do say that, you see... i study psychobiology. i'm a fine arts major. with the typical college experience. this windows pc is a life saver! being able to pull up different articles to different parts of the screen is so convenient. i used to be a mac user but this is way better. if your sneezes are a force to be reckoned with... you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec? 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"thursday night football" continues tonight on cbs. the houston texans visit the new england patriots. both teams are 2-0, but the patriots might have to turn to their third-string rookie quarterback. cbs sports nfl lead announcer game. jim, good morning. jacoby brissett is his name. they say he could make history if he starts tonight. a lot of people are pulling for him. what do you think? >> well, they are so secretive at new england. you don't really know until they take the field but i expect that j jacoby brissett will be the starter in his third week of his professional career and probably never expected to play this year. thought he would learn behind tom brady who is back in a up tonight in prime time, i think it's going to be his turn. >> i love this reporting that julian edelman has been going through some practice just in case. >> well, julian edelman, who is the scrappy receiver for new england, and is in on so many plays, punt returns, et cetera, can do it all, he was a college quarterback at kent state. so that is a possibility that he could even be the backup quarterback tonight. and who knows. maybe called into emergency action at quarterback. mystery around this game tonight regarding new england. >> how does it shape up, jim? texans versus the patriots. >> i tell you, houston is a really good team. they went out in the off-season, charlie, and picked up a quarterback in brock osweiler and a running back in lamar miller and got a complimentary receiver to deandre hopkins with will fuller out of notre dame so they are explosive and dynamic. here is what i think. i think a great chance these two teams will meet again come so this game tonight might just seem like another september game. it's bigger than that. they are both undefeated as gayle said. but when it comes time to figure out home field advantage and seed, i think three months down the line, this game could play a very big role in that. >> after tonight's game one more game and then brady is back? >> exactly. he'll be back october 9th in a game at cleveland. they were hoping with the four games he was goi to hav to were thinking maybe 3-1 and worst case scenario, hoping 2-2. they got a chance if they win this tonight, they have buffalo coming in here next week and they will be favored to win that game no matter who is at quarterback. they could come out of this stretch without brady 4-0 which would anzi accomplishment. >> and they don't have gronkowski either so they have two star players missing. >> well, you guys sound like you're settingour fta lineups right now! qo i don't know if you guys are fantasy football players but i he has not played the first two weeks. i think there is a chance you'll see him on the field tonight. >> thanks, jim. >> thank you, jim nantz. always good to see you. >> thank you. >> you can watch the houston texas and the new england patriots tonight on "thursday night football." coverage begins at 7:30. eastern right here on cbs. then simulcast on the nfl network. jewelry houses are among the private companies polishing seth doane is in rome where businesses are asking the >> good morning. i'm russ bowen. after a second night of violent protest in response to a violent shooting in charlotte, pat mccrory issued state of emergency. robert rhardson has been live all morning from charlotte and joins us with morning, russ. as you can s there's a cleanup crew at time warner cable arena where the hornets play and the team shop. lookt some of thebroke glass and you can see hangers from where looters stole merchandise out ofthe store. the national guard is starting to arrive in charlotte after that state of emergency. also people from the department of justice are coming, people fergus the michael brown shooting, trying to help the community after the teand na naacp will beeeting counity leaders this morning to try to work on an investigatioand improve community relatis and ey will be antheir early investiga this afternoon at 1:00. reporting in charlotte, robert richardson, cbs north carolina. >> thank you for your continuing coverage. >> a man will be in court after shooting another man near shaw university. 25-year-old charles mitchell was ch felon. he killed 23-year-old christopher locus. investigators believe the suspect knew the victim. someone near lenoir and mount street saw the body and called 911. a wake county teenager is due back in court, accused of assaulting his grandmother. 18-year-old kenneth hawker is charged with assault of a female. he grabbed his grandmother by her neck and left arm and threw her to the oor. he was suspended from panthe creek high school last year assaulting someone in the cafeteria. he was accused of texting another student threat and creating a hit list. > all right, it s ju nota pretty day outsid alyssa. >> no, it's not,russ. we're looking at more clouds as we start off the morning. this is a live picture from vid be in cary. we're less than two hours left in the summer season. fall starts at 10:21. we're seeing more widespread showers about an hour, two hour ago. for the most part, tho significantly. the northern portion of grandvilleounty seeing light rain there d across portions of sampson county where we have pockets of heavier rain. i just checked close to newton grove. they have received 2, 2.25 inches of rain, radar estimated there, also johnston county approaching benson. your temperatures before you head out the door, 68 henderson, 71 durham, 72 of rain this afton, smler chanc for rain towards friday but friday will warm up a bit with a high of 82. we're back to 88 to kickoff the weekend saturday. 8:28. here's ali. hey, there, good morning. taking to i-4 40 at six forks road, things are not moving too bad. we had report of a crash but not affecting traffic, as you can see here and the crash 440 westbound and looks like it has been cleared for you there. le glenwood, crash as well causing some moderate delays on u.s. 70 heading north and u.s. 64 eastbound, reports of a crash near 1a, i 440 eastbound at exit 1c as well. as we get further south, we have rain on the roadways, traveling through dunn, 95 corridor, we're on 40. give yourself extra time. we'll take you outside now and show you what it looks like i- 40 at clayton bypass, no rain ? but america's obsession isn't just a hobby. 86of amecan workers get to work by automobile and the remaining 14% transportion lking,in cas ofha we like . expec nns t he reopengf rome's onic ssh steps.es uto the beloved landmark after a year-long restoration. ahead, why world famous fashion house footed the bill. time to show you somef the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the dallas morning news" reports on a new ice cream recall in ten southern states. blue bell says an ingredient from a supplier could be tainted with lister. chocolate chip cookieound cookie two-step are the affected flavors. blue bellwethered another listeria recall a year ago. to fened out more, logon to our website. >> cookie two-step? sounds friendly. >> got it. blue bell, the best ice cream in the country. >> got it. palm springs, the desert sun reportsed a judge ruled the permit to take the water is still valid. nestle pipedbout6 millions frtr environmentahumans moigrated ar d. cultures around the globe and studied genomes from op. morning. last week with john oliver te serious topicsh with news that affects the refuges will be competing under olymp fl. one is syrian refuge who helped carry a boat and a group of others ia w t listen to her desibe her training regime in syria. >> sometimes you couldn't train because of the war, or sometimes you had training and there was bumping in the swimmingpo. so it was -- you can see, like, the roof. there is three or four places opened. when you have a problem in your life that doesn't mean you have to sit around and cry like babies or something. that woman. second, when something goes wrong, i don't cry like a baby. i cry like a grown man. i'll tell you why. it's louder and it terrifiies strangers and no one comforts me. it's better. >> this past sunday, oliver took home the award for outstanding variety talk series. he is here this morning. congratulations. >> thach. thank you. did. yes. diau whenever you it was a amazing thrill to have a band suddenly sikp removefr the age. inkling? that is unusual that aompany takes everybody on their staff and your wife too. >> they worked so hard all year. we wanted to think of something fun for them to do and lots of them have been to california so they were there and had an l studio and wouldn't roller coasters and now the fun is over and get back to work. >> a lot to discs. g eakup in the news and the politic. >> big breakup? >> i think she is talking about the brangelina breakdown. >> ishat a source for comedy? >> no. a source of dnes we have made that a source of company in the past. >> human sadness? >> yeah. no. you want to stop giving but it keeps giving its gifts io our election? >> on how it's . it's probably time -- might have done. lookt earlier and we were talking to him in the toyota green room. he said this whole election is like a banana peel. >> it is a series of banana peels and mouse traps and trap doors and awful. this has been adisaster. >> donald trump jr. got in hot water comparing refuges to skittles. i thght aut the math of it and yo dhe th? >> we did. it's, obviously, a stuping mathematically, it's incoherent and doesn't make sens we done a piece last yearn huckabee tried to pull the same nonsense regarding peanuts but it doesn't make any sense. >> can we say something about your edward snowden interview in peter van zandt complicated you in the green room because nobody has gotten so far. were you nervous about that? not about the interview but being there in the circumstances? >> yeah, of course. that's not the kind of thing which is a recipe for human kind. >> extra security password on your e-mail? >> we took in bonus. i didn't take in my phone or my laptop. i just presumed it was going -- >> had you people there watching the whole time. what was he like with you? >> what was? >> snowden. >> we spoke in interviews. he was very open. >> did he take take me with you when you leave? >> no, you because i'm not a cia >> is your approach simply to have fun or simply to treat it more as news? >> no. with that, it was so complicate. he is so important and so complicated. he is an incredibly smart guy but didn't necessarily have the tools to communicate that to a wider group of people and experts like him. so we were just trying to find a way to communicate some of the most complicated stuff in that material in a way that would would land -- >> my impression he wants to get out of there. >> yeah. he is in a real life quagmire. >> there is a new book out that suggests he gave a lot of information to the russians? >> is there? i don't know anything about that. or the source of it. i don't know. >> "time" magazine is talking about the late night shows and it's changed the political satire in this country. how has it changed when you're covering this debate and does it affect the comedy you do in terms of the satire and how i play it? >> when we are covering what, the this whole campaign. >> it's the tools that you work with doing this kind of thing kind of stay the same. it's just -- it's been a part0kicularly toxic election s it's hard to pick through and find ways of framing it. that is theai c nding a way to frameor h s sadn happened at medy central? >> wh teople who ee there. larry? >> yeah, larry wilmore. >> who elses sundstanding? on which scoop. please don't fe me in real-time as well. >> we will invite you ba. >> this rlly i like charlie and, trevor, you are gone. >> no, he's not. no, he's not. larry. >> travis is still going. larry is gone which is very sad but tv shows go. they did a great win, though, john. you really went up against everyone. and i think when they called your name, what were you thinking at that moment? i think it's such a great coup th you did. >> it's a -- >> tribute to what you did. >> it's a weird way to be in. you're sitting amongst the cast members of your favorite show so nothing feels real about the whole thing so it's a very bizarre experience to hear name and then harrington give awe trhy. it's an out of body experience. >> where will you be watching the debate monday night? >> probably at home or in a bunker sewhere. those two. the line between those two are getting smaller and smaller. >> with a baby at home. >> congratulations. >> thank you very much. >> trevor is still there. >> oh, he has his life back! what a roller coaster to him this morning? >> you can catch a new oliver this sunday on hbo. a european city is working to make history fresh again and seth doane is in rome. >> reporter: when audrey hepburn and gregory peck were here. america watched them. today, the steps are gleaming. why? that is coming up on "cbs this morning." >> that >> good morning to you, certainly watching for those our temperature right now. this is a live picture from our tower camera. most of us are dry. we have to look south across harnett, johnston, and sampson county to see passing showers, maybe an isolated shower still falling in the northern portions of grandville and person county. other than that, those shower have quickly tapered off this morning. more wet weather anticipated narrator: look up the facts on richard burr. one-point-one million dollars. that's public record. and richard burr wrote a plan to privatize medicare. "new profits for private insurers would be as high as sixteen to twenty-six billion." but seniors would pay nine percent more for medicare. richard burr is looking out for himself and the insurance industry... not you. c, religious bigot. donald trump is a phony, a fraud. he's not a serious adult. i can't vote for donald trump given ththings that he said. trump should not be supported. i believe he's disqualified himself to be president. i just cannot support donald trump. . ? >> well, it's you! >> yes, mr. bradley. >> or is it? >> roman holiday helped to make the spanish steps in rome an work, the landmark will be unveiled today. it's part of a push to restore the city's historic treasures that the government can't afford to do. rome's new mayor yesterday pulled the plug on the city's pulled the plug on the city's bid to host the 2024 pliks olympics. seth doane is here with more. >> reporter: good morning. you can see we have thepanish steps all to el back on them. across rome, tourists see spectacular monuments while the cash-strapped city seize spectacular spend expenditures cannot afford so rome is asking for help in preserving history. it was hardly a quick power wash. we watched earlier this summer as workers painstakingly leveled the steps. the ceo john chris toph says his company which has a story down beneath they restored the steps in the heart of this city of 3 million residents. >> on the oneo make sure theitst its st. >> reporter: tse two monday wants urs o thisient capital. no coined that they chose to work on something close to their stories? >> location location location. >> he says the scale of restoration work that still need to be done is staggering. >> it gives you an idea, number one, why rome can say we have more world heritage than anyplace in the world. on the other hand, you cannd ve -- can understand very clearly they million in renovation work before it can reopen. mausoleum needs a 10 million dollar fix. students on this college program were surprised by the state of somemonuments. >> kind of make you wonder what has happened to these sites and why are they being put on the back burner. >> reporter: that is where claudio pressey comes in. 21 euros for this and this for that. he is a superte cultural heritage and he helped draw up a very big 500,000 wish list of 100 monuments to fix and just the beginning. >> we have here and here to fix. we have 900monuments. >> reporter: they have some and e fountain. this debt ridden city asks for people and other countries to subside public restoration work. is there a danger to all of this? do you have run the risk of having the x, y, z companies and x, y, z monuments? >> you don't see huge banners on any of these sites. the state, the city they are very much concerned about preserving the preserving these. >> the city of rome is trying to make the case this is shared culture heritage. now please share the bill. gayle? >> nicely done, seth. you look good standing on those spanish steps. you look like something out of a movie, mr. doane! >> a younger gregory peck. are stepping up. >> it's a beautiful city. thank you, again, seth. i'm jealous. coming up next a big night for cbs news at the emmys. i'm really good at war. i love war in a certain way. includinwith nukes, yes including with nukes. i want to be unpredictable, unpredictable, unpredictable, unpredictable. ? this morning, we want to congratulate all of the cbs news emmy award winners. our colleagues received seven here in new york city last night. five awards went to "60 minutes" including outstanding writing and outstanding edit and news. sunday morning was honored for best story and a regularly scheduled newscast. jim axelrod and producer emily rand won for "cbs this morning" and "cbs evening news" for their investigation compounding pharmacy fraud exposed to phony billings for prescription drugs. congrats to one and all. will see you right here >> good morning. i'm russ bowen. we continue our coverage in charlotte after a second night of violent protests and state of emergency declared by the governor. this is due to deadly officer- involved shooting. robert richardson has more from charlotte. >> reporter: i'm robert richardson in the epicentre. the transportation center was closed fo concerns. they've reopened this morning. if you look behind me, it's the charlotte hornets arena where the team shop was broken into, multiple windows have been shattered, boarded up today. looters took up a lot of merchandise across the street and there are couple of police cars that have their windshields shattered. dozens of s.w.a.t. team officers from state highway patrol and charlotte police were in this area last protestors came through and vandalizing, spraying, graffiti. governor mccrory declared a state of emergency. there are national guard troops and specialists that went to ferguson after the michael brown shooting. the naacp north carolina president will meet this morning in an hour with officials and community leaders to discuss what to do about this situation and this afternoon at 0, preliminary investigation. i'm robert richardson. >> thank you. a fayetteville teacher on administrative leave for stepping on the american flag during a lesson will meet with the suspect today. lee francis is a teacher at a high school and said it was a lesson of the first amendment and free speech. two children, though, immediately left the room with the flag. the superintendent said there are other ways to teach first amendment rights and an yet but are ready, aren't we? >> we are, for more reasons than one, one being the sunshine and warmer temperatures will return for the weekend. no sunshine from the tower camera. we're looking downtown, pretty gray and overcast to start our friday eve. if you're get ready to head out and about, there's no rain across wake, durham, orange counties. the roads may still be wet because of overnight rain, very light ow virginia, and steadier rain has been falling on and off again, really, pretty scattered in the sampson county area towards newton grove. they have received over 2 inches of rain in the last 24 hour. showers are moving in the western portion of the county and next up will be cumberland county so fayetteville, watch out for the umbrella in the afternoon because that's when the best chance of rain will develop. we have climbed a whole degree lillington, fayetteville, 74 pinehurst, 70. fall begins at 10:21 this morning. the better chance of rain will develop, high of 78, possibly a peek or two of sun, late day shower east of the triangle and look out for the weekend ahead. i won't feel like fall on saturday, 88. a cold front sunday will drop us into the upper 70s. 8:57 on this thursday morning. here's ali. good morning. a look at i-40 at head to work on this friday eve. we have an accident on i-440 westbound side, right lane blocked by u.s. 1. heads up to you there. also you can see orange on our maps, moderate delays both sides of creedmore road because of an accident on the southbound side near glenwood. if we take you further south, a crash exit 1, u.s. 1, and u.s. 64 eastbound at i-40. this message. i know more about isis then the generals do. john mccain, a war hero. he's not a war hero, he's a war hero because he was captured. i like people that weren't captured ok. donald trump compared his sacrifices to the sacrifices of two parents who lost their son in war. how would you answer that father? what sacrifice have you made for your country? i think i've made a lot of sacrifices, built great structures. i've had tremendous success, i think... you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. the people are real. the cases are real. the people are real. the cases are real. the rulings are final. captions paid for by cbs television distribution ol guadalupe "adrian" arista is suing monica pe?a for falsely accusing him of burglarizing her home.

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