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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 2, 2024 3:12am-4:31am PDT

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>> i was able the talk to my daughter just a couple of minutes ago. but i still want to be able to touch them and hug them. i know they're all pretty scared. when my daughter first called me before they were released from the school, and it was just screaming and chaos in the background. >> reporter: and hours after this terrifying incident, as you can see, there is still a large police presence here. and for much of the day, school officials have been working to reunite these students with their families. jb? >> charlie, thank you. tonight, the central u.s. is bracing for another wave of severe storms with the threat of tornadoes, powerful wind gusts, large hail, and flash floods. this comes on the heels of a tornado that killed one person and injured three others in the small town of westmoreland, kansas on tuesday. nearly two dozen homes were destroyed. let's get the forecast from meteorologist chris warren with our partners at the weather channel. good evening, chris. >> good evening, jb. we are tracking multiple threats across the southern plains this evening in terms of severe
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weather. that does include a tornado threat, a tor:con 3 out of 10. also, another threat very large hail could see golf ball-sized hail, possibly even isolated areas with baseball-sized hail. and then the rain, which ultimately by morning could end up being one of the bigger threats. heavy rain developing here across texas and oklahoma will lead to rivers continuing to rise. some already in flood stage. but it is that flood threat, jb, that's not just possible, the flood threat, but likely for some areas to be waking up in the morning here in texas with flash flooding ongoing. >> wow, what a challenge. thank you so very much. secretary of state antony blinken was back in israel today for the seventh time since the war with hamas began last october. blinken is pushing hard for a stop to the fighting, but cbs'
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ramy inocencio reports from tel aviv progress on a deal seems out of reach. >> reporter: handshakes and smiles aside, in the quest for a ceasefire with hamas, secretary of state antony blinken shot down israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's plan for a final gaza invasion. >> we cannot, will not support a major military operation in rafah absent an effective plan to make sure that civilians are not harmed. >> reporter: but a netanyahu adviser confirms to cbs news the prime minister is not backing down from his plan to attack rafa. >> thank you, biden. >> thank you, biden! >> reporter: a more receptive welcome came from families of hostages, pleading for a ceasefire to get all hostages home. >> i feel like i'm broken up into pieces. >> reporter: for aviva siegel, her american husband keith is one of them. this proof of life video released just days ago. >> and i know that keith has had enough. my family has had enough. my country's had enough. >> reporter: aviva herself was a
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hostage, released after 51 days. she, her daughter and families of other american hostages had a face-to-face with blinken. >> what was the feeling? >> really grateful for the united states has been doing since october 7th. >> reporter: another sticking point to a ceasefire, aid to gaza. the u.n. warns of impending famine. bli blinken called for more. >> it needs to be accelerated. it needs to be sustained. >> reporter: and for the first time, aid started throwing a reopened border crossing destroyed on october 7th. as gazans rally to thank u.s. university students for their protest and solidarity. and antony blinken left the region a few hours ago back to washington. israel hasn't confirmed it will send a delegation to any ceasefire talks. hamas still hasn't replied to israel's proposal. jb? >> thank you, ramy. stubborn inflation continues to be a top concern for the
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federal reserve. today the central bank kept interest rates right where they are, at their highest level in more than two decades, hoping to stabilize prices. cheryl jerome powell did signal it's unlikely the fed would raise interest rates, and the dow closed higher on that news. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. sometimes, the lows of bipolar depression feel darkest before dawn. with caplyta, there's a chance to let in the lyte™. caplyta is proven to deliver significant relief across bipolar depression. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i,
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the subject of a stunning cyber attack that paralyzed insurance payments to hospitals, pharmacies and medical practices. >> i will not rest until we fix this. >> reporter: witty today issued this apology. >> i'm deeply, deeply sorry. >> reporter: and revealed the company paid a $22 million ransom to russian-linked cyber criminals who broke into change health care on february 12th, using stolen credentials, breaching a server not equipped with multifactor authentication, compromising sensitive health care data. >> ten weeks is way too long for millions of americans to not know that their records may be available to criminals on the dark web. >> reporter: united health says payment systems are mostly up and running, and they've issued $6.5 billion in assistance loans. but physicians like dr. christine meyer of exton, pennsylvania who first spoke with cbs news in march say it's not enough. >> let me first off apologize to dr. meyer. >> reporter: her practice now
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forced to divert patient resources to the billing department, drowning under a backlog of claims. . there are losses that we will never recover. >> you think united should seriously consider forgiving some of these loans? >> absolutely. i think that's the least they could do. they're going to get all of their dollars back and we're not? why is that okay? >> reporter: the unitedhealth ceo says it's too soon to estimate how many had their data stolen, but called it a substantial proportion of patients, including veterans and members of the u.s. armed forces. and jb, the company has vowed to provide free credit monitoring to anyone impacted. >> more to come. thank you, nicole. we have important information tonight for parents looking into summer camps for their kids, and ways to afford it. that's next.
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>> reporter: for jamie, the countdown to summer is far different than for her kids, ages 4 and 8. the new jersey copywriter depends on camp for child care each summer. >> wait, what? >> reporter: and made this popular tiktok. how much is camp? oh, that's $5,000. $5,000? >> reporter: she says even costs for her neighborhood rec center have become too pricey, with spots snatched up as early as january. >> i've heard of people saying i lost a job because i couldn't afford camp. it's just impossible to maintain and to be able to afford everything else we need to provide. >> reporter: why is it so competitive to get into day camp? >> every parent realizes now how important it is that kids have a summer learning program. >> reporter: tom rosenberg heads the american camp association. how much have costs gone up for camp? >> many industries were impacted by inflation, and camp is no exception. >> reporter: rosenberg says if needed, parents should ask about financial aid, which many camps
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provide, along with payment plans. there is also the child independent care tax credit, which could offset up to $3,000 of summer camp costs per child. this year she is enrolling her son in a science camp, but keeping it mostly to half days throughout the summer. >> seeing him come home and being excited about something and learning something new, that is of course the ultimate goal for my parent. camp can be a huge part of that experience. i just wish that there were more options for everybody. >> reporter: keeping camp a staple of the season for all. nancy chen, cbs news, new york. an unruly air passenger is hit with a big f
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today new york prosecutors asked for a september retrial for harvey weinstein. the disgraced movie mogul was in court today, his first appearance since his rape conviction was overturned last week. weinstein, now 72 years old, had
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been serving a 23-year prison sentence. but an appeals court ruled he did not receive a fair trial. an unruly passenger is paying a hefty price for disrupting a united airlines flight. the 30-year-old british man forced a flight from london to new jersey to be diverted to maine back in march. officials say he threatened a flight attendant after arguing with his girlfriend. a judge ordered him to pay more than $20,000 to the airline. finally, tonight's heart of america sure has people buzzing. a major league baseball game was delayed when a colony of bees was discovered right behind home plate. the diamondbacks, dodgers, and the fans had no choice but to wait for nearly two hours with the announcer asking them to bee patient. enter matt hilton, a professional beekeeper. he sprayed the bees and then vacuumed them up and got a standing ovation. turns out he was at his son's
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t-ball game when he got the call for help. >> i thought i was here to take care of a bee problem. people are pretty hyped up. >> reporter: afterwards, matt got to throw out the first pitch, a high honor indeed. and tops is giving him his own baseball car. can you bee-lieve it? and that's the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings," and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm james brown. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. arizona lawmakers voted wednesday to repeal a civil war era ban on nearly all abortions. the ban, which had been blocked
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by roe v. wade was revived last month in a ruling by the state supreme court. democratic governor katie hobbs says she will sign the bill repealing it today. the united methodist church's general conference voted to lift a ban on lgbtq clergy on wednesday. the conference also prohibited churches from refusing to do same-sex marriages. and walt disney world's epcot will host an exhibit of paintings of veterans done by former president george w. bush. the exhibit will include resources on how to support veterans and their families. for more download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. hundreds of protesters arrested at american universities in the last 24 hours. >> this is the new york city police department. >> crackdowns on college campuses as the new york mayor blames nonstudents for the chaos. >> outside agitators were on their grounds, training and
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really coopting this movement. >> plus violent clashes between duelling protests at ucla. ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> good evening. i'm james brown in for norah. and we begin tonight with the most intense crackdown yet on the pro-palestinian protests on college campuses in the u.s. nypd video released today shows officers in riot gear moving in to arrest people who were barricaded inside a building at columbia university. new york city mayor eric adams is blaming people not affiliated with the ivy league for the mayhem. in manhattan tonight, police are arresting protesters at fordham university's lincoln center campus. students set up an encampment calling on the schools to
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disclose and divest their investments relating to israel. at ucla this afternoon, a more peaceful scene than the brawls that took place overnight between protesters and counter protesters. a spokesperson for california governor gavin newsom calling the campus police response to the violence delayed, limited, and unacceptable. we have a team of correspondents covering the protests coast-to-coast, beginning with cbs' lilia luciano in new york. >> reporter: today, the university of wisconsin in madison became the latest hot spot in clashes between pro-palestinian demonstrators and police. more than two dozen were arrested. >> we notified them that we would begin removing tents and camping equipment, and arrests would happen if protesters turned violent. >> shame on you! >> reporter: the tipping point at columbia university came around 9:00 p.m. with a massive show of force of hundreds of nypd officers.
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the police moved in after university administrators requested help. video released by the nypd shows officers inside the building clearing barricades on multiple floors. piles of chairs were stacked up to block their path. officers were seen using a sledgehammer or a power saw to open locked doors. the tent encampment that has been the epicenter and symbol of protests for weeks was cleared. more than 300 people were arrested between columbia university and city college last night. their faculty members denounced the crackdown. >> i'm just devastated that this is happening to every single campus in this country. we're letting the military in. we're letting the police in. these are just students. >> reporter: today new york city mayor eric adams praised the university for making what he called the right call to end the protests, which he says was coopted by professional agitators. >> there is a movement to radicalize young people. and i'm note going to wait until
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it's done. >> reporter: the department claims a video it released shows one of those activists directing students to use a table to block the doors at hamilton hall. what's your response to when people say they're there or they're escalating the protests because of outsiders? >> they use that to try the justify the violence that the police unleashed on us. this was organized by students. >> reporter: carter evans is at ucla. >> a violent clash at the heart of ucla's campus as pro israel protesters attacked pro-palestinian demonstrators who had set up encampments. the attackers used chemical spray and set off fireworks. the confrontation raged for nearly two hours as police stood by before finally moving in. >> we were literally assaulted. the university knew about it. >> reporter: police pushed out counterprotesters, but did not enter the encampment, which for now is still intact. all classes today canceled. >> back here at columbia, only the footprints remained of the tent encampment that was the
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epicenter and symbol of campus protests for the last two weeks. there was another smaller protest outside here involving students and faculty members. they were denouncing the involvement of nypd and more are expected uptown in the coming hours. meanwhile, the university's vice president called the occupation of hamilton hall acts of destruction, not political speech. jb? >> lilia, thank you so much. now two major developments tonight on the fight over abortion rights in america. a six-week ban on the procedure just went into effect in florida today. and in arizona, the legislature voted to repeal the civil war era ban on nearly all abortions. here is cbs' caitlin huey-burns. >> the consequences are profound. >> reporter: hours before florida's six-week abortion ban took effect, jacksonville doctor shelly tien rushed to see as many patients as she could. >> six weeks is very, very early in pregnancy. it's two weeks past a missed period.
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most women and girls don't even realize that they are pregnant. >> reporter: florida had been a refuge for patients seeking abortions in the south. now the state joins 12 others in the region with total or near total bans. starting today, the closest options for the procedure are north carolina or virginia. >> it's a victory for babies. it's a victory for women. >> reporter: state republican house member dean black voted for the six-week ban, which includes exceptions for rape, incest, fatal fetal abnormalities, and the life of the mother. >> we think we have a good law, a compassionate law, a moral law. it can serve as a guide for other states. >> reporter: today, vice president kamala harris campaigned in jacksonville where she blamed former president trump for the new law. >> as of this morning, four million women in this state woke up with fewer reproductive freedoms than they had last night.
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>> reporter: trump, a florida resident, has criticized his state's six-week ban, but he % said this today while campaigning in wisconsin. >> it's up to the state. they'll ask me a question about, i say that's up to the state. >> you have passed house bill house bill 2677. >> reporter: in arizona today, state senators decided whether to keep their state's near total abortion ban. cbs' janet shamlian was on the floor during the vote. >> here in arizona at the capitol, lawmakers today rose one by one to defend their vote, whether to keep or repeal the state's civil war era abortion ban. it passed, and the state's democratic governor says she will sign it. >> it's been a pretty bad day in my mind. >> reporter: two republican senators voted with democrats to ensure its passage, frustrating fellow republicans. >> they and i disagree. >> reporter: outside in the heat, tempers flared. anti-abortion activists gathered, showing their disapproval.
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>> yeah devastation. it's the lives that god has created. >> reporter: it's now likely arizona will be under a near total abortion ban for months this summer, until the law returns to a 15-week ban. >> back here in florida, clinics have already started turning away patients. >> and in november, voters in florida and arizona will decide whether to enshrine abortion rights into their state's constitution. but here in florida, that's an uphill climb. it will need 60% to pass, which is more than what was needed when it was on the ballot in other swing or red states. jb? >> thank you, caitlin. there is a lot more news there is a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight [stomach growling] it's nothing... sounds like something. ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion♪ ♪upset stomach, diarrhea♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief when you need it most. sometimes jonah wrestles with falling asleep... ...so he takes zzzquil. the world's #1 sleep aid brand.
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washington. thanks for staying with us. the fbi is warning that criminal gangs overseas are taking aim at america's senior, and they're doing it online. more than 100,000 seniors were victimized last year by elder fraud, with total losses now reaching $28 billion a year? nicole sganga has some advice on how you can protect your life savings. >> all of the sudden -- >> reporter: reverend malcolm fraser was browsing his computer when the screen froze. >> a message jumped out. it said "do not turn off your computer. please call this number." >> reporter: a scammer persuaded him to transfer tens of thousands of dollars in savings or lose it all. >> you thought you were talking to the bank, and you were talking to a scammer? >> exactly. >> reporter: it's called elder fraud crime, and americans over the age of 60 are now falling victim at record numbers. >> financial fraud is definitely on the rise, and particularly targeting our elderly population. >> reporter: last year, $3.4 billion was stolen, according to
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a newly released fbi report, with more than 100,000 complaints filed to federal law enforcement last year alone. driven by criminal networks operating in west africa and asia. >> organized networks of individuals who are well-financed, well resourced and are using technology. >> reporter: still, experts say the crime targeting seniors is grossly underreported. aarp estimates more than $28 billion is stolen due to elder fraud scams each year. they're now launching a public awareness campaign nationwide, as the fbi visits senior center, church, and rotely clubs. >> if you have never met anybody in person, the best advice is not send them any money. >> reporter: convincing the members of america's silent generation to stay vigilant and speak out. >> don't fall for it. hang the phone up. >> reporter: fbi officials are also urging financial institutions to create more guardrails, fraud prevention
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measures, that would help stop seniors from transferring large sums of money to strangers. nicole sganga, cbs news, washington. another internet scandal preys on those looking for love. they're called romance scams. many of them originate in those online dating platforms, but they can have devastating effects in the real world. jim axelrod continues his investigation of this billion crimewave. >> i never thought that this could happen to our family. >> reporter: when kelly gow's widowed mother laura went on match.com, she eventually was scammed out of a million and a half. laura's life would end at 57, her body found in the mississippi river. >> we are constantly changing our tails. >> reporter: david parish is the sheriff in louis county, missouri, where laura's body was discovered. >> online romance scams are a scourge. we deal with it every other week. >> reporter: but like law
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enforcement in small towns across america, the sheriff says he doesn't have the resources to fully investigate these online scam cases, even when a body washes ashore. >> we are always behind the eight ball on this. >> reporter: but it's not just sheriff parrish who is frustrated. >> it's a substantial problem, and it's one that's rapidly accelerating. >> reporter: a justice department department official in washington overseeing romance scam cases says his main challenge is that the scammers are far away. the fbi has participated in operations in the west african nations of nigeria and ghana. rau traveled there last fall. >> we were shown video of scammers using artificial intelligence enhanced technology. so it appeared to the victim that they were speaking to another american citizen. >> reporter: chilling as you're describing it. >> it is chilling, and it also makes it challenging for law
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enforcement to intervene. >> reporter: but this former scammer who spoke to us from the west african country of ghana offers a key insight into combatting these crimes. >> you cannot do nothing without the online dating site. >> reporter: you need the online dating platforms? >> definitely, definitely. >> reporter: a 2019 federal trade commission lawsuit alleged that between 2013 and 2018, as many as 25 to 30% of match.com members who register each day were using match.com to perpetrator scams. in a statement, match group told us we believe the ftc allegations have no merit. >> how you? >> good. jim axelrod from cbs news. >> reporter: after six months of asking for an interview, we finally approach bernard kim, the ceo of match group, which operates at least a dozen dating platforms, including hinge, ok cupid, and teinder. >> we talk to scammers in africa. they say there is no issue, no problem setting up fake
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profiles. >> if you look at our community standards, our guidelines, we've reshifted the way we address people that can come into our platforms. we're working really, really hard every single day to make sure people. >> reporter: match told us they remove 96% of improper accounts within a day and use human and ai moderators to remove bad actors. to your customers that have lost a lot of money, hundreds of thousands, sometimes million, life savings, or the relatives of people that have even lost their lives, what do you have to say to them? >> look, i mean, things happen in life. that's really difficult. i have tremendous amount of empathy for things that happen, but our job is to keep people safe on our platforms. that is foremost, the most important thing to us. >> reporter: one more note about the match group. last month they announced a new head of trust and safety, that's the corporate office spond responsible for security.
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>> that's jim ax. record reporting. . working parents from coast-to-coast are struggling to pay for those who watch their kids. meanwhile, child care centers say they've been forced to charge more after federal funding was cut last year. nikole killion has the details. >> reporter: klora hoppy was about to close her center. >> you went from thousands. >> down to nothing. which is terrifying. >> reporter: the center burned through its savings after hitting the child care clip last fall, when $24 billion in federal pandemic related subsidies expired in congress. what has the impact been on your center? >> devastating. we went from 90 employees down to 70. and we had to make cuts ever everywhere. >> reporter: she used the federal money the upgrade equipment and give raises to staff like linnea walker, who at one point was homeless. you were working here at the
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center. >> yes. >> reporter: but also homeless. >> yes. i'm taking care of other people's kids and i was feeling very inadequate because i felt i couldn't afford the bear essentials for my children. i think that's a reason why a lot of people leave the field. we can't afford to live. >> last year i paid $32,000 for my pay cher. it is more than my mortgage, for sure. >> reporter: jenna has endured tuition hikes and worried she'd have to quit her job if the center closed. >> say the center and i have my husband. and that's it. >> reporter: one study finds 55% of child care operators know of at least one program that has recently closed. >> our worst fears have been realized that there are now fewer providers able to provide care for families. >> reporter: while congress approved $1 billion in child care assistance this year, the biden administration has called for $16 billion to stabilize the sector. the only way she could keep her doors open was to beg her local
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city for help. >> we need a fully funded system so we can support children's development and our economy. if parents and guardians have a safe place to drop off their children, they will be more productive at work. >> reporter: for her, it's about investing in the future. nikole killion, cbs news, rochester, new hampshire. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. ♪♪
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think for centuries. >> reporter: sam holden, originally from colorado, led the renovation of an old bath house in his tokyo neighborhood. including the repainting of a traditional mural of mount fuji. >> there is three crafts people now days in tokyo who can still paint these paintings. two of them are in their 70s or 80s. >> reporter: oh, my. >> reporter: so. >> so it's really a diesing craft. >> reporter: for rich and poor alike, they were key to hygiene, of course, but also the focus of community. and to this day, there is at least one sento tucked into virtually every tokyo neighborhood. >> if you have to go to a place every day to wash yourself. >> reporter: and get naked. >> and get naked, you're going get to know your neighbors. and also on the way to the bath house and on the way home, you're going to be stopping by the local grocer or fishmonger or your local bar.
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that's the very life of traditional sort of japanese neighborhoods. >> reporter: as late as the 1950, half of tokyo apartments had no baths or showers. some of those apartments still exist. and arata naguchi lives in one of them. it's cheap, about $300 a month, minimalist and compact, and has a very minimalist washroom, which means naguchi is a regular at the local baths. "i stop in on the way home every day" he tells me. bathing helps me to switch gears after work. >> reporter: there is a ritual to the sento, first, a rich scrub all over to get squeaky clean in the bath. and then the utter bliss of unwinding with a hot soak and sometimes a chat. but thanks to indoor plumbing, tokyo public bath owners have been pulling the plug. more than 400 sentos have closed
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since 2006. but the family that owns this one is the exception. right in the heart of tokyo's luxury shopping district, they're opening a new branch in a swanky shopping center with all the traditional fittings. and sam holden dares to hope we're now watching a sento revival. >> i think isolation is increasingly seen as a social problem in japan and big cities like tokyo, both for elderly people and young people. >> reporter: so the bath house is the perfect solution? >> exactly. and it's sort of sitting right in front of everybody's eyes. it's nothing new. >> reporter: the restorative power of hot water is as old as the city itself. liz neeley: you know, you've probably heard it said that some people have to hit rock bottom before they really come to the lord and give him their life. and that's what happened. i probably had a lot of anxiety at that point about my future, but as i began to study the word and a lot of dr. stanley's
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teachings and sermons, i began to realize that, through the love of jesus, god saved me for a purpose.
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- it's so fun to watch jessica in this space. - this is a look at those clouds right now in real-time, but let's head underneath this cloud layer and take a look at our rainfall... - [narrator] the virtual view studio, part of "morning edition." weekday mornings starting at 5 on kpix. the newest waitress at a california restaurant is the talk of the town. rosy the robot. >> reporter: at the cajun cracking seafood restaurant
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southwest of san francisco, something is cooking, and not just in the kitchen. >> we walked in and saw them moving around. it was very exciting to see. >> i am leaving for delivery. >> reporter: meet rosie the robot. she's been working here for the last two months now, and she's already a favorite among customers. >> rosie is cute. i like rosie. >> reporter: very futuristic. >> that's kind of crazy. >> reporter: waitress michelle magano says from the moment rosie was powered up -- >> i am leaving for delivery. >> reporter: not only has the service gotten better so have the tips. >> people are excited to see her. a lot of my customers call her by rosie now. >> reporter: rosie delivers food, picks up dirty dishes. she can't actually take orders, at least not yet. >> i am rosie. >> reporter: the best part, she is never sick, she is always on time, and for the most part, doesn't have an attitude. >> the meal you ordered has arrived. >> reporter: seen as a solution to the industry's labor
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shortage, server robots are becoming increasingly popular, with tens of thousands gliding through restaurants across the nation. >> now leave me alone. i have work to do. >> reporter: itai, had, cbs news, concord, california. and that's the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings," and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm olivia gazis. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. arizona lawmakers voted wednesday to repeal a civil war era ban on nearly all abortions. the ban, which had been blocked by roe v. wade was revived last
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month in a ruling by the state supreme court. democratic governor katie hobbs says she will sign the bill repealing it today. the united methodist church's general conference voted to lift a ban on lgbtq clergy on wednesday. the conference also prohibited churches from refusing to do same-sex marriages. and walt disney world's epcot will host an exhibit of paintings of veterans done by former president george w. bush. the exhibit will include resources on how to support veterans and their families. for more download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanel kaul, cbs news, new york. hundreds of protesters arrested at american universities in the last 24 hours. >> this is the new york city police department. >> crackdowns on college campuses as the new york mayor blames nonstudents for the chaos. >> outside agitators were on their grounds, training and
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really coopting this movement. >> plus violent clashes between duelling protests at ucla. ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> good evening. i'm james brown in for norah. and we begin tonight with the most intense crackdown yet on the pro-palestinian protests on college campuses in the u.s. nypd video released today shows officers in riot gear moving in to arrest people who were barricaded inside a building at columbia university. new york city mayor eric adams is blaming people not affiliated with the ivy league for the mayhem. in manhattan tonight, police are arresting protesters at fordham university's lincoln center campus. students set up an encampment calling on the schools to
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disclose and divest their investments relating to israel. at ucla this afternoon, a more peaceful scene than the brawls that took place overnight between protesters and counter protesters. a spokesperson for california governor gavin newsom calling the campus police response to the violence delayed, limited, and unacceptable. we have a team of correspondents covering the protests coast-to-coast, beginning with cbs' lilia luciano in new york. >> reporter: today, the university of wisconsin in madison became the latest hot spot in clashes between pro-palestinian demonstrators and police. more than two dozen were arrested. >> we notified them that we would begin removing tents and camping equipment, and arrests would happen if protesters turned violent. >> shame on you! >> reporter: the tipping point at columbia university came around 9:00 p.m. with a massive show of force of hundreds of nypd officers.
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the police moved in after university administrators requested help. video released by the nypd shows officers inside the building clearing barricades on multiple floors. piles of chairs were stacked up to block their path. officers were seen using a sledgehammer or a power saw to open locked doors. the tent encampment that has been the epicenter and symbol of protests for weeks was cleared. more than 300 people were arrested between columbia university and city college last night. their faculty members denounced the crackdown. >> i'm just devastated that this is happening to every single campus in this country. we're letting the military in. we're letting the police in. these are just students. >> reporter: today new york city mayor eric adams praised the university for making what he called the right call to end the protests, which he says was coopted by professional agitators. >> there is a movement to radicalize young people.
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and i'm note going to wait until it's done. >> reporter: the department claims a video it released shows one of those activists directing students to use a table to block the doors at hamilton hall. what's your response to when people say they're there or they're escalating the protests because of outsiders? >> they use that to try the to justify the violence that the police unleashed on us. this was organized by students. >> reporter: carter evans is at ucla. >> a violent clash at the heart of ucla's campus as pro israel protesters attacked pro-palestinian demonstrators who had set up encampments. the attackers used chemical spray and set off fireworks. the confrontation raged for nearly two hours as police stood by before finally moving in. >> we were literally assaulted. the university knew about it. >> reporter: police pushed out counter protesters, but did not enter the encampment, which for now is still intact. all classes today canceled. >> back here at columbia, only the footprints remained of the tent encampment that was the epicenter and symbol of campus
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protests for the last two weeks. there was another smaller protest outside here involving students and faculty members. they were denouncing the involvement of nypd and more are expected uptown in the coming hours. meanwhile, the university's vice president called the occupation of hamilton hall acts of destruction, not political speech. jb? >> lilia, thank you so much. now two major developments today on the fight over abortion rights in america. a six-week ban on the procedure just went into effect in florida today. and in arizona, the legislature voted to repeal the civil war era ban on nearly all abortions. here is cbs' caitlin huey-burns. >> the consequences are profound. >> reporter: hours before florida's six-week abortion ban took effect, jacksonville doctor shelly tien rushed to see as many patients as she could. >> six weeks is very, very early in pregnancy. it's two weeks past a missed period.
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most women and girls don't even realize that they are pregnant. >> reporter: florida had been a refuge for patients seeking abortions in the south. now the state joins 12 others in the region with total or near total bans. starting today, the closest options for the procedure are north carolina or virginia. >> it's a victory for babies. it's a victory for women. >> reporter: state republican house member dean black voted for the six-week ban, which includes exceptions for rape, incest, fatal fetal abnormalities, and the life of the mother. >> we think we have a good law, a compassionate law, a moral law. it can serve as a guide for other states. >> reporter: today, vice president kamala harris campaigned in jacksonville where she blamed former president trump for the new law. >> as of this morning, four million women in this state woke up with fewer reproductive freedoms than they had last night.
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>> reporter: trump, a florida resident, has criticized his state's six-week ban, but he said this today while campaigning in wisconsin. >> it's up to the state. they'll ask me a question about, i say that's up to the state. >> you have passed house bill house bill 2677. >> reporter: in arizona today, state senators decided whether to keep their state's near total abortion ban. cbs' janet shamlian was on the floor during the vote. >> here in arizona at the capitol, lawmakers today rose one by one to defend their vote, whether to keep or repeal the state's civil war era abortion ban. it passed, and the state's democratic governor says she will sign it. >> it's been a pretty bad day in my mind. >> reporter: two republican senators voted with democrats to ensure its passage, frustrating fellow republicans. >> they and i disagree. >> reporter: outside in the heat, tempers flared. anti-abortion activists gathered, showing their
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disapproval. >> yeah devastation. it's the lives that god has created. >> reporter: it's now likely arizona will be under a near total abortion ban for months this summer, until the law returns to a 15-week ban. >> back here in florida, clinics have already started turning away patients. >> and in november, voters in florida and arizona will decide whether to enshrine abortion rights into their state's constitution. but here in florida, that's an uphill climb. it will need 60% to pass, which is more than what was needed when it was on the ballot in other swing or red states. jb? >> thank you, caitlin. there is a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnigh news."
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♪ this is the "cbs overnight news." >> we turn now to the terrifying scene today at a middle school outside madison, wisconsin.
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a witness reporting the sound of gunshots as children ran for safety. an apparent school shooting threat now over. cbs' charlie de mar is there. >> reporter: panic at mount horeb middle school. >> reports of shots fired at the school. >> reporter: shortly after 11:00 a.m., school officials posting on social media, "an active shooter appeared on the school's campus." the count's emergency management saying the suspect had a rifle, but that suspect never made into it the building. the district later posting the alleged assailant had been, quote, neutralized. that post has since been deleted. the suspect has yet to be identified. no students or staffers were physically harmed. it was also frightening for parents left with little information and the entire campus on lockdown. >> my biggest fear kind of felt like it was unfolding. >> reporter: kristen malone waited frantically as law enforcement searched for possible additional suspects. malone's 11-year-old daughter called her on the phone to tell her she loved her. >> i was able the talk to my daughter just a couple of minutes ago.
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but i still want to be able to touch them and hug them. i know they're all pretty scared. when my daughter first called me before they were released from the school, and it was just screaming and chaos in the background. >> reporter: and hours after this terrifying incident, as you can see, there is still a large police presence here. and for much of the day, school officials have been working to reunite these students with their families. jb? >> charlie, thank you. tonight, the central u.s. is bracing for another wave of severe storms with the threat of tornadoes, powerful wind gusts, large hail, and flash floods. this comes on the heels of a tornado that killed one person and injured three others in the small town of westmoreland, kansas on tuesday. nearly two dozen homes were destroyed. let's get the forecast from meteorologist chris warren with our partners at the weather channel. good evening, chris. >> good evening, jb. we are tracking multiple threats across the southern plains this evening in terms of severe weather. that does include a tornado
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threat, a tor:con 3 out of 10. if there is a number, there is a threat for tornadoes. also, another threat very large hail could see golf ball-sized hail, possibly even isolated areas with baseball-sized hail. and then the rain, which ultimately by morning could end up being one of the bigger threats. heavy rain developing here across texas and oklahoma will lead to rivers continuing to rise. some already in flood stage. but it is that flood threat, jb, that's not just possible, the flash flood threat, but likely for some areas to be waking up in the morning here in texas with flash flooding ongoing. >> wow, what a challenge. thank you so very much. secretary of state antony blinken was back in israel today for the seventh time since the war with hamas began last october. blinken is pushing hard for a stop to the fighting, but cbs' ramy inocencio reports from tel aviv progress on a deal seems out of reach.
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>> reporter: handshakes and smiles aside, in the quest for a ceasefire with hamas, secretary of state antony blinken shot down israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's plan for a final gaza invasion. >> we cannot, will not support a major military operation in rafah absent an effective plan to make sure that civilians are not harmed. >> reporter: but a netanyahu adviser confirms to cbs news the prime minister is not backing down from his plan to attack rafah. >> thank you, biden. >> thank you, biden! >> reporter: a more receptive welcome came from families of hostages, pleading for a ceasefire to get all hostages home. >> i feel like i'm broken up into pieces. >> reporter: for aviva siegel, her american husband keith is one of them. this proof of life video released just days ago. >> and i know that keith has had enough. my family has had enough. my country's had enough. >> reporter: aviva herself was a hostage, released after 51 days.
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she, her daughter and families of other american hostages had a face-to-face with blinken. >> what was the feeling? >> really grateful for the what the united states has been doing since october 7th. >> reporter: another sticking point to a ceasefire, aid to gaza. the u.n. warns of impending famine. blinken tour ed routes being ramped up and called for more. >> it needs to be accelerated. it needs to be sustained. >> reporter: and for the first time, aid started throwing a reopened border crossing destroyed on october 7th. as gazans rally to thank u.s. university students for their protest and solidarity. and antony blinken left the region a few hours ago back to washington. israel hasn't confirmed it will send a delegation to any ceasefire talks. hamas still hasn't replied to israel's proposal. jb? >> thank you, ramy. stubborn inflation continues to be a top concern for the federal reserve. today the central bank kept
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interest rates right where they are, at their highest level in more than two decades, hoping to stabilize prices. chair jerome powell did signal it's unlikely the fed would raise interest rates, and the dow closed higher on that news. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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insurance payments to hospitals, pharmacies and medical practices. >> i will not rest until we fix this. >> reporter: witty today issued this apology. >> i'm deeply, deeply sorry. >> reporter: and revealed the company paid a $22 million ransom to russian-linked cyber criminals who broke into change health care on february 12th, using stolen credentials, breaching a server not equipped with multifactor authentication, compromising sensitive health care data. >> ten weeks is way too long for millions of americans to not know that their records may be available to criminals on the dark web. >> reporter: unitedhealth says payment systems are mostly up and running, and they've issued $6.5 billion in assistance loans. but physicians like dr. christine meyer of exton, pennsylvania who first spoke with cbs news in march say it's not enough. >> let me first off apologize to dr. meyer. >> reporter: her practice now forced to divert patient resources to the billing
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department, drowning under a backlog of claims. there are losses that we will never recover. >> you think united should seriously consider forgiving some of these loans? >> absolutely. i think that's the least they could do. they're going to get all of their dollars back and we're not? why is that okay? >> reporter: the unitedhealth ceo says it's too soon to estimate how many had their data stolen, but called it a substantial proportion of patients, including veterans and members of the u.s. armed forces. and jb, the company has vowed to provide free credit monitoring to anyone impacted. >> more to come. thank you, nicole. we have important information tonight for parents looking into summer camps for their kids, and ways to afford it. that's next.
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different than for her kids, ages 4 and 8. the new jersey copywriter depends on camp for child care each summer. >> wait, what? >> reporter: and made this popular tiktok. how much is camp? oh, that's $5,000. $5,000? >> reporter: aderski says even costs for her neighborhood rec center have been too pricey, with spots snatched up as early as january. >> i've heard of people saying i lost a job because i couldn't afford camp. it's just impossible to maintain and to be able to afford everything else we need to provide. >> reporter: why is it so competitive to get into day camp? >> every parent realizes now how important it is that kids have a summer learning program. >> reporter: tom rosenberg heads the american camp association. how much have costs gone up for camp? >> many industries were impacted by inflation, and camp is no exception. >> reporter: rosenberg says if needed, parents should ask about financial aid, which many camps provide, along with payment plans. there is also the child
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independent care tax credit, which could offset up to $3,000 of summer camp costs per child. this year aderski says she is enrolling her son in a science camp, but keeping it mostly to half days throughout the summer. >> seeing him come home and beng excited about something and learning something new, that is of course the ultimate goal for my parent. camp can be a huge part of that experience. i just wish that there were more options for everybody. >> reporter: keeping camp a staple of the season for all. nancy chen, cbs news, new york. an unruly air passenger is hit with a big fine for disrupting a flight. we'll have the details next. pain means pause on the things you love, but... green... means... go!
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today new york prosecutors asked for a september retrial for harvey weinstein. the disgraced movie mogul was in court today, his first appearance since his rape conviction was overturned last week. weinstein, now 72 years old, had been serving a 23-year prison sentence.
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but an appeals court ruled he did not receive a fair trial. an unruly passenger is paying a hefty price for disrupting a united airlines flight. the 30-year-old british man forced a flight from london to new jersey to be diverted to maine back in march. officials say he threatened a flight attendant after arguing with his girlfriend. a judge ordered him to pay more than $20,000 to the airline. finally, tonight's heart of america sure has people buzzing. a major league baseball game was delayed when a colony of bees was discovered right behind home plate. the diamondbacks, dodgers, and the fans had no choice but to wait for nearly two hours with the announcer asking them to bee patient. enter matt hilton, a professional beekeeper. he sprayed the bees and then vacuumed them up and got a standing ovation. turns out he was at his son's t-ball game when he got the call for help. >> i thought i was here to take
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care of a bee problem. people are pretty hyped up. >> reporter: afterwards, matt got to throw out the first pitch, a high honor indeed. and tops is giving him his own baseball card. can you bee-lieve it? matt hilton, part of tonight's america. and that's the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings," and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the nation's capital, i'm james brown. this is cbs news flash. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. arizona lawmakers voted wednesday to repeal a civil war era ban on nearly all abortions. the ban, which had been blocked by roe v. wade was revived last
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month in a ruling by the state supreme court. democratic governor katie hobbs says she will sign the bill repealing it today. the united methodist church's general conference voted to lift a ban on lgbtq clergy on wednesday. the conference also prohibited churches from refusing to do same-sex marriages. and walt disney world's epcot will host an exhibit of paintings of veterans done by former president george w. bush. the exhibit will include resources on how to support veterans and their families. for more download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm shanelle kaul, cbs news, new york. it's thursday, may 2nd, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." campus crackdown. clashes and standoffs. police facing off against pro-palestinian protesters as american colleges try to get

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