Transcripts For KYW CBS Evening News 20171120

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this is the "cbs evening news." >> mason: good evening. i'm anthony mason. a manhunt is on for whoever ambushed two u.s. border patrol agents over the weekend at the mexican border, leaving one dead, his partner injured. the attack brought a new call from president trump for a border wall. here's david begnaud. >> reporter: f.b.i. and border patrol agents have scoured the rocky desert terrain by foot and air looking for evidence after what's being called an attack. it was around 11:00 saturday night. border patrol agent rogelio martinez went out to investigate an alarm triggered by a lround censor. martinez called for back-up when he determined it was setoff by human movement. according to the national border patrol council, it appears he may have been ambushed and attacked with rocks. a second agent arrived to find martinez unconscious, bleeding from the head. that second agent radioed for back-up. both agents were then discovered with serious head injuries. both possibly victims of a stoning. martinez, who has been a border patrol agent for just four years, died from his injuries. his partner, whose name has not yet been released, is now in stable condition at university medical center in el paso. art del cuerto is vice president of the national border patrol council. >> everything that the agents are telling us that were there on scene is that it is consistent with having been assaulted with possibly rocks. >> reporter: this incident has renewed calls for tougher border patrol. president trump tweeted, "border patrolling officer killed at southern border. another badly hurt. we will seek out and bring justice to those responsible. we will and must build the wall." here at the hospital, the surviving agent apparently doesn't have any memory about what happened. now, all possibleilities are being explored, including accidental. here's why: there was an e-mail circulated within the border patrol yesterday stating it is unclear whether or not the two men were attacked or whether they were injured after falling into a ravine. anthony? >> mason: david begnaud in el paso. thanks, david. the wave of sexual abuse allegations we've been reporting from hollywood to washington has now touched cbs news. late today cbs suspended correspondent charlie rose after the "washington post" reported that eight women associated with his pbs program are accusing him of sexual harassment. rose apologized in a statement to the post. more now from jim axelrod. >> reporter: the eight women according to the "washington post" were either employees of the charlie rose show from the late 1990s to 2011 or aspired to work for him there. rose, suspended late today by cbs news, is 75. he co-hosts "cbs this morning" and has been a contributing correspondent for "60 minutes" for nearly a decade. >> the bureau is also expanding its presence overseas. >> reporter: the women who worked for the post worked for charlie rose inc., not cbs or pbs, where his interview air, or bloomberg, where it's taped and rebroadcast. the allegations in the "washington post" article include rose making unwanted sexual advances in the form of lewd phone calls, groping, and walking around naked in front of the women. five described rose, who time mag -- magazine named one of its 100 most thriewnial people, putting his hand on their leg to test the reaction. two said while working for him at his home or while traveling on business with him, he came out of the shower, walking naked in front of them. rose told the post in a statement, "i deeply apologize for my inappropriate behavior. i am greatly embarrassed. i have behaved insensitively at time, and i accept responsibility for that, though i do not believe that all of these allegations are accurate." in a statement cbs news said, "charlie rose is suspended immediately while we look into this matter. these allegations are extremely disturbing and we take them seriously." in addition, this evening pbs and bloomberg suspended distribution of his program. anthony? >> mason: jim axelrod, thanks. now to the sexual assault accusations against roy moore, the republican senate candidate in alabama. three weeks before the special election, accusers continue to speak out. dean reynolds is in birmingham. >> reporter: for days roy moore has avoided questions while his accusers are answering them. often in painful detail. >> he basically laid out some blankets on the floor of his living room and proceeded to... seduce me i guess you would say. >> reporter: leah corfman was 14 in 1979 when she says moore, then 32, sexually abused her in his apartment. >> he removed my clothing. he left the room and came back in wearing his white underwear, and he touched me over my clothing, what was left of it. and he tried to get me to touch him, as well. >> reporter: gina johnson was 28 in 1991 when she says moore, then 44, made a move in his law office. >> we got up to leave, and when we did, my mother went first and he grabbed he from behind. it was horrible. i felt uncomfortable. >> reporter: moore denies the charge, but these stories, plus his worldview, prompted alabama's leading newspapers to come out against him. michelle holmes is on the editorial board. >> his view is radically out of step with everyday alabama. don't let people fool you in thinking that that's what we in alabama believe, because we don't. >> reporter: in washington, the president remained mum on moore. do you believe roy moore's accusers, mr. president? >> thank you very much. >> reporter: but mr. trump's adviser kellyanne conway suggested having moore's vote in the senate outweighs his possible indiscretion? >> so vote roy moore? >> i'm telling you we want the votes in the senate to get this tax bill through. >> reporter: aides say that the president, who once called moore a really great guy who ran a fantastic primary race has no plans to come down here to alabama to campaign with him now. anthony? dean reynolds in birmingham tonight. thanks, dean. cbs news has learned special counsel robert mueller will soon interview top-level white house officials as part of his investigation into russian interference in the u.s. election. jeff pegues meanwhile has new details about members of the trump family who met with russians during the campaign. >> reporter: alexander torshin is a kremlin insider. as the deputy head of russia's central bank, he has ties to russian president vladimir putin and reportedly has links to organized crime, which is why his meeting in may 2016 with donald trump, jr., during the height of the presidential campaign has gotten the attention of congressional investigators. the two men were introduced during a dinner at national rifle association conference in louisville, kentucky, according to a source trump, jr., and torshin discussed a mutual interest in firearms. the source did not recall if the campaign ever came up. in a statement, alan futerfas, the attorney representing the president's son, said they made small talk for a few minutes and went back the their separate meals. ron hosko is a former assistant director foiive and says meetings like this are typical of intelligence operations. >> the art of getting close to someone is i give you opportunities, but i don't make you uncomfortable, and i don't have you push me away. >> reporter: torshin made overtures to the trump campaign before. through an intermediary urge a request for a meeting with candidate trump made its way to top campaign officials, including trump's son-in-law, jared kushner. sources say kushner recommended against the meeting, but less than three weeks after the n.r.a. event, beth donald -- boh donald trump, jr., and the president met. trump, jr., had been promised drirt on hillary clinton that. meeting is now a key focus in special council robert mueller's investigation into russian meddling in the election. the special counsel's office has also been examining the firing of f.b.i. director james comey and whether anyone, including the president, obstructed justice. it has asked the justice department to hand over documents rer taken to the firing, as well as the attorney general's decision to recuse himself from the russia investigation. anthony? >> mason: jeff pegues. thanks, jeff. president trump today called north korea's government a murderous regime and said he's designating it a state sponsor of terrorism. margaret warner is at the white house. margaret, what does this designation mean exactly? >> well, president trump said putting north korea on the terror black list will make it more available to the u.s. to put more sanctions on what is already the world's most-sanctioned regime. secretary of state rex tillerson acknowledged it's largely symbolic but said it will make pyongyang. it puts north korea on the same list as sudan, but also syria and iran, countries that have supported terrorist groups. today's action, though, has no direct link to north korea's nuclear program, and the administration noted kim jong-un has not launched a test missile in more than 60 days. that's one reason why the secretary of state said today that president trump's offer to negotiate, which he made during that recent trip to asia, still stands. anthony? >> mason: margaret warner at the white house. thanks, margaret. the u.s. justice department today filed a lawsuit to stop at&t from buying time warner. the government claims cable bills would skyrocket if the deal goes through because at&t would be able to charge rival distributors much more to carry time warner channels. at&t said essentially see you in court. a search vessel detected sounds today that may be coming from an argentine submarine that went missing in the atlantic five days ago. 44 crew members are on board, more than a dozen international ships, some from the u.s., are searching for the submarine. stormy weather is hindering that effort. the argentine navy said the subcould run out of oxygen in two more days. maybe it was that look in charles manson's eyes that convinced people to murder in his name. the late vincent bugliosi, who prosecuted and later wrote about manson, called him a metaphor for pure evil. manson died yesterday after spending nearly half a century in prison. he was 83. here's john blackstone. >> reporter: in his most recent prison mugshot, charles manson looked every bit the crazed killer who shocked and mesmerized america in the late 1960s. he led a cult that became known as the manson family, casting a spell over followers with the kind of word games on display in a 1986 prison interview. >> i'm inside of you, man. i'm inside of you. i'm inside every one of you. >> reporter: in 1969, on manson's orders, cult members committed seven savage murders in southern california. >> if you're afraid of me, there's something wrong with you. >> he's gone, but there are still three people that went into our home that murdered my grandfather and his wife. >> reporter: tony lamontagne's grand fore, leno labianca and his wife rosemary were killed by three manson followers who are still in prison. >> you lay in bed at night running through what was it like, you know, what happened, what was going through my grandfather's mind? >> reporter: the most famous manson victim was actress sharon tate, the 26-year-old pregnant wife of director roman polanski. manson hoped the murders would start an apocalyptic race war. instead they helped launch the victims' rights movement. >> what mercy, sir, did you show my daughter when she was begging for her life? >> reporter: when sharon tate's mother doris spoke at a parole hearing in 1984, it was the first-ever victim impact statement in california. she was addressing charles watson, one of the manson family killers. >> what about my family? when will she come up from parole? when will i come up for parole? can you tell me that? >> reporter: over the years the families of other manson victims have fought at every parole hearing to keep the three remaining killers in prison. manson's death won't change that. john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. >> mason: and coming up next on the "cbs evening news," if they can make it there, they'll make it anywhere, but is new york ready for driverless cars? 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absolutely. ask your doctor about jardiance. and get to the heart of what matters. >> mason: uber said today it plans to drive as many as 24,000 self-driving cars from volvo beginning in less than two years, and new york's governor wants the bring derless cars to the big apple even sooner, but is the city ready? here's transportation correspondent kris van cleave. [horn honking] >> reporter: mix millions of cars, pedestrian, bicyclists, delivery trucks, and you get manhattan driving. at its best, unpredictable, at worst chaos. [horn honking] for today's self-driving cars, that mixture might be too much. >> so this cop is flagging traffic here. right now that would confuse the current generation of the self-driving car? >> yes. we're not there yet, because the brain isn't advanced to be able toes unwhat that person is saying. >> reporter: we drove the city streets with brad stertz from audi. he's been working on autonomous driving technology for over a decade. >> so would the self-driving car of the future be able to predict that car would swing out into my lane? >> probably not predict, but you would have seen him edge over and start to back off. >> reporter: stirts thinks it could be 2035 before you see the vehicles in the city, but mayor bill deplaza owe says not so fast. >> i don't like it. i think it's a mistake. i think it creates a danger. >> reporter: self-driving cars use censors to detect their surroundings and are programmed to follow traffic law, but a dense city environment might overwhelm the current technology. >> if it weren't for human, autonomous vehicles would work perfectly. >> reporter: sam schwartz is a former new york city traffic commissioner. >> two things autonomous vehicles have not figured out yet is what a pedestrian is about to do and what are bicycle riders about to do. >> reporter: this is one vision of how self-driving cars could work in manhattan, dedicated autonomous thoroughfares leading into the city and cutting across town, potentially allowing some roads to go unused and become green space. john meyer from design firm e.d.g. entered the idea into a contest organized by new york city. >> getting the pedestrians and the drivers out of the way allows it to achieve its true mission. >> reporter: efficiency that will require time, upgraded infrastructure, smarter, self-driving cars, and patience. in a city not known for it. kris van cleave, cbs news. [horn honking patients new york. >> mason: brave new world. and up next, remembering della reese. i'm also on a lot of medications that dry my mouth. i just drank tons of water all the time. it was never enough. i wasn't sure i was going to be able to continue singing. i saw my dentist. he suggested biotene. it feels refreshing. my mouth felt more lubricated. i use biotene rinse twice a day and then i use the spray throughout the day. it actually saved my career in a way. biotene really did make a difference. 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start today. ♪ whstuff happens. old shut down cold symptoms fast with maximum strength alka seltzer plus liquid gels. ♪ don't you know ?oats. ♪. >> mason: della reese with her 1959 hit "don't you know." the singer-turned act rest died yesterday. reese was best known as the co-star of "touched by an angel" for nine seasons here on cbs. she was a buy near for african american women in television, the first to guest host "the tonight show," and first to host her own talk show years before oprah. della reese was 86. it was out with the old in atlanta today. first a thunderous explosion and then clouds of smoke. nearly 5,000 pounds of explosives brought down the georgia dome, most of it anyway. two small sections survived. in its 25 years, the georgia dome hosted two super bowls, three final fours, and olympic gymnastics. it's been replaced bay 1.6 billion dollar stadium next door. up next, a royal wedding anniversary. patrick woke up with a sore back. but he's got work to do. so he took aleve this morning. if he'd taken tylenol, he'd be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. tylenol can't do that. aleve. all day strong. all day long. ♪ if you wear a denture, you not only want a clean feeling every day, you want your denture to be stain free. did you know there's a specialty cleanser that's gentle enough for everyday use and cleans better than regular toothpaste? 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>> well, he really was too good looking. >> reporter: how did the marriage work so well for so long? again, according to friends, the secret was division of labor. >> essentially the queen had always worn the crown, and prince philip was allowed to wear the trousers. she is the front woman. she's the person that people around the world know, it's her face on the postage stamp, but behind the scenes he was there at every turn. >> reporter: a shared sense of humor may also have helped. you can only imagine what the thought bubbles would say. philip has had a unique royal in the queen's life according to the royal writer roya nikkah. >> the queen has spent seven decades living in a world where everyone says yes to her. philip can be completely forth right. >> reporter: he's the only one who says no? >> i think so, yeah. >> reporter: 70 years for a very public, very private couple. mark phillips, cbs news, london. >> mason: a shared sense of humor does wonders for a marriage. happy anniversary to the royal couple. that's the "cbs evening news." i'm anthony mason in new york. thanks for watching. good night. do your research.nd. find the best fit. why not do the same for your prescription drug plan? 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