Transcripts For KYW CBS Overnight News 20170914

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suspect in his teens. 150, glasses, blue jeans. >> reporter: chaos erupted at freeman high school outside spokane. the freshman, was on the second floor watching the shooter take aim. >> i remember, i crouched down. and i, i just, the girl next to me, she fell and she could hear screaming, screaming. she had been shot. >> reporter: inside students were sheltering in place. outside a nightmare for parents unfolded as they desperately waited for answers. several hours after the shooting, cory thurman reunited with her mother sharing the horrific details what happened feet away from her. >> in my head what is going on? what is happening? >> the sheriff says the male shooter had multiple weapons, a fellow student tried to stop the shooter early on. >> fortunately one of the weapons jammed. he went to the, to the second weapon. the other student did, did confront him. that's when he lost his life. >> the shooter is in custody, although the sheriff's department is not releasing a motive at this time. we do know, a lot of lives were saved today. after several courageous people stepped in to help including a high school janitor, who helped take the shooter down. anthony. >> mireya villarreal, thanks, mireya. >> senator tim scott of south carolina, the only african-american republican in the senate, met today with president trump. they talked about the president's response to the racial violence in charlottesville, virginia, last month. and then the senator talked to chief congressional correspondent, nancy cordes. >> of i went in there not expecting to change the president's mind. >> south carolina's tim scott says he was surprised by the reception he got today. after all, he came down hard on the president, just last month. >> the president's moral authority is compromised. >> you had some very bad people in the group. but you also had people that were -- that were very fine people. >> my thought was -- ouch. >> and then, you think about the scene of torches and the klan. >> reporter: did you get the sense that he felt bad about what he had said? >> he has obviously reflected and the perception of the ions comments. he was certainly very clear, that the perception that he, that he received, on his comments was not exactly what, what he intended with the comments. >> scott has always been owe any but the pain of discrimination. >> in the course of one year, i have been stopped seven times. by law enforcement officers. >> he said he tried to impart that feeling to mr. trump today. >> he asked for question as but, some, some, other incidences that, that found, african-american men in compromising positions, of no fault of their own. >> did you feel look you changed the president's mind set? >> the president was very receptive to listening. that is a key to understanding. >> the president has not said publicly that he regrets his charlottesville comments. in fact, just this week, congress passed a resolution urging him to speak out against hate groups. the white house says, that he'll sign it, when it gets to his desk. anthony. >> nancy cordes, thank you. we're learning more about how groups believed to be linked to russia used face book to meddle in the 2016 election. jeff pegues has more on this. >> the language was intended to stir up hate, using pictures and incendiary language. they won't take over our country we don't let them in. the group behind it called itself secured borders. but investigators say it was part of a russian campaign to influence the 2016 election. to that end, secured borders used facebook's event and invitation tool to promote an anti-immigrant rally in twin falls, idaho. a city it called a center of refugee resettlement, responsible for a huge upsurge of violence towards american citizens. that was false, and the rally itself, never happened in spite of the russian campaign. >> they were using these new social media sites, a wild, wild west, very few rules, to influence the election. >> mark warner its the ranking democrat on the senate intelligence committee which is investigating russian interference in the election. >> i think what we have seen so far from facebook is only the tip of the iceberg. >> face book shut down secured borders. there are other groups including this one, that worked out of texas. cbs news has learned that investigators believed there were many more and are scramble ing to identify them. last week, face book disclosed an internal investigation, disclosed 3,000 ads costing $100 t containing message as but divisive issues. those ads were also linked to russian internet trolls. a face book official says because of federal laws, and the ongoing russia investigations, the company is limited in what it can say. but senator warner says the company hasn't been transparent enough and needs to step up its efforts. anthony. >> jeff pegues, thanks. coming up next -- is the tight seating in coach a danger to air travelers? and later, a new study raises concerns about a possible link between the flu shot and miscarriages. clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but can ot fix this teens skateboarding mishap? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. i'll have the langoustine lfor you, sir?i. the original call was for langoustine ravioli. a langoustine is a tiny kind of lobster. a slight shellfish allergy rules that out, plus my wife ordered the langoustine. i will have chicken tenders and tater tots. if you're a ref, you way over-explain things. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. sir, we don't have tater tots. it's what you do. i will have nachos! mom i dropped my ball. got it. ewwww oh eat it! lysol kills 99.9% of bacteria on soft and hard surfaces. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. hey honey, good.as practice? must've been hot out there today, huh? yeah. yeah. why don't you go put that stuff in the laundry room right now? ok. do your athletes bring home big odors? tide sport is super concentrated to beat even... ...the toughest stains and odors. hey, buddy! hey. woo! somebody ran laps. yup the new tide sport collection. it's got to be tide. for many flying coach has become downright uncomfortable. with more passengers squeezed into smaller seats. turns out that may also be putting lives at risk in an emergency. here is transportation correspondent, kris van cleave. when this american airlines 767 had an engine fire during takeoff in chicago in 2016. it took more than two minutes to get everyone all. but according to faa requirements. airline manufacturers have to show they can evacuate a completely full airliner in 90 seconds or less even with half the exits blocked. >> waiting for him. >> this delta flight veered off a snowy run way at la guardia in 2015. the impact damaged the on board communication system and the evacuation took more than 17 minutes. now, there is a new concern, as airlines shrink seats to fit more people on board, passenger safety advocates worry evacuations will take longer. the space between rows shrunk from as much as 35 inches to 31. in some cases, it is done to just 28 inches. even as passengers themselves are getting bigger. >> do you believe the -- the shrinking of seats is making the flying public less safe. >> oh, definitely. >> paul hudson is president of fliers rights, advocacy group that sued to force the faa off to regulate seat size and update decades old safety standards. >> the biggest concern is you won't be able to get out in smoke or fire. you won't be able to engage in the brace position. your head will hit the seat in front of you. >> of this summer an appellate court sided with hudson's group and found a life and death safety concern and ordered the faa to look at the issue. >> the faa says it is still reviewing that decision. airlines and airplane manufacturers, say they meet or exceed all requirements. safety tests are done but impossible to simulate a real world crash environment. >> anthony. kris van cleave. a new study raises concerns about a possible flu shot risk for pregnant women. clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but will it stop this teen from being embarassed by her parents? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. and life's beautiful moments.ns get between you flonase outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. it helps block 6 key inflammatory substances that cause symptoms. pills block one and 6 is greater than 1. flonase changes everything. mom i dropped my ball. got it. ewwww oh eat it! lysol kills 99.9% of bacteria on soft and hard surfaces. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. you're lucky you're cute. lysol max cover with 2x wider coverage kills 99.9% of bacteria. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. a new study is raising concerns about the safety of a flu vaccine and possible lynn tubing miscarriage. dr. jon lapook is here. sets off alarm bells for people. >> of course it does. and the key word is possible link. considered more of a hint. worthy of further investigation. no reason for panic. they studied two seasons 2010-2012 and did see more miscarriages in one group. women vaccinated in two consecutive seasons, and, had a miscarriage within 23 days of getting the vaccine. but the numbers were small. only 17 women out of 485 women who miscarried. miscarriage defined as before 20 weeks. in this group median age of miscarriage was seven weeks. we spoke to the cdc and authors of the study. they said this is considered what is called a signal. needs further investigation. but they are not recommending changing any of the current recommendations. >> what are current recommendations, john. >> anthony, pregnant women at high risk for serious comb complications from flu. recommendation, get the flu vaccine in any trimester. a lot of extensive studies previously. finding the flu vaccine is safe and effective. >> dr. jon lapook. thank you very much. coming up next -- the stork makes it through a hurricane. that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like any of these types of plans, they could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call unitedhealthcare insurance company today to request a free decision guide. with these types of plans you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. join the millions who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp. and provided by unitedhealthcare insurance company, which has over 30 years of experience behind it. apply for a medicare supplement insurance plan any time you want. so don't wait. call unitedhealthcare now to request your free decision guide. finally tonight there is a time for everything. and for destiny knight it was time to be born. but it was the worst possible time. sunday morning, during the height of hurricane irma in miami. her mom, 23-year-old, tatiyan watkins had gone into labor but no way to get off to the hospital. she and boyfriend david knight called 911. but emergency workers could not reach them either. >> right now we are having severe, severe wind in that area. >> i knew rescue couldn't get out there. in those dangerous winds. so i knew we had to do something else. >> so dispatcher desiree farrell became the calm at center of the storm. walking the couple through the delivery of their daughter. then conferencing in, dr. kendra gillespie to help complete the procedure. >> internally my fear was thinking of all the complications that could happen. and the, the fact that no one could actually go off to the patient. >> today, they all met in person for the first time. >> i just thank god, everything was all right. her birth was successful. everybody made it out safe. >> amid all the destruction of irma, the miracle of birth. it was indeed destiny. that's the "overnight news" for this thursday. for some of you've the news continues. for others check back a little later for the morning news and, cbs this morning. the broadcast center in new york city, i'm anthony mason. thank you for watching. >> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news." i'm michelle miller. president trump travels to naples, florida, today to get a firsthand look at the devastation brought by hurricane irma. naples on the gulf coast hundreds of thousands of homes may not have their power restored for a week or more. the power outage has proved deadly on the other side of the state. and hollywood nursing home patients were found dead in their beds. there was no power to run the and police want to know why. jonathan vigliatti reports. >> reporter: by mid morning the elderly men and women were carried out of the nursing home on stretchers and in wheelchairs. many looked dazed. they had apparently been inside the hot building since the power went out three days ago. some dying others in obvious physical distress. family members arrived on the scene, frantically looking for their loved ones. god forbid he is one of the ones that passed away. >> she found her 96-year-old mother alive. she worried about the heat when he visited yesterday. >> what did it look like inside? >> inside it looked bad. felt bad. >> rehabilitation center power was knocked out sunday by hurricane irma, fans powered by a generator could barely fight the heat. police say the second floor was extremely hot. of the eight confirmed dead, their ages range from 70 to 99. dr. randy katz mobilized his team at memorial regional hospital across the street where more than a dozen are now in critical condition. the nursing home was ranked below average and had a one out of five rating according to federal records. the owner, jack michel settled a fraud complaint in 2006. hollywood police chief, says this incident is now a criminal investigation. >> really sad when something like this goes on. >> and in a statement, the center here said they're fully cooperating with this investigation. meanwhile, police here in the city of hollywood say, they're going door to door to check on every single nursing home. we should mention there is about 150 nursing homes currently without power in the state. and, anthony, many of them, don't have generators, for air conditioning. from the air the search-and-rescue is vachlts on the ground the effort is door knocking where there is one. >> fire and rescue teams are walking the debris filled streets marking homes that are safe. and documenting the damage. carlos cavillo with california task force one, a group of 80 rescuers under fema's direction. >> as a team come throughs they're triaging. doing a rapid assessment of the area. >> with the help of canines his team is looking for survivors. >> and if they actually detect human remains, or, live body, we will be able to come in. then we begin the process of taking the structure apart. and in this case we haven't found anything. >> close to 10,000 residents in the keys rode out the storm. 25% of homes here have been destroyed. while, 65% have sustained damage. >> i have to put on a new, new roof. >> peter lasha's home in ramrod key was damaged and lacks power and walter. with temperatures soaring in the 90s and stifling humidity he may have to evacuate. >> we have to get electric and water and everything back. working on that. >> reporter: residents in devastated neighborhood like this one in little torch key have told us that they are preparing and expecting not to have power for perhaps a month. and with no running water, and no cell phone service, people in this area, are facing some daunting challenges ahead. there are new details of moscow's influence in the u.s. presidential election and center on social media and facebook. jeff pegues reports. >> the language was intended to stir up hate, using pictures and incendiary language. they won't take over our country we don't let them in. the group behind it called itself secured borders. but investigators say it was part of a russian campaign to influence the 2016 election. to that end, secured borders used facebook's event and invitation tool to promote an anti-immigrant rally in twin falls, idaho. a city it called a center of refugee resettlement, responsible for a huge upsurge of violence towards american citizens. that was false, and the rally itself, never happened in spite of the russian campaign. >> they were using these new social media sites, a wild, wild west, very few rules, to influence the election. >> mark warner its the ranking democrat on the senate intelligence committee which is investigating russian interference in the election. >> i think what we have seen so far from facebook is only the tip of the iceberg. >> face book shut down secured borders. there are other groups including this one, that worked out of texas. cbs news has learned that investigators believed there were many more and are scramble ing to identify them. last week, face book disclosed an internal investigation, disclosed 3,000 ads costing $100 t containing message as but divisive issues. those ads were also linked to russian internet trolls. a face book official says because of federal laws, and the ongoing russia investigations, the company is limited in what it can say. but senator warner says the company hasn't been transparent enough and needs to step up its efforts. anthony. for years frequent fliers have complained that seats in coach have been getting smaller and smaller. now the shrinking seats and tighter leg room has become a safetier to and gotten the attention of federal reg lators. kris van cleave reports. when this american airlines 767 had an engine fire during takeoff in chicago in 2016. it took more than two minutes to get everyone all. but according to faa requirements. airline manufacturers have to show they can evacuate a completely full airliner in 90 seconds or less even with half the exits blocked. >> waiting for him. >> this delta flight veered off a snowy run way at la guardia in 2015. the impact damaged the on board communication system and the evacuation took more than 17 minutes. now, there is a new concern, as airlines shrink seats to fit more people on board, passenger safety advocates worry evacuations will take longer. the space between rows shrunk from as much as 35 inches to 31. in some cases, it is done to just 28 inches. even as passengers themselves are getting bigger. >> do you believe the -- the shrinking of seats is making the flying public less safe. >> oh, definitely. >> paul hudson is president of fliers rights, advocacy group that sued to force the faa off to regulate seat size and update decades old safety standards. >> the biggest concern is you won't be able to get out in time, before you are overcome by smoke or fire. you won't be able to engage in the brace position. your head will hit the seat in front of you. >> of this summer an appellate court sided with hudson's group and found a life and death safety concern and ordered the faa to look at the issue. ♪ get on up. ♪ get on up, mama. ♪ get on up. ♪ do what you want. ♪ do you want, let the record hop. ♪ degree motionsense. ultimate freshness... with every move. the more you move, the more it works. degree, it won't let you down. clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but will it stop this teen from chugging hot sauce? ...oh jeremy. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. hurricane irma left a trail of destruction. before it hit the sunshine state, irma laid waste to several islands in the caribbean. one is st. john in the u.s. virgin islands. tony dokoupil paid a visit and filed this report from san juan, puerto rico. >> a life line between here and the u.s. virgin island. we followed that life line to st. john where, well it looks like, windsor, not a lush tropical island now. everything is brown. and the damage is nearly atomic. at cruz bay which should be bustling with tourist there is very little stirring after most of the island evacuated. take a look. >> we need to let everybody know how bad it is here. >> tommy young moved from boston and made coral bay st. john his home in 2007. >> we're on the other side of the island. totally devastated. we lost homes, we lost roofs, vehicles. >> what does your home look like? awe it is gone. yeah, gone. >> irma hit the virgin islands as category 5 hurricane. with 150 mile an hour wind. the storm changed the 20 square mile landscape of st. john, stripping the leaves off trees. and making the hillside look charred. as we sailed into the island's largest town, cruz bay, we saw that even the u.s. customs office was a total loss. it is a ghost town in an area that would typically be bustling with tourists. everything is still with the exception of, construction, aid workers, and, and, recently, members of the u.s. navy. who are here now to restore order. nearly every building on the island is damaged or destroyed. and this is what an advanced team from fema saw tuesday. as they surveyed the island for a command post. >> you are sure there is nothing on the island other than the room right here. >> this is the only building left standing that will be usable. >> dead serious. >> roughly 5,000 people live on st. john. an island in american hand for 100 years. >> you live here. your island. >> it is your island also. >> your home. guess what. we have no -- >> going to take them. >> we are down, but not out. >> tommy young, told me he is grateful. even if his next steps are unclear. >> we are, there are people, like, myself, who have lost everything. the clothes on my back are from others. >> these are borrowed. >> yeah. >> what's it going to take for you to got on your feet for your island to get back on your feet. >> lots of prayers. you know, just some time. lots of healing. >> now, there is good news, you saw the navy is there now. fema on the ground now. ferries armed with guard to make sure resources get where they need to go. from saint thomas to st. john. no matter how you cut it. look at it. this is a recovery measured in years. but we heard again and again. a recovery will come. paradise will be back. >> after its deadly trek through the caribbean, irma made landfall in the florida keys and then again on marco island. carter evans took to the sky with the u.s. coast guard to get a look at the damage. he reports now from the coast guard station, in clear water. >> we flew about 150 miles south with the coast guard to marco island. we spent hours in the air, surveying the damage. our pilots were surprised by some of what they saw and so were we. >> a lot of stuff down over here. right below us. >> from 500 feet in the air, the area around marco island looks like a disaster zone. heavy rains turned this neighborhood of mobile homes into a lake. >> looks like there is a boat lift or something. oh, yeah, there is some destroyed houses. >> we surveyed the area with members of the u.s. coast guard two days after irma made landfall as a category 3 storm. 135 mile per hour wind. ripped off roof tiles and siding from homes. >> right here about 1:00. these -- these, decks on the house. collapsed. >> protective screens around pools, completely buckled. and a powerful storm surge crushed docks along the water. >> take a look at the homes and streets down here. it looks deserted. it pretty much is. but authorities are beginning to allow residents to come back. there is a strict curfew though. >> residents are being asked to stay inside their homes during the day. >> a bunch of people at the house. >> just waving are they. >> yeah, look all right. >> emergency crews can access the area. >> knocked over on that building too. that new construction. >> right there. wow, yep. >> along the coastline. damage and sinking boats, docked the mangrove channels. >> big catamaran. >> the coast guard next job will be helping to clear them out and ensuring safe passage. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. mom,on my car insurance of money by switching to geico. i should take a closer look at geico... you know, geico can help you save money on your homeowners insurance too? great! geico can help insure our mountain chalet! how long have we been sawing this log? um, one hundred and fourteen years. man i thought my arm would be a lot more jacked by now. i'm not even sure this is real wood. there's no butter in this churn. do my tris look okay? take a closer look at geico. great savings. and a whole lot more. clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but can ot fix this teens skateboarding mishap? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. start the interview with a firm handshake. ay,no! don't do that! try head & shoulders instant relief. it cools on contact, and also keeps you 100% flake free. try head & shoulders instant relief. for cooling relief in a snap. you're lucky you're cute. lysol max cover with 2x wider coverage kills 99.9% of bacteria. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. the latest in the battle against cancer, centers on immuno therapy uses the body's defenses to kill tumors. most of those treatments are experimental and often have no effect at all. but they do offer hope. and some times, they actually work. dr. jon lapook reports. the 12-year-old will tell you what happened to her seems like a miracle. >> and you're feeling what? >> feeling great. i feel like i could do anything. >> back when she was just 9, feeling weak, dizzy, she was taken to a hospital on long island where doctors gave her a diagnosis she barely understood. leukemia. >> am i going to die? am i going to live? and, am i going to be able to do the stuff i did before? >> 98% of children with this form of cancer respond well to chemotherapy. her dr. started there. after four brutal round. her cancer was getting worse. >> it was very scary. >> and natural reaction is to think why me? uh-huh. >> what did i do bad? so that god could give me this punishment? >> desperate and out of options, she had one last chance. she was enrolled in a clinical trial at memorial sloan kettering cancer center in manhattan, for an expeer mental treatment called car-t. >> how is everything? >> how are you feeling? >> good. >> reporter: after six weeks, the doctor, pediatric oncologist who treats her couldn't find a single leukemia cell. not one. >> what did you think? >> i thought this worked. >> in a patient who basically ten years ago would have been told, there is nothing we can do. >> yes. >> she is healthy. just a little puffy from steroids. because of a promising new frontier in the war on cancer. immuno-therapy using a patient's immune system to find and kill cancer cells. >> one of the biggest challenges in fighting cancer has been that cancer cells find ways of becoming invisible to the body's defenses. and the immune system can't kill what it can't see. so, doctors in essence taught her immune system to see. they took billions of her white blood cells, cells that normally are good at destroying invaders like bacteria and viruses, but bad at fighting cancer. and turn them into cancer killers. >> we can take the cells out of the body. genetically modify them, teach them how to fight cancer. and then infuse them back into the patient. >> like they're bloodhound. give them the scent of the cancer. >> you say go. >> traditional therapies like chemoand radiation damage healthier to along with cancer cells. the hope is, immunotherapy will be targeted and better at sparing tissue. there have been serious side effects. even death. >> once we knew it could work, we have been working around the clock. >> dr. steven rosenberg has been a pioneer in the field of immunotherapy at the national cancer institute for more than four decades. in 1994, the first doctor to cure a dying patient using her own immune system. >> so these are immune cells. >> but he will also be the first to till you that all these years later, immunotherapy is still in its infancy. >> we have gotten to the point now where i think we understand, why the, why the patient who are successfully treat the, experience tumor regression. and based on that knowledge. i think we are going to see, dramatic progress. and, in the next, next few years to come. >> but most patients don't have years to wait. >> lungs are some what compromised. like 29-year-old, who has a sarcoma, cancer in the connective tissue near his spine that has spread to his lungs. >> now, normal lung would be black. these are all abnormal tumors. every one of these. he maz many hundreds of different -- different tumors that are in his lungs. >> he has been through two rounds of chemotherapy, and multiple surgery. >> he came to us as, do, all of our patients, having exhausted what modern medicine can -- can offer. and, our goal is not to practice, today's medicine. but to create the medicine of tomorrow. >> and that, rosenberg, believes would be immunotherapy. just as was done with him, his blood cells were taught to recognize his cancer type. a month later, barack gets back his juiced up cells. >> you can just imagine in the cells, chewing up the tumor when they go in there. >> definitely feeling hopeful. i mean, you draw the lottery. and actually be part of this trial. it is just, an incredible opportunity, in itself. >> now he is waiting to see if those cells, did their job. the highly personalized treatment that patients like barack and ezzie received is available in clinical trials. but there as it nother tie it of immunotherapy in hospitals across the country. fda approved drugs called check point inhibitors are being used to fight cancers of the kidney, bladder, lungs, and more. with especially positive results for melanoma. while effective treatment for widespread, or met static cancer remains elusive, doctors are hopeful they're at least on the right path. right now, in the spectrum of cancer treatment, what percentage can be addressed by immunotherapy. >> if you look at all cancer patients. perhaps, 10%, can be helped by immunotherapy today. but it is getting better every day. >> last tuesday, he returned to the national cancer institute for a first checkup since receiving his cell transfusion five weeks earlier. >> decided comfort in terms of i have done everything i can. >> good to see you. >> just hoping that we get results we are seeking in this. >> so we have gone over the x rays very carefully. we compared them to the x rays that you had before we started the treatment. there was as you know, rapid growth of the tumor. but that's been completely arrested now. the current x-rays are absolutely stable. there is no evidence of any growth. of any lesions. so, that's good news. now we want to see these tumors go away. but some times that takes time. >> cancer patients deserve optimistic doctors. so, i'm optimistic. >> for now, patients like ezzie remain the exception. but the doctors are hopeful and continue off to explore the boundaries of the new frontier. one previously incurable patient at a time. so you are lying in bed at night. what's going through your head? >> that, that the good thing is that, i'm still alive. that, that, i could live a normal life again. i will be more better and more stronger than i have been before. ng pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 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test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 678 it's ryan's cell phone. gibbs: isolate calls from psy-ops, government-issued lines. there's five or six different numbers here. cross-reference with incoming calls to banks over the past month. apple's iphones are getting mixed reviews. it unveiled the top of the line iphone x. packed with computer wizardry. critics contend the biggest riff difference from earlier iphones is the price. john blackstone is outside apple's headquarters in california. >> the lobby to steve job's theater high tech as the company's iphone x, preorders begin early next month. the new phone features racial facial recognition, wireless charging, and of course, takes belter pictures, but is all that worth the hefty price tag? inside, it is sleek new steve jobs' theater apple was looking to score a perfect ten. one decade after the first iphone. the company unveiled the iphone 10. >> it is the biggest leap forward since the original iphone. >> the phone is unlocked using facial recognition instead of a fingerprint. apple eliminated the home button creating a larger edge to edge screen. and, the phone is now designed for wireless charging. but some experts question whether the innovations go far enough. >> the iphone 10 feels like a smart phone. many other smart phones from what i have seen. >> the 10 costs twice what the original iphone did. $1,000 smart phone. >> yeah, a lot of money. and when you have phones, that cost half that, even ones that apple makes that are hundreds less, what are you getting for that? don't think a lot are going to go for that. >> apple unveiled the slightly less expensive iphone 8 and larger iphone 8 plus. with improved cameras and speakers. there is a lot at stake for the company. customers bought more than 1.2 billion iphones in the last decade. many passed on the iphone 7. because it was too similar to the 6. apple's revenues fell for the first time since 2001. experts say apple may be hampered by its past success. having already made so many giant strides. >> it feels more like incremental steps. than, something where they introduce something brand new and completely different. >> apple is also focusing on the wearables market, the, the, watch, will no longer need how to be paired with your phone. in order to make and receive calls. it will have its own cell service built in. so the age of the two-way wireless wrist communicator may finally be here. >> all righty, john. that is the "overnight news" for this thursday. captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, september 14th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." a deal for d.r.e.a.m.ers. president trump and top democrats are working on a plan for immigrants to avoid deportation. people were killed at a nursing home. a criminal investigation. >> it's really sad when something like this goes on. and a 20-year

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