Scandals and why he calls his church a dysfunctional family. Its tuesday, october 29th, 2019. Heres todays eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. If youre in the mandatory evacuation zone and youre still there watching this, youre an idiot. Get the hell out. Reporter california launches an investigation into pg e. Californias Utility Company is planning to cut more power again. It was really scary because the fire could catch on our house, and i could literally see the flames up in the sky. Reporter the house will vote this week to affirm the impeachment inquiry. Today investigators hear testimony from a Current White House official. Reporter President Trump made his First Official visit to chicago. The president criticized the citys crime rate. Its embarrassing to us as a nation. Afghanistan is a safe place by comparison. Reporter a man suspected of opening fire at an offcampus College Party in texas killing two people has been arrested. We believe one person was targeted. Reporter at least six People Killed when a magnitude 6. 6 earthquake struck the philippines. The mission that killed the leader of isis. Mans best friend helped to corner the most wanted terrorist. All that the steelers rally back with 27 unanswered points. [ cheers ] what an effort and all that matters lebron james among those forced to evacuate their homes due to the wildfires. He tweeted that he was looking for a place for his family to stay. I feel like lebron could have knocked on any door in l. A. And been like, yeah, sure, stay for taco tuesday. On cbs this morning. Grabbed our family, grabbed our belongings and evacuated our house. I was thinking, these firefighters, these men and women, theyve left their families in their houses and theyre driving toward the fire. And i i want to take this moment to say the biggest thank you to the brave men and women out there right now fighting those fires on our behalf. You are absolute heroes to us, and we cannot thank you enough. This mornings eye opener is presented by toyota lets go places. Bravo to james corden. Thats an excellent point. We dont always think about that. While were all running out, theyre running in. Those pictures are terrifying. Yes. Very nice to give them a shout out. Very important. Were going to get to more on the fires in a minute. Were going to begin with this for the first time the house impeachment investigators are hearing testimony from someone who was actually on the call between President Trump and ukraines president. His name is Lieutenant ColonelAlexander Vindman. The white houses Top National Security expert on ukraine. He will testify to lawmakers that he told his superiors twice that military aid was being improperly tied to politics. This mornings interview comes two days before House Speaker nancy pelosi plans to hold the first formal vote on the impeachment inquiry. Nancy cordes is on capitol hill. Why is vindmans testimony so significant . Reporter well, because he is the first Current White House official to testify and because he is saying in his Opening Statement that he found the president s actions improper, and that he even went to white house lawyers this summer to warn that mr. Trump had asked his ukrainian counterpart to investigate a campaign rival. Alexander vindman is an iraq war veteran who oversees ukraine policy at the National Security council. Hell tell congressional investigators today that he grew concerned after listening in on the president s july phone call. I did not think it was proper to demand that a Foreign Government investigate a u. S. Citizen. The request to investigate biden and his son had nothing to do with National Security, he says. Adding that he warned nscs lead counsel that such a partisan play would undoubtedly result in ukraine losing the bipartisan support it has thus far maintained. This would all undermine u. S. National security. There was no anything. There was no pressure put on him. No anything. Reporter the president continues to deny that he withheld military aid and a coveted meeting in an attempt to extract those promises. But the evidence to the contrary is piling up. House democrats will introduce a resolution this week laying out procedures for public hearings and outlining Due Process Rights for the president and his counsel. The resolution will set forth procedures that the committee will use. Reporter republicans who had pushed for such a vote slammed the decision. I strongly oppose any attempt to legitimize this sovietstyle impeachment process. Reporter the white house says it may not cooperate even if the resolution passes. Just proves our point that this this was illegitimate and ill conceived from the beginning. Nancy, House Speaker nancy pelosi sent a letter to her democratic colleagues announcing this new resolution. Whats behind that move . Reporter well, she says that this is just meant to lay out procedures for the next phase in this impeachment inquiry, and that shes not bowing to gop pressure to hold a vote. At the same time, anthony, heres how she describes the vote. She says, quote, it should eliminate any doubt as to whether the Trump Administration may withhold documents, prevent witness testimony, or continue obstructing the house of representatives. The white house demanded this vote, but now aides tell us they are not going to decide whether to cooperate until they get to see whether the president is granted all the Due Process Rights that theyve been demanding, including the right to call and cross examine their own witnesses. Nancy cordes at the capitol. Thanks. Lets get to the fires in california where powerful new winds could bring more devastation to parts of the state already ravaged by wildfires. Crews battling the massive kincade fire in northern californias wine country fear the wind could fan the flames. It has burned an area more than twice the size of San Francisco and destroyed nearly 60 homes. Jonathan vigliotti is in healdsburg, california. Good morning. Many people are living without power . Reporter yeah, thats correct. Good morning. Even with the power cut off, i want to show you what some homes face. The flames ripping through. This one and many others. This is the outside of it. Through there you could see what we believe was the living room. About 500,000 people at this hour are still in the dark. Many more evacuated. Dont even know the fate of their homes. As this state faces a climate crisis, pg e says their only option has been to turn off this power. Now the state is investigating the utilitys strategy and the threat it poses to the people caught in the middle of it. Californias largest utility, pg e, now says two fires that broke out sunday, less than 20 miles northeast of San Francisco, in lafayette, including one that destroyed this tennis club, may have been caused by its own electrical malfunctions. Despite cutting power to more than 2. 5 Million People, the electricity was not turned off in the area because it wasnt designated as high risk. If we did go into a mode where we wanted to prevent everything from happening, then wed have to shut the whole system down, and thats not acceptable. Reporter the utility also says it failed to notify 23,000 customers, including 500 with medical conditions, before shutting off their power. Were going to investigate all of this. And were going to make a determination as to culpability. Reporter six days after the kincade fire first ignited, firefighters are scrambling to put out hot spots in hopes of getting an upper hand before wind gusts reaching as high as 50 miles an hour kick up again. The winds will carry burning materials sometimes miles ahead of the fire. Were having to go around and one by one deal with those and mitigate those dangers as they pop up which is always a difficulty. It being dynamic and not just a set fire line. Reporter and in Southern California where high winds fueled the getty fire monday, authorities are manning their fire lines with additional personnel. Their concern, predicted gusts of up to 80 miles an hour. Ive asked my command staff to do Everything Possible to ensure that the line is as cold as possible before those winds kick up. Reporter with the wind expected to pick up later today, pg e is already warning they could conduct their third power cut in less than one week. Gayle, that means nearly four Million People could be in the dark. Boy, jonathan, those pictures are unbelievable. We look at you standing there in the quiet and the darkness, and you see the flames, and you think people are fighting the fires, what they have to breathe and the smoke and the heat. Its terrifying really to watch it. Thank you very much. A powerful and deadly earthquake rocked the southern philippines overnight. The 6. 6magnitude quake shook buildings. At least six people were killed. More than 100 others were hurt. The quake disrupted the areas power supply. Seismic activity is common in the philippines. It lies in the socalled ring of fire. Thats a ring of faults around the Pacific Ocean where most of the worlds earthquakes occur. The pentagon is declassifying video and photos of the raid that killed isis leader abu bakr al baghdadi. They could be released by tomorrow. Meanwhile, President Trump is praising the dog that cornered al baghdadi at his hideout in northwestern syria. David martin is at the pentagon. David, good morning. What more do we know today about this mission . Reporter well, we know that after further dna testing to confirm his identity, al baghdadis remains were buried at sea. Al baghdadi may be dead, but isis is not. And the mission now is to use the intelligence collected in saturdays raid to go after the rest of the network. His death marks a devastating blow for the remnants of isis. Reporter the delta force that led the raid spent about two hours at al baghdadis compound. They executed the raid brilliantly. Reporter the u. S. Came away with cell phones and laptops which potentially can point the delta force in the direction of other isis hideouts. How much material did you take away . There was material taken away. I dont want to characterize exactly what or how much yet until it gets exploited properly. Reporter this is the delta dog which chased al baghdadi down a deadend tunnel where he set off his suicide vest killing himself and three children with him. Five other people were killed in the compound by the delta force. Two were captured. There were two adult males taken off the objective alive. Theyre in our custody. Reporter those lieutenants may be able to shed light on what happened to kayla mueller. A young aid worker that had been captured and brutalized. The raid was named after kayla. Her parents spoke on monday. Until we have her home we truly dont know what happened to her. The lieutenants have been captured. Who else would know what happened to kayla but these people close to him. Reporter were also learning more about how the u. S. Found al baghdadi. General mazloum said the kurds had an inform answer within baghdadis innerer kell. The informant reportedly tracked down baghdadi for months and provided a floor plan of his hideout including the number of guards and location of tunnels. President trump says al baghdadi was the only isis leader he cared about getting because his was the only name people recognized. But the day after the raid, a cia drone strike killed the chief spokesman for isis, a man once considered a potential successor to al baghdadi. David, thank you. This morning, boeings ceo faces questions from congress for the first time about the companys grounded 737 max planes. In an opinion piece, the head of the faa said the agency is committed to addressing recommendations on when, whether, the 737 max will return to service. Two 737 max crashes killed 346 people in the past year. Kris van cleave is on capitol hill. What can boeings ceo expect from lawmakers . Reporter well, good morning. We expect tough questions. This is the one Year Anniversary of the first 737 max crash. And we understand that muilenburg will begin his testimony offering his deepe eet civ sympathies and also expected to express confidence in the changes practice. After months of demanding answers from boeing, more than hay dozen family members who lost loved ones in the 737 max crashes are expected to attend the hearings. While all your lives moved on, for the last six months my life has not moved an inch. Reporter lawmakers will grill boeings ceo over the course of two days. House transportation chair Peter Defazio do you expect it to be a tense hearing. I dont see how it would be anything other than tense. This is an extraordinary failure, and how did the system fail this badly . How did boeing, a great company, fail this badly . Reporter the max has been grounded since march as boeing finishes Software Updates and awaits faa approval to resume flying. Costing u. S. Airlines over 1 billion so far. Uniteds ceo, oscar munoz people are going to be concerned because a regulator or manufacturer says its safe, they have to be convinced themselves. Our job is to convince them. Reporter united, american airlines, and southwest are standing by the plane, pending new training requirements and faa approval. They are hoping to return it to Service Early next year. In june, about 80 of flyers surveyed said theyd look to avoid the max. Let somebody else be the guinea pig. Pretty safe. A certifies it, its reporter boeing fired the president of the commercial Airline Division and ceo Dennis Muilenburg has been stripped of his chairman title. I think they need new leadership. Reporter you chk think muilenburg needs to go . Yeah. I dont think big big penalty, hes removed as chairman of the board and ceo of the company. I doubt that impacts his compensation very much, and hes still on the board. That doesnt seem to me like some real accountability. Reporter the senate today, we expect some of them to focus on an exchange between two boeing test pilots that appeared to show concerns about the max nearly two years before that lion air crash. Boeing was aware of that document for months before it was handed over to lawmakers. Something that has raised anger on the hill. All this on the oneYear Anniversary of the first crash. Thank you so much. Prosecutors want a former student from korea to return to the u. S. To face an Involuntary Manslaughter charge after her College Boyfriend died by suicide. They allege inyoung you encouraged him to take his own life. Alexander urtula died on his Graduation Day back in may. The case focuses texts his girlfriend sent him, and its drawing comparisons to another upsetting case in massachusetts. Mola lenghi is at Boston College, thats where the couple went to school. Good morning. What else do we know . Reporter good morning. Prosecutors say that this is a case of domestic violence. They claim that miss you engaged in a, quote, utter attack on her boyfriends will, conscience, and psyche, and did so mostly over text message. They say that she was even tracking his movements on her phone and that she was there when he died. Miss you was physically, verbally, and psychologically abusive toward mr. Urtula during their 18monthlong relationship. Reporter Suffolk CountyDistrict AttorneyRachel Rollins claims the 21yearold encouraged her boyfriend to kill himself thousands of times. Abuse became more frequent and more powerful in the days and hours leading up to mr. Urtulas untimely death. Reporter according to prosecutors, the Boston College students exchanged 75,000 Text Messages in the two months leading up to urtulas death. 47,000 came from you and included messages like go kill yourself and go die. Many of the messages clearly display the power dynamic in the relationship. Reporter the District Attorneys office says you was aware of urtulas spiraling depression and suicidal thoughts brought on by her abuse. Shes now facing one charge of Involuntary Manslaughter. Its the same charge in the same state that sent Michelle Carter to jail after she was found guilty for the 2014 suicide of her friend conrad roy. Massachusetts prosecutors alleged carter relentlessly encouraged the teen to kill himself over text. Her attorneys are appealing her conviction to the u. S. Supreme court. This indictment would not have been filed if it were not for the Michelle Carter case. Reporter cbs news legal analyst Rikki Klieman says this case is different because of its international scope. The fact that the defendant is in south korea is going to make this case much more complicated. If she wants to go through the process of contesting extradition, it could take years to get her here. Reporter the District Attorneys office here says that she is cautiously optimistic that you will voluntarily return from south korea back here to the United States to face that Involuntary Manslaughter charge. If she does not, they say they will