Transcripts For KPIX CBS 20240702 : vimarsana.com

KPIX CBS July 2, 2024



the american girl who turned four in captivity. >> it's like a dream come true. because we were in a nightmare. >> norah: and in the west bank, crowds of palestinians gather to greet released prisoners. the suspect of the shooting of three students of palestinian dissent pleads not guilty as we learn more about the victim's injuries. >> it's a real tragedy, for the nation, not just these boys. >> norah: a major recall to tell you about. the seat belt issue forcing honda to recall hundreds of thousands of vehicles. what drivers need to know. >> how busy a cyber monday for amazon? >> it's like our super bowl. we practiced for months in advance. >> we are at an amazon r&d facility we will show you what the future of shopping looks like. >> what is a second? with that ai mark, that might really be something. >> norah: in the fight against breast cancer, how artificial intelligence could help. >> ai might have saved this woman's life. ♪ ♪ >> norah: good evening to our viewers in the west, and thank you for joining us. we will begin tonight with big news out in the middle east. israel and hamas have agreed to extended their pause in fighting for two more days. the deal is expected to follow the same conditions as the original temporary cease-fire. three palestinian prisoners released for every israeli hostage freed. now these are the faces of the 69 hostages all kidnapped during the hamas terror attacks on october 7th. and they have been freed. 50 of the hostages were released under the deal that the u.s. helped broker, and 30 of them are children. now on sunday, the hostage for prisoner exchange included at the freedom of the youngest american captive. 4-year-old abigail mor edan, and also freed 350 palestinian visitors. and we saw elon musk touring the house where abigail was kidnapped and her parents were murdered in front of her. the trip comes after the billionaire faced international backlash for endorsing an anti-semitic post, musk was scolded by israel's president over the content on his social media platform x. there's a lot to get to you, and holly williams will start us off from tel aviv. good evening, holly. >> reporter: good evening, norah. the temporary cease-fire was do to end tomorrow morning at 7:00 local time. but tonight, hamas confirmed to cbs news that it is committed to releasing 20 more hostages in return for a two day extension of the cease-fire. as this evening, another of captives has been freed. another 11 hostages were released by hamas tonight including eight children. the youngest, a pair of twins just three years old. in israel, there is more joy and more relief. it follows the release last night of abigail mor edan, a dual u.s.-israeli citizen who turned four while held captive. her parents were killed in the october 7th attacks. she ran to a neighbor's house only to be kidnapped by the militants. what's it been like for your family to have her come home? >> wow. [laughs] it's like a dream come true, because we were in a nightmare. >> reporter: ella mor is abigail's aunt. does she know that she has lost her parents? >> i don't know. i don't know. >> reporter: it so much for a 4-year-old. >> so much, yes. so, it's something i can't answer. >> reporter: the temporary cease-fire has held since friday, allowing people in gaza to take stock of the devastation wreaked by israeli air strikes and fighting. and hundreds of trucks to deliver aid including desperately needed fuel. israel so far held up its end of the hostage deal releasing over 100 palestinian prisoners. many of them teenagers. there were celebrations on the streets of the west bank to welcome them home where some waved the green flag of hamas. one of those freed was norhan aouad who was just 16 when she was arrested in 2015 for the attempted stabbing of an israeli man. "i can't describe my joy," she said. "yesterday, i was in prison and today i am in my home with my family." here in israel, families have also reunited. hagar brodetz and her three children thought their father had been killed by the militants, until they were released. and maayan zin finally has her daughter's ella and zappa back in her arms. but for one, no good news, her 70-year-old mother judy is belived to be one of the american hostages, a former english teacher originally from new york. >> the hostages that were released did not see her, did not hear about her. no information still about her. i don't have proof of life for my mom, nothing. >> reporter: the releases over the last four days have been bittersweet for many hostage families, including some in which a mother and her children have been released, but the father is believed to remain in captivity. norah. >> norah: holly williams, thank you so much. well, the white house is welcoming the extension of the cease-fire and it is a deal that the president actually helped broker. but there are new questions tonight about when the remaining americans will be released. and that's one of the reason secretary of state antony blinken will travel to the middle east. we have just learned in america's top diplomat will visit israel, the west bank, and the united arab emeritas later this week. cbs's ed o'keefe is at the whie house. >> reporter: tonight the white house is applauding the deal to extend the end of the fight in gaza for two days. senior officials spoke to the qatari prime minister who is a lead in the negotiations four time today to get hostages out and let humanitarian aid in. >> another two days, my goodness, that gives you a chance for dozens more trucks and tens of thousands of gallons of fuel that can get into gaza and people in need. >> reporter: the administration is closely track and the fate of what it believes they are eight or nine americans still held hostage in gaza. the president spoke with the family of the youngest u.s. captive abigail mor edan who was released late sunday. >> she is safe early in israel, and we look for additional americans released as well. >> reporter: meanwhile, american forces remain on high alert, from iranian backed militant groups. the most recent came sunday, missiles filed from the houthi controlled area inside yemen landed in the gulf of haiti where the uss mason part of the eisenhower strike now in the region. the mason had been responding to distress calls from the israeli tanker that had been briefly seized by five somali pirates. the iranian backed houthi rebels have contained other vessels in the red sea including an israeli ranked cargo ship. u.s. officials did not rule out striking back. >> we have responded forcefully against the threats to our forces in iraq and syria, and now in the gulf region, and gulf of aden. >> is striking yemen still an option? >> we will do what we need to do in the middle east region. >> reporter: and while the naval threats in the middle east officials tell cbs news that in the last six weeks u.s. forces in iraq and syria have been attacked 73 times by drones, rockets, and close range ballistic missiles. >> norah: ed o'keefe with that information from the white house, thank you. turning to a disturbing act of violence in vermont that is being investigated as a possible hate crime. a 48-year-old burlington man pleaded not guilty into the shooting of three college students of palestinian descent over the weekend. when law enforcement arrived at the suspect's door, he said "i've been waiting for you." >> are you jason eaton? >> yes. >> reporter: shooting suspect jason eaton is charged with three counts of attempted second-degree murder. >> mr. eaton enters a not guilty plea to all three counts. >> reporter: authorities say saturday night as the 20-year-olds all palestinian descent were walking down this street, two wearing keffiyehs, traditional arab scarves, the shooter allegedly stepped out from a porch and fired four rounds, injuring all three. one obtained a spinal injury. >> although we do not yet have evidence to support a hate crime enhancement, i do want to be clear that there is no question this was a hateful act. >> reporter: family members have identified the college students as tahseen ahmed, kin-nan abdalhamid, and hisham awartini. police found a pistol and magazine of bullets during a search of the suspects apartment which is across the street from the crime scene. >> atf tests have since connected the firearm to the casings recovered at the scene of the shooting. rich price and rodney tamimi uncles of two of the men, and says that he is struggling with the decision to bring his nephew kin-nan to u.s. from the west bank. >> we figured it would be good for him to be here. it would be safe. we feel shame and betrayal almost in the sense that we sent him here with the hope for all of that and something so tragic occurred. >> reporter: now one of the three men has been released from the uvm medical center, which you see behind me. the other two, cbs news can report, remain together in the icu. meantime, if convicted, the suspect faces 20 years to life in prison, norah, on each of the three counts he faces. >> norah: errol barnett there, thank you. well, tonight, mourners are paying their respects to first lady rosalynn carter who died last week at the age of 96. it is the first day of three days of memorials for mrs. carter. cbs's mark strassmann is in atlanta with new details. good evening, mark. i understand there is new reporting on whether former president jimmy carter at age 99 will be there tomorrow. what can you tell us? >> reporter: good evening, norah. we are hearing tonight that mr. carter will in fact attend tomorrow's special service at least that's the plan. there could be a last-minute change. georgia is staging the three day farewell to mrs. crter. but this is an american moment. and right now live inside the carter center, everyday americans file past mrs. carter's casket paying their respects to the daughter of tiny plains, georgia, who became first lady of the united states. earlier today her secret service agents past and present escorted mrs. carter's hearse to georgia where her family laid wreaths at her door to our alma mater. now tomorrow that special tribute service to celebrate the life of mrs. carter, among the guests, president biden, vice president harris, and their spouses, the clintons, and first lady's bush, obama, and trump. mrs. carter was a maverick and a pioneer. as first lady, she sent in cabinet meetings, had her husband's ear and policy and politics and for the rest of her life champion to mental health therapy. at the white house, this is her official first lady portrait draped in black. she will be buried wednesday in plains after a private funeral. norah. >> norah: what a send-off there. mark, thank you so much. much of the country is in store for a big chill with more than 200 million americans set to experience subfreezing temperatures tomorrow. cold air from the north will dip down as far south as atlanta on tuesday and into wednesday morning. every state will have at least one spot below 32 degrees. along the great lakes, snow is expected especially from cleveland to watertown, new york. some spots could end up with 3 feet of snow. if you flew on sunday, you are part of a record day of air travelers. the tsa said today that more than 2.9 million people went through security at the nation's airports on sunday, making it the busiest day of air travel in u.s. history. more than 30 million people were expected to go through tsa screenings during the 12-day period that ends on tuesday. from holiday travel to holiday shopping, online sales are expected to smash records on the cyber monday, with shoppers spending more than $12 billion. cbs's kris van cleave reports digital sales also beat expectations on black friday. >> reporter: tonight, the holiday shopping surge means amazon delivery facility is like this one outside boston will handle 110,000 packages a day, nearly twice its usual number. americans already spent record amounts this thanksgiving weekend, an estimated 37.2 billion of it online. that's up by .4 percent from last year. >> it's like our super bowl. we practice for it for months in advance. >> reporter: amazon vp scott hamilton. >> within 24 hours of being placed, that inventory is on the floor ready to demand infill. >> reporter: the online retail giant is trying to increase the same or next day deliveries using ai to forecast daily demand for 400 million products. the technology helps protect where they will be ordered from allowing amazon to stage items nearby and deploy mapping technology for drivers that identifies the most efficient routes while updating in real time for traffic and weather. will you be able to move these volumes coming to handle these huge days without ai? >> we simply could not. >> reporter: amazon robotics chief technologist tye brady. >> ai will touch just about every piece of our supply chain. the ai's allows us to not only forecast demand, but to move those even quicker. >> reporter: on top of already strong discounts, cyber monday shoppers are seeing record markdowns on electronics, toys, tvs, and apparel. appliances and sporting goods are expected to see deeper discounts in the coming days. to get them out the door faster, amazon is deploying sequoia, an ai driven sorting system that speeds up the process of incoming goods by 75% and sorting for delivery by 25%. now within 11 minutes of clicking buy on a same-day order, facilities like this one are already working on delivering it. that's an hour faster than most amazon facilities. and something that the company says would not be possible without ai. it allows this facility to push out more than 55,000 same-day packages every day and deliver them all across the phoenix area, norah. >> norah: fascinating. kris van cleave, thank you. amazon is not alone in using ai. doctors are now using artificial intelligence to detect breast cancer. a new study out today shows in a new tool from researchers at northwestern school of medicine is sparing patients from unnecessary treatments. and tonight's healthwatch, chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook talks to doctors and patients about how the technology could save lives. >> reporter: tehillah harris was only 32 when her mother died of breast cancer. >> my mom was very concerned about my level of risk. >> reporter: harris get screened regularly at mount sinai in new york, where ai is used to assist reading mammograms and breast sonograms. >> the doctor said that they have the new technology with ai and would i be interested? i was like sure, sign me up. i can have an extra set of eyes. >> reporter: preliminary results from a study, found physicians assisted by ai detected 20% more cancers. >> why is that important? you may need less chemotherapy. or you might not need a mastectomy. >> reporter: dr. laurie margolies is the director of breast imaging at mount sinai. she demonstrated how ai looks at mammograms and sorts them into three levels of risk. low, intermediate, and elevated. ai also used to read breast sonograms. >> so we put it on the finding and we can analyze it. >> reporter: and it happened in about three seconds a radiologist also reads the scans. >> i think ai is here to help us in the same way that 30 years ago a magnifying glass helped us. people look at ai and say, it's as good as me. >> reporter: why won't their jobs be eliminated? >> doctors jobs won't be eliminated for many reasons. ai is not there to be empathetic. it just gives an opinion. it may not know somebody's family history, and certainly can't provide that hug. >> you want someone to come in and explain it to you, and if needed, hold your hand. >> reporter: a combination of care, ai with a human touch. dr. jon lapook, cbs news new york. >> norah: that is some promising technology. now this story, passengers aboard a southwest airlines jet scramble for safety after a man opens the emergency exit and jumps off the plane. we've got the details next. ♪ ♪ plane. the details next. ♪ ♪ pill. when i wanted to see results fast, rinvoq delivered rapid symptom relief and helped leave bathroom urgency behind. check. when uc tried to slow me down... i got lasting, steroid-free remission with rinvoq. check. and when uc caused damage rinvoq came through by visibly repairing my colon lining. check. rapid symptom relief... lasting steroid-free remission... ...and the chance to visibly repair the colon lining. check, check, and check. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least 1 heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. put uc in check and keep it there with rinvoq. ask your gastroenterologist about rinvoq and learn how abbvie can help you save. don't mind me. i'm just the flu. i'm quite harmless, really. and when people ask, “but aren't you linked to dangerous flu complications... ...like pneumonia, heart attack, and hospitalizations?” ...i just say, “but i'm just the flu.” [elevator dings] it's him! who? i'm just the flu. fight the flu with higher-dose flu vaccines from sanofi. they're proven to provide better flu protection than standard-dose flu shots in older adults. they've even been shown to better protect against flu-related complications. don't get fluzone® high-dose quadrivalent... ...if you've had a severe allergic reaction to its components... ...including egg products, or after previous dose of flu vaccine. don't get flublok® quadrivalent... ...if you've had a severe allergic reaction to its components. tell your health care professional... ...if you've had severe muscle weakness after a flu shot. people with weakened immune systems may have a lower vaccine response. demand more from your flu shot. to get a sanofi vaccine, make sure to ask for it by name. schedule your sanofi flu shot. available at these preferred national pharmacies. >> norah: on america's busiest travel day ever, a southwest airlines flight was delayed in new orleans for several hours sunday after a man got off the plane through the emergency exit while it was parked parked at the terminal. video shows passengers exiting the plane and a man being arrested on the tarmac. the good news, no one was hurt. why honda is recalling hundreds of thousands of cars, that's ne. ♪ ♪ hundreds of thousands of cars, that's next. ♪ ♪ how? 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