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tv   CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell  CBS  May 2, 2024 3:30pm-4:01pm PDT

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thank you so much for joining. us. for today's heavy khan. about the homelessness. crisis. here in the bay area and the landmark case before the us supreme court. we love to hear what you think about all of this poster thoughts online using the hashtag. kpx. the cbs evening news is next right here on kpix. [interesting shouting] >> james: president biden condemns campus violence, speaking out for the first time in a week. violent protest is not. peaceful protest is. >> james: as protest across the nation reach a boiling point
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beer >> united! we will never be defeated! >> james: tonight clashes in portland and washington, d.c. "cbs evening news" starts now. ♪ ♪ good evening. i'm james brown in for norah. and we begin tonight with president biden's sharp criticism today of the violence that has broken out in protest on america's college campuses over the israel-hamas war. in recent weeks, nearly 2,000 people have been detained or arrested at dozens of schools. there were more protest today at portland state, george washington university, the university of pennsylvania, and nyu. speaking at the white house today, president biden made his most extensive comments to date on the protests, condemning anti-semitic slurs, vandalism, trespassing, and major disruptions to classes and graduations at some universities. new york city mayor eric adams
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says nearly half of those arrested earlier this week at columbia university and nearby city college were not students at those schools. adams claims outside agitators are radicalizing students. cbs's nancy cordes leads off our coverage tonight from the white house. >> reporter: white house officials say it was the sheer number of violent encounters on college campuses over the past two days that prompted president biden to speak out. >> is the right to protest, but not the right to cause chaos. >> reporter: his comments came in the wake of nearly 2,000 arrests. more than 30 colleges and universities. >> the barricade. >> reporter: just today, protesters were ejected from the library at portland state university that they had occupied for three days. inside, police say they found ball bearings, paint balloons, spray bottles of ink, and diy armor. >> vandalism, trespassing,
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breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations. none of this is a peaceful protest. >> palestine will be free! >> reporter: like many protesters, president biden has expressed concern about the plight of palestinian civilians. more than 34,000 killed, according to the hamas-run health ministry. but when asked today if he would change his policies towards israel, as the protesters have been demanding, biden said, simply. >> no. >> reporter: the unrest is now threatening to become an election issue. young people are a key democratic voting block. >> biden's needs to listen to what the students are calling for, which is an end to a genocide funded by the united states. so, first things first, stop funding israel. >> reporter: in battleground wisconsin, donald trump argued biden should have spoken out sooner. >> there is a big fever in our country and he is not talking. >> reporter: but trump also
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made this unfounded claim about campus demonstrators. >> they do come from other countries, and they are paid. to be due some republicans have urged president biden to send in the national guard to quell campus protest, but he said no to that today. cbs news was first to report that the biden administration is now considering bringing some palestinians from war-torn gaza to the u.s. as refugees. j.b.? >> james: nancy, thank you very much. one of the most intense flash points is the campus of ucla. police broke up an encampment overnight and bulldozers were brought into date to scoop up trash and tents. some buildings were covered in graffiti. cbs's jonathan vigliotti is there. >> reporter: early morning chaos on the campus of ucla. >> these are a riot police. >> reporter: hundreds of officers in riot gear clashed with protesters. >> get back!
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get back! >> reporter: with support from multiple agencies, officers moved in, tearing down barricades and dismantling te tents. firing rubber bullets and flash-bangs. cbs's carter evans was there as police stepped into action. >> reporter: we are looking at what might be the end of the protests here at this encampment. police have got the protesters surrounding, pushing them up against a wall they are, but they are not giving up. >> reporter: the pro-palestinian cam and set up by students one week ago was declared unlawful by the university tuesday night. >> this is an attack on democratic rights. this is our radius. >> reporter: more than 200 people were arrested, arms zip tied behind their backs and let a way. >> we need to resist. we need to keep protesting. that is the only way change will be made. >> reporter: newly-released police body cam footage at columbia university just officers cutting their way through barricades after the school called and the nypd to clear protesters from the campus. cbs news has learned no firearms were found, but police did recover small pocket knives, baseball bats, and gloves.
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cbs's lilia luciano spoke with new york city mayor eric adams about the unrest at columbia university. >> we saw a change in protest behavior when we saw a destruction of property, taking over buildings. we saw the patterns that these individuals that we identified are used to doing. >> reporter: mayor adams says outside agitators known to police were arrested alongside the student protesters. there is a difference between the protests that are happening outside the gates and the protests in the encampment. who are the dangerous people were arrested inside hamilton hall? >> i'm not sure we are asking the question that someone is dangerous that uses a hammer to break into a building, destroy property, while they're in that building, burglarizing that building. burglary is one of our seven major crimes. >> reporter: back here on the ucla campus, cleanup is und underway. an encampment behind me has been cleared out, and tonight, there is an increased police presence here on campus.
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along with calls for the chancellor to step down. meanwhile, all classes have been moved online for the rest of the week, j.b. >> james: thank you, jonathan. tonight, mandatory evacuations are in place in areas around houston, texas, as a major river there quickly rises. nearly 40 million people are on alert for flash flooding. that's following days of torrential rains and severe thunderstorms. cbs's omar villafranca reports from hard-hit southeast texas. >> reporter: parts of livingston, texas, waterlogged after overnight storms soaked the south east texas town. up to 8 inches of rain fell in some areas this morning, leaving homes and businesses looking like lakefront property. he tried to get to livingston, but couldn't. heavy downpours drenched major highways and slowed traffic during the morning commute. we could only get as far as coldspring, 17 miles away. the main road in town is shut down. we found residents taking horses and even pet pigs to dryer,
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higher ground. >> about an hour and a half ago, it was about waist deep in my backyard. >> reporter: luckily, vanessa russell's home is on stilts, but her confidence is not high, after she found out the lake livingston dam across the street was open to relieve the swollen lake. dumping millions of gallons into her neighborhood. >speak with horrible. do not move to a flood point, ever. >> oh, no way. >> further east in college station, a woman tried to drive through a parking lot. >> that got bad very quickly. >> reporter: she abandoned her car once the car became too deep. >> she is okay. that's the important part. her car maybe not so much. >> reporter: people there walking through water that reached their knees. houston mayor's mcguire. >> it appears the worst is yet to come. >> reporter: high water vehicles like this one are the only way to get around certain
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neighborhoods. here in san jacinto county, emergency crews have already rescued 32 people, and with more rain in the forecast, that number may go up. j.b.? >> james: omar with the tough news. thank you, omar. tonight, one of the nation's busiest highways is completely shut down in a bustling area of connecticut. a massive fire after a gasoline tanker crashed also severely damaged an overpass. no one was seriously hurt, but this could have a huge economic impact in the northeast. cbs's tony aiello reports from the scene. >> reporter: raging flames and black smoke turned dawn into darkness after the multivehicle crash on i i-95 in norwalk, connecticut, this morning. fire officials they car swerved in front of a truck, pulling a flatbed trailer come as a fuel tanker approached, loaded with 8500 flammable gallons, all colliding under the fairfield overpass bridge, igniting a massive fire. ironically, it happened near the
quote
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headquarter of norwalk fire. >> the bridge was damaged. the heat from the burning fuel compromised some of the bridge, so that bridge is going to have to come down. >> reporter: while firefighters used foam to battle the blaze, officials say roughly 4,000 gallons of the gasoline load had burned or runoff. the crash occurred on the southbound lane of i-95, a busy stretch of the north-south interstate, with more than 145,000 vehicles traveling through daily. the morning commute turned into a chaotic mess, with thousands of vehicles diverted to local roads around the accident scene after state police shut down the highway in both directions. >> for a lot of truckers, we are on the clock, so you can only work 14 hours and drive 11 hours, so this impact, it slows down the delivery time for our loads. >> reporter: they will begin dismantling that fire damaged overpass early friday morning, with an eye on reopening that critical highway for rush hour monday, j.b. >> james: tony aiello, thank you so much.
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today was the sixth day of testimony at former president donald trump's so-called hush money trial in manhattan. before the jury heard from a former attorney for stormy daniels, there was a hearing on more potential violations of a gag order by the former president. pbs's robert costa is at the courthouse. >> reporter: former president trump already find $9,000 for violating a gag order, could be penalized again as judge juan merchan this morning considered four additional violations. >> this judge is totally conflicted. has me under an unconstitutional gag order. >> reporter: prosecutors cited several examples, including this come about future witness michael cohen. >> got caught lying in the last trial. >> reporter: on the stand today, stormy daniels a former attorney keith davidson who negotiated $130,000 payment from cohen to pay stormy daniels forr story before the election. >> and you have sex?
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>> yes. >> reporter: the night trump won, writing, what have we done? howard replied, oh, my god. asked to clarify the text, davidson told the attorney there is an understanding their activity might have assisted trump's campaign. trump has denied any wrongdoing and details about the payment, so today, the prosecution played an audio recording, in which rafah until davidson hates the fact we did it. davidson testified that was a reference to the payment for daniels. trump lawyers meanwhile tried to paint davidson is a serial extortionist of celebrities. citing alleged deals related to lindsay lohan, charlie sheen, and hulk hogan. and that he did the same with trump. >> they are doing a good job at showing sort of this cd, dirty underbelly of this world that keith davidson peddles in, by all accounts, this is what this man does for a living. it is bread-and-butter. >> reporter: and today, trump
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falsely claimed that he is not able to testify due to the gag order. that's not true. he is able to testify. the gag order just prohibits him from criticizing the jury or the witnesses beer j.b.? >> james: robert costa in new york, thank you. arizona's near-total ban on abortion has been repealed. governor katie hobbs made that official today, undoing a law that dated back to 1864. this summer, a law passed in 2022 will go back into effect. that allows abortions up to the 15th week of pregnancy. some abortion rights advocates want that to be extended to 24 weeks and are collecting signatures to put that on the ballot in november. here in washington, house republicans are bracing for another mutiny against their leader from the conference's far right. this time, congresswoman marjorie taylor greene is threatening to move ahead with the vote to remove house speaker mike johnson using the same procedure that ousted kevin mccarthy.
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but this time, johnson has an unlikely ally. in an interview for this sunday's "60 minutes," our norah o'donnell sits down with house democratic leader hakeem jeffries. >> norah: nine months after getting the job of speaker, republican kevin mccarthy of california got dumped by the far right wing of his party. following three weeks of paralysis, mike johnson of louisiana took his place. >> i want to thank you all for the trust that you have instilled in me. >> norah: after he worked with democrats to pass the foreign aid bill that included $61 billion for ukraine, georgia congresswoman marjorie taylor greene, who opposed it, said she will follow through with the threat to oust him. jeffries told us he works to find common ground with the other side of the aisle, and at least one republican who might be happy about that is speaker johnson. >> johnson, at some point
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today... >> norah: this past week, democrats said they would vote against congresswoman greene's effort to remove him. has speaker johnson asked for your help? >> he has not. and our view would traditionally be, let the other side work its own mess out. but when that mass starts to impact the ability to do the job on behalf of the american people, then the responsible thing at that moment might be for us to make clear that we will not allow the extremists to throw the congress and the country into chaos. >> james: you can see norah's conversation with leader hakeem jeffries sunday night on "60 minutes." if you are looking to buy a home, your monthly costs just went up -- again. will show you why when we come back. ♪ ♪ n symptoms were in my way. i needed more from my antidepressant. vraylar helped give it a lift. adding vraylar to an antidepressant is clinically proven to help relieve overall depression symptoms
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more than a third of all home sales each year, between march and june. here come the cicadas, and their distinct sound. billions are expected to emerge from underground across more than a dozen states. details straight ahead. when you have chronic kidney disease, there are places you'd like to be. like here. and here. not so much here. farxiga reduces the risk of kidney failure which can lead to dialysis. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪♪ farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections and low blood sugar. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection,
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ask their doctor about rexulti. >> james: parts of the u.s. are bracing for a historic bug invasion. it's already underway in the south, and the spring, by some estimates, about a trillion cicadas will emerge. at cbs's dave malkoff reports, a lot of people are... bugging out. >> reporter: you are listening to the song of the season, sung by mail cicadas, who have been living on the roots of this georgia tree since 2011. >> it just came out of the ground. it all gets started just after sunset, when they emerge from the earth, where they have lived for 13 years. >> reporter: they don't even have working wings until they molt out of their baby bodies when they are mature enough to .
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the certain of my soil reached trigger temperature six to 4 degrees fahrenheit. where is this not actually coming from? >> it really is, it is kind of ambient sound. that is kind of where they do the mating ritual. >> reporter: the eggs drop down here come a cycle that happens every 13 year. but this year, a special. >> i think i got one. >> reporter: in central illinois, dr. katy dana and her son are waiting on a 17 year brood. >> it's a boy. >> reporter: and a 13 year ones. all in the same area, overlapping for the first time since 18 oh three, when thomas jefferson was president. and you can see other kinds of cicadas. >> reporter: and these ones are still here and her band at the massive bug collection at the university of illinois. >> these specimens are from the great, great great, great great, great great grandparents. >> reporter: we could talk about a trillion of these beard >> big number, isn't it? >> reporter: all of this waiting and emerging animal thing, how is he able to jump on
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me if he doesn't even have wings yet? >> that baby body and flew home. >> reporter: and freaking out the neighbors will come to an end about two weeks after they pop out of their shells. that is, if they make it to the treetops. >> everything eats these things. >> reporter: this may actually be bad news for fishermen because with all of the cicadas dropping in the lake here, the fish might already be full and not biting. dave malkoff, cbs news, lincoln county, georgia. >> james: i pass on that stand up. all right, folks, tonight's "heart of america" is next. the heroes who stepped up to save a couple from their burning house. ♪ ♪ >> announcer: this portion of the "cbs evening news" is sponsored by verzenio. eld me. but i'm staying focused. and doing more to prevent recurrence. verzenio is specifically for hr-positive, her2-negative, node-positive early breast cancer with a high chance of returning, as determined by your doctor when added to hormone therapy. verzenio reduces the
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♪ ♪ >> james: finally, tonight, "heart of america." two members of a florida police department and a good samaritan who saved a couple from their burning home. body cam video shows the scene when officer nicholas jones and detective mathew lemos arrived at the scene in cape coral. they didn't hesitate to help a woman that was trapped in her garage, and also tackle the flames with the fire extinguisher, that is, then with the help of a neighbor named vincent navy, they rescued the
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woman's husband, an amputee who needed assistance getting out in his wheelchair. the couple and their two dogs all made it out safely before the fire department arrived. the heroes were honored with life-saving awards for their efforts. >> we really thrive on the community support that we get. >> those 3-5 minutes felt like eternity. i was just happy that they got out. >> james: three heroes who put their lives on the line to save others. tonight's "heart of america." and that's tonight's "evening news." for norah o'donnell, i'm >> i didn't want to be in front of brian. i wanted nothing to do with it. >> announcer: she says her boyfriend's roommate is troubled... >> i'm terrified of him. i'm terrified right now. >> judge judy: nobody forced you to come here. >> announcer: ...when word about her questionable relationship leaks. >> there is no one else in my life that these messages would have come from. >> judge judy: except him. >> correct. >> judge judy: or maybe his wife. is that a possibility? you flew from minnesota. i assume you came on the same flight with him. right. >> announcer: "judge judy."
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you are about to enter the courtroom of you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. captions paid for by cbs television distribution previously on "judge judy"... >> judge judy: who's doug? >> i used to work for him. >> i currently work for him. >> she is dating one of my best friends, and i started seeing doug and meghan together at odd ends of times. >> judge judy: does doug have family? >> yes, a wife and two kids. >> judge judy: what proof do you have that those vulgar and threatening texts emanated from the plaintiff? she files a protective order, and you didn't show up. why? >> i had broken my ankle two days prior. >> judge judy: get me the medical records. >> announcer: in a case continued from yesterday, brian kalenberg is suing his former friend, meghan rettke, for attorney fees, lost wages and a restraining order. >> judge judy: now, ms. rettke, when we adjourned, you were going to get your medical records. you have them? i'd like to see them, please.

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