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tv   CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell  CBS  April 18, 2024 3:30pm-4:01pm PDT

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people happened to be there at the right time. >> she got up and she saved my life. >> amazing how they are able to perform like that under that kind of pressure. fire officials pointed out that if any link in this chain of helpers was missing, these stories could have been very different. the cbs evening news is next on kpix. local news continues on our streaming service, cbs news bay area. i will see you at 5:00 . >> norah: breaking news. the jerry at donald trump's new york trial is seated. >> a lot of different places campaigning, but i've been here all day. >> norah: the dramatic day in
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court as 12 americans are set to decide the former present space and the so-called hush money trial. >> how did that make you feel? >> norah: the "cbs evening news" starts now. ♪ ♪ good evening. i'm norah o'donnell, and thank you for being with us. we want to begin tonight without breaking news. a jury of 12 new yorkers has now been seated for the first criminal prosecution of a former president of the united states viewed seven men and five women have been selected for the trial of donald trump, who is charged with falsifying business records to hide an alleged affair and influence the 2016 presidential election. one alternate has already been selected, and the court needs five more to begin the case. the judge said he hopes to have that wrapped up tomorrow. now earlier in the day, the case appeared to be heading in the wrong direction. that's because cargo jurors who were already seated were then removed. tonight, prosecutors are also asking the judge to hold trump
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in contempt after they said he repeatedly violated the court's gag order. cbs's robert costa was inside the courthouse in lower manhattan for today's major developments. >> reporter: jury selection stumbled backward and forward today before the 12 jurors who will decide donald trump's feet were finally seated. seven men and five women, including one who, during questioning, referred to trump as selfish and self-serving, but also promised she could be impartial. >> how does it feel to have a jury? >> reporter: after a full day in court, former president trump vented his frustrations. >> i'm sitting here for days now, from morning till night, in that freezing room -- freezing! everybody was freezing in there. >> reporter: the morning began with seven jurors in place, but complications flared, underscoring the high-wire act of seating a jury in such a high-profile trial. first, new york judgment
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juan merchan excused juror number 2, a nurse, who said she no longer believed she could be impartial. aspects of my identity have already been out there in public, she said. yesterday alone, i had friends, colleagues, and family push things to my phone. then he dismissed juror number 4, who had called trump fascinating and mysterious. after it emerged someone with the same name was once arrestedr allegedly ripping down conservative political posters, according to prosecutors. trial consultants save the vetting of these potential jurors is critical. >> there is extra caution because you do not want to go through six weeks and all of this and then have a problem with a jury that could cause a mistrial. >> reporter: trump was mostly quiet in court, occasionally staring into the jury box, but he has continued to rage about the case on social media. alarming prosecutors who claimed he has violated the judge's gag order seven times. it's ridiculous. it has to stop.
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late today, the former president sharply criticized the judge and district attorney alvin bragg. >> you got a d.a. that is out of control. you have a judge that is highly conflicted. >> reporter: among the new jurors, an engineer, a physical therapist, and a banker, who said they follow one of the key witnesses in this case on social media, michael cohen. they also follow trump. in the judge said opening arguments could now begin on monday. norah? >> norah: wow. robert costa, thank you. tonight, the crackdown at columbia university, where more than 100 protesters at the ivy league school were cuffed and carried away by new york police following a second day of demonstrations on campus. the heavy police presence and action came one day after the school's president faced some tough questions on capitol hill about the rise of anti-semitism on campus. cbs's lilia luciano reports on the arrests. >> for what reason? i'm just standing on the sidewalk! >> reporter: police in riot
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gear detained protesters at columbia university, loading them into multiple buses as they cleared out students who had camped out in tents on the schools south lawn. the mass protest on the war in gaza began wednesday. >> colombia has shown over and over again that they don't care about student rights, they don't care about student voices, they don't care about student safety p >> reporter: school administrators today asked nypd to clean up the tents and suspended several students who participated, including the daughter of representative ilhan omar, according to a tweet on x. colombia has been hot spot of protests in the october seventh attack, with pro-palestinian students denouncing the killing of more than 34,000 people in gaza, most women and childred with usaid recently called an imminent famine. the school also so i spike in reports of anti-semitic rhetoric. >> imes where it no max carey i've gotten very nasty anti-semitic comments at me. i don't understand how this is accepted. >> reporter: it comes after
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the president was built on capitol hill yesterday. >> anti-semitism has no place on our campus and am personally committed to doing everything i can to. >> reporter: tonight, tension still over the campus. >> new yorkers have every right to express their sorrow, but that heartbreak does not give you the right to harass others, to spread hate. >> reporter: this protest continues here, as you can hear around me. at one point turning the chant and the demonstration into a march down the steep. they returned to columbia and it is excited to continue to the night. norah? >> norah: lilia luciano, thank you very much good late today, the u.s. vetoed u.s. security council resolution which would clear the way for the palestinian state to be given full u.n. membership. the u.s. that it would only recognize palestine as part of a negotiated agreement with israel. meanwhile the biden administration today responded to saturday's unprecedented
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attack on israel by slapping new sanctions on iran. targeting its drone production. israel is also considering military action against iran. house speaker mike johnson's political future could be on the line this weekend. he is hoping to hold votes on a series of bills that include billions in military aid for israel and ukraine. johnson will likely need help from democrats to get the bills passed. cbs's scott macfarlane has been doing his reporting on capitol hill all day. what have you learned, scott? >> reporter: norah, a critical and fragile 48 hours ahead as mike johnson tries to put down a revolt and site his own party, but also get enough support for that $61 billion plan to help ukraine ahead of a key vote on saturday. in an appeal to some of his party's critics, who say the government has spent enough on ukraine already, johnson tonight argues some of the money is in the form of a loan, and some of the money will help u.s. defense manufacturers. but that's not enough to satisfy trump ally and georgia republican congresswoman marjorie taylor greene, who again today said she would move
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to try to remove johnson as speaker over that ukraine money, potentially in the coming days. but norah, multiple house democrats told cbs news late today, either they or they think their colleagues would intervene to save him if it meant getting money to ukraine. >> norah: a critical couple days ahead, you are right, scott, let me ask you about that key development on the congressional push to ban tiktok appeared what can you tell us? >> reporter: that foreign aid bill also includes this provision requiring tiktok to be sold or divested from its china-based owner or face a ban in the u.s. in a year which would strip it from tens of millions of users. here's the key movement. senate commerce committee chairwoman maria campbell of washington, who had been holding out her support for the bill, today announced she is on board, which could expedite it to the senate floor. it already has bipartisan support, could be on a fast track, and norah, tiktok has said these bills encroach on the first amendment. >> norah: a lot to watch. scott macfarlane, thank you very much good now to the 2024 presidential election and
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"america decides." president biden's campaign is increasingly concerned that the independent bid of robert f. kennedy jr., who promotes conspiracies, could hurt biden's reelection efforts. so biden appeared with kennedy's family, who has denounced their brother's views and his candidacy. cbs's weijia jiang with news from the campaign trail. >> reporter: at a biden campaign event in philadelphia... >> the kennedy family endorses joe biden for president. [cheers and applause] >> reporter: 15 members of the kennedy family, a political dynasty, through support behind president biden instead of their own relative, robert f. kennedy jr. >> i don't want to become an emotional but what an incredible honor. to have the support of the kennedy family. >> reporter: rfk jr. sister, kerry kennedy, did not mention him by name, but she insisted the race is just between biden and donald trump. >> a vote for joe biden is a
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vote for our democracy and our decency. >> reporter: rfk jr. has sparked controversy with claims like vaccines cause autism in children, but his families public endorsement of biden signals how seriously democrats are taking his run. so far, kennedy has secured a spot on the ballot in utah and michigan. the kennedy campaign and its supporters claim they have enough signatures to appear on nearly a dozen other states, including key battleground state. donald trump says rfk jr. will be spoiler for biden. >> i do believe that rfk jr. will do very well, and i do believe he is going to take a lot of votes away from crooked joe biden. >> reporter: for a massachusetts congressman kennedy the second said he would encourage his brother to drop out. >> we cannot do anything that in any way strips even one vote
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from president biden. >> reporter: today, kennedy tweeted about his family's decision saying, "i am pleased they are politically active bureaucrats a a family tradition. "he added they are divided and puts opinions but united in their love for each other, though there was clearly no love lost today in philadelphia, norah. >> norah: weijia jiang, thank you. there are new developments tonight and the murder case of the man charged with killing four university of idaho students in 2022. the defense says suspect bryan kohberger has an alibi for the night of the murders. cbs's carter evans has the latest news in this closely-watch murder investigation. >> reporter: bryan kohberger's lawyers say there was no way he could have been at the murder scene and plan to use cell phone data to prove ed. 29-year-old criminology student is accused of brutally stabbing madison mogen, kaylee goncalves, xana kernodle, and ethan chapin in this moscow, idaho, house back in 2022.
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a newly-filed alibi claims kohberger was out driving at the time of the murders come as he often did you hike and run, and/or see the moon and stars, miles away from the crime scene. >> the defense is trying to paint a consistent picture here. this was his pattern and practice. nothing out of the ordinary happened. he liked to drive late at night. >> reporter: but court documents show kohberger cell phone had no service or was turned off for two hours during the time the murders took place, which is consistent with him attempting to conceal his location. the defense says there was nothing to hide, claiming the cell data will prove that this car captured on surveillance video shortly before the murders could not have been kohberger's. >> cell phone evidence is very difficult if that's the only evidence you have on either side. because it's imperfect and because we don't always have our cell phones on us. >> reporter: but prosecutors also say police found kohberger's dna on a knife sheath at the scene of a crime.
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which is stronger in court: cell phone data or dna, allegedly found at the scene of a crime? >> the prosecution will simply say you have to follow the scientific evidence, and that's the dna. >> reporter: now but goncalves family tells cbs news they are relieved to finally see the alibi information. would actually make them feel more confident about the prosecution. they are just frustrated with all of the delays in the case. norah, a trial date still has not been set been set. >> norah: don't understand that. carter evans, thank you. well coming out of another round of severe weather threatening millions of americans tonight. in ohio, communities near cleveland and columbus are cleaning up after at least five tornadoes touched down. for a look at where the storms are heading right now, let's bring in meteorologist chris warren, from our partners at the weather channel. good evening, chris. >> we are tracking severe weather and will be doing so with multiple threats into the overnight hours tonight. this is where severe weather is not just possible but likely. could see a few tornadoes and
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damaging winds, but the big threat tonight: big time. 2 inches or greater. that will be golf ball-sized hail or even larger. here is the hail parameters. in here, that hail parameter is here with the storms even into the overnight, first thing in the morning, could be woken up by hail across parts of the south. another organization issuing their hurricane outlook. this forecast here from the weather company, along with colorado state university, now both saying an above average season, and norah, i think the main take away with this is the fact that if there is more storms, there's more chances for one to make landfall. >> norah: chris, thank you. extreme weather doesn't begin to capture what's happening in dubai. this week, the largest city in the united arab emirates got about two years worth of rain i. cbs's chris livesay reports they are still trying to get one of the world's busiest airports back to normal. >> reporter: a parched desert turned into a lake.
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some 10 inches of rain in a single storm. >> too much. >> reporter: more than the united arab emirates had seen in 75 years. >> there is so much water here. >> it's actually horrendous, the worst i've ever seen in dubai, and we have seen some bad storms in the past, but this was like nothing else. it was like an alien invasion. this guy just kept on flashing thunder, nonstop, almost nonstop. i've never seen so much rain and all my life. >> reporter: in the soil-rich reason, luxury vehicles plowed through the highways and street, transformed into muddy rivers. as futuristic skyscrapers were swallowed by ghoulish storm clouds. at dubai international airport, a wave of flight cancellations and delays, forcing the world's second busiest hub to warn passengers to stay away unless it was absolutely necessary. schools were closed. homes destroyed, and shopping malls engulfed in water. but rescuers proved ready to
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evacuate more than just men, women, and children. >> okay. >> reporter: chris livesay, cbs news, rome. >> norah: tonight, we have learned what may have caused a major 911 service outage across several states. that's next.
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but did you know we can take care of your insurance claim? that means less stress for you. >> woman: thanks. >> tech: my pleasure. have a good one. >> woman: you too. >> tech: schedule today at safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ when my doctor gave me breztri for my copd things changed for me. breztri gave me better breathing, symptom improvement, and reduced flare-ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. ask your doctor about breztri. >> norah: tonight, 911 service isn't back in four states that lost it wednesday night. for hours, millions in texas, nevada, south dakota, nebraska had no way to call first responders.
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can you imagine? the sec is investigating but a company that operates fiber lines says the outage in three of those four states was caused by a contractor who cut one of its lines while installing a light ball. reading, riding, and taylor swift? the music superstar now taking center stage in college classrooms. that's right. that's next. ♪ ♪ rheumatoid arthritis symptoms. with my psoriatic arthritis symptoms. but just ok isn't ok. and i was done settling. if you still have symptoms after a tnf blocker like humira or enbrel, rinvoq is different and may help. rinvoq is a once-daily pill that can rapidly relieve joint pain, stiffness, and swelling in ra and psa. relieve fatigue... and stop further joint damage. and in psa, can leave skin clear or almost clear. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin; heart attack, stroke, and gi tears occurred.
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the most prescribed biologic for asthma. >> norah: in just a few short hours, taylor swift will release a much-anticipated 11th studio album: "the tortured poets department." but swift cultural impact goes far beyond her music and record-breaking tours. it is now entering college classrooms. here is jo ling kent. >> all the marketing strategies in the world will only work if you have a good product to market. >> reporter: you might not expect a business school course to begin like this. ♪ ♪ but at uc berkeley, taylor swift is not just a tortured poet, she is a case study in how to build an empire. >> her tour has essentially
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revitalized so much of the economy and boosted the local economy everywhere she goes. ♪ fearless ♪ >> reporter: undergrads miaad bushala and sofia lendahl teach. >> her songwriting ability, her competitive >> taylor is so strategic and all other things that she does. anything of a brand, that's all they ever want, they want loyal customers, and that is what taylor has. >> institution's studying that, they know this is a good thing. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: and universities nationwide are teaching this independence from english to political science to gender studies. >> welcome to the air as to her! >> reporter: swift successes and failures are part of the syllabus, like the battle to regain control of her master recordings. >> we have also learned of some of the applications she has had on legal issues such as our economic artist rights and ticketing legislation which is impactful as well because that is not something you see every day. >> reporter: still we wanted
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was so much tuition on him a minute... how did your family react? >> my parents were super thrilled. my mom took me to a 1989 concert. >> there like them you have to take this class. it's not now, never, right? >> reporter: and swift now has some students thinking even bigger. >> she is incredibly fearless in the ways in which she doesn't mind taking creative risks appear to me, it's like climbing the corporate ladder, and up as a manager in five years. >> reporter: you think that you might take more risks? >> yeah. >> reporter: a la taylor swift? >> sure. >> reporter: because of this course? >> yes. >> reporter: ace course tailor-made for success. ♪ ♪ jo ling kent, berkeley, california. >> norah: "heart of america"'s next as we remember a founding member of the allman brothers band, dickey betts. ♪ ♪ >> announcer: this portion of the "cbs evening news" is sponsored by ancestry. discover preserve represent. ♪ ♪ 99 years old and he'd come five days a week if we let him.
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the allman brothers band, has died at the age of 80 after a battle with cancer. betts wrote and performed some of the bands biggest hits, like "rambling man." he also composed the seven and a half minute instrumental "jessica" named after his daughter. ♪ ♪ his talents helped define what became known as southern rock, inspiring generations of musicians. dickey betts, tonight "heart of america." and that is tonight's "cbs evening news." i'm norah o'donnell. good night. ♪ ♪ >> josh, for whatever reason, lost his temper. >> announcer: a tenant's shocking tantrum... >> he took out a knife, and he chopped out the entire internal-lighting system of my kitchen. >> judge judy: did you call the police? >> no. >> announcer: ...or a landlord hoping to spark a payday? >> josh had a temperament that would go from sullen to very explosive at times. >> judge judy: i don't understand why a man who's sane would have a nut living in their house for five months.
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>> announcer: "judge judy." 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 22-year-old joshua garver and his father, gerald, are suing joshua's former landlord, jason weismann, for the return of rent and a security deposit, harassment, and bullying. >> byrd: order! all rise! this is case number 132 on the calendar in the matter of garver vs. weismann. >> judge judy: thank you. >> byrd: you're welcome, judge. parties have been sworn in. you may be seated. ma'am, have a seat. >> judge judy: who rented the room? that would be you. your first name is? >> joshua. >> judge judy: you are? >> gerald, his father. >> judge judy: how old are you? >> 22. >> judge judy: when did you rent the room from the defendant? >> june 1, 2017, through march of 2018. >> judge judy: and you want your security deposit back.

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