Here’s a look at the top stories making headlines on the “CBS Evening News” with Reena Ninan.
Originally posted here:
"CBS Evening News" headlines for Saturday, July 28, 2018
Here’s a look at the top stories making headlines on the “CBS Evening News” with Reena Ninan.
Originally posted here:
"CBS Evening News" headlines for Saturday, July 28, 2018
Pope Francis has accepted Cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s resignation from the College of Cardinals following allegations of sexual abuse. The pope has ordered McCarrick to conduct a “life of prayer and penance.” Seth Doane reports.
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Cardinal Theodore McCarrick resigns after sexual abuse allegations
More than 80 wildfires in 13 states have forced tens of thousands of people to flee their homes to safety. At least three firefighters have been killed and several people are missing in California. Carter Evans reports.
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Trump signs emergency declaration for California wildfire
More than 80 wildfires in 13 states have forced tens of thousands of people to flee their homes to safety. At least three firefighters have been killed and several people are missing in California. Carter Evans reports.
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Trump signs emergency declaration for California wildfire
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – Staten Island homeowners were picking up the pieces Saturday after powerful storms passed through our area Friday afternoon. “We want our power back,” New Dorp resident Marie Riveccio told CBS2’s Dave Carlin. Electric company workers, city parks department crews and private contractors did a sweaty dance Saturday, ducking out of each other’s way for their grueling jobs on hard-hit Bancroft Avenue. “There are a lot of people that live without air conditioning,” said Riveccio. “But I can’t.” But losing your power wasn’t the worst that could happen – try having your bedroom ceiling vented with tree limbs poking in. George Menduina said he’s stuck, unable to get the tree off his home more than a day after it fell, despite making call after call. “You gotta get the tree off the house,” he said. “You gotta get a tree cutting company. Dilemma here now — I call them, they say, ‘well, we can’t cut the tree it belongs to the parks department.’” He was glad when the parks department arrived in the afternoon. But then, he got bad news. Parks department workers told Carlin that complicating the cleanup was that a crucial piece of equipment was not working properly. “That loader is not working right now. It has to reach in and grab it and pull it up and out,” one man said. “There’s another one, but there’s not this weekend.” The workers left, saying there may be no budging the tree for several more days. Menduina wasn’t the only resident complaining about getting the run-around. “The tree across the street fell right on top of it,” said Susie Sotomayor. Winds caused a tree to crush her husband’s motorcycle. She said she immediately called 311, then waited and waited. “I called again 311, I spoke to the operator there. She transferred me over to Con Edison, and they said that neither the police nor the fire department had notified Con Edison,” she said. Sotomayor said she’s learning the physical mess of the storm is only the half of it. It’s also the mess of reporting damage, filing insurance claims and scanning weather reports, thinking, ‘please, no more storms.’ Suffering a power outage or have an issue to report to your local utility company? Here’s a list of the usual suspects from around our area to reach for help. ConEdison : 1-800-752-6633 Central Hudson : 845-452-2700 NYSEG : 1-800-572-1111 National Grid : 1-800-930-5003 (Long Island & the Rockaways) or 1-800-642-4272 (Upstate New York) PSE&G New Jersey : 1-800-436-7734 PSEG Long Island : 1-800-490-0025 or 631-755-6000 Rochester Gas & Electric : 1-800-743-2110 National Fuel : 1-800-365-3234 For more about dealing with the summer heat, check out our Guide to Summer Safety .
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Trees Scattered Across Staten Island Following Strong Summer Storm
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – Staten Island homeowners were picking up the pieces Saturday after powerful storms passed through our area Friday afternoon. “We want our power back,” New Dorp resident Marie Riveccio told CBS2’s Dave Carlin. Electric company workers, city parks department crews and private contractors did a sweaty dance Saturday, ducking out of each other’s way for their grueling jobs on hard-hit Bancroft Avenue. “There are a lot of people that live without air conditioning,” said Riveccio. “But I can’t.” But losing your power wasn’t the worst that could happen – try having your bedroom ceiling vented with tree limbs poking in. George Menduina said he’s stuck, unable to get the tree off his home more than a day after it fell, despite making call after call. “You gotta get the tree off the house,” he said. “You gotta get a tree cutting company. Dilemma here now — I call them, they say, ‘well, we can’t cut the tree it belongs to the parks department.’” He was glad when the parks department arrived in the afternoon. But then, he got bad news. Parks department workers told Carlin that complicating the cleanup was that a crucial piece of equipment was not working properly. “That loader is not working right now. It has to reach in and grab it and pull it up and out,” one man said. “There’s another one, but there’s not this weekend.” The workers left, saying there may be no budging the tree for several more days. Menduina wasn’t the only resident complaining about getting the run-around. “The tree across the street fell right on top of it,” said Susie Sotomayor. Winds caused a tree to crush her husband’s motorcycle. She said she immediately called 311, then waited and waited. “I called again 311, I spoke to the operator there. She transferred me over to Con Edison, and they said that neither the police nor the fire department had notified Con Edison,” she said. Sotomayor said she’s learning the physical mess of the storm is only the half of it. It’s also the mess of reporting damage, filing insurance claims and scanning weather reports, thinking, ‘please, no more storms.’ Suffering a power outage or have an issue to report to your local utility company? Here’s a list of the usual suspects from around our area to reach for help. ConEdison : 1-800-752-6633 Central Hudson : 845-452-2700 NYSEG : 1-800-572-1111 National Grid : 1-800-930-5003 (Long Island & the Rockaways) or 1-800-642-4272 (Upstate New York) PSE&G New Jersey : 1-800-436-7734 PSEG Long Island : 1-800-490-0025 or 631-755-6000 Rochester Gas & Electric : 1-800-743-2110 National Fuel : 1-800-365-3234 For more about dealing with the summer heat, check out our Guide to Summer Safety .
Excerpt from:
Trees Scattered Across Staten Island Following Strong Summer Storm
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) – A gun scare caused chaos Saturday at a subway station in Brooklyn. Police swept the Bedford Avenue station in Williamsburg around 1:20 p.m. and said they found no evidence of shots fired or a gun. A woman on an L train approaching the station reportedly said passengers in her car started running toward her yelling that someone had a gun. Another woman said her husband had to run from one end of the train to the other with their 3-year-old while everyone was screaming. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority acknowledged the “frightening situation” in a tweet and said lost items can be picked up at the station or a Penn Station lost and found. To follow up, NYPD arrived on the scene. There was no gunman found and no reports of any shots fired. We know that may have been a frightening situation but we are committed to the safety of our customers at all times. Glad everyone is safe. ^JL — NYCT Subway (@NYCTSubway) July 28, 2018 (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Gun Scare Prompts Chaotic Scene On L Train In Brooklyn
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) – A gun scare caused chaos Saturday at a subway station in Brooklyn. Police swept the Bedford Avenue station in Williamsburg around 1:20 p.m. and said they found no evidence of shots fired or a gun. A woman on an L train approaching the station reportedly said passengers in her car started running toward her yelling that someone had a gun. Another woman said her husband had to run from one end of the train to the other with their 3-year-old while everyone was screaming. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority acknowledged the “frightening situation” in a tweet and said lost items can be picked up at the station or a Penn Station lost and found. To follow up, NYPD arrived on the scene. There was no gunman found and no reports of any shots fired. We know that may have been a frightening situation but we are committed to the safety of our customers at all times. Glad everyone is safe. ^JL — NYCT Subway (@NYCTSubway) July 28, 2018 (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Gun Scare Prompts Chaotic Scene On L Train In Brooklyn
SANTA MONICA (CBSLA) – Actor Ving Rhames said he was held at gunpoint by police at his own Santa Monica home two years ago when he was mistaken by neighbors for a robber. The Santa Monica Police Department said Saturday that the incident was one of two which prompted the department to launch its “Meet Your Neighbors” program. FILE — Actor Ving Rhames poses during the ‘Soldiers of Fortune’ photocall, on the roof of Ukraine hotel on July 18, 2012, in Moscow, Russia. (Getty Images) Neighbors allegedly called 911 to report two black people, one of which being Rhames, had supposedly broke into residences that turned out to be their own. Rhames for the first time publicly discussed the incident Friday to a radio audience. Rhames, appearing on Sirius XM’s “The Clay Cane” show, said that he was watching ESPN when he heard knocking at his door. “I open the door, there’s a red dot pointed at my face from a nine millimeter,” Rhames said. He was ordered to put his hands in the air, adding that there were at least four officers and a police dog at his house. The incident occurred at 1:52 a.m. on July 29, 2016 when several neighbors reported that “a black male was seen entering a residence and did not live there,” police said in a statement. “As officers were assessing the residence, they encountered the resident at the front door. Officers recognized the resident and the situation was quickly deescalated with no use of force occurring. The resident was identified as Ving Rhames.” Lt. Saul Rodriguez also said a similar occurred September 6, 2015, and involved Fay Wells, a black woman who had locked herself out of her apartment. Wells, who earned an MBA from Dartmouth University, and was a vice president of strategy at a company at the time, wrote about the incident in the Washington Post. In the piece, Wells wrote that she called for a locksmith and once inside her apartment heard a man’s voice and what sounded like a small dog whimpering outside. “I imagined a loiterer and opened the door to move him along. I was surprised to see a large dog halfway up the staircase to my door. I stepped back inside, closed the door and locked it. I heard barking. I approached my front window and loudly asked what was going on. Peering through my blinds I saw a gun. “A man stood at the bottom of the stairs, pointing it at me. I stepped back and heard ‘Come outside with your hands up.”‘ Wells said she later learned that the Santa Monica Police Department had dispatched 19 officers after one of her neighbors reported a burglary at her apartment. Hence, the police department launched a city-wide “Meet Your Neighbors” program on Jan. 30, 2017, according to a department news statement. “The key to this event is simple engagement and community building through a coffee date or ice cream social, for example,” the statement said. “Our challenge to the community is to step out of their comfort zone and get to know the people on their block — their neighbors.” Jacqueline Seabrooks, the first female black patrol officer for the Santa Monica Police Department in 1982, and California’s first black woman to serve as police chief for a municipality when she became chief of the Inglewood Police Department in 2007, began her tenure as Santa Monica’s police chief in 2012, retiring Sept. 30, 2017. (©2018 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)
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Actor Ving Rhames Was Once Mistaken For Robber, Held At Gunpoint At Own Santa Monica Home
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — To try to get more people into camping this summer, Vermont is offering first-time campers free equipment and campsites at various state parks, as New York is also doing. More than 600 people have signed up to be picked for 30 individual slots for happy camper weekends offered in July and August at various Vermont state parks. “We are always looking for ways to encourage more people to spend time outdoors with their friends and families because it’s fun, relaxing and rejuvenating, and it’s good for people’s emotional and physical health,” said state parks director Craig Whipple. “All the positive benefits of outdoor recreation can be multiplied when people spend the night outside in the woods.” The parks loan the winning campers a tent, cook stove, lantern and some sleeping pads. Staff then help the campers set up their campsite and give them a tour of the park on Friday evening. Dylan Hart, of Burlington, camped this month with her partner and 2-year-old daughter at Grand Isle State Park and said the group had “an amazing time.” Although she didn’t like camping after she and parents went on a camping trip through Europe when she was a kid, she thought it was important for her daughter to experience it. “I loved it. We had such a great time,” she said Thursday. “One of the biggest things was just seeing her, my daughter, so happy and kind of just, like, free,” she said of her daughter, who met other kids at the playground and played with them for hours. “I’ve never seen a 2-year-old so dirty in my life before, but she was having such a great time being messy and just being a kid,” she said. They also got a parking pass that allowed them to visit nearby state parks on Lake Champlain. Now Hart and her partner are trying to get their own camping gear and planning their next trip. In the last decade, visits to Vermont state parks are up 40 percent, said state parks Commissioner Michael Snyder. New York state is also offering its residents first-time camper weekends with free gear and campsites throughout the summer. (© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
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New York Offers Free Gear, Sites To First-Time Campers
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — To try to get more people into camping this summer, Vermont is offering first-time campers free equipment and campsites at various state parks, as New York is also doing. More than 600 people have signed up to be picked for 30 individual slots for happy camper weekends offered in July and August at various Vermont state parks. “We are always looking for ways to encourage more people to spend time outdoors with their friends and families because it’s fun, relaxing and rejuvenating, and it’s good for people’s emotional and physical health,” said state parks director Craig Whipple. “All the positive benefits of outdoor recreation can be multiplied when people spend the night outside in the woods.” The parks loan the winning campers a tent, cook stove, lantern and some sleeping pads. Staff then help the campers set up their campsite and give them a tour of the park on Friday evening. Dylan Hart, of Burlington, camped this month with her partner and 2-year-old daughter at Grand Isle State Park and said the group had “an amazing time.” Although she didn’t like camping after she and parents went on a camping trip through Europe when she was a kid, she thought it was important for her daughter to experience it. “I loved it. We had such a great time,” she said Thursday. “One of the biggest things was just seeing her, my daughter, so happy and kind of just, like, free,” she said of her daughter, who met other kids at the playground and played with them for hours. “I’ve never seen a 2-year-old so dirty in my life before, but she was having such a great time being messy and just being a kid,” she said. They also got a parking pass that allowed them to visit nearby state parks on Lake Champlain. Now Hart and her partner are trying to get their own camping gear and planning their next trip. In the last decade, visits to Vermont state parks are up 40 percent, said state parks Commissioner Michael Snyder. New York state is also offering its residents first-time camper weekends with free gear and campsites throughout the summer. (© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
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New York Offers Free Gear, Sites To First-Time Campers
CORONA (CBSLA) – Police are investigating the death of an infant whose body was found abandoned off a freeway in Corona Friday afternoon. The infant was discovered just after 2:30 p.m. in the area of Interstate 15 and Cajalco Road, according to Corona police. It’s unclear exactly where the infant was discovered. The Riverside County coroner’s office is conducting an autopsy to determine the exact cause of death. The infant’s name, gender and exact age were not immediately confirmed. Anyone with information on the case should call detectives at 951-279-3659.
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Abandoned Infant Found Dead Off 15 Freeway In Corona
CORONA (CBSLA) – Police are investigating the death of an infant whose body was found abandoned off a freeway in Corona Friday afternoon. The infant was discovered just after 2:30 p.m. in the area of Interstate 15 and Cajalco Road, according to Corona police. It’s unclear exactly where the infant was discovered. The Riverside County coroner’s office is conducting an autopsy to determine the exact cause of death. The infant’s name, gender and exact age were not immediately confirmed. Anyone with information on the case should call detectives at 951-279-3659.
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Abandoned Infant Found Dead Off 15 Freeway In Corona
REDDING (CBS News/AP) – Heat waves are setting all-time temperature records across the globe — again. Europe suffered its deadliest fire in more than a century. One of nearly 90 large fires in the Western U.S. burned hundreds of homes and forced the evacuation of at least 37,000 people near Redding, Calif. Flood-inducing downpours have pounded the Eastern U.S. this week. It’s all part of summer — but it’s all being made worse by human-caused climate change, scientists say. “Weirdness abounds,” said Rutgers University climate scientist Jennifer Francis. RELATED: Cranston Fire Near Idyllwild Grows Overnight Friday, 7,000 Remain Away From Their Homes Japan hit 106 degrees on Monday, its hottest temperature ever. Records fell in parts of Massachusetts, Maine, Wyoming, Colorado, Oregon, New Mexico and Texas. And then there’s crazy heat in Europe, where normally chill Norway, Sweden and Finland all saw temperatures they have never seen before on any date, pushing past 90 degrees. So far this month, at least 118 of these all-time heat records have been set or tied across the globe, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The explanations should sound as familiar as the crash of broken records. “We now have very strong evidence that global warming has already put a thumb on the scales, upping the odds of extremes like severe heat and heavy rainfall,” Stanford University climate scientist Noah Diffenbaugh said. “We find that global warming has increased the odds of record-setting hot events over more than 80 percent of the planet, and has increased the odds of record-setting wet events at around half of the planet.” Climate change is making the world warmer because of the build-up of heat-trapping gases from the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil and other human activities. And experts say the jet stream — which dictates weather in the Northern Hemisphere — is again behaving strangely. “An unusually sharply kinked jet stream has been stuck in place for weeks now,” said Jeff Masters, director of the private Weather Underground. He said that allows the heat to stay in place over three areas where the kinks are: Europe, Japan and the western United States. The same jet stream pattern caused the 2003 European heat wave, the 2010 Russian heat wave and fires, the 2011 Texas and Oklahoma drought and the 2016 Canadian wildfires, Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann said, pointing to past studies by him and others. He said in an email that these extremes are “becoming more common because of human-caused climate change and in particular, the amplified warming in the Arctic.” Climate scientists have long said they can’t directly link single weather events, like a heat wave, to human-caused climate change without extensive study. In the past decade they have used observations, statistics and computer simulations to calculate if global warming increases the chances of the events. A study by European scientists Friday found that the ongoing European heat wave is twice as likely because of human-caused global warming, though those conclusions have not yet been confirmed by outside scientists. The World Weather Attribution team said they compared three-day heat measurements and forecasts for the Netherlands, Denmark and Ireland with historical records going back to the early 1900s. “The world is becoming warmer and so heat waves like this are becoming more common,” said Friederike Otto, a member of the team and deputy director of the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford. Erich Fischer, an expert on weather extremes at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich who wasn’t part of the analysis said the authors used well-established methods to make their conclusions. Georgia Tech climate scientist Kim Cobb said the link between climate change and fires isn’t as strong as it is with heat waves, but it is becoming clearer. In the United States on Friday, there were 89 active large fires consuming nearly 900,000 acres, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. The Carr Fire in Northern California has burned hundreds of homes and is threatening thousands of other structures. The blaze began Monday as a small wildfire and erupted into a living hellscape, CBS News’ Carter Evans reported from the city of Redding. “It’s like a war zone,” one woman said. “It’s just like a bomb just hit each house and just exploded.” So far this year, fires have burned 4.15 million acres, which is nearly 14 percent higher than average over the past 10 years. In Greece, a devastating fire this month — with at least 83 fatalities — is the deadliest fire in Europe since 1900, according to the International Disaster Database run by the Centre for the Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters in Brussels, Belgium. CBS News correspondent Seth Doane met 74-year-old Maria Nikolaou as she tried to start cleaning up on Wednesday in Greece. The fast-moving wildfire tore through her neighborhood. Her car was gutted, and in minutes her whole neighborhood was consumed. “Trees were falling everywhere, I was so scared,” she said. The first major science study to connect greenhouse gases to stronger and longer heat waves was in 2004. It was titled “More intense, more frequent and longer lasting heat waves in the 21st century.” Study author Gerald Meehl of the National Center for Atmospheric Research said Friday that now it “reads like a prediction of what has been happening and will continue to happen as long as average temperatures continue to rise with ever-increasing emissions of greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels. It’s no mystery.” © 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Scientists: Worldwide Record-Breaking Heat, Wildfires Worsened by Climate Change
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) – A Brooklyn man suspected of killing a nurse and raping another woman in New York, as well as sexually assaulting and trying to kill a woman in North Hollywood after they went on a date, has confessed to killing as many as six additional victims, according to a New York Daily News report that cites law enforcement sources. Danuel Drayton. (NYPD) Danueal Drayton, 27, was arrested about 5 p.m. Tuesday by Los Angeles police in North Hollywood after he was tracked there by a joint New York-New Jersey Police Task Force. The L.A. County District Attorney’s Office reported Friday that Drayton sexually assaulted and tried to kill a 28-year-old woman in her North Hollywood apartment. According to prosecutors, on July 22-23, following a date, Drayton sexually assaulted the woman and held her captive in her apartment. The DA’s office has charged Drayton with one count each of attempted murder, rape, false imprisonment by violence and sexual penetration by a foreign object. He is scheduled to be arraigned in L.A. County Superior Court Monday. He is being held on $1.5 million bail. Drayton is also wanted in New York in connection with the killing of nurse Samantha Stewart, who was found dead in her Queens apartment on July 17, as well as the rape earlier this month of a woman in Brooklyn. Stewart, 29, was found dead by her father and brother, and authorities later determined that she had been strangled. On Friday, the New York Daily News reported that Drayton confessed to committing two murders in Connecticut, one in the Bronx, one in Suffolk County, one in either Queens or Nassau County, and possibly another California homicide, according to a police source. The source stressed, however, that it was unclear if Drayton was telling the truth about the additional crimes. “My body did this, not my mind,” the paper quoted Drayton as telling investigators. “I didn’t want to do this. My body made me do this.” Authorities believe Drayton met both of his New York victims on Tinder and their first meeting was in a public space. They say he also may have used other dating sites to meet potential victims. “The common denominator in these two cases – one being a murder, one being a rape – is dating websites,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea said this week. Police say Drayton was well known to police. He was arrested in June for allegedly choking an ex-girlfriend at Inwood Park in Nassau County. One July 1, his bail was set at $1,000. On July 5, a judge dropped the bail requirement, over the objection of the district attorney, and Drayton walked free. “It would have been impossible for the judge at that time to foresee the allegations that are presently unfolding and coming to light,” a Nassau Court spokesman told the Daily News. He also has five prior arrests in his home state of Connecticut, including a strangulation arrest in 2011. (©2018 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)
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Report: NY Murder Suspect Arrested In NoHo Confessed To Several Other Killings