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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  June 16, 2025 3:00am-3:30am PDT

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>> hello and thanks for watching. i'm jessi mitchell in new york and this is cbs news roundup. here are the top stories. police in minnesota now have a man in custody who is suspected of assassinating a state lawmaker and her husband. los angeles prepares for more protests as president trump doubles down on efforts to deport undocumented migrants. and israel and iran show no signs of backing down from the latest outbreak of fighting. despite international calls for ceasefire. the man suspected of assassinating a top minnesota lawmaker and her husband has been caught by police after an intense statewide manhunt. the ramsey county sheriff's office released this photo showing 57 year old vance boelter in police custody late sunday night. he was arrested near his home in the town of green isle, minnesota. boelter is also suspected of shooting a state senator and his spouse, who are both expected to recover. the statewide manhunt lasted just over 24 hours. police say boelter was armed at the time of his arrest but captured without incident. as cbs cristian
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benavides reports, police found a list of other possible targets in his vehicle, including abortion rights advocates and abortion facilities. >> a manhunt has come to an end. police have arrested 57 year old vance luther boelter. >> we will put every ounce of effort that the state of minnesota has to make sure that justice is served, and the individual responsible for this serves the time for the unspeakable act. >> this image captured boelter just hours after four people were shot, including two state lawmakers. minnesota house leader democrat melissa hortman and her husband mark, were killed in the early saturday shootings, and senator john hoffman and his wife were wounded. both couples were shot in their homes. u.s. democratic senator amy klobuchar was a close friend of hortman, and had dined with her the night before the shooting. >> at that dinner, it was a big political dinner. everyone was rejoicing, happy the session's behind them. and that was the
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last time so many of us saw melissa and mark. and the next morning, 5 a.m., the governor, governor walz, calls me and tells me that we believe that she's no longer with us. >> hoffman and his wife are seriously wounded. they're recovering in the hospital as of saturday night. yvette hoffman was reportedly awake and alert. police say the suspect wore a mask and posed as a police officer. he is known to minnesota politics, appointed twice to the governor's workforce development commission, most recently by governor tim walz. his political leanings at the time of the shooting are unclear. >> you don't think he had any extreme views about anything? >> no. he never talked to extreme views. >> at the white house. president trump condemned the shootings. >> absolutely terrible. absolutely terrible. and they're looking for that particular man right now. >> police confronted the suspect at hauptmann's home early saturday. they exchanged
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gunfire. he retreated into the house and escaped on foot. cristian benavides. cbs news. >> president donald trump took to social media on sunday night, saying he's directing ice agents to expand deportation efforts of undocumented migrants. protests continued outside the los angeles federal building over the weekend, and authorities are bracing for more cbs's elise preston reports. >> tensions remain high as immigration agents make more arrests in southern california, raising anxiety and anger. the raid sparking more than a week of daily protests in downtown l.a. on saturday, police used tear gas and rubber bullets to clear a large crowd near the federal building. mayor karen bass says los angeles does not need the military. >> they don't need to be here. our local law enforcement have complete control of the situation. >> the city of los angeles covers nearly 500mi÷, with a population of almost 4 million. the protests have been mostly
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isolated to a few blocks downtown. >> if this wasn't done, then you would have. you would have broken windows. >> we met don tahara outside his bar in little tokyo. he and others have boarded up their businesses for safety, but are open and hoping for customers. why was it important for you to hang that sign? >> we are a community of immigrants. many businesses lost tons of businesses because of vandals. >> how much business would you say you've lost? >> probably about 80%. >> tahara is hopeful his community will quickly get back to normal. >> it's important that everybody go back to work and feel safe about going to work and being on the streets. >> elise preston cbs news, los angeles. >> israel and iran continue trading strikes in a war that threatens to grow into a wider regional conflict. israel claims to have killed a number of high ranking iranian officials, while several missiles fired from tehran have penetrated israel's iron dome defense system. cbs's
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debora patta has the latest from tel aviv. >> israel remains on high alert after taking a direct hit in haifa throughout the weekend. its powerful air defense system has been fighting off waves of iranian missiles and drones. while most have been intercepted, at least 14 israelis have been killed. but the toll israel has inflicted on iran is far higher, with almost 100 civilian deaths, nearly 30 of them children, and the assassination of top military commanders and scientists. this is unchartered territory for israel and iran, who have been locked in battle now for four straight days. zohar palti is the former director of mossad intelligence. our israel and iran at war.
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>> yes. >> unequivocally. >> definitely. >> but starting a war is one thing. ending it is a lot harder. >> no doubt that without the americans, without president trump, nothing will be over. over here, they have the ability to end it. >> iranian president masoud pezeshkian says iran does not want to expand the war. israel knows no boundaries, he said. they intrude wherever they want with permission from america. iran has threatened a more ferocious response if attacks continue. but prime minister benjamin netanyahu remains resolute. >> we can't have the world's most dangerous regime, have the world's most dangerous weapons. we're protecting ourselves. but by doing so, we're protecting many others. >> iranians are not used to having their cities attacked, and this has also unsettled their regime. who are concerned it could spark unrest. and we understand that security has
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been beefed up across the country. >> cbs's debora patta reporting from tel aviv. president trump is warning iran not to retaliate against u.s. targets in the middle east. on sunday, he headed to canada to meet with g-7 leaders. a u.s. official says president trump vetoed an israeli plan to kill iran's supreme leader. the president is encouraging both countries to make a ceasefire deal. straight ahead on cbs news roundup. we'll have much more on the continuing air war between israel and iran, with a report on what led to the conflict and what to expect now. [female narrator] if words were enough, i would help you bear your burden, i would watch each child of yours grow strong and true... teach them to read and to write and to sing so that their voices be forgotten nevermore. if words were enough, i would sate your hunger and you would know you are my sister, my brother,
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[snap] [music ends] ever lose your keys? is that normal aging? dementia? or something else? fear often stops us from asking for a simple check-up from the neck up. knowing your numbers: blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol are common. but your cognitive numbers are also important. request our free guide. it's filled with tips for better brain health, facts about dementia, and much more. go to 1800dementia.org or call 1-800-dementia. your brain will thank you. >> this is cbs news roundup. i'm jesse mitchell in new york. the air war between israel and iran has added a new and unexpected dimension to the g7
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summit that gets underway monday in canada. the two sides have been exchanging rocket, missile and drone attacks since last week. israel touched off the conflict, claiming it needed to end iran's nuclear weapons program. elizabeth palmer reports on the battle so far and what comes next. >> israeli jets bombed targets across iran for the third night in a row. the objective, israel says, to destroy as much of iran's nuclear program as it can. it struck airports. oil fields, iran's largest natural gas plant. also, apartment buildings where military officers and nuclear scientists lived. israel defense forces say it has killed more than 20 iranian military commanders so far. >> the regime doesn't know what hit them. they don't know what will hit them. >> on friday, israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu
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encouraged the iranian people themselves to rise up. >> by standing up for your freedom from an evil and oppressive regime. >> but right now, shocked and scared by news of civilian deaths rising up as the last thing on most iranians minds. after the initial strikes, iran's supreme leader ayatollah ali khamenei warned, quote, the zionist regime has made a grave mistake and the consequences will bring it to ruin. iran's retaliation with missile barrages lit up the sky over israel. most were intercepted by israel's iron dome air defense, but some did get through. overnight, at least half a dozen israelis were killed, with scores more injured and missing. sanam vakil is an expert on the middle east with chatham house in london. how dangerous a moment is this.? >> extraordinarily dangerous. this is a war. this isn't a
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conflict. this isn't about for tat strikes. this will have long term impact in the region. >> by saturday afternoon, an idf map showed what it claimed were 150 strikes in iran, 13 of them on nuclear sites shown in yellow. so far, this is an air war between two old enemies. but the u.s. is israel's main ally. so iran has said it blames america and president trump, too. what are the chances of the u.s. having to get involved? >> well, i think the u.s. is already involved. the u.s. is helping israel to defend itself from iranian ballistic missile strikes over the past 24 hours. and if these strikes continue to intensify, this will result in the united states getting dragged in steve witkoff. >> trump's envoy was supposed to meet iranian negotiators today to talk about a nuclear deal, but those talks are off,
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as are all bets on the future. iran has consistently said it didn't want a nuclear weapon. that may now change. >> the perverse consequences that iran could in the weeks and months ahead, make that fateful choice to weaponize its program, because it's through weaponization that the islamic republic might finally feel that it has the security that it seeks. >> so to make a
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>> the music world is mourning the loss of two giants, brian wilson and sly stone, jane pauley reports. >> bum bum bum bum bum bum bum. >> born sylvester stewart in 1943, he became sly when a classmate misspelled his first name on the chalkboard. a gifted musician, by four he was singing on stage. he made his first recording at nine and was working as a dj when he formed a band in 1966. just a year later, dance to the music launched sly and the family stone. >> back to the music. >> the first major group to include black and white men and women into superstardom, a
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string of hits followed in quick succession. >> i. >> am everyday. people. >> but by the end of the 1970s, drug addiction and mental health issues had taken their toll. the band broke up and he faded from the spotlight. the band reunited in 2006 when they were honored at the grammy awards. >> yeah. >> it would be the last major performance by a man whose stle, social conscience and revolutionary sound forever changed the course of pop music. sly stone died monday in los angeles. he was 82. >> thank you for letting me be myself. again. >> round, round. get around. i get around. >> then on wednesday, we learned
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of the passing of another musical genius with an altogether different sound. >> wouldn't it be nice if we were older? >> brian wilson was born in california in 1942. in his teens, he, along with brothers dennis and carl, cousin mike love and friend al jardine, started a band. >> let's go surfing. now everybody's learning how. >> around that time, dennis started surfing and as brian told sunday morning's anthony mason, the rest is history. >> mike and i started writing surf songs, you know, but i never surfed and he never surfed either. >> mm-hmm. did you feel the need to surf for any reason? >> no, i never tried it. >> if everybody had an ocean. >> but the beach boys sonic palette of surf, sun, cars and endless summers made them an indelible part of america's pop culture. >> i'm picking up good
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us. >> i'm scott and i'm editor. sometimes i'm at the department of justice or i'm at the white house. but we're also dads. i'm the dad of these two guys, and i'm a girl dad to these two. i'm told i have a really annoying dad voice, and i've got plenty of dad jokes. if i told you the one about. we've heard all the jokes. okay? there's other things that we have in common. like we can't do certain things anymore. that's right. what we've discovered is we can't quite hang at a bar like we used to. and it turns out we're not alone. as the years add up, the beers don't always go down quite as easily. and let's face it, high octane ipas can leave us, well, a bit hazy by the morning, right? when dads like craig carey and ryan kutcher are getting these guys up and out the door. i love craft beer. ryan loves craft beer. but craft beer stopped loving us back after. >> you had kids. >> you realize i can't. just crush two beers a night? was the day. >> that you have the kid is the
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day. >> and worse, these friends discovered they'd both been doing something that most guys wouldn't admit. when i turned 35, i had first two beer hangover and so started mixing beers, nonalcoholic craft beer with full strength craft beer in the same glass. and at first were taking two beers. two beers. like a science experiment. yes, franken beer. but that new brew gave them a heady idea. what if the dads could create an ipa that's not the normal 6 to 9% alcohol by volume, but only about 3% right? between 2.8 and 2.9%? is this magic sweet spot where you catch a buzz and you don't catch a hangover for beer. friday is five, beer fridays are back, but. >> first they had to. >> make it, and all their experience with beer was only this kind. >> of heavy lifting. we're not brewers, by the way. i'm not even a home brewer. >> well, more importantly, you're drinkers. we're drinkers and dads. >> dads. >> so they turn to one of their favorite breweries, atlas in washington, and tapped the help
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of head brewer daniel vilarrubi. did you think they were crazy? personally, i love the idea. it's nice to be able to have a few without feeling it, but it was hard, challenging, but fun. it took. >> a year. >> and eight pilot batches, but dad strength brewing was born. >> it was two dads subaru pickup truck selling out of the back, seeing if anyone wanted this. turns out a lot of dads did like these fathers we had. >> try it. it's great. >> that's excellent. >> crisp, good flavor, not overly hoppy. >> still has the same taste of an ipa, but just not as heavy. >> you can't hit snooze on a baby. >> 100%. >> and this father's day, dad's strength is going strong. sold at about 300 stores in washington, d.c., virginia and maryland with hopes of going national. you sell this at whole foods? i'd love to sell it at home depot, but we're not allowed. >> we have a whole team of dad ambassadors who help us do these tastings. sorry. what was that? ambassadors. dad? bassadors. yeah, yeah. if you all are
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looking for a side hustle, even carries two daughters. got in on the promotion. >> dad, dad, trick. >> you say? oh, well, it's an ipa for when you don't want to get ipa. and hearing that from a five year old is is pretty yeah. that would work. cheers.- >> cheers, guys. >> happy father's day. >> happy father's day. >> cheers. >> ed o'keefe and scott macfarlane living their best lives in washington. cbs news roundup will be right back.
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it's monday, june 16th, 2025. this is "cbs news mornings." breaking overnight -- >> after a two-day manhunt, two sleepless nights, law enforcement have apprehended vance boelter. >> captured, the gunman accused of kil

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