Episode Transcript
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Bank of America Corporation, All
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Rights Reserve. From CBS News
1:05
Headquarters in New York, this
1:07
is the CBS evening news.
1:10
Good evening, I'm John Dickerson.
1:12
I'm Maurice Dubois. We begin tonight
1:14
with the President's push to deport
1:16
immigrants because there are a lot
1:19
of developments in a number of
1:21
courtrooms. An immigration judge in Louisiana
1:23
ruled today that Mahmoud Kalil, a
1:25
former grad student who helped lead
1:28
pro-Palestinian demonstrations at Columbia University in
1:30
New York, can be deported as
1:32
a security risk. Kalil has a
1:35
green card. A US district court
1:37
judge in Washington today allowed federal
1:39
agents to conduct enforcement operations at
1:42
houses of worship. And after the
1:44
Supreme Court said the administration must
1:46
work to bring back a migrant
1:49
mistakenly deported to El Salvador, a
1:51
district court judge in Maryland held
1:53
a hearing in that case today.
1:56
Justice correspondent Scott McFarland reports the
1:58
judge did not like. But she
2:00
heard from the government. Scott? Yeah,
2:02
John, it was a unanimous ruling
2:04
by the Supreme Court ordering the
2:07
administration to facilitate the return of
2:09
Kilmar-Abrigo Garcia, but he's not back.
2:11
And under questioning today, the Department
2:13
of Justice gave no indication he'll
2:15
be returning any time soon. It
2:17
was a month ago this weekend.
2:19
Kilmar-Abrigo Garcia was among those shackled
2:22
and then flown to a prison
2:24
in El Salvador, with no chance
2:26
to contest it. The Trump administration
2:28
admits a Brigo Garcia who had
2:30
no criminal record was included by
2:32
mistake. He had a previous court
2:35
order protecting him from going to
2:37
El Salvador, a nation he fled
2:39
about a decade ago. His attorney,
2:41
Simon Sandoval Moshenberg, made a plea
2:43
both outside and inside court today
2:45
for Arbrigo Garcia's return. Neither we
2:47
nor the family have been able
2:50
to make any contact with him.
2:52
This is one of the principal
2:54
human rights violations that occurs in
2:56
that facility. You know, inmates and
2:58
detainees in that facility are held
3:00
in communicado. But the Department of
3:03
Justice today argued they're not able
3:05
to say when they can secure
3:07
his return. Maryland Federal Judge Paula
3:09
Zinnis pressed to know Arrigo Garcia's
3:11
condition, asking where is he, and
3:13
under whose authority? The response from
3:15
the Department of Justice attorney, your
3:18
honor, I do not have that
3:20
information. What do you make of...
3:22
The government is saying we can't
3:24
tell you where he is, we
3:26
can't tell you who has, and
3:28
we can't tell you how he's
3:31
doing. What I make of that
3:33
is that it is purposeful stalling.
3:35
Doris Meisner is former head of
3:37
US immigration services. We seemingly have
3:39
an agreement with El Salvador to
3:41
take these detainees. Those agreements implicitly
3:43
are a two-way street. So for
3:46
us to send somebody that we
3:48
then understand to have been wrongly
3:50
sent. Certainly, one has to expect
3:52
that we could go back to
3:54
El Salvador, explain that, check the
3:56
records, and get that person back.
3:58
Scott, the Supreme Court justices are
4:01
seldom unanimous. on anything but they
4:03
had a nine-nothing ruling last night
4:05
that seems to make a statement.
4:07
Yeah unanimous decision that he has
4:09
to be facilitated back by the
4:11
Trump administration but Justice Sotomayor and
4:14
a pointy of then President Obama
4:16
wrote something different under her name
4:18
only that the administration's argument seems
4:20
to indicate that citizens could eventually
4:22
be deported and incarcerated and that's
4:24
troubling. Nobody else put their name
4:26
on that, but Maurice and John,
4:29
it's noteworthy, the 200 plus lawsuits
4:31
against the Trump administration, they're accused
4:33
of defying court orders just in
4:35
these March 15th deportations. Scott Dorsmeiser
4:37
in your piece talked about the
4:39
fact that the administration has a
4:42
relationship with El Salvador. The president
4:44
of El Salvador would be in
4:46
town on Monday. What's the administration
4:48
saying about that relationship with respect
4:50
to this one case? Yeah, John,
4:52
the White House press secretary was
4:54
asked today could. This man be
4:57
put on the president's plane and
4:59
flown with the Salvadoran president of
5:01
the U.S. They deflected that question.
5:03
Scott McFarland and Washington, thanks so
5:05
much, Scott. While the Trump administration
5:07
is forcibly removing some undocumented immigrants,
5:10
it is using different techniques to
5:12
encourage others to leave on their
5:14
own. including taking away their social
5:16
security numbers so they can't work
5:18
and can't afford to live here
5:20
and using the IRS to track
5:22
them down. Some are leaving because
5:25
they fear it on certain future.
5:27
Lilia Luciano talked to an immigrant
5:29
in Southern California. And then you
5:31
don't want this. Brenda Martinez and
5:33
her husband Richard are packing up
5:35
to leave the only country they've
5:37
called home. I'm not afraid of
5:40
people knowing that I'm untaking of
5:42
what they would do to me
5:44
if they knew. That was me
5:46
the year before we left. Martinez
5:48
was born in Mexico and brought
5:50
to California when she was two.
5:53
Why do you choose to talk
5:55
to us? There's a lot of
5:57
kids in the shadows. They're terrified.
5:59
Now 28, she's been undocumented, temporarily
6:01
protected from deep... under the Deferred
6:03
Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA.
6:05
This folder also has every employment
6:08
authorization. Since 2012, the program
6:10
has given more than 900,000
6:12
young immigrants, like Martinez, work
6:14
authorizations, but no legal pathway
6:16
to citizenship. This is not
6:18
like permanent status. This is
6:20
just a deferment. Her husband,
6:22
who was born in the
6:24
US, petitioned for her to
6:26
get a green card. But
6:28
that process can take years.
6:30
So she's been weighing her options
6:32
with a lawyer. Do you feel like
6:34
a lot of like what we're hearing
6:36
now with like executive orders and everything?
6:38
Do you think it's just a bunch
6:41
of noise? With the release of the
6:43
ICE agents into the community, we are
6:45
seeing people being picked up randomly. There's
6:47
a nice checkpoints like coming up everywhere
6:49
and then that's when I started to
6:51
feel like the walls caving the walls
6:53
caving in. And then just for a
6:55
second, I was like, what if I
6:58
just left? Do you feel
7:00
your entire life is up
7:02
to one agent or officer's
7:04
hands? Yeah, I do. If
7:06
someone decided to not pay
7:08
attention to my work permit,
7:10
being detained terrifies me. So
7:12
terrified, they're moving to Mexico,
7:14
leaving behind family, friends, and their
7:17
jobs. searching for stability in a
7:19
place she has no memories of.
7:21
Why not wait it out? I
7:24
mean, you waited 26 years? I
7:26
want to live my life, but
7:28
also I grew up with a
7:31
bunch of American children. They have
7:33
like these amazing dreams that they've
7:36
never been limited from. And
7:38
Lilia Luciano joins us now. Lilia, how many
7:40
other people are like Brenda Martinez who are
7:42
leaving? That's a very good question, John. I
7:45
mean, we have heard reports from the federal
7:47
government that there are thousands of people who
7:49
are allegedly voluntarily leaving through an app that
7:51
the government changed to allow for that to
7:53
happen. When it comes to Dhaka, there's a
7:56
group that was advising Brenda and other people
7:58
like her. They tell me in... their Facebook
8:00
group alone, that membership has doubled
8:02
from 3,000 to 6,000 people who
8:04
are seeking that guidance and resources
8:06
to lead the country. And Brenda's
8:08
fears are not unfounded, right? I
8:10
mean, there are other cases to
8:12
make her just worry. She is
8:14
certainly worried. And today is a
8:16
perfect example of that. The ruling
8:18
on the Kaleel case, who is
8:20
a permanent legal resident of the
8:22
United States, targeted and now in
8:24
possibly the process for deportation serves
8:26
as evidence as to why she
8:28
should be afraid. Yeah, you got
8:30
a green card. Okay, Lily Luciano,
8:32
thank you so much. Thank you.
8:35
Now more of the top stories
8:37
from around the world. In tonight's
8:39
evening news, roundup. Three people were
8:41
killed in Boca Raton, Florida, when
8:43
a small plane crashed minutes after
8:45
taking off from the local airport.
8:47
Graphic video shows the Cessna falling
8:49
from the sky and exploding in
8:51
flames. A man in a car
8:53
was injured, no word yet, on
8:55
what caused the crash. Or the
8:57
helicopter crashed yesterday in the Hudson
8:59
River that killed a family of
9:01
five from Spain and the pilot.
9:03
The mayor of New York says
9:05
the family had been... to celebrate
9:07
the middle son's eighth birthday today.
9:09
Russia says President Putin had a
9:11
productive day today in talks with
9:13
U.S. envoy Steve Whitcough aimed at
9:15
ending the war in Ukraine. CBS's
9:17
Scott Peli spoke with Ukraine's President
9:19
Zelenski, who again invited President Trump.
9:21
to visit his country. Scott's interview
9:23
airs Sunday on 60 Minutes. And
9:25
despite the tariff turmoil, stocks were
9:27
up for the week, but consumer
9:29
sentiment is down to the lowest
9:31
level in nearly three years. One
9:33
reason, according to a survey from
9:35
the University of Michigan, fear of
9:37
inflation is at its highest point
9:39
since 1981. Nancy Chen checked back
9:41
with a grocer to see how
9:43
business is going. For
9:47
Stuletter Jr., the word import now
9:49
means a whole new layer of
9:51
work at its northeast chain of
9:54
grocery stores. A lot of our
9:56
cheeses are imported from France and
9:58
even Italy with Regiano. We spoke
10:00
to the CEO two months ago
10:03
when President Trump's first China tariffs
10:05
went into effect. It's a wild
10:07
wild west out there. And we
10:09
met him again this week to
10:12
find out how his business is
10:14
coping. When we talked two months
10:16
ago you said at that point
10:18
you were preparing for tariffs. How
10:20
those preparations gone? Well I think
10:23
what it is as you stay
10:25
in maybe not in the daily
10:27
contact with your suppliers but hourly.
10:29
grocery prices have surged nearly 30%
10:32
in the last five years and
10:34
Yale University researchers warned yesterday that
10:36
tariffs could drive up food prices
10:38
another two and a half percent.
10:41
I think it's impacting the food
10:43
industry overall. As a consumer, how
10:45
could my grocery shopping experience change?
10:47
You might have to switch from
10:50
some foreign-made products to US-made products.
10:52
If breechis, maybe you'll go to
10:54
US, if you're getting a Kianti
10:56
from... Maybe you'll switch over to
10:58
Washington State red blend. The U.S.
11:01
relies on all kinds of imported
11:03
grocery items, such as produce from
11:05
Mexico, pasta from Italy, and coffee
11:07
from Brazil. Letter told us he's
11:10
held firm and hasn't raised prices
11:12
yet. Our job right now is
11:14
to work with these suppliers, keep
11:16
our prices as low as we
11:19
possibly can, and help the families
11:21
out that are coming into the
11:23
store. Nancy Chan, when
11:25
will people start to see prices
11:27
go up because of these tariffs?
11:29
That's a big question. It depends
11:32
on the store, but the changes
11:34
that you're going to see first
11:36
likely are going to be perishable
11:38
items like fruits and vegetables. I
11:40
checked in with a produce importer
11:42
that we've been talking to now
11:44
for the past couple of months.
11:46
I checked in within this afternoon.
11:48
He says those changes. could be
11:50
immediate. He's already starting to see
11:52
price hikes. Shipments of his bananas
11:54
are up more than $1,000 already.
11:56
To put in a perspective, that's
11:58
about a dollar more per box
12:00
with 15 bunches in each box.
12:02
A thousand dollars, that's bananas. It's
12:04
real. here on the Friday CBS
12:06
evening news temperature records on both
12:08
sides of the country on opposite
12:10
ends of the thermometer. And Steve
12:12
Hartman on the road with random
12:14
acts of artwork. This was a
12:16
stranger and she was doing that
12:19
just for me and that's the
12:21
beauty of it. I'm Adami Maguchi.
12:23
Why combat veterans say they're feeling
12:25
abandoned by the very government they
12:27
served. That's next on a CBS
12:29
evening news. I'm Andy. If you
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don't know me, it's probably because
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Planned parenthood.org/defend. He
14:02
may remember one of the four
14:04
U.S. Army soldiers killed last month
14:06
during a training exercise in Lithuania
14:09
was from Guam. Dante Titano was
14:11
his name. About 14% of the
14:13
population of Guam are veterans. For
14:15
them, Adam Yamaguchi reports, getting the
14:18
health care they need can be
14:20
a challenge. Every week in the
14:22
U.S. territory of Guam, these military
14:24
veterans come together and pass around
14:27
this paddle so each can speak.
14:29
I come back to this place
14:31
to... reflect on the service that
14:34
I've done. This is the
14:36
only place that they sort
14:38
of break down a little.
14:40
This is their therapy for
14:42
physical and psychological wounds sustained
14:44
in combat in Iraq and
14:46
Afghanistan. Few nights ago I was
14:48
thinking of suicide. I wanted
14:51
to end my life because I'm worth
14:53
more to my family dead than
14:55
I am alive. Not true, bro. We
14:57
got you, bro. Thank you, bro.
14:59
For people in Guam, military service
15:01
is an economic opportunity. Of the
15:04
roughly 170,000 residents who live here,
15:06
24,000 of them are military veterans.
15:08
Despite that, there is only one
15:10
small VA clinic on the island,
15:12
with one psychologist. We're three hours
15:14
away from VA Philippines. We need
15:17
to go that way. A lot
15:19
better treatment. Imagine I walked through
15:21
the door on a gun appointment.
15:23
Hawaii, you got to wait for
15:25
months. Due to the lack of services
15:27
here. Roy Gambo assembled this group. He
15:30
served 10 years in the Marine Corps,
15:32
and he calls this group, Gottier 671.
15:34
671 is the area code for Guam.
15:36
In the first couple of years, everything
15:38
was coming out of our pockets. Since
15:40
then, we've applied for and received a
15:42
couple of grants to help keep our
15:44
doors open. But the vets we met
15:47
are worried about the looming budget cuts
15:49
to the VA. The agency has terminated
15:51
585 contracts as part of an ongoing
15:53
audit. Gambo worries his group could be
15:55
next. I have chronic chronic depression. Donovan
15:57
Santos is also a combat vet.
15:59
He's now the person on the
16:02
listening end of the group's suicide
16:04
prevention hotline. I pretty much helped
16:06
those that fall through the cracks
16:08
that feel like they're alone. You
16:10
talk on my full ledge? Yes,
16:12
I'm there with them on the
16:14
ledge. I'm there with them to
16:16
pull them back to catch them.
16:18
Where would you be without this?
16:20
Honest, I'd be dead. Sometimes I
16:22
wish my brothers were here. And
16:24
I wasn't. But you're carrying on
16:26
their fight. Yep. Roy
16:36
Gamboa told us it's a
16:39
fight they all hope to
16:41
carry on long into the
16:43
future. You've probably saved lives.
16:45
You've probably kept people from
16:47
making that final decision. You
16:49
know, and I'll keep going.
16:52
I mean, we were willing
16:54
to die for each other
16:56
in combat. I refuse to
16:58
believe that it was all
17:00
for nothing. Now,
17:04
in light of recent cuts to the VA's
17:06
budget, Roy and other veterans who recently in
17:08
San Francisco to plead their case for continued
17:11
funding. Now, these American citizens on the U.S.
17:13
territory of Guam can't vote for president and
17:15
they don't have a vote in Congress, so
17:17
there's really nobody in power to advocate on
17:20
their behalf. Revealing report. Adam Yamaguchi, thank you
17:22
so much, and we cannot thank them enough
17:24
for their service. That's right. Now to the
17:26
weather and a weekend of record temperatures Rob
17:29
Marciano tells us the mercury is heading south
17:31
in the east and north in the west
17:33
Rob Yes, south enough here in the northeast
17:35
to get some snow. This is the snow
17:38
stake at Mount snow ski resort still open
17:40
for business It's 24 hours and then I
17:42
got four inches on the ground right now
17:44
and county. We've got more snow on the
17:47
way with this system that right now the
17:49
center of it is really around DC. It's
17:51
turning into a bit of a northeastern. It's
17:53
going to meet with some colder air coming
17:56
in from Canada and that will turn some
17:58
of this green to white and some snow
18:00
humiliations, especially at the higher elevation. 2 to
18:02
6 maybe the 10 inches of snow. Places
18:05
like Worcester at elevation, that's a record cold
18:07
high temperature tomorrow in the 30s. New York
18:09
and Philly with the rain will be in
18:11
the 40 tomorrow. By contrast, in Phoenix you
18:14
hit 100 yesterday, you'll hit 100 today, you'll
18:16
hit 100 today, you'll hit 100 again tomorrow.
18:18
Typically, the first 100 degree day in Phoenix
18:20
is May 2nd. So the southwest feels like
18:23
the beginning of May while the Northeast feels
18:25
like the beginning of March. And Rob, what's
18:27
the why so hot so hot so hot
18:29
out west? Well, we've had a massive pattern
18:32
change at the upper level of the atmosphere.
18:34
So the jet stream is really just driving
18:36
everything down into the northeast as far as
18:38
this trough. It's concerned by contrast. We're getting
18:41
a big ridge of high pressure and warm
18:43
air across the west. And this pattern looks
18:45
like it wants to stick with us for
18:47
a good few days. The next six to
18:50
10 days looks to be below average in
18:52
the west and a below average in the
18:54
northeast. Rob Messiano, thank you. Steve Hardman. As
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Insta Cart is about to make grocery
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shopping so much easier. Because with family
20:49
carts, you can share a cart with
20:51
your partner and each add the items
20:53
you want. Since between the two of
20:55
you, odds are you'll both remember everything
20:58
you need. And this way, you'll both
21:00
remember everything you need. And this way,
21:02
you'll never have to eat milkless cereal
21:05
again. So minimize the stress of the
21:07
weekly shop with family carts. Download
21:09
the Insta. It
21:18
all started when Melody Morrow of
21:20
New York City hurt her foot
21:23
and needed physical therapy. It helped.
21:25
But as we first reported in
21:27
2023, what really made her feel
21:30
better was paying the bills. You
21:32
asked for a receipt? Correct. And
21:34
it comes in the mail? Correct.
21:37
And what was special about it?
21:39
On the envelope, on the front
21:41
of the envelope, it had these
21:44
little music notes. Well, her name
21:46
is Melody. But this is a
21:48
big health system. Personal touches on
21:51
billing statements aren't typically their thing.
21:53
And then it began. Every month
21:55
thereafter. Her payment receipt arrived in
21:58
the mail. And every month... A
22:00
new drawing. They started out
22:02
simple, like this treble clef.
22:05
But as the months progressed,
22:07
the envelopes got more and
22:09
more elaborate. And this was
22:11
original art, created anonymously
22:14
just for her. It's hard to
22:16
even describe. It was
22:18
incredible. Melody did call
22:20
her provider. MJHS Health System.
22:22
And asked if by chance
22:24
there was anyone in the billing
22:27
department who was artistic. She says
22:29
the phone got quiet and
22:31
then she heard hey Emily,
22:33
it's for you I'm like
22:35
what I do now. What were
22:38
you hoping what's going to come
22:40
from this? I like to make
22:42
people happy. Accounting clerk
22:44
Emily Margolis is hardly a
22:47
frontline caregiver, but she says
22:49
she can still make people
22:51
better and her drawings are
22:54
her way. Melody was
22:56
so grateful Emily decided to
22:58
ramp up her game even
23:00
further. She began taking Melody's
23:03
mailings home at night and
23:05
spent hours turning those plain
23:07
white business envelopes into masterpieces.
23:10
Then I started adding rhinestones. I
23:12
know I got involved with the
23:14
gold leaf. That was fun. I
23:16
never done that before. Where was
23:18
this going to stop? I know how much
23:20
she had left to pay. It's been
23:23
a couple years since we first
23:25
told this story. Melody is
23:27
all paid up. Hello. The two
23:29
are now good friends and Emily
23:31
has started getting mail of her own
23:34
from school kids. Grateful for
23:36
the example she has set. There
23:38
was also an exhibit at
23:41
a Manhattan coffee shop showcasing
23:43
Emily's enveloping creations and highlighting
23:46
the healing power of her
23:48
kindness. This was a stranger
23:50
and she was doing that just
23:52
for me and that's the beauty
23:54
of it. A melody
23:56
for us all to
23:58
sing. Steve Hartman on
24:01
the road in New York. Man
24:03
on the moon! Walter Cronkite's greatest
24:05
moment of joy, reporting the moon
24:07
landing in 1969. He once said
24:10
his greatest regret was not having
24:12
the chance to travel the space
24:14
himself. So you know he'd be
24:16
rooting for our Gail King, who
24:18
is training for her flight aboard
24:21
Blue Origins New Shepherd. She will
24:23
be part of an all-female space
24:25
flight crew. The 11-minute flight launches
24:27
from Texas Monday at 9 AM
24:30
Eastern. CBS News will of course
24:32
bring you live coverage. Godspeed, Gail
24:34
King. And the entire crew. Good
24:36
luck to you all. Can't even
24:39
imagine. They'll have good stories. Excellent
24:41
stories. And that is the CBS
24:43
TV news for this week. I'm
24:45
Maurice Dubois. I'm John Dickerson. I'll
24:47
see you on Earth soon on
24:50
evening news plus. And we'll be
24:52
back here on Monday. Have a
24:54
fantastic weekend. Survivor
25:04
48 is here and alongside it we're
25:06
bringing you a brand new season of
25:09
on-fire. The only official Survivor podcast. If
25:11
you're a Survivor super fan, you won't
25:13
want to miss this deep dive into
25:16
every episode where we break down how
25:18
we design the game, the biggest moves,
25:20
your burning questions. It's the only podcast
25:23
that gives you inside access to Survivor,
25:25
that nobody else can. Listen to on-fire
25:27
the official Survivor podcast with me,
25:30
Jeff Probst, every Wednesday after the
25:32
show, wherever you get your podcast.
26:11
threat.
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