CBS Evening News, 04/17/25

CBS Evening News, 04/17/25

Released Thursday, 17th April 2025
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CBS Evening News, 04/17/25

CBS Evening News, 04/17/25

CBS Evening News, 04/17/25

CBS Evening News, 04/17/25

Thursday, 17th April 2025
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journey. Find. I

1:31

heard the sirens, I saw the police going,

1:33

I saw people running like crazy. Another school

1:35

shooting in America sends students

1:37

running for their lives. From

1:40

CBS News Headquarters in

1:43

New York, this is

1:45

the CBS Evening News. Good

1:50

evening. I'm John Dickerson. I'm Maurice Dubois.

1:53

It is always difficult for law enforcement

1:55

to give the details of a

1:57

deadly school shooting, but it was even

1:59

more so this time. This time the

2:01

alleged shooter is the son of

2:03

a law enforcement officer, a sheriff's deputy

2:05

in the very county where it

2:07

happened. The police identified a

2:09

20 year old student at Florida

2:11

State University and said he opened

2:13

fire at the school in Tallahassee

2:15

today using his mother's former service

2:18

weapon. Two people were killed. At

2:20

least six others were wounded. The

2:22

suspect was wounded by the police before

2:24

he was taken into custody. Skyler Henry

2:26

is at the seat. Heavily

2:29

armed police swarmed Florida

2:31

State University. Gunmen opened fire

2:33

inside the student union building just

2:35

before noon today. I was honestly in

2:38

shock. My hands were shaking. Just

2:40

adrenaline kicked in. I really didn't know

2:42

what to do. I started tearing

2:44

up just like I was scared. This

2:46

video apparently shows the shooter on

2:48

campus. He turns and fires a handgun

2:50

as people run away. A

2:52

victim lies nearby. Two

2:55

people were killed. Neither were

2:57

students. Six others were transported

2:59

to a local hospital. Tallahassee

3:01

Police Department Chief Lawrence Revelle. We

3:03

have multiple crime scenes. This

3:05

is a very large area we're covering.

3:07

We have hundreds or thousands of witnesses.

3:11

Panic students scrambled to safety.

3:14

Some even ran through traffic while

3:16

others took cover inside their

3:18

classrooms. And

3:20

a cabin Asia. The freshman exchanged messages

3:22

with her friends who were hiding. They just

3:24

said they're scared they're in lockdown and

3:26

they just want to go home. The

3:29

alleged shooter seen here being loaded

3:31

into the back of an ambulance in

3:33

shackled has been identified as 20

3:35

year old Phoenix Eichner. an FSU student

3:37

who was shot by police. Officials

3:39

say he is the son of a

3:41

local sheriff's deputy and used one of her

3:43

weapons that was found at the scene. Leon

3:46

County Sheriff, Walt McNeil. We will

3:48

make sure that we do everything

3:50

we can to prosecute and make

3:52

sure that we send a message

3:54

to folks that this will never

3:57

be tolerated here in Leon County.

3:59

And I dare say across the

4:02

state, Police say the shooter

4:04

was a longtime member of the

4:06

Leon County Sheriff's Office's Youth

4:08

Advisory Council and had a series

4:10

of engagements with the training

4:12

programs involved with the department. As

4:15

of now, there is no

4:17

motive that has been released. Skylar

4:19

Henry in Tallahassee. Thank

4:22

you. Sadly,

4:24

the threat of being shot in

4:26

school is a fact of life for

4:28

students. There have been more than

4:30

400 school shootings since Columbine in 1999.

4:33

School shootings are so prevalent

4:35

that since Columbine, more

4:37

than 394 ,000 children, K

4:39

through 12, have attended a

4:41

school that had a shooting during the

4:43

school year. Even so, a little over

4:45

a mile from FSU, the Florida legislature

4:47

is now considering removing a gun control

4:49

law that was passed after an earlier

4:52

school shooting in the state. Parkland.

4:54

A number of survivors of

4:56

that shooting now attend FSU.

4:59

Here's Scott McFarland. It's

5:01

one the hardest things my

5:03

wife and I ever had to

5:05

do was come home after

5:07

learning about our daughter's murder and

5:09

explain that to her little

5:12

brother. Tony Montalto's daughter Gina

5:14

was a freshman at Marjorie

5:16

Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland,

5:18

Florida. One of 17 people

5:20

killed in the 2018 shooting there.

5:22

by a teenager. In the

5:24

weeks after the tragedy, Florida passed

5:26

a law which among other things

5:29

prohibited most people under 21 from

5:31

buying firearms with Republican state leaders

5:33

leading the way. Seven

5:35

years later there's a push to

5:37

strip it from the books with Republican

5:39

state leaders leading the way. It

5:41

wasn't a very good idea and lawmakers

5:43

have even admitted that they were

5:46

emotionally high strong and they made mistakes.

5:48

Do you think they were emotional? Oh,

5:50

they were very much emotional. Luis Valdez

5:52

is with the Gun Owners of America advocacy

5:55

group. You're an adult at 18. If

5:57

they're going to make the argument that we

5:59

need to raise the age, then raise

6:01

it for voting, raise it for

6:03

getting into contracts, raise it for

6:05

getting into being married. The repeal

6:07

of parts of the legislation passed Florida's

6:09

House of Representatives, but it appears

6:11

the state Senate will block the effort.

6:14

U .S. Congressman Jared Moskowitz is a

6:16

Marjory Stoneman Douglas alum who as

6:18

a state representative helped pass the

6:20

initial law. They used the phrase, it

6:22

was passed with too much emotion. How

6:25

have you responded to those criticisms? Yeah,

6:28

well, you know, they didn't attend any of

6:30

the funerals at any of these parents. If they

6:32

want to see emotion, go watch a parent

6:34

eulogize their 14 -year -old as they're putting them in

6:37

a wooden box. Scott

6:39

McFarlane joins us now from Washington. Scott, it turns

6:41

out we were trying to do this story. We

6:43

were planning to do it since this morning before

6:45

the shooting. We had the same question then as

6:47

we do now. Why do they feel a need

6:49

to roll back a gun control law there in

6:51

Florida? A lot of this falls

6:53

down the traditional. boundaries on the

6:55

gun control debate, where those who want

6:57

more gun rights say, if you have

6:59

18 to 21 year olds who can't

7:01

purchase a firearm, they may be less

7:03

equipped to protect themselves. Those supporting gun

7:05

control say they can be misused if

7:07

bought by somebody of that age bracket.

7:10

Maurice and John, this bill may

7:12

not be impacted by what happened today,

7:14

the tragedy just down the road in

7:16

Tallahassee, but you can bet this bill,

7:18

if it doesn't pass this year, will

7:20

come back again next session. Scott McFarland

7:22

in Washington. Thank you, Scott. Now more

7:24

of the top stories from around the

7:27

world. And tonight's evening news roundup, the

7:29

Trump administration tried to stop it, but

7:31

government officials can be deposed about the

7:33

accidental deportation of a migrant to El

7:35

Salvador. A federal court cleared

7:37

the way. It accused the administration

7:39

of trying to stash away U

7:41

.S. residents in foreign prisons without

7:44

the semblance of due process. The

7:46

police in the Central American nation

7:48

of Belize say a U .S. citizen

7:50

armed with a knife tried to

7:52

hijack a plane. carrying 13 other

7:55

passengers. They say the

7:57

man wounded three people before he

7:59

was shot and killed. by another

8:01

passenger. The federal judge in Virginia

8:03

says Google violated antitrust law by

8:05

holding a monopoly on digital advertising.

8:07

The ruling raises the possibility that

8:09

Google might have to break off

8:11

parts of the company. And

8:14

Pope Francis kept his Holy

8:16

Thursday tradition of meeting with prisoners.

8:18

The Pope, who is 88, is

8:20

frail after a series of illnesses

8:22

and did not perform the washing

8:25

of the feet as Jesus did

8:27

at the last supper. Francis did

8:29

greet. each of the inmates personally. The

8:32

chairman of the Federal Reserve has

8:34

run afoul, again, of President Trump.

8:36

Jerome Powell said that Trump tariffs

8:38

could hurt the economy. Now the

8:40

president is talking about removing Powell.

8:42

Ouija Zhang is at the White

8:44

House. In the Oval

8:46

Office, President Trump was asked if he

8:48

has the power to fire Fed

8:50

Chair Jerome Powell. I'm not happy with

8:52

him. I

8:54

let him know it and If

8:57

I want him out, he'll be

8:59

out of there real fast, believe

9:01

me. That frustration stemmed from Powell's

9:03

prediction yesterday about the impact of

9:05

Trump's tariffs. The level of

9:07

tariff increases announced so far is

9:10

significantly larger than anticipated and the

9:12

same is likely to be true

9:14

of the economic effects which will

9:16

include higher inflation and slower growth.

9:19

And from Powell's refusal to lower

9:21

interest rates at Trump's demand.

9:23

I don't think he's doing the

9:25

job. He's too late. Always

9:27

too late. The president hasn't explicitly

9:29

said that he's going to try

9:31

to fire Jerome Powell. Does he

9:33

even have the power to do

9:35

that? My reading of the law

9:37

is no. He does not have

9:39

that power. Wendy Edelberg worked as

9:41

an economist under presidents Bush and

9:44

Obama and for the Federal Reserve

9:46

Board for nearly five years. President

9:48

Trump continues to talk about what

9:50

he wants the Fed to do.

9:52

Even if the Fed doesn't listen, does

9:55

that make a difference? It makes

9:57

a difference if financial markets

9:59

think that President Trump is

10:01

having influence. So that's the

10:03

concern, because even if the

10:05

Fed stays strong, maintains its

10:07

independence, You can get

10:09

these negative effects on financial markets

10:11

if they lose their trust. Trump's

10:13

insults toward Powell unfolded as he

10:15

was hosting Italian Prime Minister Giorgia

10:18

Maloney. His first meeting with the

10:20

European leader since he announced steep

10:22

tariffs on the EU that will

10:24

go into effect in July if

10:26

they can't reach a new trade

10:28

deal with the US. going

10:30

to have very little problem making

10:32

a deal with Europe or anybody

10:34

else because we have something that

10:37

everybody wants. And we do Jang

10:39

George's now. So we do. This is by no means

10:41

the first time Trump has thought of getting rid

10:43

of Powell. They have a little history here. Yeah,

10:46

even though it was Trump

10:48

who nominated Powell, he has frequently

10:50

lashed out at the Fed

10:52

chair, even calling him the enemy

10:54

during his first term. And

10:57

in 2018, Trump actually considered firing

10:59

him. But the president backed

11:01

off after the markets tumbled. We

11:03

should past presidents have groused

11:05

about the Fed chairman, but

11:07

this is a new level,

11:09

isn't it? Well, sure, because

11:11

in the past presidents, including

11:13

Trump, have had issue with

11:15

the decision -making. But now

11:17

the president is making claims

11:19

about motive. Just today, he,

11:21

on multiple occasions, accused Powell

11:23

of, quote, playing politics. Powell

11:26

insists that the Federal Reserve will never

11:28

be influenced by political pressure. We'll be

11:30

jazang at the White House. Thank you,

11:32

Weijia. Still ahead here on the CBS

11:34

Evening News, Rob Marciano with Severe Weather

11:36

Tonight in the Midwest. And we

11:38

will have these stories. I'm

11:41

Mark Straussman in Wallingford, Connecticut. A

11:43

six -figure income used to mean

11:45

you made it in America. Now

11:47

it can mean you don't have enough to

11:49

eat. Food and securities, new

11:51

face coming up on tonight's I

11:53

in America. I'm Dr. John

11:55

Lapook in New York. Research could be

11:57

paving the way for a weight loss

11:59

solution in a daily pill. That

12:01

story next on the CBS Evening

12:03

News. There

12:13

may soon be a new medical

12:15

option for losing weight, and it

12:17

would be the first that could

12:19

be taken orally. Eli Lilly's experimental

12:21

pill appears to work as well

12:23

as the injected drug Ozympic to

12:25

lower weight of diabetes patients. Our

12:27

Dr. John Lapook has more about

12:29

it. The new study

12:31

looked at a pill called Orphaglipron

12:33

that could join a group of

12:35

drugs, including WeGovian Zepbound, GLP -1s that

12:37

are FDA approved for weight loss,

12:40

but come with a drawback. I've

12:42

always been looking for something that

12:45

will even the playing field. And now

12:47

we have drugs that are doing

12:49

that. Is this a big deal? This

12:51

is transformational. Dr. Louis Aroni has

12:53

been treating obesity for 35 years

12:55

and is a consultant for Eli

12:57

Lilly, the maker of the new

13:00

pill. He says it's easier

13:02

and less expensive to make than

13:04

the injectables. Just think about the

13:06

idea of having a pill that

13:08

can be distributed anywhere in the

13:10

world that doesn't need to be

13:12

refrigerated. It's as effective as one

13:14

of the injectable drugs we have

13:16

now, somaculotype. I mean, that is

13:18

a big deal. Eli Lilly says

13:20

the drug significantly improved glucose control

13:22

in people with type 2 diabetes

13:24

who lost about 8 % of

13:26

their body weight at the highest

13:28

dose. Dr. Aroni is involved

13:30

in a related study of obese patients

13:32

who make up about 40 % of

13:34

adults. Even if the price

13:36

comes down a little bit of

13:38

these new medications, as a society can

13:40

we afford it? we can't afford

13:43

not to do it. When you look

13:45

at the overall cost of obesity

13:47

and the diseases that are directly linked

13:49

to obesity, how can we afford

13:51

not to treat it? And the earlier

13:53

we treat it, the more money

13:55

we're going to save. And

13:58

Dr. LaPouk joins us now. Everybody's wondering this one

14:00

question here, John, among many others, but can you

14:02

just go out and eat whatever you want now?

14:04

Sorry, Maurice, there still is no free lunch. Remember

14:06

how these drugs work. First of all, they

14:08

decrease craving. So you're not going to

14:10

want to eat as much, but they also decrease

14:12

stomach emptying. So if you have a couple of

14:14

bacon cheeseburgers, a few slices, you're going to feel

14:16

it. You're going to have some angina. I

14:19

think you really have to have

14:21

a holistic approach. These medications are terrific,

14:23

but you also have to have

14:25

a healthy diet and exercise. Two questions,

14:27

John. I'll put them together. When's

14:29

it going to be available? And what

14:31

are the risks of this? Risks

14:33

are very similar to the injectables, mostly

14:35

GI, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, some constipation.

14:37

Eli Lilly says it's going to be

14:40

applying for approval for diabetes sometime

14:42

in 2026 and for weight loss by

14:44

the end of this year. Okay,

14:46

help is on the way. Doctor, thanks

14:48

so much. To the

14:50

weather now, take a look at

14:52

this. In western Iowa, it's called

14:54

a firenado. When a fire burns

14:56

so intensely, it creates its own

14:59

wind. Meteorologist Rob Marciano is tracking

15:01

more severe weather in the same

15:03

area tonight. Rob. Yeah,

15:05

that city guys is under a severe

15:07

thunderstorm. Watch their winds just changed.

15:09

We'll probably not get any storms. They

15:11

didn't get any rain to help

15:13

that fire, NATO. We've got four days

15:15

of storms coming, including tonight, right

15:17

through the holiday weekend, going over some

15:19

some of the same spots with

15:21

heavy rain as well. So let's get

15:23

right to the floor and show

15:25

you the radar. We've got severe thunderstorm

15:27

watches out that include parts of

15:29

Minnesota. Minneapolis has been getting hit. Now

15:31

a tornado watch is up for

15:33

parts of Omaha, Nebraska and Lincoln, Nebraska

15:36

till midnight tonight. So we'll see

15:38

some of those storms rumble across. They

15:40

could be dangerous at times. Look

15:42

at this. developing in northern r moisture

15:44

coming across t across Arkansas and

15:46

through on saturday, stretching into the over

15:48

the next several d more inches

15:50

of rainfall c in a ribbon of

15:52

real estate from all the way

15:54

to St. Louis, maybe all over very

15:56

swollen rivers. We showed you video

15:58

out of Torrential rain. This is just

16:03

that river is nearly a foot of

16:05

rainfall falling in the last couple of days.

16:07

Just up the hill in places in

16:10

France, just over the border, seeing over three

16:12

feet, a meter of heavy wet snow

16:14

there in Tinier, France. They've had a problem

16:16

with avalanches there, already one fatality. The

16:18

precip guys is tapering off, but the threat

16:20

for avalanche will continue over the next

16:22

couple of days. So just a mess in

16:24

Italy and parts of France. Precipitation everywhere. Rob

16:26

Marciano, thanks so much. A six

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figure income and still struggling to pay

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the food bill. as

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Enjoy! I've been

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I'd never be a golfer with

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just one arm. But the only

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thing that feels better than proving people

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I want to be remembered for my ability.

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As a champion partner of the Masters, Bank

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what would you like the power to

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do? Bank of America. Bank of

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America NA member of DIC Cooperate 2025, Bank

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of America Corporation, all rights reserved. You

18:08

can see the impact of inflation

18:10

most clearly these days at the

18:12

grocery store. But you can also

18:14

see it at food banks, where

18:16

people who never dreamed they'd need

18:18

it. are turning for help. Even

18:20

some with six -figure incomes are

18:22

struggling to feed their families. Mark

18:25

Strassman has tonight's I Want

18:27

America from Wallingford, Connecticut. Forget

18:31

the image you may have of people

18:33

who are hungry. In America,

18:35

hunger is now as mobile as

18:37

this food bag serving a line

18:40

60 deep in Connecticut. Being

18:42

under financial stress, takes a

18:44

lot of time, a lot of

18:46

planning. Take Chandra Kelsey, grocery

18:48

shopping on a tight budget for

18:50

her family of five. It's

18:52

whatever is on sale. Food

18:54

insecurity eats at her,

18:56

a lifelong trauma. You

18:58

remember going to food bags? What was it

19:00

like? The first time I did it,

19:02

I cried. To

19:05

be in a position where you are

19:07

doing okay and then you lose everything

19:09

the next day. It's

19:11

humbling. It's scary. And

19:13

yet you'd never suspect need

19:15

has lived with his family. Household

19:18

income is roughly... 150,

19:21

two people working full time. Sometimes

19:24

I work two jobs. How

19:26

can you make $150 ,000 and

19:28

be food insecure? That's

19:30

not what you bring home after

19:32

taxes. You know, we

19:34

have... mortgage, insurance. We've got

19:36

one kid on their way to college, one in college.

19:39

Something as small as $1 ,000

19:41

expense could throw things off significantly.

19:45

This one's crazy looking. On and

19:47

off for a decade, Kelsey has

19:49

relied on help from Connecticut Food

19:51

Share, the state's largest food bank. She

19:53

and two of her children

19:55

now give back by volunteering here.

19:57

All this food and it's

19:59

still not enough. Nationally, more than

20:01

50 million people need help

20:03

getting food from charities like this

20:05

one. Here in Connecticut, that's

20:08

one in eight people. They're your

20:10

neighbor. They're your friend. They

20:12

could be your family. Jason

20:14

Jakobowski, Connecticut food share

20:16

CEO, told us demand for

20:18

their food jumped 23 %

20:20

last year. He expects

20:22

another double -digit increase this

20:24

year. Are you seeing more

20:27

people with higher incomes who need

20:29

your help? 100%. Many

20:31

of them come to us and say, I

20:33

donated to you for years, and I

20:35

never in a million years thought I would

20:37

have to use this service. What has

20:39

changed? A lot of

20:41

economic unpredictability. They're scared

20:43

about their cost of living is going

20:45

to go up, too. They're scared about

20:48

what the price of eggs is going

20:50

to be. Chandra Kelce is scared about

20:52

her job. She works as a program

20:54

director at the Yale School of Public

20:56

Health. and worries about continued government funding

20:58

of universities such as hers. We are

21:00

trying to be very cognizant that it

21:03

could be around the corner. And

21:05

in its own way, Connecticut

21:07

food share is feeling food insecure.

21:10

Government doge cuts last month slashed nearly

21:12

$2 million from its food budget. How

21:14

do you replace that? We don't. That's

21:17

the problem. Is there any hope here?

21:19

We still live in America. People always

21:21

step up to the plate. It may

21:23

not be enough food, but we're going

21:25

to keep doing whatever we can to

21:27

try to provide. Provided

21:29

to more families who never suspected

21:31

their new worry is their

21:33

next meal. For I in

21:36

America, I'm Mark Strousman

21:38

in Wallingford, Connecticut. Steve

21:40

Hartman will be here this time

21:42

tomorrow to take us on the

21:45

road to the Wimbledon of the

21:47

Midwest. And we're not

21:49

done tonight. Anderson Cooper is waiting

21:51

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22:25

This is a mini meditation

22:27

guided by Bombus. Repeat

22:29

after me. I'm comfy. I'm

22:32

cozy. I have zero

22:34

blisters on my toes. And

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that's because I wear Bombus. The

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softest socks, underwear, and t -shirts that

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give back. You've

22:59

heard the headlines. Now

23:01

it's time to take action. Nearly 80

23:03

% of Americans agree that we should

23:05

have the power to make our own

23:07

decisions about our bodies and futures, not

23:09

lawmakers. Planned Parenthood is here

23:11

to ensure that everyone has access

23:14

to essential, high -quality healthcare. And

23:16

they are here for the long

23:18

haul. Patients count on Planned Parenthood.

23:20

Planned Parenthood counts on you. Donate

23:22

at plannedparenthood .org slash defend. We

23:25

end this spring evening with

23:27

a moment of nature. Courtesy

23:29

of Anderson Cooper and insect

23:31

royalty. On the forest

23:33

floor, all around us, monarchs litter

23:35

the ground. But most are not dead.

23:38

They've just fallen from trees during

23:40

the night, and their muscles are too

23:42

cold for them to fly. Cup

23:46

them in your hands, you can

23:48

revive them with your breath. So

23:51

they need a certain temperature to

23:53

get their wing muscles back. They

23:55

are very, very vulnerable when they're on

23:57

the floor. And the birds know

24:00

that, and the mice know that. That's

24:02

almost ready. There you go. When

24:16

the sun begins to hit

24:18

the trees, flashes of orange

24:21

appear. The monarchs

24:23

are warming and slowly opening

24:25

their wings. Anderson

24:29

Cooper reports on the great migration of

24:31

the monitor butterfly this Sunday on 60 minutes.

24:33

Ultimate connectivity right there. That's a great

24:35

gig. That is the CBS Evening News for

24:37

this Thursday. I'm Maurice Dubois. I'm John

24:39

Dickerson. I'll see you soon on Evening News

24:41

Plus, streaming on CBS News 24 seven.

24:43

Have a good night. We'll see you back

24:45

here tomorrow. What's

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