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Iran Permanent Mission to U.N.: Hezbollah will “choose broader and deeper targets” after Israel’s Beirut strike

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The Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations has warned that Hezbollah’s response to Israel’s assassination of one of its top commanders, Fuad Shukr, in a suburb of Lebanon’s capital city Beirut on Tuesday may result in the militant group attacking much “broader and deeper” civilian as well as military targets inside Israel. 

A spokesperson for the mission told CBS News exclusively how Hezbollah might respond to Israel’s targeted strike in Beirut, which also killed at least five civilians and wounded several others, saying: “Until now, Hezbollah and the regime have, in an unwritten understanding, practically adhered to certain limits in their military operations, meaning that confining their actions to border areas and shallow zones, targeting primarily military objectives. However, the (Israeli) regime’s attack on Dahieh in Beirut and the targeting of a residential building marked a deviation from these boundaries. We anticipate that, in its response, Hezbollah will choose both broader and deeper targets, and will not restrict itself solely to military targets and means.”

Asked to clarify where these targets might be, the Iranian Mission to the U.N. told CBS News they would be within Israel’s territory.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned on Thursday that Israel had crossed “red lines” and the conflict had “entered a new phase,” adding, “The response will come, whether spread out or simultaneously.” Shukr was believed to have been a close adviser to Nasrallah.

Israel’s strike in Beirut came in response to a rocket attack last Saturday, blamed on Hezbollah, which killed 12 people, mostly children and teens playing soccer, in the town of Majdal Shams in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights.

As regional tensions have increased significantly over the past week, the Pentagon announced Friday that the U.S. is deploying an additional fighter squadron to the Middle East and moving additional cruisers and destroyers to help defend Israel and protect U.S. forces. The USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier will replace the USS Theodore Roosevelt in the Middle East, a Pentagon spokesperson said.  

Hezbollah, which is based in Lebanon but is allied with and funded by Iran, took part in a retaliatory attack by Tehran on April 13 that saw more than 300 drones and missiles launched towards Israel, mainly from Iranian territory as well as from its other allied proxies in Syria, Iraq and Yemen. The attack came several days after an Israeli strike on Iran’s consulate in the Syrian capital of Damascus on April 1 that killed at least half a dozen Iranian commanders. 

U.S. military forces and assets, which had been reinforced, helped Israel take down a majority of the projectiles before they reached Israeli territory. Israel’s military said only a small number of projectiles managed to land inside Israeli territory. Only one casualty was reported.

It is unclear whether Hezbollah would again be part of a simultaneous retaliatory attack on Israel by Iran and its regional proxies, or would carry out its own separate attack. 

Hezbollah is believed to have an arsenal of 150,000 missiles and rockets, including some with long ranges that collectively have the potential to overwhelm Israel’s “Iron Dome” anti-missile defense system and could hit deep inside Israeli territory. 

Israel’s military, still embroiled in the conflict against Hamas in Gaza, has raised concerns that it would not be able to sustain fighting a war on two fronts, in its south and north. 

An Israeli official told CBS News that while Israel had successfully avoided significant impact from Iran’s April 13 attack, this time around Israel is anticipating a “more aggressive” retaliation, one that could even go beyond Israeli territory to target Israeli assets abroad.

Asked what Israel is expecting Tehran’s response will be, another Israeli official told CBS News, “that’s for Iran to decide.” 

Hamas’s top political leader, Ismail Haniyeh, was killed in Tehran on Wednesday. The New York Times and others have reported he was killed by an explosion. A U.S. official confirmed to CBS News that Israel committed the assassination, though the Israeli government has not publicly taken responsibility.

Israel also confirmed this past week that it had finally killed Mohammad Deif —the leader of Hamas’s military wing and a mastermind of the Oct. 7 attack— in Gaza last month, after years of Israeli assassination attempts on him. 

Israel’s killing of all three Iran-allied figures has significantly raised concerns that tensions between Israel and Iran will escalate into a bigger regional conflict in the coming days.

—Margaret Brennan, Eleanor Watson and Olivia Gazis contributed reporting.

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and

contributed to this report.



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Justice Department opens civil rights investigation into Mississippi “Goon Squad” sheriff’s office

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The Justice Department on Thursday announced it is opening a civil rights investigation into Rankin County, Mississippi, and the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department. A group of the agency’s former officers — who called themselves the “Goon Squad” — pleaded guilty last year to a series of charges for torturing two Black men.

“The public is now well aware of the heinous attack inflicted on two Black men by Rankin County deputies who called themselves the ‘Goon Squad,'” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland in a statement. “Those officers have since been convicted and sentenced, but we are launching this civil pattern or practice investigation to examine serious allegations that the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department systematically violates people’s constitutional rights through excessive use of force; unlawful stops, searches, and arrests; and discriminatory policing.”

Garland said the allegations against the sheriff’s department include overusing tasers, using racial slurs, entering homes illegally and accusations deputies have “deployed dangerous, cruel tactics to assault people in their custody.”

The Justice Department said Rankin County officials have said they will cooperate with the investigation.

The Rankin County Sheriff’s Department made national headlines when five former deputies, along with one former Richland, Mississippi, police officer, were accused of torturing two Black men — Michael Corey Jenkins and Eddie Terrell Parker — in January of 2023.

Mississippi Deputies Sentencing
FThis combination of photos shows, from top left, former Rankin County sheriff’s deputies Hunter Elward, Christian Dedmon, Brett McAlpin, Jeffrey Middleton, Daniel Opdyke and former Richland police officer Joshua Hartfield.

Rogelio V. Solis / AP


All six former officers pleaded guilty to a series of state and federal charges, admitting to breaking into a home without a warrant and torturing Jenkins and Parker for hours, going so far as to shoot one of them in the mouth. The men were also beaten, tased repeatedly and assaulted with a sex toy, prosecutors said.

The group of former officers had arrived at the Braxton, Mississippi, house after a White person called Rankin County Sheriff’s Deputy Brett McAlpin to complain about two Black men staying with a White woman. McAlpin told Christian Dedmon, another deputy, who then texted a group of White deputies internally known for using excessive force who called themselves the “Goon Squad,” according to prosecutors.

McAlpin, Dedmon and fellow former deputies Hunter Elward, Jeffrey Middleton and Daniel Opdyke — along with former Richland police officer Joshua Hartfield — were all sentenced to decades in prison on both state and federal charges earlier this year.



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This week on “Sunday Morning” (September 22)

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The Emmy Award-winning “CBS News Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET.  “Sunday Morning” also streams on the CBS News app beginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.) 


Hosted by Jane Pauley

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The Cadillac Escalade IQ electric vehicle on the test track at GM’s Milford Proving Ground in Milford, Mich. 

CBS News


COVER STORY:  GM’s CEO on electric vehicles: “This is one of the most exciting times in our industry”
Correspondent Kris Van Cleave talks with Mary Barra, General Motors’ second-longest-serving CEO, about the company’s expanding electric vehicle lineup. He also takes a “high-speed” tour of GM’s Milford Proving Ground in Michigan, which has been a hub for automotive innovation for a century, and gets behind the wheel of GM’s soon-to-be-released electric Cadillac Escalade IQ. 

For more info:

      
ALMANAC: September 22
“Sunday Morning” looks back at historical events on this date.

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© and TM E.C. Publications/Courtesy of DC


ARTS: How Mad Magazine’s humor created a revolution
Mad Magazine began in 1952 as a comic book that made fun of other comic books – and soon became an institution for mocking authority in all spheres of life, from TV, movies and advertising, to politicians and parents. Correspondent David Pogue visits a new museum exhibition celebrating the humor of Mad, as created by the artists and writers who called themselves “the usual gang of idiots.”

For more info:

  • Mad Magazine
  • Exhibition: “What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of Mad Magazine,” at the Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge, Mass. (though October 27) | Exhibition magazine
  • Cartoonist Steve Brodner
  • MAD and all related elements © and TM E.C. Publications. Courtesy of DC
  • Norman Rockwell images courtesy of Norman Rockwell Museum. © SEPS, Curtis Licensing and/or Norman Rockwell Family Agency
  • Norman Rockwell Museum video footage © Norman Rockwell Museum; all rights reserved. Used with permission.
  • Drone & aerial footage by Richard Sands & Terry Holland

        
THE NEW SEASON: Art
“Sunday Morning” previews upcoming museum exhibitions.

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Pearl Jam lead singer Eddie Vedder (with drummer Matt Cameron) performs “Even Flow” during the band’s tour in Missoula, Mont. 

CBS News


MUSIC: On the road with Pearl Jam
Since their debut nearly 35 years ago, Pearl Jam has been one of the world’s most popular and influential rock groups. They’ve produced 12 studio albums (including their latest, “Dark Matter”), while also fighting with their label, refusing to make videos, and suing Ticketmaster. In a rare interview, lead singer Eddie Vedder and bassist Jeff Ament talk with correspondent Anthony Mason about success, friendship, creativity, and giving back to their loyal fans.

PREVIEW: Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder on writing songs while surfing

You can stream Pearl Jam’s latest album, “Dark Matter,” by clicking on the embed below (Free Spotify registration required to hear the tracks in full):

For more info:

      
THE NEW SEASON: Music
“Sunday Morning” previews some of the most anticipated new releases.

Flames rise during an explosion in Toropets
Flames rise during an explosion in Toropets, Tver region, Russia, in this screen grab obtained from a social media video released on September 18, 2024. It was reported that Ukrainian drones struck a warehouse about 300 miles from the Ukraine border containing Iskander and Tochka-U tactical missile systems, guided aerial bombs, and artillery ammunition. 

SOCIAL MEDIA via Reuters


WORLD: The stakes behind Ukraine’s surprise attack inside Russian territory
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is gambling that his surprise attack into Russia can convince Vladimir Putin to negotiate an end to the 2½-year-old war which has produced an estimated one million casualties. But Putin’s forces continue to rely on the sheer weight of numbers to grind Ukraine down, and Zelenskyy must depend on America’s deeply divided politics for the aid which he needs to stave off Russian assaults on his front lines and air attacks against his cities. CBS News national security correspondent David Martin talks with former Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Miley about the stakes. 

For more info:

      
PASSAGE: In Memoriam
“Sunday Morning” remembers some of the notable figures who left us this week.

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In Matera, Italy, you can stay in the luxury hotel Sextantio, built into one of the town’s many caves. 

CBS News


WORLD: Modern living in the ancient caves of Matera, Italy
In southern Italy’s Basilicata region, caves snake through the hillside town of Matera – the remains of neolithic villages that date back more than 6,000 years. Correspondent Seth Doane visits a town reborn as some of its cliffside caves have been re-envisioned as restaurants, bars and luxury hotels.

For more info:

     
THE NEW SEASON: TV
“Sunday Morning” previews some of the most anticipated new broadcast and streaming choices.

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Correspondent Tracy Smith with actress Demi Moore. 

CBS News


MOVIES: Demi Moore on resisting a toxic beauty culture
Demi Moore was a troubled member of the “Brat Pack,” who overcame esteem issues and became the highest-paid actress in Hollywood, starring in such films as “Indecent Proposal,” “Charlie’s Angels” and “Striptease.” Her latest, “The Substance,” is about an aging TV star who finds a sinister potion that can give her a younger, more perfect version of herself, but at a horrifying price. Moore, now 61, talks with correspondent Tracy Smith about how she had suffered to comply with the entertainment industry’s toxic expectations of beauty for female actresses; and how today she is trying to focus on what really brings her joy.

To watch a trailer for “The Substance” click on the video player below:


THE SUBSTANCE | Official Trailer | In Theaters September 20 by
MUBI on
YouTube

For more info:

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Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande in the film adaptation of the musical “Wicked.” 

Universal Pictures


THE NEW SEASON: Movies
“Sunday Morning” previews some of the most anticipated new releases.

       
THE NEW SEASON: Documentaries
Watch out for these upcoming non-fiction films.

       
HARTMAN: The Gift

       
THE NEW SEASON: Theater
“Sunday Morning” previews some of the most anticipated new shows, on Broadway and across the country.

       
NATURE: TBD


WEB EXCLUSIVE: 


From the archives: The SS United States by
CBS Sunday Morning on
YouTube

FROM THE ARCHIVES: The SS United States (YouTube Video)
On Friday, September 13, 2024, a federal judge agreed to mediation in a years-long rent dispute case involving the SS United States Conservancy, a group that has sought to preserve the fabled ocean liner. The ship may be destined to be sunk to become an artificial reef in Florida. Watch Mark Strassmann’s Feb. 17, 2013 “Sunday Morning” report about the glamorous history of the ship – longer than the Titanic, faster than any ocean liner, ever – and how it came to inhabit a berth in Philadelphia. 


The Emmy Award-winning “CBS News Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Executive producer is Rand Morrison.

DVR Alert! Find out when “Sunday Morning” airs in your city 

“Sunday Morning” also streams on the CBS News app beginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.) 

Full episodes of “Sunday Morning” are now available to watch on demand on CBSNews.com, CBS.com and Paramount+, including via Apple TV, Android TV, Roku, Chromecast, Amazon FireTV/FireTV stick and Xbox. 

Follow us on TwitterFacebookInstagramYouTubeTikTok; and at cbssundaymorning.com.  

You can also download the free “Sunday Morning” audio podcast at iTunes and at Play.it. Now you’ll never miss the trumpet!






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Donald Trump and other insiders can now sell shares of DJT, just as stock hits new low

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Former President Donald Trump, the biggest shareholder in Trump Media & Technology Group, and other insiders at the Truth Social owner, can finally sell their stakes in the business — just as shares of the stock hit a new low. 

Until today, Trump and other insiders have been unable to sell their stakes, even as the shares enjoyed an initial surge after the company’s public offering in March, providing the company a valuation of more than $9.4 billion. 

That’s because of a so-called lock-up period during which time Trump and other insiders have been unable to sell. Such agreements are common with initial stock sales and are designed to keep executives from immediately selling, thereby flooding the market with available shares and causing a stock to tumble.

Despite its early stock market gains, Trump Media — which trades under the ticker DJT, the same letters as Trump’s initials — has had a largely bumpy reception from Wall Street. 

That path became even rockier on Thursday with DJT shares tumbling 92 cents, or 5.9%, to $14.70, representing a new low for the stock. The lock-up period for Trump and other insiders expired at the end of the trading day, or 4 p.m. Eastern time on September 19.

The slide, which comes even as the market rallied on optimism after the Federal Reserve’s jumbo rate cut, represents an 81% decline from its March high of $79.38.

The lock-up’s expiration now provides Trump and other insiders with a chance to cash out. In Trump’s case, his holdings are worth $1.7 billion — a sizable fortune, yet a far cry from its $6 billion value soon after the company went public.

That slump might not matter to Trump, however, as the former president recently vowed he has “absolutely no intention of selling” his almost 60% stake in the business. But other insiders might be tempted to sell now that the lock-up has ended, with those shareholders ranging from company executives to former “Apprentice” contestants who were earlier involved in the social media business.

Those insiders together own more than 20 million shares, according to the New York Times.

Trump Media & Technology Group didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. 

“I’m going to buy more”

Trump Media & Technology Group has attracted thousands of small investors who bought shares as a way to express support for the former president. On Thursday, as the stock sank to a new low, some took to Truth Social to urge the stock upward and profess their faith that DJT shares will see better days. 

“I’m going to buy more,” one member of the DJT stock group on Truth Social wrote Thursday. “Prices are ridiculously low … even though I realize nothing is going to happen until Donald J. Trump is back in office.”

Shares of DJT have swung wildly based on news about Trump, as well as the perception of his standing in the presidential race against Vice President Kamala Harris. For instance, after Trump survived an assassination attempt in July, the stock soared 32% as investors recalculated his odds of winning in November. 

Since Harris entered the race on July 21, replacing President Joe Biden, Trump Media shares have shed 58% of their value.

That has prompted some analysts to compare DJT to a meme stock, or companies that trade on social media buzz instead of traditional financial measures such as revenue growth and profitability.

Trump, meanwhile, said that he didn’t create Trump Media or Truth Social for the money. 

“I did it because I really wanted to have a strong voice,” he said last week. “As long as my voice is on there, it’s going to always be good.” 



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