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How Liz Cheney’s support can help Kamala Harris ahead of Election Day

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How Liz Cheney’s support can help Kamala Harris ahead of Election Day – CBS News


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Vice President Kamala Harris campaigned Thursday with former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney in Ripon, Wisconsin, the city credited as the birthplace of the Republican Party. Former President Donald Trump campaigned in Michigan after special counsel Jack Smith’s filing was unsealed in the 2020 election interference case. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa has the latest.

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3 ex-Memphis officers convicted of federal charges in death of Tyre Nichols; Father survives Helene journey to attend daughter’s wedding

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Garth Brooks accused of rape in new lawsuit

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A woman who says she worked as a hair-and-makeup stylist for Garth Brooks alleged in a lawsuit filed Thursday that he raped her in a Los Angeles hotel in 2019.

The woman does not use her name and goes by Jane Roe in the lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court. 

She said the assault occurred when she traveled with Brooks from Nashville to Los Angeles, where he was performing at a Grammy Awards tribute concert in October 2019.

The woman says in the lawsuit she had worked for Brooks’ wife, country singer Trisha Yearwood, since 1999, and had started also working for Brooks in 2017.

In a statement provided to CBS News on Thursday night, Brooks said that he had filed his own lawsuit “anonymously” almost a month ago against the plaintiff for “extortion and defamation of character.”

“For the last two months, I have been hassled to no end with threats, lies, and tragic tales of what my future would be if I did not write a check for many millions of dollars,” Brooks said. “It has been like having a loaded gun waved in my face. Hush money, no matter how much or how little, is still hush money.  In my mind, that means I am admitting to behavior I am incapable of—ugly acts no human should ever do to another. We filed suit against this person nearly a month ago to speak out against extortion and defamation of character.  We filed it anonymously for the sake of families on both sides. I want to play music tonight. I want to continue our good deeds going forward. It breaks my heart these wonderful things are in question now.  I trust the system, I do not fear the truth, and I am not the man they have painted me to be.”

Singer Garth Brooks
Singer Garth Brooks attends a reception for the 2022 Kennedy Center honorees hosted by President Biden at the White House on Dec. 4, 2022 in Washington, DC. 

Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images


According to the lawsuit filed by the woman Thursday, Brooks normally traveled with an entourage, but the two were alone on his private jet, and he booked just one hotel suite for both of them. The woman alleges that in the suite, he appeared naked in the doorway to the bedroom and raped her.

The suit says that he then proceeded as though nothing had happened and expected her to do his hair and makeup immediately after.

She alleges that earlier in 2019, when she was at Brooks’ home, he had appeared naked in front of her, grabbed her hands, and put them on his genitals.

The lawsuit says that Brooks filed his preemptive lawsuit in federal court in Mississippi last month, in which both him and the woman are anonymous.

The woman’s attorney, Douglas Wigdor, acknowledged Brooks’ “preemptive complaint” in his own statement to CBS News.

“We applaud our client’s courage in moving forward with her complaint against Garth Brooks,” Wigdor said. “The complaint filed today demonstrates that sexual predators exist not only in corporate America, Hollywood and in the rap and rock and roll industries but also in the world of country music. We are confident that Brooks will be held accountable for his actions and his efforts to silence our client through the filing of a preemptive complaint in Mississippi was nothing other than an act of desperation and attempted intimidation. We encourage others who may have been victimized to contact us as no survivor should suffer in silence.”

The lawsuit did not state if the woman reported the alleged incident to the authorities. CBS News has also reached out to a representative of Yearwood for comment on the lawsuit.

In the lawsuit filed by Brooks, the plaintiff, going by John Doe, says the allegations are “wholly untrue” and that he first learned of them in July when she threatened to publicly sue him unless he gave her millions of dollars.

He asks a judge to stop the woman from “intentional infliction of emotional distress, defamation, and false light invasion of privacy.”

The woman’s suit also says Brooks exposed himself to her many other times and talked about sexual fantasies with her and sent her explicit text messages.

She said she was forced to keep working for Brooks because of financial hardship, which he knew about and took advantage of.

The 62-year-old Oklahoma-born Brooks was the biggest star in country music of the 1990s, with hits including “Friends in Low Places” and “The Thunder Rolls.” He brought arena-rock theatrics to his concerts and a pop-music sensibility to his recordings. He had huge success that went beyond typical country audiences.

He married fellow country star Yearwood in 2005. 



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How Los Angeles is addressing homelessness after Supreme Court ruled cities can ban camping

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For four days a week, Venice Family Clinic’s mobile exam room serves as a doctor’s office for those without homes in the Los Angeles area.

“We want to be there for them,” said Dr. Coley King, the clinic’s director of homeless health care.

There are more than 45,000 people experiencing homelessness in the city of Los Angeles, according to the city’s Homeless Services Authority. King says many of them suffer from serious medical illnesses.

“There are patients that have schizophrenia, have HIV. So I think there’s urgency from everyone to solve this,” King said.

Nearly half of all homeless people in the U.S. live in California, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The state had roughly one shelter bed for every three people who needed one last year, according to the Public Policy Institute of California.

Earlier this year, leaders like California Gov. Gavin Newsom were empowered to take action in clearing homeless encampments after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled cities could ban people from sleeping outside.

“It’s time to move forward with urgency at the local level to clean up these sites… there are no longer any excuses,” Newsom said in a video posted to social media.

Easy to say, perhaps, but the reality is more complicated.

“The goal has got to be to solve the problem,” said Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. “Our problem here is we don’t have enough housing. We need to build, we need to purchase buildings.”

Bass is focused on getting people off the streets and into shelters that up until now did not exist. She’s doing it by leveraging empty motels and city-owned properties with the goal of moving people indoors urgently and clearing encampments permanently.

“You don’t solve anything by clearing an encampment and just moving them to the next street,” Bass said.

Since 2022, Bass’s “Inside Safe” program has brought more than 3,000 people indoors from over 60 encampments, the city says. The city has seen a 10% drop in street homelessness.

Pointing to an empty patch of grass next to a playground, Bass said, “This area right here, many months ago was filled with tents. And you can imagine what family wants to bring their kids here —right there— if this is filled with tents and you’re afraid of the people that are here. And look at it now.”

While some people have been able to find interim housing, others are still waiting.

“We’re dealing with massive numbers, so it is gonna take a while. I wish I could tell you that on this date, this problem would be ended. I can’t do that, but what I do know is that if we continue along with the trajectory that we’re headed on, we will be able to solve this problem,” Bass said.

It’s an approach that could also solve a problem for Dr. King, who often loses contact with people who need more consistent care.

“We may lose them and we may lose them forever, because they are that sick. I have faith that here we’re already on that pathway to try to do this the right way,” King said.

A crisis decades in the making is slowly changing, one day and one life at a time.



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