tv America Tonight Al Jazeera May 29, 2015 12:30am-1:01am EDT
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the energy to prepare small rolls of dough. they are making pastry which they'll sell and share the profits. it's not much but it's enough to get by. just a reminder that you can keep up to date with all the news on the website at aljazeera.com. aljazeera.com. [ ♪♪ ] on "america tonight" - giving final honours to the fallen and forgotten. >> it's our way of healing, maybe not ourselves, but our family members or maybe they know somebody that didn't come home and it's their way of honouring them "america tonight"s michael oku with a story of one californian man determined to honour and pay tribute to america's veterans baltimore
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- behind bars and beyond belief. the gang leader who proclaimed "i am the law." >> we had a woman fixing meals, and one smuggling him personal matters he could have for him. that's the tip of the iceberg. a look behind bars and how they are fixing what is called one of america's most corrupt gaols. thanks for joining us, i'm adam may sitting in for joie chen. we begin in baltimore, a city in turmoil. a month after rioting following the death of a man in police custody, protesters are turning their anger towards the prison system. demonstrate juniors are outrage -- demonstrators are outraged over plans to build a gaol for youth. it will cost $30 million, while the maryland governor is cutting education.
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some baltimore youth are being how farred in the main gaol along -- housed in the main gaol along adult offenders. i went inside the baltimore detention centers, where gang members claimed to take control in a corruption scandal. >> reporter: does the location corrosion. roll. >> reporter: until now ralph has never talked on national tv about what he witnessed as a supervising corrections officer at the baltimore city gaol. >> people from the neighbourhood become inmates. >> an institution overrun with sex, drugs and corruption. >> reporter: what happened? >> it blossomed out of cell in 2004 when they started hiring atos, that was kind of crazy, how can you put an 18-year-old that does not have any experience in live, and you put
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him on the section of 120 inmates, seasoned inmates and expect that nothing is going to happen to that wild. -- child. >> reporter: maryland's experiment hiring female and male officers as young as 18, was intended to address a shortage of applicants willing to take low-paying jobs. critics like johnson, who wrote a book about the gaol, say it backfired, younger cos were vulnerable. >> the veteran inmates, they was licking their chops, seeing an innocent 18-year-old, and they would eat them alive. they would manipulate them, have sex with them, they would bring things in, and it became a money making matter. >> reporter: the gangs were making money inside the gaol? >> they were making a tonne of money, it evolved. >> following a multiyear
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veification involving -- investigation, 22 were indicted, allegations that they were helping prison gangs run drugs. more than a dozen members of the black guerilla family gang, bgf and associates were indicted. the largest conspiracy prison case history. >> more than two dozen correction officers indicted. gang. >> they were smuggling in marijuana, heroin, crack, opening grills so gang members could be attacked, and they did run the gaol because the cos empowered it. they couldn't have done it without them. >> u.s. attorney rod resentheme oversaw 40 convictions in the conspiracy.
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>> a lot of people assume when you put people in gaol it solves the problem, isolating them. that's not the problem. they have shiftworkers coming in and out. and kitchen workers and maintenance. that is the problem. it is not an island to itself. >> reporter: how did what happened inside the gaol affect greater baltimore and life outside the area. >> if you put them in a gaol, you have not solved the problem. >> baltimore has a high violent crime rate in america, leading to crowded gaols, where prisoners can serve years before heading to a permanent prison, allowing problems to take root. where are we headed now? >> we'll take you down to the receiving section. >> reporter: this detention center was guilt before abraham lincoln took office. >> it's the oldest working gaol we know of >> reporter: oldest working gaol
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in america. >> pete is the deputy secretary of provisions. a few years ago this retirement commander was hired to run the baltimore detention center, but realised the corruption went too deep. >> when i came here, i don't now how to make this clearer, the facility didn't feel right. >> at what point were you motivated to call in the feds. >> we had a choice to make. we could have done nothing, or do something. we those to do something. we had a dangerous facilityie leer. we had a facility jeopardizing the life and safety of not just inmates, but the people we asked to come to work every day. >> the 3-year case reveals inside the gaol, one inmate in particular, tayvon white was in charge of the widespread black
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guerilla family gangs. in wire taxes he proclaimed "this is my gaol, i'm the law." what was his life like in the prison? was it as lavish as reports indicate. better. >> reporter: how so. >> he could have sex any time he wants. he had one woman fixing him home cooked meals every day. a woman smuggling him personal pills that he could take for himself, or wine, and he was never searched at the city gaol. he wasn't allowed to be searched. he had phone calls, pretty much everything that he wanted. plus, while incarcerated in '09 to 2013, he brought five vehicles, a black mercedes, a white mercedes, a lexus and another car, and this is while he was incarcerated. >> reporter: more shocking - inside gaol he fathered five
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children with four correction officers. one of them katera - she smuggled in drugs, drove a fancy car and had his name tattooed on her wrist and helped him run bgf business. earring. >> reporter: she walked out on a break, went to her car, picked up contraband and came in, is that possible today? >> it shouldn't have been possible then. the fact that we watched her leave, and watched her return through our surveillance suggested that supervisors were not doing their job. >> nationally there's a head line every week. "america tonight" attempted to quantify the problem. we discovered no one is tracking it. the u.s. department of justice told us they don't have information on criminal charges filed against prison guards. this comes as the u.s. incarceration rate has more than quadrupled since the 1970s.
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>> what do you think we would find if we did a research study nationwide. >> based on what you saw play-out in baltimore. >> i think you'd find the general problem of smuggling contraband is a nationwide problem. we are really about preventing violence, crime in the streets. we need to focus attention on what's while the inmates are behind bars. since a baltimore schedule, gaol has gone through an overhaul. quit. >> have you used the camera system to intercept contraband. >> it is used for everything, staff performance, cannes roe band. >> the gaol invested millions in new technology, better cameras and a system blocking outgoing cellphone calls. >> what is the impact of
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communication. >> folks that are incarcerated use cellphones to intimidate witnesses. we stopped supplied contraband, intimidate staff. cellphones are a way to continue the criminal enterprise. >> since the federal indictments maryland created a prison corruption task force. it investigates other claims of corruption. how do you think prison society. >> in urban america, i do know that the communities are extensions of the gaol, and face versa. there's not a lot of deterrent in going to prison. you have cable tv, you have access to sex, drugs, the whole nine yards. actually, it's exacerbating the problem. for decades inmates released from the baltimore gaol have seen this sign as they exit the
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facility. now it takes on a whole new meaning. last week two more baltimore correction officers were suspended. this time they are accused of looting a 7/11 during the riots. gaol protesters are planning acts of civil disobedience, demanding the government scrap plans for the facility. the government says the 60-bed youth gaol will offer better classrooms, medical services and recreation areas. >> up next - black box warning - a tool used to fight cancer could be spreading it. a controversial procedure now has the federal bureau of investigation's attention. and later - honouring the fallen heroes. "america tonight"s michael oku uncovers a story of a man making sure our veterans are not forgotten.
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hop on the "america tonight" website. could gold medallist boxer sharisa shields repeat in rio. learn more at aljazeera.com/americatonight >> "compass" will challenge the way you look at the world. talking about big subjects. telling human stories. >> there's a tidal wave. >> we all have a problem. >> could you have seen that coming?
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wendell pierce talks big screen politics and taking a stand >> do you think it cost you the oscar? >> ahh...yeah... >> do you regret it? >> absoloutely not... >> and his home town ten years after katrina... >> what's the biggest problem right now. >> crime...jobs, stop bullets... >> every tuesday night. go one on one with america's movers and shakers. gripping. inspiring. entertaining. talk to al jazeera. only on al jazeera america. welcome back, in our fast-forward, it was touted as a new safer way to remove fibroid tumours, cutting risk and recovery compared to a full hysterectomy. that device ended up with a black box warping, the strong -- warning, the strongest there is. sara hoy meets a patient battling cancer spread by the help.
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>> reporter: it is the last place amy reed, a successful boston annas thesologist and mother of six expected to be, in a hospital ward as a cancer patient. accompanied by her husband, a boston heart surgeon. what the couple discovered is that during amy's surgery, in a minimally invasive hysterectomy the surgeons used a morse illator to mince the f.b.i. roids into pieces. the procedure, she says, spread the hidden cancer cells. >> you can see tissue, chunks, dripping down. it's not a refined procedure. >> reporter: amy says he was never informed or consulted about the use of morcellation, had she known, she wouldn't have allowed it. >> i did not know initially, it's not something they tell you when they say your surgery went well. they didn't say your surgery
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went well and we shredded things up. i learnt they were morcellated, and the chance of occurs meaning the disease coming back was in the ballpark of 80% because of how they handled the consumer in front of me. >> 80%. >> 8-0. if it came back i knew i had life expectation si of two years. >> my wife was hit in a way as a surgeon, i recognised it as a catastrophic hit. if you disrupt a cancer in someone's body, you upstage from a stage 1 to stage 4. >> reporter: he is channelling his grief into a campaign delling anyone that will listen -- telling anyone that will listen that there's no place for morcellation inside women, anyone with undetectable cancer fast-forward to who knew what, and when. it's reported as to whether johnson&johnson, the largest maker of the device knew that it
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would spread uterin cancer. "america tonight" talked to amy's husband. he confirms in the fbi interviewed him. we reached out. comment. >> next - remembering our fallen heroes, especially those without a family to call their own. meet a man who is often the lone mourner at military funerals. and tomorrow on the show. we continue our indepth coverage from baltimore, with a look at bloodshed. >> i think that the cops are not as aggressive as they were. because they are afraid to put their hands on people why police officers say they are afraid as the city sees a that's friday on "america tonight". >> on hard earned, down but not out, >> i'm in recovery i've been in recovery for 23 years... >> last shot at a better life... >> this is the one... this is the one... >> we haven't got it yet... >> it's all or nothing...
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honour - it's a meaningful word that you will hear often from vietnam vet an doyle tollbetter. a man dedicating his life to those who sacrifice said for this country, especially those that died alone, unclaimed, without a family to call their own. michael oku unearths the motivation behind a man who stands up for veterans who might otherwise be forgotten. >> reporter: on every wednesday morning, every year for the past in my opinion, without fail, doyle tolber. it has been laying brothers and
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sisters to rest, here. paying tribute along with dozens of other veterans for the fallen and forgotten. riverside national cemetery was home to 225,000 veterans. doyle, a former investigator with the l.a. county coroner's office started trips to the cemetery after he noticed the number of veterans voce bodies were -- whose bodies were unclaimed by the next of kin, and went out burial as a result. >> how can this happen, why does this happen? the men and women served our country and they deserved better than that. >> reporter: he gave them better, starting veterans without families. before you had this idea to honour unclaimed veterans, what would happen to their remains?
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>> if nobody claimed them, they would be cremated by the county, and the cremation is held for a couple of years, and after that they'd be taken to the county cemetery and buried at the site with a marker on it, saying the year of the date of death though doyle rarely met any of the veterans in life, he made death. >> they needed to be set out here and honoured by being placed next to and with their brothers and sisters that they have served with. sounds like this is not only for these folks, but there's something kath arctic for you too.
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it's our way of healing themselves or family members. maybe they now someone that didn't go home. >> at 21, doyle deployed as a paratrooper. and managed to live through the jungle ambush. like men, they left south east asia with a dose of guilt, for the yes. few years he worked in law enforcement. i don't know whether you want to talk about it, but his own mother abandoned you. being abandoned and seeing the vets abandoned. maybe it was something - maybe it was brothers and sisters. i don't know. it's something that always bothered me.
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it's something that bothered me, alone. >> since 2008 they have honoured more than 2500 veterans, each memoriesed with a dog tag. >> every men and woman bought up for burial, a dog tag is made with their name on it. we honour their memory in that way for now and forever. >> there's one for ron add neblis, a parachuter who found his way home after the war, but lost his way. together. >> he was a happy go lucky kid, full of joy, laughter. >> reporter: ronald was drafted in 1965. after he was hit by enemy fire, he received the purple heart. he revived his injuries, but returned to southern california
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a changed man. >> he had to do things in the war that here you wouldn't have dreamed of having done. >> reporter: give he a sense of what he went through. >> he had to go and shoot, sometimes, women and children it. >> and it haunted him? >> yes. >> back then, p.t.s.d. didn't have a name. >> ronald married, but the union was short lived. >> did you see him like that, on the streets. >> i couldn't. he drifted away and saw his family occasionally. he was more and more troubled, and it showed. >> it made it hard for him to live with himself because of the things he had done. because of that he didn't like to be sober very much. >> nicole what is his niece, and ronald lived with her family for a short time. it didn't work out either.
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>> he wasn't happy. i feel that's why he took himself out of society and decided to become homeless. he didn't feel worthy, i think, to be in regular society with the rest of us, you know. he stayed under the bridge on mission, behind us, and... >> he lived under the bridge. bridge. >> a wounded war veteran ended up here, 40 miles away. >> any message come back. >> seeing homeless vehicles like a lot were, soldiers and veterans and people that had a hard time in life. so it reminds me to be humble, and that's for sure. and i do think of him often, and i wondered what happened to him. >> ronald passed away under the bridge in august 2004. it would be four years before
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any loved ones learnt of his death. and another six before he was laid in his time resting place, not far from the bridge he had made his home. veterans without family learnt of ronald's story and made him one of their own. on another wednesday morning in 2014, he was buried with full military honours, for service his -- a service his niece nicole was proud to taken. >> it kind of gave us closure, finely, to know that -- finally to know that he was okay, we were able to honour him. >> he hadn't just been buried, he was buried with honours. that. >> when you heard that he had been buried
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and honoured by the rejection? >> i was happy that he did have his burial the way he should have had it. >> what does it mean for you to gi that man dignity in his death. >> it gives me pride, satisfaction, knowing that we gave him his final military honours that he earnt and burial. >> reporter: and there's no imposing how many other ronald's may be out there. >> there's thousands. >> if we cannot do him honour while he's here to hear the prays. let's give him homage at the ending of his days. >> why does this matter so much to you? >> they are veterans.
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they gave part of their life to defend our right as citizens of the united states, freedom. perhaps a head line in the paper to say our country is in mourning, a soldiers died today. may he rest in peace, we are your family. [ bell tolls ] [ "last post" plays ] that is it for "america tonight", tell us what you think at aljazeera.com/americatonight. come back, we'll have more of "america tonight" here tomorrow.
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a regional conference on the migrant crisis in southeast asia is underway in thailand. we are live in bangkok. ♪ ♪ hello and welcome to al jazerra live from our headquarters in doha. i am elizabeth. also ahead. >> it must fall to me to take responsibility. >> a defiant sepp blatters stays the course. bombs at two hotels in baghdad killing at least 10
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