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tv   America Tonight  Al Jazeera  April 12, 2016 2:00am-3:01am EDT

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>> al jazeera america. proud to tell your stories. >> america tonight. it was a bold name our bosses gave this program and a big mission. america tonight. we wanted to represent the best of what aljazeera america stood for, covering every corner of this nation with smart storytelling, giving voice to the voiceless, making an impact with each report and reporting the stories of all of "america tonight".
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it's actually one of the most isolated areas long the texas-mexico border, and for miles, all you see is desert distance. >> since i was a little kid, all i wanted to be was a rancher, that was my dream. this. >> my grandmother taught mow. >> this is a tradition, goes back how long. >> thousandses of years. >> why do you care? why are you hear >> anchor: i told my mother, any made it, i would never forget where i gam came from. >> this is -- >> holy cow. >> all of these boats in the distance, passing here on the river is illegal. somebody. >> why with that weapon? >> why not? it's my right to do so. >> why are you so tenacious? >>
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people are going to die, and nothing is doing anything. >> my task is to set it up and make sure that the person is comfortable and they feel safe. and allow it to take hold. >> you lay down, and it starts coming in. >> your concerned that you're inviting the devil into your house. >> if i did invite the devil, i would be like hey, let's party. >> you know, what remains remarkable to me, this was our opportunity to do stories that we never had the opportunity to do before. and was there something, adam that you wanted to report and got a chance to here. >> i wanted to do a lot more environmental reporting, changes across the country that are impacting families and health. to do that. >> . >> which story really struck you? personally? >> oh, gosh. you know, i think a lot about some of
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the people that were facing insurmountable odds in her personal life. a woman fighting death. and fighting against a proposal for physician assisted suicide beliefs. >> i'm not afraid to die. we're all dying, and i think most people are afraid to talk about death. whereas for me, it's part of my life to talk about death. >> is stephanie packer's body isn't nearly as strong as her spirit. a mother of four young children, she's dying from multiple ailments. although she's running out of treatment option, for this devout catholic, ending her life with a pill is unthinkable. >> are you religiously motivated with this? is this your primary reason. >> it is definitely part of my reason, but it most definitely
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is not my only reason. there are very real problems with this bill. >> opponents say that this is a choice bill. that no doctor will make you take this pill ever, no insurance company can force you do it. >> no, but they can take away options for you. >> she was brave. >> she was very brave. we met so many brave people during the course of this show. >> so you all strike me as bringing people into your heart. it became very emotional for you, and very personal for you. >> absolutely, part of that is we were given an opportunity here on this show to actually find the real people and go to them wherever they were, we were given that mandate. find the voice that nobody else is hearing and bring it to you. >> whose voice sticks with you? >> the one, t-rex, clarissa
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shields, the boxer. >> going against all odds. >> what defines you? >> overcoming my obstacles. resilience is the word. it doesn't matter what your father s. your mother is. they're not you. i didn't have the worst parents, but they're pretty close, i think. and thank god he blessed them to change. but every young child, i think the more things that you go through, it builds character. i love a lot about boxing. >> she doesn't have a chip on her shoulder. she has this very very tough background that she comes from, but you would not know it. >> lisa, what about you? there are some people that come into your heart because they hope. >> they do. i got to do a three part special on ebola. and it was such a pressing topic because it took thousands of lives, but i had the chance to meet two doctors who were working in west africa, who both got ebola and one nearly
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dialed. >> if you told me on day one that i would develop multisystem organ failure and ask me to predict my survival, i would have thought it would be zero. >> you had a brush with death and put yourself in harm's way, and you've been back a couple why? >> liberia is my second home. these are my people. i've lived there a long time. and i really view this as my hospital and the place that god has put on my heart to serve. and they say when you're there, the dust gets in your shoes, and it makes it so you can't forget about it. >> and michael, reach out to go beyond any place that you normally have the opportunity to go. the one that stuck with me of sinkhole. >> you know what struck me about that, the fact that i had seen that story, as we all had on the other networks, and i
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don't want to disparage anyone, but the reporting on that was the connec spectacle of that visual. seeing the trees sinking into this bayou and they would touch on that and they would be gone, look >> and with that story, you met another hero, and for a lot of us, you saw the general in a completely different light. >> this is incredibly beautiful, general. >> that's why i wanted you to see it. >> the natural tendency when you approach a law make, we can't live without this industry, we have to be nice to them, they might leave. where are they going to go? boston? new york? miami? i don't think so. >> christoph, i will always remember the first question of your story about the transgender children.
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child. >> let's get something girl? >> a boy. >> 100%. >> absolutely. >> that is the question that's on everybody's mind that they don't understand, and the bottom line is, you have to hear it from the kid, because what's going on in their head and in their heart and the way they feel is who they are. you have the adults that can't seem to figure this out. the kids were so easy it talk to. this kid seems so mature. and that's true, but at the same time, they were speak from the heart and what's real with s. >> lengths talk about tough questions. because you seem to be in the business and always seem to end up in these situations. you're talking from the mayor of ferguson. >> we have people from all over the world coming to this community, and they're astounded by the beautiful community that they see, as
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tv. i don't know, i wasn't there. >> as the mayor of the city, you never set foot outside? >> i didn't go down in the middle of teargas and grenades going off. >> don't these people realize that you're about to ask them hard questions? >> i wonder myself, especially when it comes to flint, because we were there before a lot of the large media companies had come in to cover who was going on in flint. and we got there, and i told them, i'm going to be asking these tough questions, and we sat down, and the gentleman was very nice. >> has there been a public apology to the people of flint. >> i've apologized to those who brought it forward because of our tone. >> are you sorry that the people of flint don't have fresh drinking water? >> i am concerned, and certainly recognize that that's an issue for the city of flint. and so, yes, we are concerned.
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sorry? >> i -- i recognize flint is anxious and concerned about t. >> one of the hardest and most mem prabble questions that has been asked on this program, you asked a man on the phone, -- >> it was a lawyer in miami. and this pair of lawyers actually, we had been tracking them for days, and we had left messages, and we wanted to talk to them because they were instrumental in buying up condominium complexes, and in buying up these complexes with this comma miami florida law meant that they could force people out with the laws that they set. they told me that the termination was done as of may
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of 2014 and they had owned the unit since then. >> even though you didn't sign a piece of paper? >> i signed nothing. >> the question you ask. this may be legal, but the question from you is is it moral >> and the answer i got back from a these lawyers, there's no morality in business.
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>> emmet didn't know there were certain things that he couldn't say, couldn't do. >> i don't think so. he didn't know anything about the morays of the south. we lived there and we didn't know about listening. >> did -- lynching.>> did you know theg to be trouble after? >> i thought they would have hurt us, but murder never crossed my mind. ♪ >> you could never remember selma and forget the bridge.
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here, where the jefferson davis highway leaves town and heads north to montgomery is where the first steps of the long last journey in the fight against jim crow began. ♪ come by here, my lord, come by here ♪ >> and here, a local woman, barely known outside of her alabama hometown, became the image of bloody sunday, seen around the world. >> history is important and important. and some of the stories you reported really reached to that, when communities, when families try to bring themselves back together to try to heal in a way that maybe their own personal pain shouldn't even allow. >> and there was a family in chicago. there was a woman who literally turned her pain into her purpose.
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>> she lost her son. >> her son was shot in front of practice. >> i try to protect him the best that i could, me and my husband and because of guns in our neighborhood, my baby is not here. just like it happened to me, i found out it can happen to anybody, no matter how hard you try to protect your child. >> this kid did everything right, he was going to college, good kid, stayed out of trouble, had a long-term girlfriend. you do everything, and you do everything right and everything will be all well in the world. well, it wasn't. and this crushed her. she attempted suicide twice. >> and yet she brought herself back. >> she survived her second suicide attempt, and she quit her job at a bank, and she went to work at the church that's a beacon of hope on the south side of chicago.
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and she helps at risk youth. >> so we're here, and if you need us. >> and she really really tries to fight for peace, and helps people understand that this issue of gun violence is serious. >> christoph, you spent a lot of time in chicago talking about where those weapons come from. >> yeah, and you know -- >> and they're willing to tell you that. >> there's a lot of places in the world that i go, and i blend right in. chicago in the inner-city is not one of them. so we spend a significant amount of time just on the streets making our presence kind of known. i attend a lot of block parties, and so by the time it came about to do this one interview where we sat around with eight guys, they told us that the addresses was vacant. and we open the door and there's a guy wearing a mask, and we walk into a room and there are eight masks. >> so what's the game? what's the product? what do you sell?
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>> crack, dope, ex. if you see it, we're going to sell it. >> what do you have here. >> crack. $10 a bag. >> $10 a bag. >> yeah. from? >> colombia. this is how we eat, this is how we feed our families every day. >> does it concern that you you might be selling a product that's hurting a lot of people. >> i started doing it to be a social worker. >> this is the only option. it was never a, b or c, but just a, this right here. >> when i asked how many of you remember the first time that you saw somebody get killed, the oldest one was 12. one of themed when he was three, and you just imagine the post-traumatic stress that these people grow up and live in. i think that the goal of a lot of our reporting, the viewer,
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and it starts ourselves as reporters, to connect and see there's a little bit of me in you and i can see myself in you. >> al jazeera america - proud to tell important stories of native lives. >> oak flat to the apaches is an ancestral place. what'll happen to this after the mine...this will sink away and be destroyed. >> were the apache consulted on this before it was put into the defense bill? >> no we were not consulted at all. >> it takes a military bill to again attack the apache. >> the mining operation will generate $61 billion of economic benefit >> look at all the things they took from us. seventy percent unemployment. that already tells you where its going. it's not going to benefit anybody here. >> we are being left behind. >> we don't have economic development that we should have here. >> we need to be out there telling them what we need and what's required to take care of our people. >> any time they see a social worker it's like seeing a police
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officer. the immediate response is they are here to take my kids. >> the continuing legacy of anti-indian sentiment, while it may not be as vicious and overt as it once was, the fact is american indians remain at the bottom of every socio-economic indicator. >> louie is an example of what makes this 95 percent native american school work. a former student who cared enough to come back home and help. >> they're really pushing for education, really pushing for people to go off and go to college, but then to come back and apply it here where it counts. >> we said why not video games. >> that's really cool. it's an evil spirit. >> we're a living culture. we're a strong culture. >> this game is to celebrate. >> al jazeera america - proud to tell your stories.
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>> the helicopters flying over in the sky -- >> we have vehicles -- there's a huge place in the middle of the road where they have been punching over the top of the vehicles and slowly advancing down the middle of the road. >> i've never heard or seen any of this kind of outcry, not knowing that it's not out there in america, but i've never seen it in our community. >> we'll kill y'all! >> do you expect to gain the respect and the hearts and minds of the people that you're killing their children? and their families?
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>> this moment, as "america tonight" came into being, also seemed to be a really seminole moment for this country, where we confront seriously the issues of crime and justice and race. and legitimacy of authority. this really came to happen at the same moment that america tonight was growing and doing our reporting, so we became very much part of this conversation, and we were in ferguson, and we were in baltimore, and we were in all of these places where these issues were coming straight to the fore. when you walk away from this, what will you remember about those nights in ferguson. >> when we were deciding should we go, was this an officer involved shoot org something more? and then going into this, we didn't know this was the start of a huge move. nationally. and they said we're going to
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send you in with gas masks and helmets, and i thought, this is silly, why would we need this? >> so we have been finding smoke canisters in the field. and this is a riot multi-projectile that came out of here. >> the other night that really sits with me is in november, when they announced that they would not be indicting the officer, and the chaos that happened after that. >> turn your vehicles around and leave the city of ferguson immediately. do not destroy property here in ferguson. >> we're refugees. >> black lives don't matter. >> the police lives don't matter. >> no justice! >> you live only blocks away from the parts of baltimore
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that went up in flames. >> it was unbelievable. i was shooting another interview the day the rioting broke out. i raced over to the epicenter of the riots, and i'm standing there and i'm watching the city that i live in burn. i mean, it's burning in front of my eyes. an intersection that i had driven through hundreds of times in my life is being looted, there was glass everywhere, and it looked like a war zone. >> i just want to show them a better way of going about things, and a better way of protesting. a lot of police right there, let's clean up our community. >> you have a story with chicago, and really looking at the history of corrections, of law enforcement in chicago, which is brutal, which was tough, which was harsh. it was hard to believe it was in america, really. i mean this story, it was stunning. we read all about it, and we
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did our research, and we learned that there was a history of torture within the chicago police department, particularly in the precinct, and the guy, john burg was at the helm and he was prosecuted and convicted and he happens to be out of prison now, but long story short, everybody thought when the john burg era was over, it was over, but what we discovered when we went to chicago, they were like it never ended. he created a culture that still exists, and we interviewed guys, one in particular, he had been in prison 21 years, more than a dozen of those years, he was on death row, and he was innocent. he was given a certificate of innocence from the court. it's not like there was enough information or evidence to prove him guilty. this man was innocent. and he was tortured under john burg and his minions.
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>> so he tells me, stand up, nigger, stand up against the wall and he put the night stick between my legs, and he put it against the wall. and he lifts me off my feet. >> in america. >> in america, in chicago. and the more we heard the same story over and over, we just couldn't believe it, and we were having such a hard time putting our arms around the idea that this was happening in america, and potentially still happening. >> why is even the smallest community so important, such a community. >> in the black church, the church is the center of our community, it's our social structure. we live in connection with the church. so we become the church. and that makes the small black
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significant to us. >> how do you describe attacks on churches? how do you categorize that? >> well, what has been going on. you got to go from anger to terrorism. because it's trying to intimidate us to get back in our place. >> christoff, you went to charleston after the horrific shooting at mother emanuel church, and that particularly heinous crime inside of that church, but you reached out to look at the community with race and slavery and how that touches what's happening now. >> we were flabbergasted when we went down there, not just of the incident that took place. but here you found a town that
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in recent years has experienced a huge economic boom around the tourist industry, based on the idea that it was a historical town. but there was no reference to the 40 or so auction houses that auctioned off slaves that the charleston -- that 40% of all slaves in north carolina went through charleston. you would never know going on your history tour. somebody just mentioned in passing as we were walking down the street that oh, look at these fingerprints. >> i found fingerprints right here. >> you would never know these are the fingerprints of the slave that made that particular brick. >> it could have been a female or a child making these bricks. >> there's no reference that the place was built by slaves, you would o'yo never know. they're all over the place.
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>> al jazeera america - proud to tell critical and timely stories of race in america. >> i think since he was a person of color, the police department won't care. >> i'm more scared of the police than a burglar. >> this is really really unfair how we're being treated. >> i think what's important is that we're having a discussion about it. >> what took place here 60 years ago...the murder of emmett till is to this day an unsolved crime. >> i wanted people to hear the true story of till. >> never thought that he would be killed for that. >> that was the first step in the modern civil rights movement. >> ferguson has a...asking for assistance with crowd control... >> we're live in ferguson, missouri. >> these young people deserve justice. >> this is a target you can't get rid of. >> they were so angry, because it could've been them. >> there's clearly an issue and we have to focus on how we
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bridge that. >> they say they did it because they were trying to protect my children. they didn't protect my children, they traumatized them. >> we're just the average person, trying to go to work, provide for our families, and do what we can in this world. >> don't get lost in a sea of despair. >> i'm interested in getting us to a place where we're feeling something that looks more like freedom and justice. >> check which ethnicity - i check multiple boxes. >> this is who i am. >> were you here 50 years ago? >> yes to support the cause for voter's rights. >> we've come a long way. we've got a long ways to go. >> al jazeera america - proud to tell your stories.
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[ speaking spanish ]
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>> i came to brazil the month that michael brown was killed.
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i grew upright next to where he lived in baltimore. most of the people here were for the people of baltimore. they were like congratulations, and we feel exactly what's going on. that's michael brown and freddie gray on the wall here. i get to see people honor the black struggle in the state. >> right now, we're at the site where 13 young blank men were mass occurred during carnival. the misaligned them up against the wall and shot them. they were
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killed. >> nobody talks about the police, we don't deal with the police, because everyone is afraid of the police. the police can kill you. the police come to the marches and take pictures of the people. like we're coming for you. >> how hard is this trip? this journey? >> we have by walking, we're coming like ten hours. >> how many countries have you been through? do you know? have you lost track. >> no, i did not really know. >> but you have a long way to go. >> yeah. >> the truth is that on this
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long road, many countries like macedonia don't want the burden of caring for these children. and so it's not until they get to their destinations in austria, germany or beyond that child refugees actually come forward and ask for help. >> we tend to be the news media in general depends to simplify something like the immigration problem. like refugees in europe. >> it's easy to be glib, and it's easy to reduce the tragedy of people's lives to 30 seconds or 40 seconds, whatever, the evening news can decide to convey, and how long how many nights in a row television is going to deal with that story. these people feel they have no choice, and they have no way to go by forward. and there is no going back. yes, they want home. but when home is a pile of rubble, when there is nothing
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to eat, when there are bombs falling from the sky, when your children cannot go to school, when you cannot work, when you have no money, what do you do? >> we say that our program is america tonight. and we say that's our focus. yet, we have done a lot of work. laurie has been in central and south america, and i've been in europe. >> similarly, you've seen the same emotion rise up in the community in a way that we have seen in places in the united states, and you've seen the same sort of emotion in other places, it's shared, it's the same. >> paris in the last year, after the attacks in january. "charlie hebdo" after the attacks in november, and that is a city that i love, that i live in, and for me, it was in a way so shocking to try to process that the second time. to try to understand that what was being attacked was not just specific sites, but it was a
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better way of life. people going to a concert. and people going out for a drink on a friday night after work or having dinner with a friend. >> tell me about your friends who died. >> to me, every young people in paris, i know is nice, and full of life. >> you were here on friday night. what happened? >> . >> they were shooting everywhere. there was no specific address, they were shooting everywhere, left and right. i ran to the back, and i switched the lights off. i was too frightened to go to down. >> there are bullet holes in the windows of the hairdresser next door. at the entrance of the women's shelter across the road. in the windows of the japanese restaurant. dark. >> michael, early on, you began
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in japan, walking in the shadows of fuk shim a. which has to be terrifying and terrifying to your wife and daughter that she would go into a situation like this. but really, you went to see what was really left after all of cameras had gone away. >> the very few experiences i had like walking through what has essentially become a ghost moment. >> was it scary. >> it was scary, and i can't lie about that. what kept me going, the fact that we were chronicling something that people had forgotten b. >> what do you make of the efforts? >> how do you change this most contaminated area into towns where people with live? our towns have turned into chernobyl. and if people return, what will they do? >> this major crisis had occurred years ago, but the truth is, it's an ongoing crisis.
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they still don't know what to do with this contaminated water that is building by the day. it's changed an entire generation of japanese. >> lori, you've been to the border areas and beyond, where people as sheila talked about, were fleeing their histories, and giving up their homes to try something else. >> it's very interesting, you can only read it so many times. people fleeing the danger and trying to find a better life, but it helped to go there and bring it firsthand back to our viewers. we just got a call that there was another murder here. and from the moment we got to honduras, people are telling us how dangerous this place can be. under the yellow tarp, that's the fourth murder today. i could feel, i could see why somebody would want to leave that extremely murderous city.
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>> what was the plan when you crossed the border? were you going to turn yourself in? [ speaking spanish ] >> i think that they were just so desperate to leave and to make it to the united states, and it really didn't matter what they were going to encounter along the way. it takes a lot to drive people from their homes. even under the most -- what we look at and say jeez, that is a desperate circumstance. it takes a lot for people to give up hope.
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>> joie, i want to turn the tables on you a little bit. because you recently reported from the southern border about people who were forced from their homes. >> but this is about history, isn't it? it returns to the question, history. we hear the political environment saying, we can solve the immigration problem by putting up a wall, by deporting everyone. you have political figures who will come out and make these bold claims, and it's a new idea and that's what happens in this country >> and that's what you explored. >> that's exactly what we looked at. >> still seems like a family home, right? >> we talked to people, families affected by a 1930s decision to deport mexicans, ethnic descent. some of whom were citizens of the united states and born in this country and forced to return. under what circumstances do you think you're not american enough?
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that's the question we asked. what is it that allows people to make a decision like this to force people back to a country that's not even their home. that's not a deportation. that's being forced out of your home to be sent back in that way. so when you hear again, history, history rings out and says, oh, yeah, we have been down this road before.
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>> its like mayberry, mayberry usa here. its like a one horse town. >> but this mayberry is deeply mired in allegations of corruption and cronyism. >> it appears they used the taxpayer's dollars as an open pocketbook. piggybacked and over time into large sums of money. >> nobody rocked the boat, nobody paid attention. >> you say that can't be happening. >> i went to see another mayor
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last year as a reformer, he's living in what the sheriff likes to call, bradford county's only gated community. its jail. barrymore is awaiting trial on charges that he was dealing drugs. did we mention that he was elected as a reformer? >> there was $20,000 spent at wal-mart on a credit card. and nothing to show for it. the city doesn't have a lawnmower, a shovel. where did all of this money go. >> turns out above he was arrested, the mayor was trying to clean up the town and follow the money trail. think? >> yes, very big lesson. don't put blind trust in people. just because you love them doesn't mean they're honest. >> this is probably as close to get.
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>> for 43 years, cowboy bob landis has worked the annual roundup of a buffalo herd that roams the range, even as it's species was nearly slaughtered to existence. and visitors have all over the world come to watch. and soon over the ridge top the first buffalo breaks the horizon. barely visible at first, but then the whips crack, and the cowboys holler the way they always have. >> get up there! get up there. and the vast empty plains come to life. the ground itself shaking from the thundering hooves. >> i thought at the time i was
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doing the right thing. it's what the legislators wanted at that time and what my bosses wanted. even the president of the united states. you trusted all of those people. so i went right along with them. >> 87-year-old selia vandergrift remembers her time in the operating room, for those labeled ep epileptic and feeble minded. alcohols and others who the inadequate. >> this is where victims were sterilized and taken from their homes and families. >> so every person that came here was considered to be feeble minded. >> feeble minded or epileptic or criminal. the end was to develop a super human race. something that we associate with nazi germany, but in fact, it was established here and
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ground zero for that. >> . >> how many sterilizations do you think that you observed during your career there. >> oh, my goodness. i couldn't begin to tell you. >> there's so much that i'm going to remember from this program. all of you, the stories that we have had the opportunity to tell, but my own experiences in the philippines after super fief on a, haiyan, or walking across all of desolation there, and the dark roads where emmet hill met his fate. all of these moments will always remain with me and with you, what will you remember? >> i think it's probably living in california, and hearing about the drought every single day, and sort of dismissing it because it doesn't affect me but actually going out and doing a special on it, and seeing towns where people haven't had running water for five years. and these lakes that are completely dried up many. >> i'm standing on the bottom
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of lake mcclure, at least what's left of it. and what's left of it is mounds of old dry dust, no doubt what used to be mud, debris that was long forgotten, and plant life that's making a home between the cracks at the bottom of this lake bed. it's a moon scape that extends for miles and miles and miles. >> but the most memorable image, going and seeing the salten sea for the first time, the largest lake in california, and it's literally drying up as a result of the drought. and the incredible smell that i experienced when i got there and realized on further inspection that what i was seeing and smelling were literally tens of thousands of dead fish. littered over the entire layup as far as the eye could see. it's just a searing image in this otherwise beautiful backdrop, with this beautiful distance.
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>> laurie jane, you traveled across the desert many times. >> yeah, i think that there have been so many memorable moments for me, and i had the opportunity to report from five different countries, jamaica, honduras, mexico, guatemala, and one of the fun experiences, when we were getting to the small town in mexico and we were telling a story about the border and we had to cross in these little boats, and in order to get into the town, it's so tiny, we took a donkey ride to get into the town, and the donkey ride is so slow, and there was a boy slapping the donkey on the butt and trying to get it to go. and it was fun, and there were really cool experience that's i got to have being on the show, and i really appreciate opportunity. >> christof, you had memorable experiences too. >> one of the most for me was
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in iraq, we got there after isis had taken over mosul. and there was the security line with the territory with the kurds. this is the security line, we have everything on this side in control of the peshmerga, and everything on this side, in control of the isil. and the soldier says that as long as the isil stays over there, they're not going to engage them. i climbed occupy this tower, and if you looked over, you could see less than half a mile away, all of these isil vehicles and patrols and the flag, and people trying to get to where we were. we're so close to it, yet so incredibly far away. we can't really get in, there's no getting close to that. but it was right there in front of us. >us. sheila, a lot of talk about immersion. >> one of the stories that we did this year was the advance
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of the paris climate conference, so we went to the marshal islands, deep in the pacific ocean, and it's one of those place that's in the sea continues to rise and the global temperatures continue to rise, they will be under water. and they are already beginning to see that. when the king tides come as they come every year now, they flood. the islands flood. and you're talking about going from being a flat little coral atol, floating above the pacific sea and wondering how much longer can we stay here? the other part of global warming we saw there was underneath the ocean. because of warming ocean temperatures, there is a huge coral dieoff taking place. coral reefs across the pacific,
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and into the caribbean, and going up the atlantic coast. it's gone beyond bleaching into a fungus like a mold, and crumbling away. this should have been a spectacular coral garden, and there's still beautiful coral there, but you can see there's so much damage. >> and when the coral dies, all of the life that's dependent on the coral, all of the fish die with it. >> that's something that we'll have to continue to watch for and worry about in our future. >> yeah, ocean acidification is an issue. about one-third of the earth's carbons are in the ocean, and it's changing the ph, and its killing coral reefs and causing shellfish the inability to grow their shells, so lobsters, and oysters and clams, they can't overcome the acidity when they're young, and they can't
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create a shell and they die. one of the pieces that i did, a family in puget sound. it was not only an inspiring place, but for this family, it was so much more than a business. they were the largest oyster family in the company. it was about the stewardship that they have for the land. and the responsibility to turn around the acidification. so they became activists, and they have a place on their property where they grow the oysters in a non-acidic brackish water, and when the oysters are able to live on their own, they put them out in the bay. it's very inspiring. >> sarah, you too made family and community. >community. some of the things that really stand out to me, whether if it's in chicago, and being with
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a mother who never lost a child to gun violence, but took the extraordinary step to sit on a corner and collected other mothers to do this with her to stop the gun violence on the blocks. you are with her, deep in the south side, and sitting next to her in a lawn chair. >> just as mothers control it on our own, i thinking that we could do it in the community as well. so this summer, i thought we would take moms and set upshot on some of the worst blocks, the most violent. >> loved it. this was america tonight at its finest. and that's stuff that will stick with me. you learn enough is enough, and i'm going to do what i can even if it affects these small groups of people. the voices of people that need to be heard, adam. >> america tonight, that's the name of the show, and i'm so fortunate that i got to tell
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stories in 44 states during the run of this newscast. and i think sometimes it's the places you go that really stand out in your mind. it was going on idaho and visiting a playground. the best playground in the country for disabled children. in idaho, a town surrounding one child living with a disability and that i will never forget. and then going back to my home state of minnesota, trying to figure out why moose are dying off. the climate change researchers are watching, and we got up to a moose that is tranquilized. and they're taking samples from it. and i will never forget the smell of that moose. and then fun things too like in minnesota, showing people fun things that i got to do as a kid that most aren't familiar with, and that is ice fishing, and
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how last night they r. >> these are the stories that we had the opportunity to tell. stories that are not being told anywhere else in all of media that we're seeing. and we had the opportunity to bring the voice to the voiceless, and the opportunity to bring american cancer america america tonight.
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people in yemen getting respite as the truce largely holds up for a second day the world news from al jazeera. also getting some breaking news of a suicide bomb attack near a football stadium in aden. we will bring you that together with the other news. a large fire has broken occupant in tokyo. a blow for brazil's president as a congressional committee votes in favor of impeaching her. u.s.