tv CNN Presents CNN April 28, 2012 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT
5:00 pm
>> hey. youn shouldn't have had me on te show if you didn't know i would go there. me and joe should hang poupt i would love to have a beer with joe biden. >> and just let him rant and talk. can you believe he said that in anyway, he'd be a good wing man, i'm sure. >> he would definitely be a good wing man. but you know, that's why we like joe biden, because he tells it like it is. even if it's a little edgy. you know, that's -- he's on point. >> loni love. all right. cnn's special coverage of the white house correspondents dinner 9:30. i'll see you back here then. i'll see you back here then. good night. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com tonight on "cnn presents" -- betrayal of trust? sexual assaults on the rise at the nation's prestigious military academies. >> i remember him turning off the lights and me asking what are you doing? >> women who feel betrayed by the military they committed to serve. and the pentagon's battle to do something about it. freeing the chimps. >> so this is the infamous --
5:01 pm
>> the dungeon. >> these research chimps are getting their first taste of freedom. but what about the unlucky ones still behind bars? the last season. at 39 he's banking his career on a risky experiment. >> i'm laying in bed and thinking am i delusional? >> one man's willingness to do anything for one last chance to play a sport he can't live without. revealing investigations. fascinating characters. stories with impact. this is "cnn presents" with tonight's hosts, randi kaye and drew griffin. secretary of defense leon panetta announced new aggressive policies to combat sexual assault in the military. zero tolerance is the message from the pentagon's top commander. >> but ground zero for battling the growing problem may start at the nation's most prestigious
5:02 pm
military academies. >> reports of sexual assaults at the academies rose by nearly 60% in the past year. and out of the 65 cases reported only one resulted in court-martial. >> that is why two young women say they're coming forward. in a lawsuit just filed they allege they were raped in their first year at the academies. tonight they speak to kyra phillips for the first time. >> reporter: west point, the naval academy, the air force academy. prestigious military institutions tasked with training future officers ethically, spiritually, and morally. but for these high school honor students their experience would be far different. >> i remember him turning off the lights and me asking what are you doing? >> in the middle of the night i did come to, and he was on top
5:03 pm
of me. >> karley marquet and annie ken kendsior say they were raped. raped by fellow classmates they trusted and ignored by a chain of command that promised their parents they'd be protected. >> and nobody, not a single person, not one, was looking out for her best interest. >> come on, karley. >> reporter: karley marquet was not your typical teenage girl. that's her cage fighting at 18. >> that's it, karley. >> reporter: an all-star rugby player. a championship swimmer and honors student. karley could have gone to college anywhere. what was it about west point that drew you to that academy? >> just knowing you kind of have your future set, having that structure and discipline but at the same time having people look at you like wow, you're doing something great for our country.
5:04 pm
>> reporter: her sister was a mid-shipman at the naval academy, her father a marine. to karley they were heroes. everything she wanted to be. do you think west point let you down? >> yeah. i wanted to be there. it was my dream. >> reporter: a dream that was shattered her first year, when an upper classman showed up at her door to talk girl troubles. >> i kind of felt a little cool that an upper classman wanted to be friends with me and was seeking my advice. >> reporter: after sharing a drink karley says he convinced her to come to his room. since he was an upper classman she trusted him. >> i remember just getting more and more intoxicated, and my judgment really started to become impaired. i remember him turning off the
5:05 pm
lights and me asking, what are you doing? and then he proceeded to rape me. >> reporter: karley says she woke up disoriented, in physical pain, and afraid to come forward. >> i was scared it was going to ruin my career. i was scared if i said anything that there would constantly be a target on my back. i reached out to people, and they weren't there. i just didn't want to leave my room. i mean, he was right across the hall. >> and you still had to work under him, take out his trash. >> yes. >> why? >> it was part of our duties. >> chain of command? >> mm-hmm. >> reporter: chain of command. military ranks where senior students have authority over the one immediately below. so every day karley had to face the man she says raped her. but weeks later karley finally found the courage to come
5:06 pm
forward. she filed a report and asked an investigation. >> and the reason i ended up telling someone is because i didn't want that to happen to anyone else. >> reporter: annie kendzior describes her as a girly girl who never imagined joining the military. an honor student and one of the best high school soccer players in the country, she was heavily recruited by top ivy league schools. but the naval academy was the most convincing. >> all their graduates that graduated from the soccer team went on and became pilots and marine officers. and it just sounded like oh, those women are so powerful and so well respected, and i wanted to be that woman. >> reporter: annie's goal was to fly f-18s. but it wasn't long after arriving she realized that wasn't going to happen. >> i could tell that there was definitely a bias toward the
5:07 pm
women. i mean, you're a female entering into a fraternity, a giant frat. >> reporter: annie says there were no derogatory names for the men but for the women they were called dubs. >> what does dub mean? >> dub, a dumb ugly bitch. >> were you ever called a dub? >> every girl was called a dub. >> reporter: it was definitely a different culture, and annie felt out of place. so when she got invited to go to an off-campus party, she was in. >> i was like okay, cool. college, finally. i can live the college life for one night. >> reporter: but annie says she had way too much to drink. so when a fellow midshipman offered her a place to crash, she accepted. >> i was like, okay. it'll be fine. i trust you. you're in upper class. because that's what they teach you to trust, your upper class. >> so tell me what happened once he took you back to the room. >> i just laid down and went to sleep. at one part in the middle of the night i did come to, and he was
5:08 pm
on top of me. and i remember saying no. but then i just passed back out again. >> reporter: annie was afraid to come forward. >> why were you scared? >> i didn't want to be the girl that got the athlete kicked out. because we had been told stories about how that had happened in the past. and i didn't want to be that next story. >> reporter: for two years annie battled depression and thoughts of suicide. she had a secret she couldn't keep anymore. and finally called her father. >> and she said, "i was raped." and i couldn't breathe. >> reporter: still ahead, the battle to change the system. >> how do you get it through these men's heads if they rape they will pay the price? was checking up on me. i wasn't eating well. she's a dietitian, and she suggests that i try boost complete nutritional drink
5:09 pm
to help get the nutrition i was missing. now i drink it every day and i love the great taste. [ female announcer ] boost has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to help keep bones strong and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. and our great taste is guaranteed or your money back. learn more at boost.com. [ dad ] i choose great taste. i choose boost. cubanearn more at boost.com. cajun raw seafood pizza parlor french fondue tex-mex fro-yo tapas puck chinese takeout taco truck free range chicken pancake stack baked alaska 5% cash back. right now, get 5% cash back at restaurants. it pays to discover. today training depends on technology. and when it takes a battery, there are athletes everywhere who trust duracell. they rely on copper to go for the gold. duracell. trusted everywhere. they rely on copper to go for the gold. (sfx: car garage sounds) today my journey brings me to charlotte, north carolina, where i spent the day with geico driver casey mears. i told him the secret to saving money on car insurance.
5:10 pm
he told me the secret to his car setup. first he adjusts... first he adjusts... (sfx:engine revving drowns out gecko's dialogue) then he... then he... fx:loud drilling noise continues to drown out gecko's dialogue) then he... .and a quarter cup of neapple juice. or was that the secret to his barbecue sauce? hey, "secret" sauce. geico®. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. [ male announcer ] while others are content to imitate, we'll continue to innovate. the lexus rx. why settle for a copy when you can own the original? see your lexus dealer.
5:12 pm
point and the naval academy, two young women say they risked their careers to come forward and request an investigation. they wanted the men they say raped them to be prosecuted. one year later they're still waiting. kyra phillips continues our investigation. >> reporter: when karley marquet came forward to say she was raped at west point, she believed her case would be investigated. >> i remember the investigators meeting with my parents, and they promised my parents that if he wasn't going to jail they could at least get him kicked out of west point with the evidence they had. >> but he's still there. >> but he's still there. >> reporter: annie kendzior says she too believed her allegations of rape would be investigated. >> i was like, okay, they're going to get him. like, good. >> reporter: but karley and annie say their alleged perpetrators were never punished. so now they've filed a lawsuit,
5:13 pm
naming former secretary of defense robert gates, the former superintendents of west point and the naval academy, secretary of the navy ray maybis, and secretary of the army john mchugh. the lawsuit claims there was limited support from commanders and failure to ensure sexual predators were prosecuted and incarcerated for their crimes. karley and annie are not alone. reports of sexual assault at the academies are up nearly 60%. and of the 65 reports investigated last year, only one resulted in a court-martial. >> i ache for those former cadet midshipmen who have had their lives torn up. it shouldn't be that way. >> reporter: congresswoman jackie speier has gone to the house floor 19 times. >> we need to overhaul this
5:14 pm
system. >> reporter: demanding that congress and the military change the way sexual assaults are prosecuted. >> you report everything through your chain of command. so i'm raped, i go to my commander, i say i've been raped. my commander can say to me, well, you know, i'm not going to pursue this. or take an aspirin and go to bed. as long as it's going to be in the chain of command, there's always going to be a conflict. >> reporter: her bill, the stop act, would take investigations away from the chain of command and turn them over to an impartial council of civilian and military experts. >> if you're not going to have your assailant prosecuted, why would you want to come forward? because you're basically setting yourself up to lose your career in the military. >> reporter: speier says for years her calls to action have gone unanswered until secretary of defense leon panetta took office. >> we've got to train commanders
5:15 pm
to understand that when these complaints are brought they've got to do their damnedest to make sure these people are brought to justice. that's the only way we're going to try to prevent this in the future, is to show that people can't get away with it. >> how do you get it through these men's heads if they rape they will pay the price? >> this place operates by command authority, and it has to begin at the top, and the message has to go down to the bottom. >> reporter: still, panetta will not take investigations away from the chain of command. but he is changing the rules, announcing new initiatives just one week after our interview. >> what i will do is change these cases are hanltd handled military. >> reporter: here's what panetta is doing differently. he created a special victims unit to investigate sexual assaults. now instead of slowly making their way up the chain of command all cases will begin at the level of colonel.
5:16 pm
>> everybody has to do due diligence. commanders, like i said, have bosses. if that commander's not doing their job, you relieve their butts of command. >> reporter: major general mary kay hertog heads the sexual assault response and prevention office. >> you have to look at this every single day and you have to look at what every victim says seriously. i want our victims to come forward. >> reporter: but the changes in policy come too late for karley marquet and annie kendzior. their military careers are over. >> it hurts me to hear that because we betrayed their trust and we didn't take care of them and we need to do a much better job. >> reporter: according to the lawsuit, as a result of the rape karley became depressed and suicidal, unable to handle the stress of seeing her alleged perpetrator every day. karley resigned from west point. >> i felt like a blemish. >> because they knew you reported the rape.
5:17 pm
>> mm-hmm. >> reporter: annie says she too became suicidal. she was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. and according to her lawsuit was then forced to leave the academy. >> it hurts the message that we're trying to get out there, that -- >> reporter: because of privacy issues panetta couldn't comment specifically on karley and annie's cases. but he does make clear that blaming the victim needs to stop. >> personality disorder. academic separation. i mean -- >> i think that's part of the syndrome that we're dealing with, which is that, you know, once a decision is made that somehow this prosecution is not going to move forward then you basically turn on the victim who brought that complaint and try to do everything possible to make sure that that victim doesn't hang around or really diminish them by somehow accusing them of having psychological problems. that syndrome is what we have to
5:18 pm
break out of. >> reporter: and for karley and annie if coming forward helps with that mission they want to be a part of the battle. >> i know with at least one person coming forward there will be others that want to come forward and say something. >> because then they might get their perpetrators put behind bars, which is where they should be. >> west point and the naval academy say they couldn't comment on karley and annie's allegations because of privacy issues. both women have requested copies of their case files to learn more about why the men they say raped them are still in the military. coming up -- from the laboratory to freedom. the journey of a group of chimps that get a new lease on life. [ camera clicks ] ♪ it's hard to resist the craveable nature of a nature valley sweet & salty nut bar. hey, dad, you think i could drive?
5:19 pm
i'll tell you what -- when we stop to fill it up. ♪ ♪ [ son ] you realize, it's gotta run out sometime. [ male announcer ] jetta tdi clean diesel. the turbo that gets 42 miles per gallon. that's the power of german engineering. ♪ but my smile wasn't. [ female announcer ] new crest 3d white intensive professional effects whitestrips. it goes below he enamel surface to whiten as well as a five-hundred dollar professional treatment. wow, that's you? [ female announcer ] new intensive professional effects whitestrips.
5:20 pm
(female announcer) most life insurance companies look at you and just see a policy. at aviva, we do things differently. we're bringing humanity back to life insurance. that's why only aviva rewards you with savings for getting a check-up. it's our wellness for life program, with online access to mayo clinic. see the difference at avivausa.com.
5:22 pm
the disney film "chimpanzee" just out this week shows the cute creatures enjoying life in the wild, acting a lot like us. but thousands of chimps being used for research here in the united states are cooped up in cages. there's a fierce debate over whether the primates should be forced to endure that kind of captivity. a bill before congress would ban invasive research on chimpanzees. john zarrella follows a group of chimps whose research days are finally over and looks at what's ahead for those who aren't so lucky. >> reporter: winter snow came early. melting now under a warming
5:23 pm
december sun. a new season begins, and for some the beginning of a cross-country journey. to freedom. you hear them long before you see them. when you see them, their features are unmistakable. ten chimpanzees are here, with names like bart and sarah. >> sarah, you want to play? no. bart wants to hog all the attention. >> reporter: they've lived most of their lives behind these walls. some for decades. they were research chimps used to test everything from the toxicity of pesticides in hairsprays to cures for aids and hepatitis. now these are the last of 266 to leave this one-time biomedical lab, the colston foundation, in alamogordo, new mexico. for jen firestein, sanctuary
5:24 pm
director of the save the chimps foundation, it is a promise fulfilled. >> failure was never an option for us. and the only thing that's ever slowed us down is that it takes a long time for the chimps to get used to living in family groups because they didn't have that opportunity growing up. >> because this is where they lived. >> reporter: exa >> exactly. >> reporter: firestein is finishing a dreem begun by her late boss carol noon to give these animals who had had blood draush drawn and biopsied a life where they can be quite simply chimps. a decade ago frederick colston lost federal funding after numerous violations of the animal welfare act. in one case three chimps literally cooked to death when their enclosure heated to 140 degrees. colston, now deceased, denied abuse accusations during a 1995 interview with cnn. >> we don't abuse animals.
5:25 pm
we try to treat them according to the regulations and the law and even beyond that. >> reporter: facing bankruptcy, he finally sold the facility and animals to save the chimps. it was the beginning of a great migration. for ten years a dozen or so at a time have left the cold walls and steel bars for a new home, an island sanctuary. >> this is the last crew. >> the last crew. >> this is the crazy young wonderful vivacious crew. >> well, they're kind of mellowed right now -- >> reporter: veterinarian jocelyn bessner checks her charges. >> what i want to do now is just go over each one, make sure they look healthy. >> reporter: bart was born here. he turned 20 on january 14th. like most of the chimps his records are sketchy at best. >> so we don't know what the study was for. we just know that he was in a study. >> reporter: experts say every chimp has its own personality. bart's is spitting vinegar. he interrupts my conversation
5:26 pm
with besner. >> that's the testosterone. >> reporter: he was getting a kick -- >> oh. >> reporter: -- out of his antics. the concrete and steel enclosures have been modified with pass-throughs. the chimps can visit each other, play, roughhouse. it wasn't that way before save the chimps took over. >> so this is the infamous -- >> this is the dungeon. >> the dungeon. >> this is the dungeon. and this is a small cage that they lived in. >> wow. >> reporter: like a prison, one cell after another. chimps lived this way, sitting day after day, year after year, until needed for a research project. >> what do you feel like when you walk in here? >> it's almost like it's haunted. it's a really dismal place. there's not really a lot of good memories here for any of us. >> reporter: here at least it's just memories. the story is much different a few miles down the road at
5:27 pm
holoman air force base. before humans flew in space, a chimp named ham did. not that he had a choice. the old footage shows chimps being trained, examined, playing, and dying. a chimp strapped into a form-fitting shell is secured inside a cylinder on a rocket sled. he's propelled down the track to test survivability after a sudden stop. the answer is evident in the lifeless body. once no longer needed, most of these air force chimps eventually ended up in the hands of, you guessed it, frederick colston. by the mid '90s colston ran two facilities just miles apart. a rare air force tour in 1997 shed light on the research they were subjected to under colston. >> that animal was -- has been
5:28 pm
inoculated with hiv. it's on hiv protocols. >> reporter: the chimps are now owned by the national institutes of health, n.i.h. there's a moratorium on using or for that matter retiring some or all of the 170 chimps housed at holoman until an expert panel weighs in next year. >> they're inactive. they're not involved in research. and they, like others that are inactive, are waiting for recommendations from this working group on how many would be needed in the long term. >> but what's troubling to me is why do you need somebody to tell you how many you need when you folks have been funding it and been responsible for it? why do you need to have someone else tell you your business? how many you need. >> the n.i.h. seeks input from the public in many different ways. >> reporter: so until a decision is made on whether they're needed for future research, the chimps sit caged, in limbo. it is estimated these and other federally owned chimps cost
5:29 pm
5:30 pm
if you made a list of countries from around the world... ...with the best math scores. ...the united states would be on that list. in 25th place. let's raise academic standards across the nation. let's get back to the head of the class. let's solve this. [ male announcer ] aggressive styling. a more fuel-efficient turbocharged engine. and a completely redesigned interior. ♪ the 2012 c-class with over 2,000 refinements. it's amazing...inside and out. see your authorized mercedes-benz dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services.
5:31 pm
5:33 pm
tonight, randi kaye and drew griffin. for chimps bart, sarah, and friends a new life is about to begin. >> but there is a growing debate over the future of nearly 1,000 chimpanzees still in research facilities, costing taxpayers millions of dollars. john zarrella continues our investigation. >> all right. >> reporter: the atmosphere is excited. the staff coaxes the chimps from their enclosures into travel cages. sarah is the first in. >> whoo! >> reporter: bart is not buying it. >> bart, come on. it's okay. >> reporter: veterinarian jocelyn besner has to sedate him. she hides the needle in a glove. >> come here. >> reporter: minutes later, after a second injection, bart is out. as the work to coax the others continues, bart is gently moved into the travel cage. it has taken all day. by nightfall the ten chimps are
5:34 pm
loaded in the trailer. there are tears, hugs as the staff and volunteers say good-bye. >> it's time for them to go and start their new life. it's been a long time coming. and we're finally here. >> reporter: the trip from new mexico will take two days. stops only to feed and check on the chimps. the chimpmobile moves east, passing lafayette, louisiana, home to the new iberia research center, which houses 360 chimpanzees. new iberia was the focus of a 2008 undercover humane society investigation. it showed primates being darted, falling over unconscious, self-mutilating. disturbing video. but not torture, says center director thomas rowell. >> it never rose to the point of an animal welfare violation or an animal being tortured. it was, you know, people maybe
5:35 pm
rushed to do a job, not being as careful as they could have been. >> reporter: we are allowed in, says rowell, because the future use of chimps in research is in serious doubt. >> would you have invited cameras, cnn cameras in years ago here? >> again, that's not -- that was not part of our mission. okay? and because it wasn't part of our mission, the answer's no. our mission is public health, not public entertainment. >> reporter: the great ape protection and cost savings act sits in congress. if passed, it would stop all invasive research using chimpanzees. and just last year an institute of medicine study commissioned by the national institutes of health found the use of chimps for current research is in most cases "unnecessary." soon after the n.i.h. suspended all new chimp research grants. so what happens if the approximately 1,000 research
5:36 pm
chimps are retired? >> chimpanzees, if we didn't have them today, we would find other ways of doing the research, and i would argue better ways of doing it. >> i think some treatments for cancer, for certain autoimmune diseases will be delayed. i think there will be suffering. i think there will be increase in deaths among people. >> reporter: some researchers believe chimps will be instrumental in developing vaccines for emerging diseases we've not yet heard of and for hepatitis c. even with hep c the n.i.h. insists it's doing everything it can to eliminate the need for chimps. >> just in the last year investigators have developed a mouse model that can be infected with hepatitis c by just introducing a human gene into the mouse. so we're busy trying to create alternative models to avoid the use of chimpanzees. >> reporter: but the n.i.h. is not ready to pull the plug entirely. >> we welcome the day when there's no need for the use of
5:37 pm
chimpanzees in research. >> but you still think that that day isn't here yet? >> i don't think it is. >> reporter: the n.i.h.'s anderson told us they're waiting for guidance from that so-called expert panel that is evaluating for them all things chimps. >> we've asked them to consider all of those options and give us priorities. >> reporter: with not enough sanctuaries it's clear many chimps might stay right where they are, languishing for the remainder of their lives in places like alamogordo or living in these primadomes. >> we like the primadomes. we think they're really nice enclosures. >> reporter: about a third of the chimps at new iberia live in them. the rest in cages. if laws change new iberia hopes to be considered a sanctuary site. the future for research chimps is at best unclear. >> hey, everybody. >> reporter: for bart and sarah and their friends the future is crystal clear. the chimpmobile has arrived in
5:38 pm
fort pierce, florida. their first taste of freedom is finally here. their days in a cage over. one by one they are released into their new housing enclosures. ten years after this great migration began, the last ten of the 266 one-time research chimps are home. they're greeted by friends who arrived in a group just before them. >> aw. that was sweet. >> reporter: the next morning the culmination of a decade's work. >> all right, guys. are you ready? >> reporter: the doors separating the chimps from their island, from grass and sunshine and fresh air, are opened. >> hi. you guys are doing so good. you're doing so good. you're outside, buddy. >> reporter: you wonder, what are they thinking? is the past forgotten? do they know they are the lucky ones?
5:39 pm
up next, how far would you go to play the game you love? one man who's staking his career on a risky medical procedure. look at you and just see a policy. at aviva, we do things differently. we're bringing humanity back to life insurance. that's why only aviva rewards you with savings for getting a check-up. it's our wellness for life program, with online access to mayo clinic. see the difference at avivausa.com. cuban cajun raw seafood pizza parlor french fondue tex-mex fro-yo tapas puck chinese takeout taco truck free range chicken pancake stack baked alaska 5% cash back. right now, get 5% cash back at restaurants. it pays to discover. standard keyless access, and standard leather-trimmed seats, then your choice is obvious.
5:40 pm
5:42 pm
5:43 pm
spent thousands of dollars of his own money just for the chance to once again be in the major leagues, to be in what professionals call the show. at 39 years old christopher john nitkowski really has no business trying to pitch in the major leagues. >> oh! >> reporter: in baseball terms he is a has-been. >> uh. >> reporter: just don't tell him that. >> you go as long as you can. i had a good friend tell me one time, make them tear the uniform off you. you can do whatever you're going to do the rest of your life. you can't play baseball forever. >> i don't have every one, but most of them -- >> reporter: his major league jersey collection, though, is evidence he has tried. >> they're almost all there. cincinnati, detroit. they're in order. houston. i went back to detroit. >> braves. >> i got traded to the mets. from the mets i went back to the astros. texas picked me up. and within four weeks i was back in the big leagues again. it's been a roller coaster. >> reporter: so many teams hired and fired nitkowski, the path is
5:44 pm
almost dizzying. he was a fresh-faced rookie in 1995 with the cincinnati reds. then after ten big league seasons came the final cut in the majors. the washington nationals in 2005. that only sent him looking for other jerseys to wear. >> these are my japanese jerseys, home and away. i played for three different teams in korea. >> reporter: finally, last year the career-ending injury. he was hurt, he says, right here, pitching to high schoolers, trying to increase his velocity. he felt a twinge in his pitching shoulder. at 39, married-w three kids, it was the moment he should have stopped playing games, moving on like so many others into coaching or perhaps a real job. instead, he took the biggest gamble of his professional career. >> going to be just a little bit
5:45 pm
of pain again. doing all right so far? >> i'm fine, yeah. >> i don't want you to faint on us. >> no. >> i'll take our magic potion. >> reporter: he decided on an experiment. the same experiment that produced last year's miracle comeback. yankee pitcher bartolo colon was all but washed up until he was injected with his own stem cells and platelet-enriched plasma, prp, at the florida clinic of dr. joseph purita. colon returned to the mound, stunning the baseball world with a better than average comeback season. >> you think your procedure is what did it? >> i think it helped him. i think it gave him the ability to maybe go back and play. so i think it's a combination of a lot of factors. but certainly i think what we did certainly helped. >> reporter: last fall nitkowski decided he would pay several thousand dollars for the same procedure. first harvesting and reinjecting
5:46 pm
his own stem cells into his damaged shoulder, then his own platelet-enriched plasma, a kind of super blood. dr. purita admits there's no scientific proof any of this works. but his patients, like this man trying to avoid knee surgery, swear by it. >> how are we doing? >> good. >> excellent. so am i. >> reporter: purita's critics, however, stop just short of calling him a fraud. >> we might as well be talking about crystals and healing. the fact is that stem cells hold great promise because there's real scientific and medical rationale for using them. but we are ignorant about their use. we've certainly had very little experience with putting them into patients. so what we're worried about are the risks. and the risks are many. >> reporter: dr. george daley is past president of the international society for stem cell research and a physician at children's hospital in boston. at our request he examined a
5:47 pm
long informational packet purita had posted on his website. >> if it were subject to a critical analysis by experts in the field it would be dismissed as unfortunately superficial and inaccurate. >> the paper you sent us we gave to george daley. >> of course i've heard of him. you know, interesting, i can't really dispute him because of the fact az said earlier in the interview we really don't have a good uniform idea yet as to what constitutes good platelet-enriched plasma. what is it? you can ask ten doctors and they're going to give you ten different answers. we really need to get together and form an idea as to what it is. >> reporter: nitkowski wasn't interested in a scientific debate, just his shoulder and getting a chance at another jersey. when we met him last fall, a few days after the injections, he was working out, banging tennis balls from a machine to loosen up. then agility drills with his
5:48 pm
personal trainer. finally, tossing a football before getting to throw a baseball. >> so how long from right this moment till you pitch a baseball? >> i mean, i kind of play it by ear. but the goal is somewhere around three weeks. >> reporter: but to do that means putting off major life decisions. working out instead of looking for that real job. working out day after day after day. >> whoo! >> i'm trying to put him in as neutral position as possible so when he strengthens the rotator cuff and the shoulders we maximize the strength. >> you have been working out like crazy. do you ever lay in bed and think, am i delusional? >> there's times where you question yourself. anything you want to do, if you have a passion about it you're going to take whatever it takes to do it. >> whew. >> so that's where i'm at. there's times doubt definitely creeps in. i say what am i doing? >> reporter: what he is trying to do is make a miracle comeback, as a pitching specialist, a sidearmer, brought
5:49 pm
in to get one or two left-handers out in the late innings. a new athlete, revived with the help of stem cells. >> your job would be to come in, get that lefty out in a big situation, get out of the game as quickly as possible. before a righty comes up. yeah. >> reporter: by december he was at an indoor facility in new jersey throwing a baseball again and with some zip. >> there's some life there. i've still got some work to do but i'm thrilled about where i'm at right now. >> reporter: thrilled or not, however, pitching off an indoor mound. throwing against a real hitter was another. >> what's next for me is to try to find a place to pitch. >> reporter: coming up -- a baseball nomad winds up in yet another field of dreams. or is this a pipe dream? >> i don't want to say it's been a debacle, but it's been a lot of back and forth and uncertainty from the beginning. , you think i could drive? i'll tell you what -- when we stop to fill it up.
5:50 pm
♪ ♪ [ son ] you realize, it's gotta run out sometime. [ male announcer ] jetta tdi clean diesel. the turbo that gets 42 miles per gallon. that's the power of german engineering. ♪ ♪ [ camera clicks ] ♪ it's hard to resist the craveable nature of a nature valley sweet & salty nut bar. how did i get here? dumb luck? or good decisions? ones i've made.
5:51 pm
ones we've all made. about marriage. children. money. about tomorrow. here's to good decisions. who matters most to you says the most about you. massmutual is owned by our policyholders so they matter most to us. massmutual. we'll help you get there. but last year my daughter was checking up on me. i wasn't eating well. she's a dietitian, and she suggests that i try boost complete nutritional drink to help get the nutrition i was missing. now i drink it every day and i love the great taste. [ female announcer ] boost has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to help keep bones strong and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. and our great taste is guaranteed or your money back. learn more at boost.com. [ dad ] i choose great taste. i choose boost. learn more at boost.com. see life in the best light. outdoors, or in. transitions® lenses automatically filter
5:52 pm
just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it's meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. experience life well lit, ask for transitions adaptive lenses. receiving a transitions lenses certificate of authenticity is your only guarantee that you're getting the world's #1 recommended photochromic lens. ask for it and register your lenses online today.
5:53 pm
5:54 pm
major leagues? it's the second day of the new year, and c.j. nitkowski is chasing his dream. again. this time in santa domingo, capital of the dominican republic. >> it took a lot of patience, a lot of phone calls. i've been trying to do this since late october, trying to get here. >> reporter: he paid his own way. just to get a chance at a tryout with one of the four baseball teams still playing dominican winter ball. >> i told my agent, listen, if you get a team that's even slightly interested, let him know i'll come down, let them see me in person, i know teams will be a little hesitant because i didn't play baseball this year. >> reporter: so that's why c.j. nitkowski finds himself here, outside the biggest baseball stadium in santo domingo. waiting, checking his blackberry. not quite sure what's going to happen next. >> i don't want to say it's been a debacle, but it's just been a lot of back and forth and uncertainty from the beginning.
5:55 pm
a month ago i was told i probably had a job here. two weeks after that i was told i definitely had a job here. and then that fell through. >> reporter: but on this day his perseverance pays off. >> i'm a pretty patient man. >> reporter: and he walks into the stadium. not to audition for the home team but for the visitors, the giants. gigantes in spanish. and their pitching coach, miguel aponte. >> what do you want me to do today? >> okay. let's come over here. >> did you never lose the passion? >> the passion never goes away. because then you stop. if you lose the passion when you start moving around a lot, getting released, signed, all that kind of stuff, if you lose the passion you're done. so i never lost hope. >> reporter: as the sun sets and the team gets ready for a night game, it's time to show what the months of workouts, his stem cell therapy, and his rehab have delivered. but there's a problem. a good one. >> i feel fine right now. i'm ready to go. so it's a matter of what you -- >> i don't need to have you
5:56 pm
throw anything. no bullpen, no hitters. >> okay. >> if you tell me that your arm is good enough to pitch in the game, that's good with me. because i know you. >> okay. >> reporter: turns out his coach had not really known c.j. but remembered him from a spring training 15 years earlier. >> i know you. because i was with houston when you were there. >> '97-98. >> the fun, the excitement, the competitiveness that goes on in playing at a high level in any sport, it's hard to find that anywhere else. >> you still want in. >> absolutely. i mean, it's fun. you have a shelf life on your career, you know. and it chases you. and for me i know it's close, and maybe it's over. who knows? >> reporter: in the visitors' bullpen nitkowski throws his pitches anyway with his new sidearm delivery. he whips a curveball to a young catcher. and throws a few more to a teenage batter. everyone here seems younger.
5:57 pm
>> i'm almost 39 years old. what am i doing with the stem cells? why am i trying to change my arm angle? it's a pretty easy answer for me. i'm still passionate about what i do. >> reporter: the next afternoon nitkowski is in a car for the long drive through the dominican countryside to his new hometown, san francisco de macarese. and his new team. >> basically, the gigantes said they'd sign me for the rest of the playoffs. or i shouldn't say rest. for today. i think it's probably pretty much day by day. there's still a lot of margin for error. >> reporter: this is hardly the big leagues. baseball refugees from all over are here. the clubhouse is littered with equipment bags from dozen of different teams. an hour after arriving an assistant general manager shows up with a contract. the payday. well, not huge. >> 2,000, 2,500 for the rest of the playoffs.
5:58 pm
2,500 if you go to the final. >> that's fine. no problem. thank you very much. appreciate it. >> reporter: he gets his new baseball cap and his first job in professional baseball in almost two years. >> it feels good. i mean, this is what i've worked for, you know, for all this, is just to have an opportunity. >> reporter: the fact is c.j. nitkowski is back, but not to what he once was. >> oh, man. >> reporter: he throws sidearm now, hoping for just one more chance to climb that mound back in the bigs. he's not as fast. and by baseball standards, he is old. in five winter league games in the dominican republic he pitched well enough. but after all the money, all the treatments, all the tryouts there has been no stem cell miracle. >> you spent a long time getting to this very moment, right now.
5:59 pm
>> yeah. >> that phone ain't ringing. >> no. not yet. but you don't stop. you know, i think -- there's times where i get a little down, you know, and kind of like you said, what am i doing? should i really be doing this? should i be moving on to something a little more responsible? we'll see. it would be sad to me if i didn't get that chance. so i would hate to go into retirement, forced into retirement. >> is this it, though, c.j.? >> oh, yeah. >> this is the year, this is it? >> oh, absolutely, yeah. >> reporter: so far that phone is not ringing. >> that is such a great story. the question is, though, did the phone ever ring for c.j.? >> once. the new york mets called him down to florida, had him try out. and they never called back. but he got a different call. this is a different -- a roll call, as it were. he's going to be in a movie pitching to a guy portraying jackie robinson in a movie that's actually about the guy that signed jackie robinson to be a major league baseball player.
175 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=794543067)