tv Piers Morgan Live CNN May 18, 2013 3:00am-4:00am EDT
3:00 am
good evening, everyone. tonight, details you haven't heard about the rescue of the cleveland women held captive for close to a decade. the police officers who were first inside the house are telling their stories for the first time. >> within moments, she came charging at me. she jumped on to me, she's like you saved us, you saved us, and i'm holding on to her so tight, and then within a few seconds, i see another girl come out of the bedroom. i just look at her. you can immediately tell who it is, just thinner, and again, i just needed confirmation, and i asked her what's your name. she said my name is georgina dejesus. >> we will play more of that interview for you tonight.
3:01 am
also an american aide worker captured, held hostage by pirates in somalia describes her three-month nightmare in somalia's desert and her dramatic rescue by u.s. navy s.e.a.l. team 6. jessica buchanan has an incredible story to tell. you'll hear it tonight. we begin though with breaking news and a warning. several major cities are in the path of some very dangerous storms. an estimated 35 million people across the united states could see some of the most volatile and potentially the most dangerous storm systems so far this season, one that far eclipses the one that unleashed 16 twisters across texas on wednesday that killed six people. the breaking news tonight, the national weather service is now confirming another tornado touched down in alabama just a few hours ago. we just got this video from outside the town of athens in northern alabama. meteorologist chad myers is live with the latest. chad, what's going on? >> it's a central park and also, central plains storm here, all the way from minnesota back on down even into the parts of wichita and into amarillo. here's the deal.
3:02 am
we have all of this weather, we have warm air on one side, cold air on the other, and we haven't had tornadoes this year. we literally had less than half of the tornadoes that we should have had so far this year. so what does that mean. that tells us that all of a sudden, we're about to catch up. the warm and the cold aren't gone. summer and spring are still around the corner. that spring weather has to happen sometime, and it will happen this weekend. that weather will be saturday for parts of nebraska, kansas into iowa, into oklahoma, then sunday, all the way from ohio back into wichita and then monday, probably the bigger cities, that will be chicago into st. louis all the way back into oklahoma city and little rock into arkansas. it is a big event that we haven't seen yet this year. i think people's guards are down and i think we have to worry about this. you have to make sure you have the noaa weather radios and assume that some of these storms will happen at night and you're not going to be able to see them because they are going to be violent and they are also going to be quick. they might only start five minutes earlier and the warning might come and it could be a very quick event for you where
3:03 am
you don't get the 15, 20 minutes warning that usually get. >> despite what we've seen just this week, there's actually been tonight, incredible story of rescue and survival. a tornado drought, as you mentioned. in october of 2011, an american >> yeah. this is an interesting graphic. aide worker named jessica buchanan was in somalia teaching from where we were in 2011 to children how to avoid land mines where we are today. when she and her colleague were kidnapped by somali pirates and 2011, the april event of 2011, held hostage for a grueling 93 days. we talked in tuscaloosa, 758 her ransom was initially set at $45 million and as her captors tornadoes touched down in april 2011. starved her day in and day out, she had no idea that anyone was this year, only 83. yes, that is certainly a drought and over the average, we should thinking about her or coming for her. after more than three months in be well over 500 by this time of the desert with negotiations failing and jessica's health year and we only have about 150 declining, president obama gave to 200 confirmed tornadoes. the go ahead for u.s. forces to enter somalia and bring there's the one that touched jessica's long nightmare to an down in athens, that was athens, end. she describes her ordeal in a just to the west of huntsville, new book called "impossible alabama. odds, the kidnapping of jessica buchanan and her dramatic rescue literally, those people did not have any warning because the by s.e.a.l. team 6." warning said, anderson, police i spoke with jessica and her confirm a tornado on the ground. husband eric. tell me what happened when you when you read that warning, that were kidnapped. means the warning didn't get it in time. you were driving down a road. the warning is in time if it how quickly did it all take place? says radar indicated could be to >> i mean, it was just a split you in ten minutes or so. second.
3:04 am
>> so folks this weekend in that we were in our three vehicle area should expect what? caravan with spu, the security >> hail the size of baseballs. police unit, in front of us and probably at least a dozen behind us, and then the ex-pats were in the middle. tornadoes a day, maybe more. we were in our way back across the green line to the north and winds probably at least 80 to 90 miles per hour. office, where it was a bit it is a normal spring event. we just haven't had them, so now safer. this is a wake-up call for those we had been driving for seven to people. ten minutes and then all of a >> chad, good information. sudden, we get cut off from the thank you. right side by another vehicle, now to the tornado recovery effort in north texas. take a look. and they splash mud up over the windshield and i think, you >> dude, look at that! know, what kind of idiotic driver is this who just look, it's right above us! completely cut us off. right above us! film right above us! next thing i know they're pounding the windshield and the windows with ak-47s and literally, like look straight screaming and we're completely surrounded, and they yanked the up. >> oh, my god! doors open and climbed in and stuck a gun to my head and just >> oh, my god! take off. i mean, we just barrel down >> unbelievable. these camel tracks out of town that was the scene two days ago into the desert, and i mean, when a pair of storm chasers got that's how it continued for hour too close to one of the 16 tornadoes that swept through texas. after hour after hour. they escaped the worst of it but we're now hearing from one family who survived a direct strike. >> was there any explanation they sought shelter in their bathtub. about who these people were, why they lost their home. they wanted you? they said they are lucky to still have their lives. >> no, nothing. the initial like act of being >> this is it. i just said it, this is it. abducted was terrifying enough, but it became heightened because
3:05 am
we're gone. we thought we were gone. i thought, i just seen myself we didn't know and we didn't understand who it was who had just, i don't know, i just came taken us, because from into that point. appearance sake, they looked i just gave up. like they could be al shabaab. i couldn't hold no more, you they were -- know. it was that much. >> al shabaab, islamic militants >> incredible. granbury, texas took one of the which that would be the worst hardest hits from the tornado. case scenario. entire neighborhoods leveled. >> that would mean the worst those who survived are just case scenario because i'm really starting the process of american and i'm a woman. picking up the pieces. randi kaye joins us live from granbury. randi, how is it? and i knew that if this indeed was al shabaab, then my hopes of >> reporter: well, anderson, tonight the cleanup continues. survival were -- they were nil. the hardest hit areas are still so you know, there hadn't been closed. texas governor rick perry came very many kidnappings taking by the area today. he actually used to represent this area back in the late 1980s place on land or taking place in this particular area, so there as a legislator so it's close to wasn't any precedent set to know his heart and he described the what was going to happen. destruction as incomprehensible. >> when did you realize that she but there is some good news to report tonight. had been kidnapped? >> just roughly a half hour or the seven missing that we told you about last night have all been found. they have all been located which hour after it actually happened. is great news. also, the sheriff says that on a >> that quick. >> yeah. limited basis, he's going to open that hardest hit area >> which is good. tomorrow morning. the residents will be able to go in, take a look at their homes. they won't be able to stay >> yeah, it was good. i got a phone call from her
3:06 am
organization and told me that there. media is certainly not allowed. they have to be out of there by 8:00 p.m. tomorrow night. also, some great stories, some jess and her colleague had been dramatic stories of survival and kidnapped, didn't know who the some unexpected reunions, and we kidnapper were, we didn't know where they were going. had the chance to witness one of we had hardly any idea at all. those today. shortly after that, i also got a phone call from fbi telling me that they were on it and that when the winds picked up, was kind of some sort of relief granbury resident jerry shuttlesworth knew he was in trouble. in the midst of it. >> i was watching trees start to buckle over. i said oh, god, please, don't >> you were sleeping outside all the time. let this happen. >> we were outside the entire time. >> it rains a lot so you're getting wet. the wind got so strong, at that point i said junior, we're in >> yeah. trouble. >> you've not much food. >> reporter: junior is jerry's 6-year-old pit bull. >> not much food. his baby. not much clean water. jerry grabbed him and ran for cover in his mobile home's nothing really to wash with, you laundry room. know. hygiene was a real issue, >> i was praying, i said junior, it will be okay, it will be okay. especially as a woman. they didn't understand my needs, nor did they really care. i was praying and the house went >> we had proof of life calls six or seven times during the together, and then blew out and i don't think i figured out, i kidnapping with jess and her colleague, and at the end, on went upside down holding on to him and he was no more. 16th of january, we received a >> reporter: he was just sucked out of your arms? >> right. phone call from jess where she i never felt him leave my arms. said that more or less i'm not i never felt nothing. going to make it.
3:07 am
all i know, i was over him like this and next thing i know i'm i think i'm going to die here. upside down and he's nowhere to be found. >> it was that phone call which >> reporter: jerry was thrown to the ground about 20 feet from his home. really unknown to you, spurred the u.s. into actually pulling >> and for five minutes, that the trigger, literally. tornado was over me going counterclockwise. it was literally setting over >> exactly. me. >> did you think this was >> reporter: oh, my goodness. what did it look like? something that u.s. officials >> you can't explain it. were aware of, that president obama was aware of? let's put it this way, slow >> no. motion, everything, all the trash, everything just moving i mean, it's so humbling now on continuously, and i just laid the other side of it to see there and prayed for junior and what, you know, what the government will do for their i prayed god, please protect my citizens. puppy. >> reporter: when he managed to i mean, i had no idea, no idea get up, he was in too much pain to look for his dog. that anybody knew i was out there. >> because that's got to add to >> reporter: were you in any shape to go look for junior? >> no, no. because my foot was broke. >> reporter: jerry's dog wasn't the only one lost. as many as 200 dogs were left this feeling of complete misery, homeless after this storm. to feel -- it's one thing to most were brought here to this feel like the world is paying attention and people know about animal shelter, where volunteers it, but to feel like no one's are working hard to try and paying attention. reunite them with their owners. >> no, absolutely. but without cell phone service i mean, that's why i feel like or access to the devastated the title of the book "impossible odds" is so perfect areas, that is no easy task. jerry got lucky, though. when a shelter employee
3:08 am
recognized junior as one of the because i felt like i was in the most impossible situation i could ever face, because the dogs whose pictures were posted only way out, i saw, was paying on this facebook page set up for ransom and $45 million was never going to happen, even it went down to 18 but millions of granbury's missing pets. jerry got the call friday dollars, it wasn't going to happen. i didn't know how we were morning and rushed right over. >> hey, buddy! actually going to get out. >> in the phone call you made, you really had reached a point physically where you had serious medical problems, you were feeling you weren't going to hey! junior. >> there's daddy! make it. >> yeah. >> hey, hey. you're going to have to have a bath. yeah. i had developed a terrible what happened? urinary tract infection because of the unsanitary conditions and you fly through the air? i knew it was heading into a kidney infection. >> reporter: finally, the dog and they were withholding any ripped from his arms was back in them. kind of antibiotics or >> come here, buddy. come here. medication from me as a form of look what daddy's got. punishment because the negotiations weren't going well, >> reporter: jerry isn't sure where the storm took junior, but and i knew that if i didn't get he wants his pup to know he's to help soon, some medication or sorry. something, i wasn't going to make it. >> nothing i could do, baby. it jerked you out of my arms. so that's what i told them on my last proof of life call that, i i think you flew through the was afraid i was going to die air. out there in the desert, and dogs weren't meant to fly. they needed to do something but i bet he had an angel with fast. him. >> did you hear the helicopter come in at all? >> reporter: junior was a bit banged up from it all. >> no. he has a few cuts and bruises, just like jerry, who has a no. broken foot, a bruised skull and a face fit for a boxer.
3:09 am
>> you got scratched up, too, absolutely not. huh? daddy got scratched up, too. yes. i mean, it was as much a surprise to me as it was to >> reporter: but none of that matters now. everybody else. the night of the rescue, all i heard was scratching noises in >> we're back together. we're back together. the grass and i thought they it's okay now. it's okay now. >> jerry and junior. that is so great. were these large beetles coming i'm so happy they found each other. out that always came out at night, and i'm looking, trying was he able to salvage anything else? to slap away these beetles and can't find them so i tried to go back to sleep, and the next thing i know, the pirates are up >> reporter: no. he lost his home, as i said, and he also lost 41 trees. and they're alert and they're but he actually kept his truck. his truck survived it and so did junior. aiming their guns and then just for now, they're going to live this massive gunfire begins and at a motel in the area and yes, all i can think is i'm being it is pet-friendly. rekidnapped, we're being taken the first order of business by al shabaab, i'm not going to tonight at that motel is a bath survive this. i'm sick, you know, i don't know for junior, and then jerry says who's coming after me, i don't he still hopes that he can spoil him rotten just like he always know who's going to come and get has. me now, what am i going to have to face. he plans to bring him his favorite meal which is kentucky fried chicken. like i don't have the energy to do this anymore. i am so tired, i am so exhausted >> i love pit bulls. and i am so -- i just, i don't have anything left. great to see. thanks so much. jerry and junior back together. let us know what you think. follow us on twitter. just ahead tonight, the and the next thing i know, i riveting accounts of the police feel all these men's hands on me officers who found michelle knight and gina dejesus inside and i'm thinking, you know, ariel castro's house. trying to fight back and i hear this is the first time you're a man say my name and he says jessica, and all i can think is, going to hear what those moments were actually like for those
3:10 am
officers. >> at that point, all i remember you know, it's such a different is when he put her down, she sounding voice, it's a voice with an american accent and he jumped up into my arms and held on to me and screamed please don't let me go, please don't let me go. i said honey, don't worry, i'm pulls the blankets away from my not letting you go. >> new details in the death of a face and i can't see anything. well-respected doctor, just 41 it's just very dark. years old. everything is very dark. she was poisoned with cyanide. the question is was she a victim and he says we're the american of homicide. the fbi is joining the investigation. military and we're here to save you, we're here to take you home. and all i can say at that point hoo-hoo...hoo-hoo. is you're americans, like how did americans get here, because you know, i didn't hear hoo-hoo hoo. anything, i just had no idea, just in complete shock. sir... i'll get it together i promise... >> and there was a time as heeheehee. they're bringing you out where jimmy: ronny, how happy are folks who save they thought more people were coming, and they actually all hundreds of dollars switching to geico? piled on top of you. ronny: i'd say happier than the pillsbury doughboy >> yeah. on his way to a baking convention. they formed a human shield, a get happy. get geico. ring around both my colleague fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. and i, and they asked me to lie down in the grass or in the scrub, and three of them laid down on top of me to protect me. until the helicopters got there. >> when you heard those
3:11 am
helicopters coming, what did that sound like? >> freedom. and they were so kind and chivalrous and trying to guide me. something took over me, even though i was very ill and i had even been having trouble walking and stuff, i just thought like i need to get on to this helicopter as quickly as possible, and so i just ran. like with everything i had in me, i ran and i threw myself on to that helicopter, and then i just crawled on my belly all the way to the other side against the wall, and i really, i don't think i started breathing until we were hundreds of feet up in the air, and i knew they couldn't get me anymore. which seems ridiculous given the fact that who had come to save me, but i hadn't realized the magnitude of who these men were at that point until later on. >> they took a different chopper than you, right? so did you ever get a chance to meet them and thank them? >> no.
3:12 am
>> really? >> no. they just vanished. >> is that something you would like to? >> yeah. yeah. absolutely. i mean, i know that they know how grateful i am to them for what they've done, and they have given me my life back. but of course, you know, i think everybody who has gone through something like this would love to have the opportunity and the closure to just say how grateful i am. >> thank you very much for talking to us. >> thank you for having us. >> amazing story of survival and rescue. up next, the new food revolution going on in libya. anthony bourdain stops by to tell us what he faced when he went there. he says it was by far the most difficult trip ever. hurt so bad. my back the sleep number bed conforms to you. i wake up in the morning with no back pain. i can adjust it if i need to...if my back's a little more sore. and by the time i get up in the morning, i feel great! if you have back pain, toss and turn at night or wake up tired with no energy, the sleep number bed could be your solution. the sleep number bed's secret is it's air
3:13 am
chambers which provide ideal support and put you in control of the firmness. and the bed is perfect for couples because each side adjusts independently to their unique sleep number. here's what clinical research has found: 93% of participants experienced back-pain relief 90% reported reduced aches and pains 87% fell asleep faster and enjoyed more deep sleep. for study summaries, call this number now. we'll include a free dvd and brochure about the tonight a perspective you have not heard on the rescue of sleep number bed including prices, the three missing cleveland women found alive last week in and models plus a free $50 savings card. west cleveland. and how about this? steel springs can cause uncomfortable pressure now, the perspective of the points. police rescuers themselves. but the sleep number bed contours to your body. as you know, amanda berry, michelle knight and gina dejesus were freed from ariel castro's imagine how good you'll feel when your muscles house where he allegedly held them captive for close to a decade. he was accused of kidnapping relax and you fall into a deep sleep! them over the span of three years starting in 2002. he's also charged with three i'm not just a back surgeon, counts of rape. i'm also a back patient. i sleep on the sleep number bed myself and i amanda berry gave birth to a daughter in that house. you've heard from the neighbors who came to amanda berry's aid highly recommend it to all of my patients. after hearing her cries for
3:14 am
help. here's what charles ramsey told need another reason to call? the sleep number bed costs about the same as an me. >> i'm trying to get the door innerspring but lasts twice as long. open and can't because he torture chambered it some kind so if you want to sleep better or find relief for of way and locked it up. your bad back, call now. so i did what i had to do and kicked the bottom of the door and she crawled out of it. call the number on your screen for your free she grabbed her baby. information kit with dvd, brochure and price list. it threw me off. call right now and you'll also receive a $50 savings okay, fine, i got some girl and her kid. >> the child he's talking about card just for inquiring about the sleep number is amanda berry's 6-year-old daughter fathered by ariel bed. ask about our risk-free 100-night in-home trial. castro. cleveland police arrived within minutes. until tonight, we have not heard from those first responders, the call now for your free information kit and a free officers who broke into the $50 savings card. house and freed the two other women who were still inside. call now! now for the first time, you're going to hear their stories. in an interview they did with the city itself, published on its website, they reveal just how emotional those moments were for them. officers anthony espada, barbara johnson and michael tracy say they do not consider themselves heroes. here's their account of how the rescue went down. >> she called her car, 2 adam 23 for a code one.
3:15 am
i responded, go ahead. >> i have a subject on the phone with a female, says her name is amanda berry. >> help me, i'm amanda berry. >> do you need police, fire or ambulance? >> i need police. >> what's going on there? >> i've been kidnapped and i've been missing for ten years. i'm here. i'm free now. >> we pull up, we see a crowd like on the porch. we see this girl, she's like raising her hand, holding a child. i'm looking at my partner, you know, is it her. >> you're thinking it's got to be her. even before i can stop the vehicle, came up close to the vehicle, carrying a small child waving at us. before the vehicle could stop she's at the window and i looked up at her, and we look at each other and i go i think that's amanda berry. i think that's amanda berry. >> when i pulled up, i didn't see amanda.
3:16 am
i just saw officer espada and officer tracy running across the street toward the house. and i got out of my car and ran over there right behind them. officer espada kept yelling out cleveland police. and kind of seems like an eternity but it was so quick at the same time. >> i'm like is that you, and just like on the tape, she's frantic. she's frantic with us, it's when you think about all that's happened in libya recently, a culinary revolution is probably not the first thing pretty chaotic. that comes to mind but now the libyan people are getting their she's telling us who she is, she has been captive. the little child at the time, we first taste of freedom and didn't know was hers, is screaming and crying. so it was just crazy what was going on. >> just the emotion from that anthony bourdain traveled there point of him confirming it was amanda, it was overwhelming. >> i'm looking at her face and i for this week's parts unknown. i sat down for a meal with him recently to find out more about the trip. can't believe what i'm seeing i remember you have been in war zones before. right in front of me. you were in beirut when the war between hezbollah and israel broke out. what was it like going to post-gadhafi libya? nervous, the child she's holding >> libya was far and away the most difficult show i have ever done to date. is screaming.
3:17 am
to operate, to get the footage i'm thinking wow, we got her, we got her right here. we needed and to do the things that we expected to do in a very she saved -- her child is safe. we don't know what's going on in the house. we don't know who's in the house, the suspect or something. i just asked her is there fluid, ever-changing situation, anybody else in the house. she goes yes, gina dejesus and another girl. every day the security briefing was pretty unpleasant, where we i was like what? had to change our behavior. we like the restaurant or people >> it was like another we're going to visit to know bombshell, just with overwhelming force just hitting me. we're coming. i believe i broadcasted that gina might still be in the we couldn't do that. we had to really change our whole style. house. >> adam 23, you got a box >> because if you alert them in advance, there's potential for kidnapping or something like coming? that? it might be for real. there might be others in the house. >> we ended up essentially georgina dejesus might be in this house also. >> possibly she'll be in the hiring a militia as both our house and we immediately started subjects and our protectors. running towards the house. >> kentucky fried chicken -- uncle kentucky fried chicken. okay. >> we went to a chicken as we were going up the steps, restaurant. it was so quiet, like peaceful, it was like a uncle kentucky fried chicken, with a young kid who helped liberate the gadhafi almost as if, you know, i compound, who fought and killed people, he was so happy to be started thinking okay, all we're eating american style fried going to do is clear this top chicken in this garish little floor, nobody's going to be fast food restaurant. there, and just leave.
3:18 am
and then you hear this he told us this is the taste of scuffling, you know, something freedom. people showed things about going on in this room. themselves that you would not expect of people who had done the things that they had done and endured what they had and you know, i'm looking that way just waiting to see what, endured. these are kids calling in air you know, what's going to happen, and it was michelle. she kind of popped out into the strikes, kids who on thursday doorway and paused there for a second. thought we're going to be living within moments she came charging with gadhafi for the rest of our lives, there is no option for us at me, she jumped on to me, but the army or escape. she's like you saved us, you and on friday they're looking at wow, we might actually have a saved us, and i'm holding on to chance. her so tight, and then within a it was a thrilling, alternately few seconds, i see another girl frightening, grinding, come out of the bedroom. ultimately inspiring and i just look at her. thrilling experience and there's you can immediately tell who it going to be a turbulent situation for a long time, but is, just thinner, and again, i just needed confirmation. anybody who says you know, the world is better off with and i asked her what's your name. gadhafi, my blood will boil forever. >> if you haven't watched she said my name is georgina anthony bourdain parts unknown, you should. it's a really good show. even if you don't care about dejesus. food like me, it's really fun to watch. sunday, 9:00 p.m. eastern, this sunday. >> you didn't hear anything, coming up, can't seem to
3:19 am
then all of a sudden, it was almost like the pitter-patter of remember to change your baby's diapers? is that an actual problem? there's an app for that. feet running towards you. the "ridiculist" is next. and next thing i know, someone is in officer espada's arms. at that point, all i remember is i always wanted to design a bike that honored those who when he put her down, she jumped serve our country. up into my arms and held on to and geico gave me that opportunity. me and screamed please don't let me go, please don't let me go. now naturally, we wanted it to be powerful, i said honey, don't worry, i'm innovative not letting you go. and we built this bike as a tribute >> very overwhelming. to those who are serving, those who have served and their families. i mean, it took everything to and i think we nailed it. hold myself together. geico. proudly serving the military for over 75 years. you know, i have michelle in my arms and then you have gina coming out, and it was like one bombshell after another. that's when i broadcasted we found them. we found them. >> i can't even tell you the emotions that we felt. they're just unbelievable.
3:20 am
and everything else was just a blur. it was just surreal. it was just unbelievable. just the feeling of the heaviness in the heart just lifted, and then the next array of emotions, of -- i don't know, it was relief and then you just don't want to think of what happened to them so you just keep thinking positive and wanting to just encourage them that everything, that they're safe now and everything is okay. >> words can't explain what was going through our minds that day. just an overload of information and happiness. to find those two girls, those three girls, and the daughter alive was just unbelievable. >> like everybody was in the right place. it couldn't have got any better than that that day.
3:21 am
i don't feel like a hero. i'm just glad i was there. you know, just making sure they were safe. i feel so happy for them. it was just unbelievable. it goes through my mind every day, i couldn't imagine the past 10, 12 years what they went through. >> the girls are the heroes in this story. they fought every day. they're the true heroes. >> amazing. joining me now is scott taylor, the investigative reporter for cnn affiliate woio. new information about the days surrounding when ariel castro allegedly kidnapped gina dejesus. what have you learned? >> reporter: we started taking a look, anderson, at his attendance records at the school. i just got ahold of 2004, when gina, the year gina disappeared, just earlier today, and on april 2nd, you know, everybody knows
3:22 am
now across the world that she disappeared on a friday walking home from school, and i found out that ariel castro didn't show up for work that day. he also didn't show up for work the day before, and the weekend passed, and police believe gina was in that basement chained and gagged, and then he didn't show up for work the following monday, tuesday, wednesday and thursday, and the district has told me that he didn't call in in a timely fashion, so i think that they had no idea where he was, and he's going to really have to explain that to the police. >> and you've also been able to see castro's most recent jail logs. what do they say about him? >> yeah. well, he is still depressed, according to my sources. his attorneys really confirmed that when they started talking to the media yesterday. time now for the "ridiculist." i got to ask you, how many times has this happened to you. you have a baby, everything is he is starting to talk to the going great, you never realize people who are his jailors. your own capacity for love, et he's saying thank you, he's cetera, blah, blah, blah, but being polite, he's saying have a there's one problem. good day. you just can't seem to remember to change the little one's he really hasn't requested for a diapers because you're always busy playing with your phone. lot except he asked for -- to
3:23 am
call his attorneys. if only there was some way that his attorneys visit him at least your urine-soaked baby could once. he has a psychologist who comes in to take a look at him. contact you via social media. he also has a nurse. the following video is in portuguese but i think you'll get the idea. he had a problem with his blood sugar last week, that looks like it's under control. he asked for a second blanket. but he spends a lot of time looking out a window on to the outside but that is really glassed over. he can't really see other than [ speaking in a foreign language ] if it's night or day. then he turns around and looks out into the pod. it looks like he's trying to find some human contact. he spends a lot of time lying in his bunk and looking up at the top bunk, just staring. >> huggies tweet pea. >> and you have got also some information, i understand, about a retirement fund of his? isn't technology great? loosely translated, a sensor detects humidity inside the >> reporter: yeah. everybody is wondering in cleveland how is he paying for diaper and sends a message to mom and dad, or mom or dad, that these two defense lawyers, they it's time to change said diaper. have a really good history of taking care of their clients. now, the humidity thing i get. it's moisture related but my question is, if it tweets for they've actually gotten charges, pee, what does it t do when the an acquittal on murder charges baby drops a deuce? and other sex crimes and we were wondering if he was taking his does it post a picture on retirement fund that he built up instagram? over 21 years as that school bus driver for the cleveland
3:24 am
so when the tweet pea video municipal school district and right now, the people who run that tell me that he hasn't leaked online, there was touched a dime of it. he can go in and take one lump obviously a diaper rash of mockery and huggies released a statement that reads in part sum out but he can't cherry pick quote, in the promotional video, what he wants to take out and so far, he hasn't touched a penny. >> interesting. the clip on humidity sensor is all right. scott taylor, appreciate the reporting. intended merely as a concept thank you. device. still ahead, new information about the mysterious death of a nor are we suggesting parents are unable or too busy to notice popular doctor and mom. when their baby's diapers need a lethal dose of cyanide was changing. found in her system. question is, who gave it to her. you can tell they mean it by the exclamation point there. the fbi is now joining the search for answers. p.r. notwithstanding, tweet pea also ahead, my interview is indeed a real thing. with jessica buchanan, an huggies says it is being american aide worker who was launched in brazil in july. kidnapped by somali pirates, ladies and gentlemen, mark down held for 93 days and rescued by s.e.a.l.s. that date because we have >> next thing i know they're officially bridged a gap between real commercials and "saturday night live" parodies. pounding the windshield and windows with ak-47s and screaming and we're completely >> introducing chewable pampers. surrounded, and they yank the all the convenience of a disposable diaper in an edible doors open and climb in and package. stick a gun to my head. they're made from easily digestible fibers, they're super absorbent and super delicious. mmm. you can smell when it's working. mmm.
3:25 am
3:28 am
in crime and punishment tonight, the mysterious death of a popular young doctor in pittsburgh stunned her colleagues and her patients. investigators know exactly what killed the doctor, autumn klein, cyanide poisoning. the mystery is how did the well-respected neurologist end up with so much of the cyanide in her body? investigators have not ruled out homicide. here's cnn's martin savidge. >> reporter: debbie was stunned when she read the letter from her physician's office. >> when i read that she suddenly passed away, i just couldn't believe it. >> reporter: it wasn't some serious diagnosis, but a notice to say her doctor was dead. >> i can't say enough about how kind she was, and that's why i was just so shocked to hear what happened to her. >> reporter: many people were impressed with the doctor and it's easy to see why. at just 41, she was one of the top experts in her field. chief of the division of women's
3:29 am
neurology at the prestigious university of pittsburgh medical center. she was married to another successful neurologist and together, they had a 6-year-old daughter. by most measures, dr. klein had it all. but on a recent friday night, there were investigators searching her beautiful home, carrying out items like computers and vacuum cleaners, even taking the family cars, all in an effort to solve a tragic mystery. >> this doesn't happen. this is like -- somebody said it's like a movie. >> reporter: it all began on the night of april 17th on this street at the home of dr. klein. when according to authorities, her husband, 64-year-old dr. robert ferante, called 911 to say that he thought his wife was having a stroke. dr. klein was rushed to her own hospital, where she died three days later. early test results suggest it was no stroke or heart attack or aneurysm.
3:30 am
it was poison. the preliminary autopsy revealed she died of cyanide poisoning. the source close to the investigation says the levels in her system were enough to make her collapse in 30 seconds. but how did she get it? police looked at three possibilities. suicide, accident, or murder. dr. klein's parents say their daughter would never have killed herself. she had too much to live for. there was even talk of having another child. so i picked up the phone and called deborah bloom. she wrote the book on poison, the poisoner's handbook. how likely is it to be an accident? >> i'd say extremely rare. >> reporter: cyanide is so deadly, bloom says, an amount the size of a baby aspirin can kill. but it's not supposed to be easy to get. >> the most likely place that you would find cyanide would be -- >> in medical laboratories and university laboratories. >> reporter: that could explain why authorities used search
3:31 am
warrants and subpoenas to search the lab where klein's husband works. a source close to the investigation confirms cyanide was found in his lab. but neighbors say there was no indication of trouble in the home. >> she was very happy. she was very relaxed. >> reporter: dr. ferante's attorney says authorities are looking at his client. >> i'm sure what do they call it, person of interest or suspect. i don't think there's any doubt about that. >> reporter: pittsburgh authorities would not comment about whether he is the primary focus of suspicion, saying the investigation's being handled by homicide detectives, but no suspect has been named. lieutenant kevin krause, commander in charge of the major crimes unit for the pittsburgh police, tells us dr. klein's death is being treated as a suspicious death investigation. renowned forensic pathologist dr. cyril wecht says in his long career, he can count the number of cyanide murders he's seen on one hand. >> 70% or more are suicides.
3:32 am
and the vast majority of the remaining percentage are accidents. >> reporter: those who knew her say dr. autumn klein never liked to waste a moment. she got married on the same weekend she graduated from med school. as if knowing there was so much good she could do for her patients as long as she had the time. martin savidge, cnn, pittsburgh. >> such a mysterious story. we'll continue to follow it. a lot more happening tonight. isha's here with the "360" bulletin. a gay rights march marred by violence. we're getting word thousands of people attacked in the georgian capital. there are reports of at least 12 people injured. a federal judge rejecting a request from lawyers for boston marathon bombing suspect dzhokhar tsarnaev to take periodic photos of their client. they say they want to document their client's injuries while in custody. british police say they have identified a number of suspects in the 2007 kidnapping of madeline mccann. she was 3 years old when she
3:33 am
disappeared while on a family trip to portugal. this comes as police launch a new investigation into the case. more than $1 million worth of jewelry stolen from a hotel in cannes, france. it comes on the second day of the famed film festival there. by coincidence, the same day aired the premier of "the bling ring" a movie about teens stealing from celebrities. anderson, the rush is on to pick up tickets for tomorrow's big power ball lottery. the top jackpot is now worth more than $600 million. that is the second largest in u.s. history. we have a pool going. are you in, are you out? >> don't worry about the pool. >> you want me to lend you a ten so you can be in? >> yeah, please. >> i'll send you the iou. >> thank you. isha, thanks very much. coming up, an american aide worker who was kidnapped in somalia, held for 93 days. incredibly harrowing ordeal. she tells me about what happened, the conditions she endured and the night she was rescued by s.e.a.l. team 6.
3:34 am
86 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CNN Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on