tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN September 23, 2013 8:00pm-9:00pm EDT
8:00 pm
temporari terrible turnouts. in greece, they don't give a hoot about authority. is this the regulation you can get behind? will the united states be like australia or greece? come on, america, you can do better than people who had their pools. anderson starts now. erin, thank you, good evening this hour, the deadly standoff continues. it has now been four days since people shopping, eating and spending time with their families at an upscale mall in kenya were shot at, and how many hostages remain alive inside? kenyan officials say that all the hostages have been released. but according to the red cross, 65 people are still unaccounted for. they revised the death toll down to 62, apparently the numbers were miscounted. the details are extremely fluid,
8:01 pm
and with each day and each hour, there is a much clearer picture of how the attack unfolded over the weekend. >> saturday afternoon, shots and explosions are heard inside the busy upscale westgate shopping mall in nairobi, kenya. >> the shoppers are held but gunmen, and unconfirmed reports indicate that several people have been shot. >> eyewitnesss say an unknown number of gunmen burst through the mall from unknown entrances, firing shots at the shoppers. at first, they thought it was a grenade, according to some reports asking people the name of the prophet mohammed's mother, to prove their faith before they exit. >> 18 gunmen believed to be within the westgate, having taken control of the mall right
8:02 pm
now -- police, as we understand, have been able to gain access of the we do understand the death toll now stands at at least four people. >> reporter: the gunmen moved from store to store, shooting people randomly. hundreds of terrified shoppers try to flee or attempt to hide inside the stores and stair well. many escape however they can. kenyan authorities stormed the mall and pursued the gunmen, who sequestered themselves inside a huge complex with an unknown number of hostages. the standoff has begun, hallways and corridors turn into battle grounds with desperate shoppers caught in the middle. 30-year-old malaki tried to run after she heard shooting but ended up hiding for four terrified hours before she escaped. >> we heard guns, then we started to run. and there was a second explosion
8:03 pm
which knocked us on the ground. >> reporter: as the kenyan military takes control over more of the building, survivors start to come out. >> you're fine. >> reporter: late saturday afternoon, the terrorist group, al-shabaab, comes forward, complaining responsibility for the attack in a series of tweets, also indicating one or more of the gunmen may be american. sunday, and the siege continues. by mid-day, the kenyan government announces 59 are dead, more than 175 wounded. among them, 26-year-old american elaine dane, who spoke by phone. >> i am okay. >> reporter: the gunmen are still inside the mall, still holding hostages. by monday, day three of the standoff, the kenyan government says the forces have taken control over most of the building. >> the process, the recruiting has gone on very well. and we are very certain that
8:04 pm
there are very, very little hostages in the building. >> reporter: but later in the day, heavy gunfire, 62 confirmed dead. and the fourth day of the standoff has now begun. >> we have late breaking news, "the washington post" now reports that the kenyan foreign minist minister says that two of the attackers were american, good to see you, there have been these conflicting reports in the last few hours, reporting that the situation is contained. what is the latest? what are you hearing? >> reporter: well, we have been hearing for a few hours. you're right, almost all of the hostages have been freed. and when we initially had this, the kenyan government was saying this is the end game. this is the final assault. and that final assault seems to have gone on for quite sometime now. but those who have been here watching this unfold can
8:05 pm
appreciate why. this is an extraordinarily painstaking operation. the gunmen have made it very clear from the very beginning that much like the mumbai attack they have no intention of being taken alive. we understand they are hiding behind the hostages, using them as human shield. so you can imagine trying to go into that situation to both disarm the gunmen and trying to rescue the remaining hostages, it is extraordinarily difficult and taking a long time. >> reporter: there are still 60 people unaccounted for. is there any kind of an update about that? because we have word about that a short time ago. >> reporter: well, the last few eyewitnesss that have been able to come out from within the hostage-taker's room, they're describing some pretty horrific scenes. you know, when you hear them talk about piled up bodies,
8:06 pm
people lying around the place, not really being able to get a sense of really whether you're looking at a man or woman in some of these instances, the firing seems to be really indiscriminate, anderson, and they chose a day where there was actually a cooking class for children going on. that only added to the panic, a lot of people don't know yet if their relatives are among the remaining hostages. if the relatives are among the bodies still inside. there are more not yet accounted for. one guy, we've seen him every single day, coming right up to the considerrridor and sits and. he said his father is still inside. he says he has to come here. he has to believe somehow his father is going to walk out of those corridors.
8:07 pm
>> you and i were together in mogadishu, i think it was right after al-shabaab had been kicked out of there by peace-keeping forces there. but they have not gone away. can you talk about their capabilities, because i understand they have also launched some attacks inside somalia. >> reporter: well, when we were there, anderson, it was during the famine, and al-shabaab was denying any western aid. and that was really the timing of the support they were getting with the local community. and after that, we saw the kenyans go in, they were pushed out of the capital, they were consistently pushed out of the urban census. back when we were there, we felt we were in the middle of an amazing period that somalia may come into a more stable area. but days later, we learned that
8:08 pm
al-shabaab is moving in another direction, and getting more global finance. and this is something we heard from the kenyan foreign minister, that they believe this is not just al-shabaab, but also al-qaeda. the global world realized what they lost when they lost that territorial fingerprint in somalia. and this is part of their fightback. they're trying to show not only that al-shabaab is still in the game. that al-shabaab is still capable of pulling off something this complex, of this magnitude, but that al-qaeda is still in the game here in africa. anderson. >> all right, appreciate the support, the terrorists clearly timed their attack at the westgate shopping mall for maximum impact, striking at noon on saturday when the mall was certainly expected to be packed. they were shattered by bullets. one american was inside the mall
8:09 pm
away his toddler daughter when the terror began, his pregnant wife was shopping on another floor. he joins me from nairobi. nick, can you just walk me through what happened? you were sitting with your daughter in a cafe? >> yes, i was sitting in a cafe with my daughter, my wife had left us just a couple of minutes before to do some shopping. heard a loud blast, followed by gunsh gunshots. and i happened to be very close to the door. i just reached over, grabbed my daughter and just ran out of the front of that cafe, as fast as i could without looking back. >> did you have any idea where you were going, did you have a destination? >> i had had no idea actually if there was an exit over there or anything. but i saw some other people sort of heading in that direction. and i just got lucky and it happened to be a door to the outside which i was able to get
8:10 pm
out of the mall. >> where did you find to hide? >> so after i went through this door, i was sort of in a loading door that serviced a couple of the restaurants and the supermarket in that area. all of a sudden, a wave of people started to run back away from the parking lot towards the area where i was standing. and so i just sort of turned and ran back towards a loading dock at the back of the mall. ended up heading up a flight of stairs. was guided up there by some employees who suggested that was a safe place to go and ended up inside of a store room. >> how many people were in the store room or ended up in the store room with you there hiding? >> i would say there were probably about 40 people or so. >> and how big a room was it? >> it is quite large, a place where they stored a lot of just inventory. >> and at this point, your wife is pregnant with your second child. she was not with you, as you said. so did you have any idea at that
8:11 pm
point where she was? >> yeah, once i made it in there i was able to call her. and i found out that she was on the second floor initially. and eventually made her way up to a movie theater on the third floor. and was waiting there, sort of uncertain what to do. and we were both trying to contact our friend outside who we thought might have some information on what was happening, just letting him know where we were. and then finding out where we could, as far as where would be a safe place to go. >> and so she was hiding in the movie theater. how was your child during all of this? did she have any idea? she was what? almost 2 years old? >> yes, it is kind of -- the first moments are kind of a blur when i picked her up and started to run. i know that she was definitely shocked. and there was some fear, and she was upset. but once we made it inside the store room and settled down, we
8:12 pm
were there for quite sometime. she really sort of returned to her normal self. >> how long were you and your daughter hiding in that store room? >> i would say about three hours. >> wow. >> total. >> it must have been incredibly scary, i mean, to not have a real sense of what was going on, where these terrorists are. and if somebody could be right outside the door? >> i would say the most scary moment is when some people started to leave maybe about an hour and a half during our time there. i made it about half way across the room. all of a sudden the wave of people came running back. at that point i had no idea if we had been discovered, if somebody knew where we were and was coming after us. that was definitely the most terrifying of the three hours in that room. >> do you know why they ran back? >> i would assume they heard gunshots outside, they thought it was safe to leave.
8:13 pm
and as they got out they heard there was still gunshots. >> and after three hours, the police found you? >> after three hours, a bunch of plain clothes police came to the door, let everybody know it was safe. we opened the door from the inside. and they led us down a safe exit out to the parking lot. those people were heroes, and absolutely saved our lives and the lives of so many -- so many people at the mall. and my wife, as well. she never would have made it off -- of the roof of the mall if it were not for the two plain clothes police that made it up to the roof and secured the way down for them. >> so she was rescued before you were? >> yes, she was rescued probably -- maybe an hour or so before i was. >> well, nick, i'm so glad you and your wife and daughter are okay. and thank you so much for talking to me. >> yeah, absolutely, thank you very much. >> incredibly scary stuff, let
8:14 pm
us know what you think, you can follow me @andersoncooper. more ahead, the seasoned reporter just happened to be nearby when the attack began. he ran into the mall and did what he was trained to do. he got some of the most dramatic ima images. i'll talk to him ahead on the graphic images. also coming up, the family and talso, the dash cam video, and the police car. they are calling it an execution, the florida medical examiner is calling it something else entirely. that is ahead. [ male announcer ] introducing new fast acting advil. with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core™ technology, it stops pain before it gets worse. nothing works faster. new fast acting advil. look for it in the white box.
8:15 pm
new fast acting advil. help the gulf when we made recover and learn the gulf, bp from what happened so we could be a better, safer energy company. i can tell you - safety is at the heart of everything we do. we've added cutting-edge technology, like a new deepwater well cap and a state-of-the-art monitoring center, where experts watch over all drilling activity twenty-four-seven. and we're sharing what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. our commitment has never been stronger. nice car. sure is.
8:16 pm
8:17 pm
i don't like the ups and downs of the market, but i can't just sit on my cash. i want to be prepared for the long haul. ishares minimum volatility etfs. investments designed for a smoother ride. find out why 9 out of 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus, which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. read and consider it carefully before investing. risk includes possible loss of principal. tonight, breaking news on the nairobi terror attack, "the washington post" reports that two or three americans are among the gunmen with the group a al-shaba al-shabaab. there were many witnesses who were inside the mall that saw things they will never forget. i talked to one, tyler hicks, who documented the terror with his camera. he just happened to be inside
8:18 pm
the mall shopping, living there with his wife. he is a television journalist. we'll show you some of the pictures and the video they shot. some of the pictures, i want to warn you is graphic. tyler hicks, you were right next door on a shopping errand when you noticed something was going on. explain what you first saw when you ran out into the mall. >> reporter: the moment i got out on the street, from where i could see i saw lots of people running towards me, away from westgate mall. and about a minute later i arrived in the kind of entrance parking lot. and i could already see there were injured people coming out clearly, who had been shot in the leg. stomach, other parts of the body. and people really streaming out of the mall completely
8:19 pm
terrified. frantic, crying, people running with children. it was clear something really serious was happening inside. >> and from your photographs, i mean -- and we're looking at them now, it looks like you were with a group of police officers or commandos? >> yes, when i reached the upper parking lot area, i could see at the opposite end of the mall there were some civilians running out. and i saw that as a possible way to get in. i -- once going through that door, there was a service entrance, there were some police in there trying to get the people out. and they were agreeable to having me and a few other photographers along with them as they were sweeping through, looking for these -- whoever was shooting. they didn't know who they were yet. they didn't know what group was responsible for that. and also desperately trying to
8:20 pm
get civilians out as quickly as possible before more people were killed. >> you must have been concerned not only about the attackers inside, but about ieds, explosive devices that they could have planted? >> yes, yeah, i mean once i looked into the center area of the mall down into lower floors and saw that there were bodies around on the ground floor, big pools of blood, people scattered around, it really -- it was clear that these guys were just indiscriminately killing people. they were still in there. and that is something that you really have to think about also. in a mall, in a big open air mall like that, there is no -- there is really no cover. there is very little place to hide. they really have the advantage. they're already in there. they can be in the aisles of the supermarket or in a casino or a
8:21 pm
movie theater. there is hundreds -- thousands of places to hide and to wage an attack from. >> the fact that it is taking kenyan security forces so long to try to contain this situation, is it that they're out-matched or is it just as you said, this is an incredibly difficult area where it is tough to get control, and you're up against people who are willing to die? >> yes, this is the problem, they don't know exactly how many people were in the mall. and they don't know if the people who were remaining and are remaining are being held by them or if -- as hostages. or if they're just hiding. you know, it is clear that a lot of people were killed. and so the question is you know, you can't just go rushing in there with people who are very willing to kill civilians.
8:22 pm
and perfectly happy to die themselves to become martyrs for the cause. >> your wife is a tv journalist. she was in the mall also covering this. she shot some incredible video that i want to show. was there ever a point where you thought this is too dangerous? i mean, you have covered wars in iraq and afghanistan where you thought this was too unsafe, i should leave? >> well, not really. i mean, it was dangerous. and there was some shooting going on of the and obviously, there are people who -- many, many people who were injured and killed there. it was one of those moments when i really felt like this was very important to cover. and worth to be there for as long as -- i was taking as much care as i could. the problem was, it became very clear within the first ten or 15 minutes that the people who i
8:23 pm
was traveling around the mall with, you know, do just as little as i did. and that is the one thing that is unsettling when you're there, when you realize they had no idea where these guys were either. >> well, i'm glad you are okay, tyler, and your wife, as well. and thank you for taking the time to talk to me. >> thank you. >> as you heard from tyler hick's report, nairobi's westgate shopping mall really popular with foreigner s and people there. it is clear the terrorists didn't choose it at random. this washington post report that two or three americans were among the attackers, talking to k kenyans and pbs, that there were two or three americans among
8:24 pm
them? >> no, it doesn't surprise us, in america, britain, and kenya itself, 11% of the population is muslim, the vast majority of them are peaceful and law abiding. but it does mean that there are large areas where there are shabaab sympathizers, and joining them, here in britain people are very concerned about it. >> yeah, i believe the first suicide bombing by an american was actually by a somali-american who joined them in mogadishu. one spokesperson said they cannot confirm -- they don't have enough information to verify if americans were in fact involved in these attacks. so right now this is just information coming from the kenyan foreign minister by pbs. the shopping mall frequented by the westerners, it reminded me a lot of the mumbai terror attacks
8:25 pm
where you have a relatively small amount of gunmen who caused panic in a city by taking over a well-known landmark. >> exactly, anderson, these are soft targets. there is no way to protect them. you can put armed guards at the front entrance but it is not enough. and once a team deploys inside a shopping center it is virtually impossible for police to figure out where they are. it has taken, in nairobi, almost three days to clear that place. the same goes for the united states. they're easy targets. high visibility, you can get the message you want to convey across. and it doesn't surprise me at all, frankly, that they went after one. >> it did surprise me, because i was in mogadishu two years ago, basically after al-shabaab had been kicked out by peace-keeping forces. and it seemed like they were on their heels basically in the southern part of the country.
8:26 pm
does this seem to you a resurgence of them, and maybe they were just cooling their heels? >> well, they have been on the edge of al-qaeda. we have to consider this in a long chain of events where al-qaeda are re-grouping. i believe that we have prematurely declared we have have defeated al-qaeda. and this was perhaps for election purposes. and al-qaeda have completed far more than we would have dreamed. now with this attack in kenya, they have demonstrated and are capable, despite having been expelled from somalia, they are capable to launch attacks like was done in mumbai.
8:27 pm
>> and yet, bob, it is not a high impact attack like was on the towers. it was a terror, sophisticated attack, but as you said it can have a large impact. >> absolutely, we have to look at the totality, nigerian, mali, you have al-qaeda there, you have niger, libya, still a mess. and on top of it you have syria. so i agree that there is a resurgence that we're seeing. the question is where will they attack next? >> and you have been on our program a number of times, you actually became an islamic extremist while you were in prison in egypt. you have now completely changed your mind, and actually sort of preach to others and try to convince others to leave extremism behind. can you understand why -- and i
8:28 pm
think it is hard for many americans to understand why some somali-americans, a small number in the united states, but a small number of somali-americans would choose to leave their lives here and go back to sma somalia, in many cases they never even remembered, from where they were born, to fight for this group? >> yes, anderson, the sad situation is that islamism, and the violent strand of islamism known as jihadism, have been the established mode of the day for people in the middle east. the communist ideology is dead today, but those who want to pick up a flag, raise the ideology, raising themselves through the prism. that has become a brand. it is glittering and attracts on
8:29 pm
its own accord. and pretty much as che quevara, leaving their countries to join a war that perhaps they have nothing to do with. because they find this brand that appealing. and the problem is that we don't have an alternative discourse on the grass roots to challenge this ideology. >> his new book "radical" comes out in a couple of weeks, i have read it. good to have you onment bob b oe -- bob beir, as well. we'll be right back. neil and buzz: for teaching us that you can't create the future... bob be -- bob beir, as well. we'll be right back. bob be -- bob beir, as well. we'll be right back. bob be -- bob beir, as well. we'll be right back. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand of us investing billions... in everything from the best experiences below...
8:33 pm
welcome back, we're going to have a lot more on the terror attack on our 10:00 hour on "ac360" later. and tonight, president obama for the new opening of the general assembly. and the new president of iran made it clear he intends to establish new dialogue with the west, possibly the united states. president obama addresses the general assembly tomorrow where he will undoubtedly talk about the containment of the stockpile of weapons. what is the possibility of the meeting between president obama and the iranian president? >> well, it is still possible but no commitment. u.s. officials say there is no meeti meeting scheduled yet. if there is no hand shake or meeting on the sidelines, they don't want this story to be here
8:34 pm
that the new effort at diplomacy has fizzled. and in reality, we do know that secretary kerry will meet with his counterpart, the iranian foreign minister, as well as the five members of the council with germany, on the meetings between the u.n. secretary of state and the foreign minister since 2007. and just thinking about where we were last year at the u.n. general assembly, things are dramatically more positive. but it is still possible you don't have that iconic moment here of the u.s. president shaking the iranian president's hand. >> well, it shows you what the state of the relations is, even a hand shake would be considered an iconic moment. the u.s., though, is clearly trying to keep the focus on syria this week? >> reporter: no question, and up until a week ago before all this excitement of the iranian meeting came up, it really was the focus. and remains so for secretary
8:35 pm
kerry. they want this to come out that they are enshrining the chemical weapons, and of course, the u.s. still disagreeing on the u.s. of military force if syria doesn't agree. and still a lot of hurdles to overcome in getting to a resolution to back the deal. >> all right, thank you very much, jim sciutto. and the video right there, the medical examiner says it was an accident. you will hear both sides of the story and can decide for yourself. also, the pictures of the little girl with her adoptive parents. she has been at the center of a custody battle that has happened for half of her life. will they finally, finally get to bring her home? details ahead. i was made to work.
8:36 pm
make my mark with pride. create moments of value. build character through quality. and earn the right to be called a classic. the lands' end no iron dress shirt. starting at 49 dollars. his day of coaching begins with knee pain, when... [ man ] hey, brad, want to trade the all-day relief of two aleve for six tylenol? what's the catch? there's no catch. you want me to give up my two aleve for six tylenol? no. for my knee pain, nothing beats my aleve.
8:37 pm
help the gulf when we made recover and learn the gulf, bp from what happened so we could be a better, safer energy company. i can tell you - safety is at the heart of everything we do. we've added cutting-edge technology, like a new deepwater well cap and a state-of-the-art monitoring center, where experts watch over all drilling activity twenty-four-seven. and we're sharing what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. our commitment has never been stronger.
8:39 pm
welcome back, our "crime and punishment" segment, a florida family is demanding an investigation into the death of a loved one, his name is marlon brown, who was run over by a police officer, the death caught on a dash cam. the family was outraged. the family decided to release the dash cam video to the public as a way to pressure the prosecutors to file charges. i want to warn you, the video is graphic.
8:40 pm
you may find it disturbing. >> reporter: you are watching the final moments of a man's life, caught on police dash cam video. it is 12:38, and marlon brown is running from the police officers. a volusia county police officer tried to stop him earlier for not wearing a seat belt. from there, they picked up the pursuit. each in the patrol car spot brown there at the intersection. they tail him until he makes it to a dead end. brown makes it there, takes off and jumps out running to a vacant lot. the officer stays on him. >> he was chasing a man down with a 4,000 pound car, he had to realize there was a risk here. >> what my client is trying to do is drive towards the back of the lot where he can stop, and then exit his vehicle. he is not attempting to strike
8:41 pm
anyone. >> a warning, what happens next is hard to watch. one finally glance toward the oncoming police car, and brown disappears underneath it. it all happened so fast, brown is only on foot for about six seconds. moments later, the other officer looks under the car with a flash light. then they attempt to get the car off brown. >> we got to get this car off now. >> reporter: by the time fire and rescue crews arrive to lift the car, the 38-year-old father of two is dead. crystal brown is marlon's ex-wife. >> you look in the video, you don't see a swerve, you don't see -- you don't even hear, oh, my god, as you impact. >> reporter: the medical examiner said that brown died from the weight of the car that cut off his oxygen.
8:42 pm
the m. e. also found in evidence he was struck by the vehicle, no skull fractures or pelvic fractures, ruling that brown slipped. only then did the car stop on top of him. he ruled the death accidental. >> i don't buy it, he sees the car coming. >> he lost his footing and he fell down, and that was because of the wet turf and the loose dirt. and that is the same thing that made it difficult to stop your car. >> reporter: do you believe your client tried to slow down? >> oh, absolutely. >> reporter: just weeks ago, the state attorney general announced that a grand jury decided to not indict the officer for vehicular homicide. frustrated, the family made the dash cam video public, hoping it will force an independent investigation by agencies. testimony was included as part of the evidence by an expert. the expert found that officer
8:43 pm
harris was driving carelessly, given the wet grass and the darkness. he also said the officer violated the department's policy of non-pursuit, except after a forcible felony. harris was fired the same day the video was watched. marlon brown had been in and out of jail for drugs and fraud. he was just released the month before he died. friends in the car with him that night told police he fled because he was so afraid of going back to jail. randi kaye, cnn, florida. and let's talk more about the attorney for marlon's family, you believe this was an execution? >> well, i think when you look at the velocity that he came at marlon brown that night, regardless if he fell down that night, that car came straight at him.
8:44 pm
>> you have no doubt the car actually hit marlon? >> no doubt, absolutely, that is why we can't believe the m. e. says there was no intentional contact. you look at it with your own eyes, at best, it is inaccurate, at best, a conspiracy. >> jose, you don't think the officer did anything criminal, is that correct? >> well, i think it was stupid, negligent, but does it rise to the level of being criminal? and i don't think this is an issue where we have someone that is reckless to the extent of criminal liability. i don't think anyone could condone this officer's actions. but does it rise to that level of criminality? and i think the grand jurors made the decision based on the information they had. >> jose, to you, does it make a difference that the officer actually hit brown with the vehicle? >> no, i don't think so, it was an accident. you clearly see this was a situation where it was an
8:45 pm
accident. i don't think anyone can get in that officer's head and say this is -- there is some type of evidence here where he clearly wanted to run him down and run him over. just based on what we see, now, there may be something outside of this video that tells us otherwise, but based on what i see this is a tragic accident. people get hit every single day with cars. and that doesn't make it criminal. >> what about that? is it possible the grass was slick, he had a hard time stopping? >> jose knows vehicle homicide, you just have to show the person was reckless, had due disregard for human safety or life. and it caused somebody to die. look at that video, he came around two police officers who had stopped. he was reckless, he intended to get to marlon brown, and you see it. you don't have to take anybody's word for it. >> why would he want to hit this person, you say he intended to? >> you think about the whole
8:46 pm
mentality? they are chasing him for the seat belt violation, they don't do it in certain communities, they only do it here they would chase it for a seat belt violation? >> you're saying it because it is african-american? >> absolutely, they don't pursue other communities like that. >> there are lots of problems throughout the state of florida that different counties have, pursuit, different pursuit policies. there is no uniform policy across the state of florida. so you -- mr. crump is absolutely correct. this is a huge problem throughout our communities. >> ben, i understand that the county has already paid the brown family more than $500,000. what is it now that you're looking for? >> the civil settlement is completely irrelevant to the criminal matter. we are looking for -- if that medical examiner's report is inaccurate and she shows that there is new evidence that the car did hit marlon brown. go back to that grand jury and
8:47 pm
hold him accountable just as if jose or i or any of our friends or relatives had did that, they would have been charged. >> what about autopsy results? >> well, the autopsy is done by this medical examiner who works with the police officer. >> do you believe they would like to have a separate autopsy? >> absolutely, and also we think there is other evidence that shows he was hit. and that, we believe, will come out. >> anderson, you know what the biggest problem here is that this prosecutor did not seek out a special prosecutor to investigate this case. this prosecutor actually investigated their own case and sent it to the grand jury. and that is what gives the appearance of impropriety here. had they reached the statewide prosecutor's office and asked them to take over the investigation, might have seen a different result or you might have seen the same exact result. but that really casts a shadow over this prosecutor that leads people to question. and rightfully so. >> a 12 and 13-year-old child saw this video, and they believe
8:48 pm
it was wrong that he was hit. the center of a custody battle we reported on. reunited with the adoptive parents. the question is, will she go home with them soon? the latest. and the nfl player who said teenagers held a party in his home, trashed it while he was away. they broke into his home. he asked them to come and clean up the mess. we'll tell you how many of them actually showed up. ♪
8:49 pm
8:50 pm
someone finally cuts through the noise and puts an emmy speech we can all get behind. the ridiculous-list is coming up. that's why we partnered with hp to build the new nascar fan and media engagement center. hp's technology helps us turn millions of tweets, posts and stories into real-time business insights that help nascar win with our fans. (music plaheythroughout) guten morgen guess who? mr. mojito? ok it's got to be really fast, i've got one second hey no way wei hey, ca va? nudeq nuqdaq duch doch bolz stop calling me oh my god, no! how are they looking? we did it baby woohh oi ma yerp yerp moshi moshi, meow
8:51 pm
what?! ♪ woman: everyone in the nicu -- all the nurses wanted to watch him when he was there 118 days. everything that you thought was important to you changes in light of having a child that needs you every moment. i wouldn't trade him for the world. who matters most to you says the most about you. at massmutual we're owned by our policyowners, and they matter most to us. if you're caring for a child with special needs,
8:52 pm
our innovative special care program offers strategies that can help. r . let's get a quick check of other headline, isha is here with more business. and the oklahoma state supreme court has ruled the 4-year-old girl named veronica at the center of a custody battle will need to be returned. however, that is unclear when it will happen. the couple's spokesperson said they can't wait to bring veronica home and begin the healing process as a united family. they also hope that veronica's
8:53 pm
birth father and the cherokee nation will return veronica peacefully. and a father who never gave up looking for his missing son is reunited with him 13 years after his abduction. the boy's grandmother is arrested with the kidnapping in 2000. and showing up this morning to help the nfl player brian hollowway clean up his upstate new york home. he says teens broke in over the labor day weekend and trashed his home. and the man who bought a powerball ticket wants to remain anonymous. anderson, he told them it was only the second time he had played. clearly, i must play less. >> that will make a lot of people play all the time. i can't believe only four kids showed up. >> i can believe only four kids showed up. >> where are their parents? >> now you sound like an old man. >> thanks, the ridiculist is
8:54 pm
next. i had pain in my abdomen... it just wouldn't go away.thing. i was spotting, but i had already gone through menopause. these symptoms may be nothing... but they could be early warning signs of a gynecologic cancer, such as cervical, ovarian, or uterine cancer. feeling bloated for no reason. that's what i remember. seeing my doctor probably saved my life. warning signs are not the same for everyone. if you think something's wrong... see your doctor. ask about gynecologic cancer. and get the inside knowledge.
8:55 pm
8:58 pm
and the emmys last night, they talked about snubs, and why else do people actually watch the emmys? all right, i guess to see what the stars are wearing, maybe we could do a best dressed/worse dressed. but truly, our staff couldn't be equipped to do the best dressed list, we couldn't talk about how many times someone wore the same sweat shirt without it falling apart. but evening wear? what does it mean? typically people are with their agents, accompanied by surprise, and follow your dreams cliches, until the music gets loud enough to put us out of our misery. then last night, a winner gave a speech about what the speech
8:59 pm
should be. >> thank you so much, um, thank you so much. um -- i got to go. good-bye. >> there, concise, authentic, and after a commercial break, neil patrick harris summed it up the only appropriate way. >> merit weaver, best speech ever. >> so when she took questions after the speech, she had a moment to gather her thoughts and remembered what she wanted to say. >> i wanted to thank a lot of people. oh, it is happening again. i wanted to thank everybody at showtime and thank most of all edie falco. it is hard to do those. sorry. yeah. i'm scared. i'm scared bec
117 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CNNUploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1402304424)