tv 60 Minutes CBS October 2, 2016 6:00pm-7:00pm MDT
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knew this was-looked like we were going to be taken hostage, this was a kidnapping. >> whitaker: how many kidnappers were there? >> quin: about 18. >> whitaker: how mary quin survived is a story in itself. and so is what the terrorist behind the kidnapping learned: you don't mess with mary quin. >> quin: i just took another step closer to him and put my foot down on his head and that just gave me some leverage. >> whitaker: so you wrestled the gun away from him? >> quin: yes, and said some things that we won't repeat on television. >> whitaker: whadi >> quin: it was casting aspersions on his mother, i'll put it that way. >> i'm steve kroft. >> i'm leslie stahl. >> i'm bill whitaker. >> i'm anderson cooper. >> i'm scott pelley. those stories tonight, on "60 minutes."
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businesses. >> good evening. on friday the labor department is expected to announce a gain of 171,000 jobs for september. ford, gold medal -- g.m. and toyota are among the automakers reporting sales. and a 1910honus wagner baseball card sold for a record $3.12 million. i'm reena ninan, cbs news. don't let dust and allergens get between you and life's beautiful moments. flonase gives you more complete allergy relief. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance.
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>> leslie stahl: the sea ice over the arctic is melting and shrinking so fast, we will see in our lifetime something that hasn't happened, it's believed, since the end of the last ice age: the opening of an ocean, the arctic ocean, and with that access to trade routes and trillions of dollars worth of oil and natural gas, almost as much as the entire u.s. economy. but this isn't a story about climate change; this is a story about the competition for those riches. the russians, for instance, have already amassed a major military presence in the region. it's also about pioneers: u.s. scientists and naval personnel,
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covered frontier. we discovered just how harsh, on a recent trip to the arctic. the arctic ocean sits on top of the globe, encircled by russia, which encompasses about half of its coastline, norway, greenland, canada and the united states, thanks to alaska. we flew, as guests of the navy - from prudhoe bay alaska 200 miles inhe north pole, over fractured, thinning ice, to a spot where the ice was still thick enough to support this base camp. it was a small temporary village, disrupting the peace and purity of the ice, white as far as the eye can see. the camp was built for a scientific and military exercise, called "ice-x 2016". hi, everyone. how do you do? nice to meet you.
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>> stahl: for five weeks, this no man's land of ice was home to an expeditionary team of sailors, scientists and engineers, whose mission was to understand how to survive in maybe the most hostile conditions on earth. the navy says those taking part in this exercise are the first humans ever to set foot on this part of the planet. it's actually beautiful beyond belief isn't it? >> chuck mcguire: it really is. >> stahl: chuck mcguire was one of the first to arrive. university of washington's applied physics lab that was brought in to build this camp from scratch. so you get off the plane. there's nothing. >> mcguire: yeah. >> stahl: there's no shelter, there's no indoors. >> mcguire: no. >> stahl: there was just ice? >> mcguire: ice everywhere. that's right. >> stahl: and you say, "how am i going to survive?" >> mcguire: you pick up a hammer and start building. >> stahl: they built a makeshift city called sargo for roughly 60 people, consisting of a command
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airlifted in weekly, and some very primitive toilet facilities. >> mcguire: that outhouse is really cold. (laughter) >> stahl: that outhouse is awful! oh my god! what about water? you can't just eat the ice, right? >> mcguire: you can if you know what you're looking for. >> stahl: this ice mining team knows what to look for: old sea ice that's been baking in the sun long enough that the salt has leached out. >> ice mining ic we are returning back to camp. >> stahl: they bring back chunks to melt down into the camp's only drinking water. >> mcguire: all the things that you take for granted in normal civilization, right, shelter, food, the ease of going to the bathroom, right? that is all different out here. (laughs) >> stahl: what qualities do you think it takes to stay here and survive out here for weeks? >> mcguire: i think maybe you
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and really understand that everything outside that door is trying to kill you here. >> stahl: if the ice and wind don't get you, polar bears might. an armed sentry patrols the perimeter of the camp in case one comes looking for food. >> good evening everyone. another successful day here at sargo. >> stahl: there's a daily briefing in the command post to coordinate the various researchers who are studying and trying to understand this part of the world as they plan for a more sustained presence here. they're analyzing among other things >> scott: the ice floe's moved about nine miles to the west northwest today. >> stahl: how climate change is affecting the way the ice here drifts and migrates. it feels like you're on land, you get the sense that you're on land-- it's very firm you know, a plane could land, but we're moving, which is kind of astonishing. >> luers: i think every day it's interesting to wake up and recognize you're eight or nine
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it looks the same, but it's pretty interesting to try and figure that out. >> stahl: the ice moves that much every day in unpredictable directions because of the currents underwater and the wind above. >> down here, we're 23 degrees celsius. >> stahl: also unpredictable is the weather. we met a team of meteorologists using balloons to help with forecasting which is key for any military operation. >> scott parker: so, these balloons mea y temperature, your dew point, the wind speed. >> stahl: commander scott parker, a meteorologist with the navy's atlantic submarine force, says there's virtually no weather data collected up here. in other parts of the world meteorologists rely on satellites for forecasting, but up here near the north pole satellite coverage is minimal. how cold does it get up here? 'cause it's-- right now, i don't know if-- >> parker: it is freezing, right? >> stahl: people can see, it's terribly--
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is-- is 26? below fahrenheit, and today's actually our warmest day-- >> stahl: come on? >> parker: --and right now, it's 6? below. >> stahl: and with this wind chill factor? because the wind is really blowing. >> parker: it is. and it's terrible. it's about 25? below zero with the wind chill. >> stahl: and you're telling me this is the warmest day you've had? >> parker: this is the warmest day we've had so far. >> stahl: do you want to go inside? >> parker: i do. let's go. >> stahl: the temperature can drop to as low as 50 below and that can wreak havoc on just about everything: weapons, communications systems, sensors... and people, including these navy divers who were here to test their latest cold- weather gear, and their endurance, in the frigid water. these robotics engineers are conducting underwater experiments in a temperature- controlled tent. when we were there, doug horner and his team were field-testing these underwater drones, for the first time in the arctic. >> doug horner: when we first put it in, we check the ballast >> stahl: the drones are
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warmer the deeper you go. they're also getting a picture of what it looks like down below. >> horner: my primary emphasis here is the ability to map the under-ice. so we have sensors, sonar specifically which is sound, which is focused upwards and what we hope to do with continually putting sound upwards is to make a map. >> stahl: you're the mapping the bottom of the ice? >> horner: yes, the undeea >> stahl: uh uh. and why is that important? >> horner: i want to be able to navigate relative to that. so this is the idea of being able to navigate an underwater robot accurately without g.p.s. cause in the ice you don't have the opportunity to come up to the surface for a gps fix. >> stahl: he says these drones could also be used to patrol the waters of the arctic, looking for enemy subs, for instance, the way drones hover in the sky over a battlefield. the navy is testing this
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this research, to prepare for an expanded presence in the arctic, as the ice continues to melt. the russians are already there in force. last year they staged a military exercise in the arctic as seen in this russian ministry of defense footage. it involved about 40,000 troops, 15 submarines, 41 warships and multiple aircraft. no one disputes their right to do that on their own territory. it's just that it wasn't announced. >> philip breedlove: we pre- announce ours. no one is surprised by them. whereas the exercise that russia did was a snap exercise which is a bit destabilizing. >> stahl: until may of this year, retired four-star general philip breedlove was the supreme allied commander of nato with responsibility for the arctic. what else is destabilizing, he says, is russia's military build
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northern sea route skirting the russian arctic coastline. the route could become an alternative to the suez canal, saving huge amounts of time and money for the commercial shipping industry. >> breedlove: i have heard as much as 28 days decrease in some of the transit from the northern european markets to the asian markets. that is an incredible economic opportunity. and it could be a very boon- big boon to business around the world. s the russians did gain control over the northern sea route? >> breedlove: if the russians had the ability to militarily hold that at ransom, that is a big lever over the world economy. >> stahl: so tell us in a nutshell what's happening. >> breedlove: along that route what we see is russia upgrading over 50 airfields and ports, 14 of them to be done this year, increasing the number of ground troops, putting in surface-to- air missiles, putting in sensors.
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that could be used to deny access. >> stahl: in 2007 russia went so far as to plant its flag on the sea floor under the north pole. >> breedlove: i think it's important to understand what the deputy prime minister said, that the arctic is a part of russia, that-- that they will provide the defense for the arctic and that they will make money in the arctic and that the western world may, therefore, bring sanctions on them, but that's okay because tanks don't need visas. i think it sends a pretty clear message. >> stahl: the u.s. has not tried to match the russian build up, the navy relying on its fleet of nuclear and attack submarines, the most powerful in the world. when we were there, the navy was conducting a submarine warfare exercise, something it does in
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when a sub surfaces in the arctic, they use shovels to carve a visual landmark in the ice that the sub can see." x" literally marks the spot. but that "x" is a moving target because of the drifting ice. >> luers: there we go >> stahl: which makes maneuvering a windowless steel cylinder the size of a football field to such a pinpoint location seem impossible. but on this day, the skipper and his crew, punching up through thick ice, nailed it on their first try. it took a few minutes for the sail, the shark fin on top, to completely emerge. >> there they are. >> stahl: when they popped the hatch, a special guest climbed out, the secretary of the navy, ray mabus, who'd been on board for five days, taking part in the naval exercise. what does it mean that the secretary of the navy has come
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is there a special significance to you being here? >> ray mabus: our responsibilities are increasing as the arctic ice melts, as the climate changes. and so the navy has got to be here, we've got to provide that presence and i hope that my presence emphasizes what we do. >> stahl: as he flew off to alaska, we climbed down the ladder into the fast-attack, nuclear-powered u.s.s. "hampton," and went through a 100 degree change in temperature, from 25 below to about 75. you feel claustropho >> theron davis: oh no. not at all. you get used to it. >> stahl: commander of the hampton, theron davis, took us to the control room as the crew prepared to submerge. >> davis: stationary dive the ship. >> stationary dive the ship, aye, sir. dive. stationary dive the ship. make your depth 1-5-0 feet. >> stahl: what he and his crew of 20-somethings are practicing is something subs only do in the arctic. ( horn sounding ) diving down through new ice that
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>> davis: that's the ice breaking away. it's the first time we've surfaced through this thick ice and stayed up here this long. so that's the ice that's beside us. and as we go down, it's got to crack-- crack away from the hull. >> stahl: we're listing. i'm tilting this way. i can feel everything. >> davis: and now we're starting to see water. see the water on the monitor? >> stahl: once they get to a cruising level, they practice hide and seek with another sub. in some of the exercises, they also test-fire blank torpedoes. you a torpedo tube. >> stahl: one of their challenges is ice keels, huge chunks of ice that jut down from the surface, and confuse sonar- guided torpedoes that can't distinguish them from enemy submarines. >> davis: so what we're working on is saying, "hey, how can we fix that? how do we know we can go and shoot-- shoot a weapon in the ice and get a hit?" right? so now, we have to go up there and we have to figure that out. >> stahl: we returned to the surface... >> davis: we're coming up right
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>> stahl: one american sub in a region with a growing russian military presence. during our last day at the camp, something dramatic happened. a crack in the ice along the perimeter became a giant lake. new fissures formed right through the heart of the camp, up to the doorstep of the command post. everything was packed up quickly for an emergency evacuation, a reminder that the most formidable adversary here may not be russian forces, but the
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is start would be under gary kubiak. lead willing the bucks by 20. second and in ." abider son up. kwon alexander on the tackle. pick up of four. you have to think the play calling will remain conservative here for kubiak and that off glens footing is nothing like what it had been before the delay. i'm sure the players are trying to adjust. if you're the visiting team, i don't know if you bring extra shoes or try to make changes but this field took on a lot of water during a rain delay that
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>> we asked dirk koetter about that long delay. talked about being out in this humidity. hands off to anderson. go into the locker room for over an hour. we saw one of the tampa bay defenders cramp up during warm ups. was escorted into the locker room. didn't get an official word on from his jersey number. some of the challenges that both of these coaches and training staffs are contending with during rain delay that lasted nearly 90 minutes. >> tough to keep your players loose and in shape in terms of keeping them warm to come back out hit the ground running. number of thing you can do, maybe you walk on a treadmill, get the stationary bike. start pedaling away but i don't know if you have enough of those
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player. you never experience anything like this, right, as a player. >> what was that? you never experienced any kind of delay? >> not of this nature, no. ryan dixon on to punt. humphries will watch a bounce inside the tampa bay 20. the bucs are trying to stay cutting edge in terms of player health and safety. they have three guy can particular gas that dip to temperatures within 250 to 280 degrees. gerald mccoy one of the guys has been taking advantage. we hopped ha in. this was highlight of our season. >> you can tell i'm cold. >> even fully clothed we could feel it. players said it helps with inflammation. something you wish you and your players had back in the day.
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is. >> spero: that pass caught by tight end cameron brate. 18 yards. developing into pretty reliable target for jameis winston. >> solomon: his coach on the tight ends, making sure that they hold up their end of the deal. brate has really developed on first and ten. pass is incomplete trying to go right back to brate. disappointing where you way from winston. >> solomon: let's keep in mind. did he make some bad throws, bad decisions. but he has been under duress, almost all evening from the likes of von miller. shane ray and that denver broncos, he has been on the run, has not had significant time to be able to survey the field make the kind of plays he's accustomed to. >> spero: the two early interceptions. second and ten right over the middle of the field to jacquizz
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as we take another look. >> solomon: made poor decision early forcing the ball into coverage. of course he was intercepted. >> spero: two picks by aqib talib. off balance throw. able to find mike evans inside denver territory. 11 yards for the bucs. tackled by brad reroby. >> solomon: this is one thing you like about jameis, such leader, he's a competitor, out here trying to make plays to get into the end zone. >> spero: quick strike that pass is incomplete. looking in the direction of evans. the coverage applied by roby. >> solomon: couldn't haul it in.
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>> spero: saw chris harris come off before the delay. so much depth the way phillips and that denver defense on back end. second and ten. talk about this field taking on a lot of water, like the slip and slide. you have one of those. >> spero: of course. lots of action on the slip and slide in the summers in jersey. >> solomon: invite everyone over. >> spero: winston third and five. that pass is batted down at the line of scrimmage. officials will rule it incomplete. billy winn man who got hand on it. late marker comes in on the denver defensive side of the football. >> referee: illegal contact.
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five-yard penalty. automatic first down. >> spero: on t.j. ward. they're all pro safety. >> solomon: gives winston new life. jameson, moving around, trying to find more time. you can continue to see even, von miller on the field. c quarterback. spear broncos coming. get to him again. >> solomon: guess who. fourth sack for denver. von miller and derek wolfe. >> solomon: they just keep oncoming. von miller, he was a pleasure to meet with last night.
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>> spero: back with you at tampa bay. final minutes between broncos and buccaneers. all denver as defending champs up 27-7. we'll revideo game our cbs prime time programming upon conclusion of this game. as we gear up for the final two minutes here at raymond james stadium. spero dedes, solomon wilcots. our cbs crew. winston unable to corral that football. winston didn't appreciate the level of contact by shaquil barrett at the end of the play. >> solomon: look at the hit. there's punishment coming. strig to avoid him. barrett gets himself a sack on that play.
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von miller is going to call it a night. >> spero: this is the pressure that winston has been facing all afternoon. certainly expected it against this play making broncos defense. tampa bay will use a time out. broncos will to go 4-0 they will be home next week for atlanta. and dirk koetter and bucs back to the drawing board. >> solomon: as you take a look at von miller just a pleasure meeting with him. just in terms of his focus this off season, he did so much after winning a super bowl but he came
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football team. their team unity is intact that's what allows them to play at high level. >> spero: no where to throw they will get to him again. that is the perfect exclamation point for this denver defens, now players pushing after the whistle. was actually a skirmish during the warm-ups before the game resumed as tempers starting to flare on tampa bay sof field. sixth sack of winston today. it was jared crick and shaquil barrett. getting to winston. >> solomon: i'm sure you're the bucs you get tired of people hitting on your quarterback. here's winston here on the drop back. he's been alluding defenders all night, spero. there you can see, crick jumping
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sack. but that's what the offensive linemen don't like, they have seen this all day. >> spero: winston has been running for his life without a doubt. tampa bay uses its final time out they will run a play here on fourth down and 43. lead the down. winston putting some air under it, falls incomplete. 1:36 to play. mike evans the intended receiver. will parks the rookie safety out of arizona on the coverage. we mentioned upcoming schedule this is what broncos have in front of them. go home for atlanta, falcons a winner today.
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broncos beginning a stretch today, had some winnable games as they go through december. >> solomon: eight of the next ten games are against opponents for 500 or worse currently. expect them, not that they will run the table you know in the nfl every week is a dog fight. for the most part. but gary kubiak has done wonderful job of preparing his team, talked about the off train some of the veteran players he had program for them. then the younger players had more aggressive program for guys who really needed it. we weren't going to put guys like aqib talib and some of the veterans through basis that we would our younger players. it was very smart. divided up the work for guys who have the experience and don't need to go through some of the tedious moments of off-season training. >> spero: have to be careful as
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this one could get ugly in a hurry. see the clock continuing to run, 42 seconds to play. denver will to go 4-0. tampa bay will fall to 1-3. in their last 19 home games. >> solomon: that's it they got to start to win at home. they are trying to turn around a culture, coach dirk koetter talked about it. it starts with winning paxton lynch is going to walk off the field a winner in his first experience as an nfl regular season quarterback. came on for trevor siemian who left with that left shoulder injury at the end of the first half. as defending champion denver broncos remain perfect. off to a 4-0 start for 9th
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we're replacing you and your staff. since when do you let anyone come in here and tell you what to do? hetty: he's right. i was at the helm when we were compromised. it's hetty. it's just a bunch of numbers and letters. granger: they're chess moves. it's called the queen's gambit. sacrificing a pawn to gain advantage. congratulations. you found your mole. you're the mole? (alarm blaring) we've been hit! hang on! sam: she's got no radial pulse. she lost about two liters of blood. get kensi out of here. (gunfire) come on, baby. (man singing call to prayer)
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(shouts) oh! oh! (grunts) call an ambulance! can you stand up? i don't... i don't know. i-i can't. okay, let me help you. (groaning) i got you. come on. st sit right here. (groans) what... my leg, i think it's broken. i need to go to a hospital. (taser crackles) (tires screeching) (car horn honking)
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what's wrong with this picture? you think we made a mistake? going to syria after asakeem? the guy was a high-value target. it cost lives. put kensi in a coma. kensi'll bounce back. how many lives do you think we saved? i don't know. like deeks said, was it worth it? yes. we all know the risks. this is the path we've chosen. hey. got something. where's deeks? ah, he's gonna stop by the hospital to see kensi on his way in. how's she doing? still unconscious as of last night.
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do we still have jobs? yes. i mean, i think so. don't we? we're asking you. well, as far as i know, part of hetty's deal with the under secretary of defense is that we be allowed to keep working. while she turns herself in as the mole? which is too ridiculous to even consider. hey, under secretary duggan bought it. then he's even dumber than he looks. woman (over p.a.): dr. paris to cardiology. dr. paris to cardiology. deeks: julia. hey. hi. oh, so sorry. i know. how's she doing? she hasn't moved since i got here. what are the, uh... what are the doctors saying? no one's been in but a nurse. hey. hey, baby, can you hear me? hey. hey, uh, i'm here with your mom. can you hear me? kens.
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so many times, they knew her by name. she was like having three boys. only this one... wasn't afraid of anything. yeah, well, she's still fearless. lonely in here. where's granger? haven't seen him. any word on hetty? nothing. what do we got? not exactly sure, but this happened a few hours ago. security cam footage from a mosque in west l.a. wow. did not see that coming. sam: let me guess-- she didn't take him to the hospital. if she did, it wasn't anywhere nearby. road rage and a capture. you don't see that every day, even in l.a. no, you don't. okay, so what's this have to do with us? well, lapd identified the driver as jasmine garcia. she's a reserve marine sergeant who returned from afghanistan three months ago. she's currently working at a nonprofit,
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luctant passenger? eric: witnesses at the scene i.d.'d him as gabriel mir. he owns a high-end rug store on melrose. sam: lover's quarrel? didn't see a whole lot of love there. tough love? garcia was a cst in afghanistan, cultural support team and translator. hmm. eric: mir is originally from afghanistan. could be a coincidence. that hit wasn't. she clipped him on purpose. the question is: why? quick incapacitation before kidnapping him. again, why? and in broad daylight? to look into it, make sure it's not some sort of a hate crime related to her translator duties in country. all right. we're on it. okay. granger. have any news on hetty? no, nobody's talking. you know what she's up to? do we ever? what's secnav saying? nada. you think they're working this thing together? hetty's always got a plan.
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tell me who you were working for. we had a deal. you also took an oath, swearing to support and defend our constitution against all enemies, both foreign and domestic. you should be ashamed. i'm going to recommend no plea bargaining, regardless of what you have to offer in exchange. on the contrary, you should be an example of how we deal with treachery. in fact, if it were up to me, your trial would look like something straight out of salem. the only difference being those poor women were actually innocent.
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ms. lange? hetty? hetty! oh! oh! (chuckles): i'm so sorry. i must have nodded off. i love that my shop is part of the morning ritual around here. and i wouldn't want to mess with that. but when (my) back pain got bad, i couldn't sleep. i had trouble getting there on time. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour strength of aleve. for pain relief that can last into the morning. ? look up at a new day...? hey guys! now i'm back.
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and a lack of oxygen to the brain, but the good news is her head ct showed no skull fracture or intracranial bleeding. and her mri was clear of any signs of a stroke. her eeg-- no evidence of seizure activity either. so when is she gonna wake up? unfortunately, it's hard to tell. all we can do is wait and see. and what about other injuries? she sustained a c5, c6 disc herniation with impingement on the spinal cord in her neck.
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osurgery to remove the protruding disc and take pressure off the spinal cord. and that went well? yes. all indications. what's the worst-case scenario? there could be paralysis of her left hand and wrist and complete paralysis of her left leg, but we're not there yet. right. please feel free to ask me any questions as we move forward, okay? sure. thank you, doc. (knock on door) hello. hello. ts hanna and callen. is jasmine in? no. sorry. and you are? i'm summer. i just clean for her. you know, the police were already here asking all kinds of questions about jasmine. they go inside? no. is she in trouble? we hope not. do you mind if we took a little look around?
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sam: so when's the last time you saw ms. garcia? probably last week. sweet girl. i worked for previous renters and she just kept me on. (chuckles): even though i think she does more cleaning than i do. she have any friends or family that you know about? um... i've seen her with girlfriends on occasions. that's about it. she hasn't been here long. you see her again? it's important that we speak with her. i sure will... sam. eric, no sign of jasmine garcia at her house. her cleaning lady has not seen her. see if you can find anything else in the neighborhood. eric: will do. oh, and, eric, see if she has any other properties or vehicles in her name. on it. any luck? huh? no? wha-- sorry. what?
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t she has a storage locker. did you send the address to cal and sam? no... but i will right now. (sighs) you okay? yeah. uh, i'm just thinking about kensi. she's gonna be okay. i hope so. no, she will be. i just think of our guys as indestructible. about how cool it is to be a special agent, and then something like this happens, and suddenly you realize how quickly it can all come to an end. kind of makes you want to stay in ops, huh? yeah. kinda. deeks is on his way in. any news on kensi? no, nothing new. i am gonna need you out in the field with deeks. is there a problem, jones?
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okay, good. you're gonna be fine. i know. i know. (whispers): be careful. always. she's who kidnapped my brother? looks that way. you recognize her? no. who is she? ying to find out. has anyone contacted you about gabriel? the police and some of his friends from the mosque who saw it happen. was your brother in a relationship? no. and he attends the mosque where this happened on a regular basis? oh, yeah. were you with him this morning? no, i'm not as devout as gabriel. when's the last time your brother went back to afghanistan? never. i mean, not since we came here as kids. he's never been back. what about to buy rugs? no. we'll go to turkey and pakistan and iran, now that the embargo's been lifted.
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any bad business deals? absolutely not. i mean, this makes no sense. just out of curiosity, what does a rug like this go for? that's 230,000. dollars? for a rug? it's probably 100 years old. oh, and it's used. i could carpet my entire house for a couple grand. and i'm talking about the walls and the ceiling, too. listen, if you hear anything else concerning your brother, please give us a call. ank you, guys. (door bells jingle) what do you think? what do i think? i think you're embarrassing. if i'm gonna pay a quarter million dollars for a carpet, the damn thing better fly. okay, aladdin. look, this does not feel like a ransom deal to me. you? i don't know. something's not quite right. (phone vibrates) you mean besides the prices? well, according to nell, jasmine garcia has a storage unit in culver city.
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unless you want to look around some more. i'm never shopping there. i'm sure they'll be really, really disappointed we're getting a visit from the under secretary of defense duggan. we're replacing you and your staff. since when do you let anyone come in here and tell you what to do? hetty: he's right. i was at the helm when we were compromised. it's hetty. it's just a bunch of numbers and letters. granger: they're chess moves. it's called the queen's gambit. sacrificing a pawn congratulations. you found your mole. you're the mole? (alarm blaring) we've been hit! hang on! sam: she's got no radial pulse. she lost about two liters of blood. get kensi out of here. (gunfire) come on, baby.
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