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tv   Nightline  ABC  August 2, 2017 12:37am-1:07am PDT

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this is "nightline." >> tonight -- violence in venezuela. over 100 days of nonstop protests. the president now expanding his control, jailing political opponents, seizing hospitals, keeping medicine from children we're going inside this once wealthy paradise, now a nation in crisis rife with hunger and fear. >> there's no quality of life. >> plus too drunk to consent? the new surveillance footage of an alcohol-fueled college night out that ended in rape charges. she leads him out of the bar where they met. later they went to her dorm. so what happened next? tonight he tells his story. >> she was the aggressor. she's the one who wanted it. >> and wag the dog. a talent management firm for
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animal influencers. how you can turn your furry friend into a social media celebrity. but first here the "nightline 5." >> gentlemen, beingin' strips. with real meat as ingredient one. >> everything to your liking. beingin' strips premium. ingin' strips premium. and number one is coming up
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good evening. it was once an oil-rich tropical paradise, but now venezuela is
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descending into ever deeper chaos. with food lines, drug shortages and rampant fear. the white house today condemned that country's quote, unquote dictatorship after it began rounding up and jailing political opponents. abc's matt gutman has this extraordinary look at the crisis. >> reporter: for 124 consecutive days, protests have rocked the streets of caracas, venezuela, growing increasingly violent, national forces armed with tear gas, rub ert bullets, batons, and guns, clamping down. the death toll now, 120,000 injured, thousands more arrested. they've been protesting president nicolas maduro's power grab. the white house called president maduro a dictator. >> he's not just a bad leader. he's now a dictator. >> reporter: that after maduro vowed to round up his opponents. maduro declaring the right-wing
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has a prison cell waiting. all the criminals will go to prison for the crimes they committed. this video proof he was true to his word. here you see the venezuelan secret police, the sabine, drag -- dragging the former mayor of caracas from his home. i traveled to venezuela late last year. from the moment we arrived on this, my third trip, we saw the people rising up. >> freedom, freedom, freedom. >> reporter: we're probably a couple thousand of people who have overtaken this highway. is life harder for you now than it was? >> yes. there's no food. there's no quality of life here. we cannot go in the streets at night. >> reporter: in the crowd, we met lillian, an opposition leader here. >> it's not a political fight. >> reporter: she's paid dearly for speaking out. this video shows her husband,
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leopoldo lopez being hauled off by the secret police just this weekend. and we were there during one of his many previous arrests. do you think maduro is ready to give in? >> maduro is a dictatorship. he needs to go. >> reporter: are you prepared for confrontation if it needs to -- if it has to happen? >> i don't want confrontation. >> reporter: she's taken those messages right to the white house, meeting with president trump earlier this year. the descent into chaos is now accelerating. caracas is the murder capital of the world. that's not all. its inflation is well above a thousand percent. and what was once the richest country in south america, one that still sits atop the world's largest oil reserves, is now the world's worst performing economy. we met up with second grade teacher vanessa, and she invited us into her class. she tells us that some of her students have fainted from hunger.
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[ speaking spanish ] >> reporter: but it's not just the students. [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: more than a third  of the country's teachers miss school every day, so they can stand in lines like these. hoping to buy the staples they need for their own children at a much cheaper government subsidized price. sometimes they wait for hours and get nothing at all. vanessa and her husband adolpho are two of the few teachers that, despite the journey, work every day. it's a two-hour hitchhike and a bus ride to and from school. they had to sell their car to
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survive. vanessa and adolpho have to alternate eating dinner on different nights to make sure their son gets to eat every day. the meals missed have taken a toll on their bodies. [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: teachers here need to earn at least 16 base salaries to adequately feed a family of five. [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: at this
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supermarket, prices, shockingly high. so a dollar apiece for each of these apples. each one of these apples is about 5% of the average worker's monthly wage, just one of these apples. that's pretty crazy and now those prices are several times higher. the supermarket looked fully stocked, but turns out it's missing what people need to survive. workers here tell us they don't have the staples of venezuelan life. flour, bread, butter, sugar and milk. what everyone here knows is that we are all under the watchful eye of government-backed militias. but this one woman was so desperate to tell her story, she was willing to risk it all and followed us out. [ speaking foreign language ] she says that she's lost 30 pounds this year just because there's not enough food. she wants the world to know, she says, turning directly to the camera.
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>> reporter: our moto taxi driver suddenly starts to tell us, you guys are being watched, we gotta get out of here. we abruptly break off and hop on those taxis. repression is the new normal. the everyday threat of violence mixed with the complete failure of the government is forcing hundreds of thousands to flee. and u.s. asylum requests have tripled, venezuela now leading u.s. requests worldwide. that's because of death toll here is on the rise, due to shortages of medicine and basic supplies. there are no antibiotics. [ speaking foreign language ]
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>> reporter: the government has tightened its grip on the most vulnerable. hospitals are now under military control. we saw armed guards at the doors. doctors tell us they're not there to protect the patients but to take control of any donations that might come in and to prevent journalists like us from reporting on what is really going on inside. in caracas people told us if you want to see how bad it is, go to the peripheries, go to cities like valencia. we drove through the mountains from caracas to valencia, to meet a doctor determined to show us the horrors that lay inside a hospital. so if you take us in, it will be easier for us to get in than if we drive. he and his fellow doctors earnestly and deeply want to get the word out about how bad this situation is. he doesn't want his face or name shown, but he wants us to see
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what is going on inside the main hospital for the city of 2 million people. inside the pediatric ward, hospitals provide two things. they provide the bed and the doctor. everything else has to be provided by the patient. and then we saw these children. it was already 11:00 at night, and all of them were moaning, writhing in their beds. nurses were just standing there. there's nothing they can do. all of these children waiting for medication and additional testing. nyali has been suffering from convulsions for months. her family had to provide everything. and obviously she's been here six weeks and that is very expensive.
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now, with the country descending even deeper into chaos, there's little hope left. a country that so many people like vanessa are desperate to escape. for "nightline" i'm matt gutman. was it a drunken hook-up or a rape? surveillance footage shedding light on a controversial case, raising questions about what constitutes consent. controversial case about what constitutes consent? ease. you're a life of unpredictable symptoms. crohn's, you've tried to own us. but now it's our turn to take control with stelara® stelara® works differently for adults with moderately to severely active crohn's disease. studies showed relief and remission, with dosing every 8 weeks. stelara® may lower the ability of your immune system to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections require hospitalization.
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now, to the surveillance video that helped get a college student out of rape charges. tonight you'll see that video and hear from the young man at the center of a case raising fresh questions about campus drinking culture and what exactly constitutes consent. here's abc's jim avila. >> reporter: it happens all too often. two college students drinking too much and heading off to have sex. >> we were just drinking, having a good time. >> reporter: was the woman in this case, a 19-year-old university of southern california student, too drunk to give consent? this surveillance video appears to show her making the first move at the college bar bandito's and eventually pulling 20-year-old fellow student into an uber. >> she put her arms around me, started kissing me on the neck. we started making out. >> reporter: but the night would end for him with allegations of rape. she ends up in the hospital with alcohol poisoning, but tonight
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he's a free man in part because of these videos. and at any time did she say no? >> no. that was consensual. she's the one who wanted to have sex. >> reporter: according to the police report, soon after they left the bar, he took her to his kappa sigma frat house having to carry her up the stairs. and that she was so drunk, his frat brothers thought it too risky to have her there. so they head to her dorm. >> i told her, maybe we should wait it out and wait for another day. she said, why are you being such a good boy? be a bad boy. >> reporter: according to the police report, the woman's roommate walked into the dorm room shortly after 1:00 in the morning and witnessed the couple having sex in the common living room. but roughly an hour later the roommates walked out of the rooms to see the woman lying nude and passed out. >> after we were done having sex, i went to use the rest room. and when i came back out the roommates seemed very upset by
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the fact that she and i just had sex in the living room. >> reporter: her roommates told police premjee said he were wasted and she was all over me. according to the police report, after he left, the roommates tried to wake her up but couldn't. when the young woman finally woke up at the hospital, she remembered nothing, asking investigating officers in tears, how someone could have done this to her. her blood alcohol level was four times the legal limit. when did you find out there was trouble? >> i didn't think too much of it at the time. it was only the following morning when the lapd came. >> what happened at the bar may be very different than what happened inside that dorm room. >> reporter: premjee was arrested and charged with rape by use of drugs, and sexual penetration by a foreign object. he was released on $200,000 bail. all along he said the encounter was consensual. >> i thought it was absurd that they would even make a charge against me. >> reporter: then last week at a preliminary hearing the charges were dropped. in the end the judge ruled in
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premjee's favor citing the evidence. this ruling strikes at the heart of discussions happening on college campuses all across the country about what constitutes consent and when a sexual encounter becomes a sexual assault. >> she a hundred percent could have revoked consent. >> reporter: vanessa spent three years talking to college students across the country exploring consent and the rules of engagement. >> it's not enough for a woman to verbally say no. the man must ask her for a yes. yes, do you want to do this? yes, does this seem like a good idea to you? >> reporter: according to a sweeping survey of 27 universities, more than one in five female undergrads say they were victims of sexual assault or misconduct. as much as 80% of those cases reportedly involve alcohol or drugs. >> he had purchased strawberritas for me.
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>> reporter: molly morris said she quickly became too out of it to give consent. she was a student at the university of tennessee chattanooga hanging out at a party with a classmate corey hawk, when she suddenly felt sick. >> i was throwing up and feeling really dizzy, could not feel my arms or legs. >> reporter: next thing she knew she blacked out. >> the next morning i woke up, i was completely naked in the sheets at the base of the bed. he was at the top of the bed. >> reporter: she says she immediately defined it as rape and filed a report with the school saying corey, a wrestler on the school team, forced himself on her when she was in no condition to consent. >> i now have depression streaks, anxiety streaks, night terrors. >> it's on his record. his life is ruined. >> reporter: but there is another side to this. c.d. mauk is corey's father. and he says his son was completely blindsided by morris's accusation.
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>> he was just blown away. he didn't even know how to react. >> reporter: corey who declined to be interviewed, told his father he remembered the night very differently and he and morris had consensual sex. >> would i ever think that my son would be involved in sexual assault? absolutely not. >> reporter: the university initially dismissed the charges against corey in a noncriminal hearing but weeks later reversed that ruling finding him responsible. but after that, a local court said the school improperly shifted the burden of proof. no charges were brought. but by then c.d. says the damage had been done. >> you're labeled a rapist. you can't go to parties. you can't be with any one of the opposite sex. >> all the court documents are in here. >> reporter: molly feels damage, too. still maintaining she could not have consented and that it was rape. >> life after the assault is not even close to being what it could have been. >> reporter: armand premjee and the 19-year-old usc student, are just another reminder that a fun
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night out, can easily get out of control. >> well, i'm really sad, you know, for both of us, for what we've been through because of this entire incident. >> reporter: for "nightline" i'm jim avila in los angeles. >> we'll be right back. abc news "nightline" brought to you by megared. to you by megared. .. it supports your heart, joints, brain, and eyes. and is absorbed by your body three times better. so one megared has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. new megared advanced triple absorption.
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♪ ♪ and finally tonight, sure, maybe your pet is cute and maybe you get lots of likes when you post pics online. but does your dog or cat have an agent? here's maria schiavocampo. >> reporter: move over kardashians. you have competition. they're called pet influencers. animals with big social media followings that partner with brands to promote products. >> they tend to resonate better with consumers. they reach everyone. >> reporter: some pet owners now making this a career. like lonnie who left her career in law behind to start a dog agency. a talent management firm for social media famous pets, a move inspired by her own little superstar, 4-year-old chloe, the mini frenchy. what makes an animal connect
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with people? >> it's a very human focus. >> reporter: animals bring in anywhere from 2,000 to $5,000 per sponsored post. what are some of the guidelines? >> definitely posting regularly, the photos and the videos should be on brand with the message that you're creating. >> thank you for watching abc news tonight. and as always we're online 24/7 at abc news.com and on our tim & charlie, 4th graders. lazy 3rd graders. they even have those new easy open gogurt tubes. we used to struggle 20 minutes to open our gogurts.
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we were on our own. and when we finally got those things open, we'd be overcome with the sense of accomplishment no 3rd grader today will ever know. hi guys. get a job. you believe this guy? new ez open gogurt. kids never had it so easy.

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