tv 60 Minutes CBS March 1, 2020 7:00pm-8:01pm PST
7:00 pm
captioning funded by cbs and ford. we go further, so you can. >> i have been training for this job for close to 20 years. there is nobody else running that has any management experience whatsoever in any of these things. >> this week former new york city mayor michael bloomberg will appear on primary ballots for the first time. you told everyone who would listen that you're not running for president. >> i did. >> what changeed? >> i started watching and listening to the candidates, and they had ideas that made no sense to me whatsoever.
7:01 pm
donald trump is going the eat them for lunch. >> people either love you as an american hero or despise me as a war criminal. >> navy seal edward gallagher has never publicly answered questions about whether he killed this injured isis prisoner until tonight. that's pretty incriminating. >> yeah, it is. >> exactly six months ago this evening, hurricane dorian slammed into the northern bahamas. it was fifth category five atlantic hurricane in the last three years. what can the chain of islands that sit in the heart of hurricane alley do to protect themselves? we found a ray of hope, specifically a solar array, designed to survive future destructive hurricanes spawned by the warming ocean waters. >> >> i'm lesley stahl. >> i'm bill whitaker.
7:02 pm
>> i'm anderson cooper. >> i'm norah o'donnell. >> i'm scott pelley. >> i'm scott pelley. those stories and more, tonight, on "60 minutes." ( ticking ) put off treating min. epclusa treats all main types of chronic hep c. whatever your type, epclusa could be your kind of cure. i just found out about mine. i knew for years epclusa has a 98% overall cure rate. i had no symptoms of hepatitis c mine caused liver damage. epclusa is only one pill, once a day, taken with or without food for 12 weeks. before starting epclusa, your doctor will test if you have had hepatitis b, which may flare up, and could cause serious liver problems during and after treatment. tell your doctor if you have had hepatitis b, other liver or... ...kidney problems, hiv, or other medical conditions... ...and all medicines you take, including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with epclusa may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate.
7:03 pm
7:04 pm
stand up to moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and take. it. on with rinvoq. rinvoq a once-daily pill can dramatically improve symptoms... rinvoq helps tame pain, stiffness, swelling. and for some... rinvoq can even significantly reduce ra fatigue. that's rinvoq relief. with ra, your overactive immune system attacks your joints. rinvoq regulates it to help stop the attack. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious infections and blood clots, sometimes fatal, have occurred as have certain cancers, including lymphoma, and tears in the stomach or intestines, and changes in lab results. your doctor should monitor your bloodwork. tell your doctor about any infections and if you are or may become pregnant while taking rinvoq.
7:05 pm
ready to take on ra? talk to your rheumatologist about rinvoq relief. rinvoq. make it your mission. >> pelley: suddenly, crisis management is an urgent issue in the presidential campaign. coronavirus has infected world financial markets. and now, wall street is calculating the chances of a recession. into this, a new name will appear on primary ballots for the first time.
7:06 pm
michael bloomberg, the 78-year- old billionaire and former mayor of new york city, skipped the early contests. but he's already spent almost $500 million, much of it aimed at this week's super tuesday. we spoke to mike bloomberg yesterday, and earlier in the week, about how he would lead, his reputation with women and minorities and the virus crisis. how do you view this emergency? >> mike bloomberg: i find it incomprehensible that the president would do something as inane as calling it a hoax, which he did last night in south carolina. >> pelley: he said that the democrats making so much of it is a democratic hoax, not that the virus was a hoax. >> bloomberg: this is up to the scientists and the doctors as to whether there is a problem. and it is just ignorant and irresponsible to not stand up and be the leader and say, "we don't know, but we have to prepare for the fact that, if it is, we have the medicines and
7:07 pm
the structure and the knowledge to deal with it." >> pelley: the president's proposed budget would have cut 16% from the budget of the centers for disease control, and about 8% from the-- >> bloomberg: i would have raised it rather than-- >> pelley: --national institutes of health. >> bloomberg: --cut it. >> pelley: i should say that the congress didn't allow that to happen, so the cuts didn't happen. but what do you make of the effort to cut those budgets? >> bloomberg: we have to spend money to make us safe and protect this country. it's like saying i'm not going fund the military. "i'm not gonna fund the local fire department. we're not gonna have fires. i don't believe-- fires are hoaxes." this is about the level that he's talking. spending money is what the trump administration has in mind now. it's asking for nearly $2 billion for a virus response led by the vice president. despite that markets plummeted about 10% last week. >> pelley: what about wall street? >> bloomberg: wall street does not do well with uncertainty. and it's-- the worst thing is
7:08 pm
nobody knows how bad this is going to get. i can just tell you, in my company, we're splitting in all our big offices into two different buildings, even if it's just a temporary thing. if the flu does strike, and strikes our employees, it won't strike all of 'em, 'cause we have to continue to provide a service. >> pelley: friday evening, the president announced his selection for director of national intelligence. his principal qualification for that job appears to be fierce loyalty to the president. >> bloomberg: that's all of the president's appointees, have that one characteristic. >> pelley: and i'm curious, how would you fill the top jobs in government? >> bloomberg: plain and simple: you get some experts. you put 'em in a room and say, "okay, now who should we go hire to do this job? who's the best person in the world?" we'll start there. asking what party they're a member of, how they voted the last time, it is so nonsensical. if you are sick, do you really wanna go to a doctor who was
7:09 pm
politically correct? or somebody that knew how to treat your disease? i'll rest my case. >> pelley: bloomberg is pressing his case after a late start and poor showing in his first debate last month. this past wednesday, after a better, second debate, he slept three hours before heading to his times square headquarters to phone voters. >> bloomberg: hi, mike bloomberg. how are you? >> pelley: he's opened more than 200 offices with 2,400 staff. that same morning, he met us for a flight to his boyhood home. you told everybody who would listen that you're not running for president. >> bloomberg: i did. >> pelley: what changed? >> bloomberg: i started watching and listening to the candidates. and they had ideas that made no sense to me whatsoever. donald trump is gonna eat 'iem for lunch. >> pelley: that evening he would head to south carolina and texas.
7:10 pm
bloomberg comes to politics like the electrical engineer he is, pragmatic not charismatic. >> bloomberg: i have been training for this job for close to 20 years there is nobody else running that has any management experience whatsoever in any of these things, but you have to have somebody that's been there, done that and will do it right, and will guide us through the tough times particularly day one. >> pelley: what does the data today tell you about the voter that leads you to believe that you can win? >> bloomberg: a few years ago there was a revolution against the intelligentsia. people said, "you know, those people, particularly on the coasts, are tryin' to tell us what to do." they wanted a change. that explains donald trump. now, people seem to have changed. this cycle, people want stability. >> pelley: his political career began in 2001.
7:11 pm
he won the mayor's office three times-- as a republican-- then as an independent. his strategy was the one he is using right now-- he massively outspent his opponents in self- funded campaigns. in 12-years bloomberg helped rebuild ground zero, helped the city survive the great recession. he banned smoking in restaurants, improved schools and balanced the budget. but there was controversy. bloomberg expanded a police tactic called "stop and frisk." more than 80% of those stopped were minorities. less than 1% were carrying guns. you defended stop and frisk right up to the point that you announced you were going to run for president. what have you learned? >> bloomberg: we should've, in retrospect, been more careful and keep it from, and keep the numbers from growing, and we did not and for that i am very sorry. >> pelley: it was a mistake, the way that it rolled out--
7:12 pm
>> bloomberg: well, yeah, there's no argument about it. it was a mistake. i erred. it was a mistake. i've took-- i haven't walked away from my responsibility for it. >> pelley: bloomberg is divorced with two daughters and two grandchildren. he still owns his boyhood home in medford, massachusetts. your parents bought this house through an intermediary because the owner wouldn't sell to a jew. >> bloomberg: correct. 1946, and the guy who sold it to us said his sister would never forgive him. >> pelley: do you think america's ready for a jewish president? >> bloomberg: nobody's-- virtually, nobody's mentioned it and i think in this day and age, yes. we've moved on. it's a better world than it was back then. >> pelley: mike bloomberg is the ninth richest person in the world, worth about $60-billion. his success began in 1981. before p.c.'s or the internet evolved, bloomberg created a data and communications network for wall street. today, the bloomberg terminal is
7:13 pm
the central nervous system of world finance. but he told us, if he wins the presidency, he'll sell the company. what does a multibillionaire know about people who are living paycheck to paycheck and hoping that the car doesn't break down? >> bloomberg: when i lived in this house my father made $6,000 the best year of his life. my parents took a mortgage out on the house, i think it was $11,000, if i remember, to help my sister and i go through school. i worked as hard as anybody. not better. i wasn't any better or worse, i was luckier, i think, than other people. >> pelley: he has 20,000 employees. but in early years, some found the office harsh. allegations by women have challenged his political campaigns. in 1990, as a tongue-in-cheek gift, your employees immortalized some of your sayings, in a booklet called, "the wit and wisdom of michael bloomberg." >> bloomberg: i don't think i ever saw the book, but i do remember it. >> pelley: one of them has you describing your bloomberg
7:14 pm
terminal, and the quote in the book is, quoting you, "it will do everything, including give you," a euphemism for oral sex-- >> bloomberg: right, okay. >> pelley: "i guess that puts a lot of you girls out of business." >> bloomberg: well, i didn't write the book. so-- >> pelley: did you say these things? >> bloomberg: i don't remember saying it. i can tell you that years ago on the trading room floors, things were different. i apologize for that, i'm sorry if somebody was hurt. >> pelley: you don't remember. >> bloomberg: if i annoyed somebody or hurt somebody i apologize. i can't go rewrite history. i can only tell you now it is a different world. >> pelley: it's a different world, but the question is, is it a different man? >> bloomberg: oh, i think, for sure. you evolve with times. we're all a product of the world we live in. shame on you if you don't learn and try to be better. >> pelley: bloomberg was named in lawsuits three times in the 1990's by female employees
7:15 pm
offended by his alleged comments. one suit was settled, two were dismissed. how can you be the standard- bearer for a party that claims the high ground on the rights of women and minorities? >> bloomberg: because i brought down the murder rate. i doubled the, or cut the gap between rich and poor education. i created 500,000 jobs, 175,000 units of affordable housing. we did all the things to reduce poverty that anybody could possibly do. and when i left, i think it's fair to say most people, women, minorities, they would say it was the best 12 years the city has had in modern memory. >> pelley: since leaving city hall, bloomberg has been giving away his fortune. he has donated billions to reduce gun violence, smoking, and greenhouse gases. he spent more than $100 million
7:16 pm
helping democrats in 2018 when they retook the house. he's telling voters he would expand obamacare while keeping employer-provided insurance, and provide eventual citizenship to the 11 million residents who immigrated illegally. he's for control of the borders, but doesn't think a wall will do it. who's gonna get a tax increase-- >> bloomberg: the wealthy. >> pelley: --in your administration, and who's gonna get a tax cut? >> bloomberg: we're-- we're gonna have to raise taxes on me and people like me. >> pelley: he means a 5% surtax on household incomes over $5 million and a rollback of president trump's 2017 cuts for the wealthy. you have already spent twice as much on this campaign as president trump has raised. how much are you willing to spend? >> bloomberg: well, i'm making an investment in this country.
7:17 pm
my investment is i'm going to remove president trump from 1600 pennsylvania avenue or at least try as hard as i can. >> pelley: so it's a blank check? you'd spend $1 billion? >> bloomberg: well, i don't know if it's a blank check, but, when they come to me and they wanna spend more, i've so far said yes. >> pelley: he said "yes" to starting a new company to analyze voter data for targeting ads and social media. this was president trump's big advantage in 2016, and bloomberg is spending heavily to catch up. if you're not the nominee, will you support the nominee of the party? >> bloomberg: it's an easy commitment for me to make because the alternative is donald trump, so, yes, i would support the nominee-- >> pelley: if you don't finish in the top three on super tuesday is that it for you? >> bloomberg: no, of course not. >> pelley: you'll keep going. >> bloomberg: yeah, sure. there's an election seven or so days later. there's another one 14 days later. there's a number of elections
7:18 pm
after that. >> pelley: despite joe biden's win yesterday in south carolina, bloomberg believes bernie sanders is the candidate to beat. he's counting on voters to move toward a centrist who believes government should be effective and dull-- not a blood sport for tv. >> bloomberg: the middle of the road doesn't want extremism. they want evolution rather than revolution. and if bernie sanders is the candidate, donald trump will win. donald trump not only will win, but the house will go back to being in republican hands, the senate will stay in republican hands. downstream, a lotta the state houses will flip back, republican. and when that happens, you're gonna have gerrymandering at the local level, and judicial appointments at the federal level that will last for decades.
7:19 pm
and so, what's really at stake here is the future of this country for a very long time. and that's why i'm running. ( ticking ) >> cbs money watch sponsored by lincoln financial, helping you create a secure financial future. >> good evening. financial markets open tomorrow after coronavirus fears sent stocks to their worst weekly finish since 2008. retailers report a run on hand sanitizers and facemasks, and trader joe has died at 89. he turned a single store into national chain. i'm errol barnett, cbs news.
7:20 pm
(suspense music) (warning siren) there's no room! go on without me! woman: nooooo! i got room. hop in! go! i'll hold it off! mondays, right? you guys go! (horn honking) get in, bryan. thanks, mom. hey! howdy! hello! again? go wherever they need you. ( ♪ ) the all-new highlander. toyota. let's go places. what about here? here? here? daddy, is that where we're from? well, actually... we're from a lot of places.
7:21 pm
you see we're from here and there and here... turn questions you've always had into stories you can't wait to share; with ancestry. i'm phil mickelson. that's me long before i had psoriatic arthritis. turn questions you've always had into stories i've always been a go-getter and kinda competitive. flash forward, then psoriatic arthritis started getting the better of me. and my doctor said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain, helps stop that joint damage, plus helps skin get clearer. ask about enbrel so you can get back to being your true self. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu.
7:22 pm
7:23 pm
>> pelley: now, david martin on assignment for "60 minutes." >> martin: the trial of navy seal edward gallagher was a riveting court room drama in which a decorated war fighter with four combat tours faced life in prison for crimes prosecutors said he committed on the battlefield. when president trump used his powers as commander-in-chief to intervene, it mushroomed into a full blown political controversy. gallagher was acquitted of the murder charge last july, but he never took the stand and has never publicly answered questions about what happened on the day he was accused of stabbing a wounded isis prisoner to death. until tonight. we warn you: it's a story of combat at its ugliest and military justice at its worst. people either love you as an american hero-- >> eddie gallagher: or despise me. >> martin: --as a war criminal. >> eddie gallagher: yes. >> martin: navy seal edward gallagher was charged with the premeditated murder of an isis prisoner in iraq.
7:24 pm
did you stab that fighter? >> eddie gallagher: no, i did not. >> martin: the isis fighter had been wounded in an american air strike during the battle for mosul in 2017. iraqi soldiers brought him to a compound they shared with the navy seals. a half hour later he was dead, and gallagher posed for this photo holding his knife. that's a trophy photo if i ever saw one. >> eddie gallagher: yeah, yeah that's what it was taken as. >> martin: you were trying to make it look like you killed him. >> eddie gallagher: i was trying to make it look tough, yeah. >> martin: you know how bad that looks? >> eddie gallagher: yeah, i know how bad it looks when it gets out into the public, which it never was supposed to. >> martin: it looked even worse when he sent it to a buddy with this text, "good story behind this. got him with my hunting knife." that's pretty incriminating. >> eddie gallagher: yeah, it is, it was, like, a joke text. dark humor. >> martin: it's not often you see a photo of the accused murderer holding the alleged
7:25 pm
weapon at the throat of his victim. >> eddie gallagher: that is true, yeah, but they ran a test on the knife, the sheath, no blood anywhere on it. and if you look at the picture close, there's no blood on the knife. there's no blood anywhere on me. >> martin: when he was brought in, the fighter was barely conscious, probably suffering from internal injuries caused by the blast which struck the building he was in. did you feel sorry for this kid? >> eddie gallagher: no, that's war. he was out there trying to kill us. >> martin: gallagher was a trained medic, and if you listen closely you can hear him say "i got him." >> eddie gallagher: i got him. i got him. >> martin: what did you mean, "i got him. i got him." >> eddie gallagher: i got him. i'm going to treat him. >> martin: he grabbed his medical bag and started working on the prisoner- none too gently. >> eddie gallagher: you know, he's an isis fighter. i don't want his hands anywhere near me. so, i pushed him back down forcefully. >> martin: what kind of
7:26 pm
procedures did you perform on him? >> eddie gallagher: he wasn't breathing properly so i performed an invasive procedure, which is a crike. >> martin: a crike. and that's basically sticking a breathing tube in his throat. >> eddie gallagher: correct. >> martin: there's no video of that because the seal recording the scene turned off his helmet camera. but you can clearly see the breathing tube in this photo taken after the prisoner died- along with several other medical devices implanted-- but by other seals. over the next few hours the team mistreated the body, buzzing it with a drone, posing for their own trophy photos, then for a group shot with gallagher front and center. but, you knew this was wrong. >> eddie gallagher: it's wrong. i'll say it's wrong now and i've definitely learned-- learned my lesson. yeah, it's distasteful. >> martin: well, it's more than just bad taste. it's against the law of war. it's illegal. >> eddie gallagher: i'm pretty sure i'm the first person ever to go to a general court martial for it for taking a picture.
7:27 pm
it's been done on previous deployments. >> martin: on 2010 deployment to afghanistan gallagher was investigated for killing a little girl when he shot a taliban commander who was holding her. according to his commanding officer, "gallagher was absolved of any wrongdoing." seven years later in iraq, some members of his platoon claimed he was taking pot shots at civilians. they may look like a band of brothers, but some of them hated gallagher. craig miller told investigators he was "freakin' evil." gallagher's men complained he was needlessly exposing them to enemy fire. were you a hard ass? >> eddie gallagher: i definitely didn't take any, like, guff or anything. if they had complained or were saying i was working them too hard, you know, i didn't really take any pity. >> martin: did you call 'em cowards? >> eddie gallagher: i did. told 'em they were acting like a bunch of cowards. you know, not saying it directly to my face. to me that's cowardice. >> martin: nobody likes to be called a coward. >> eddie gallagher: no. >> martin: and i bet you that's
7:28 pm
doubly true for a navy seal. >> eddie gallagher: oh, for sure. and that's what really, i think, sparked them. >> martin: 11 months after this picture was taken, corey scott told the naval criminal investigative service- n.c.i.s.-- he saw gallagher stab that isis prisoner. >> corey scott: like, all of a sudden eddie's, like, stabbing this dude in the neck. >> martin: charged with war crimes that could send him away for life without parole, gallagher hired naval academy graduate turned smashmouth lawyer, tim parlatore. >> tim parlatore: if you want to put my client in jail for the rest of his life you're going to need to come through me. >> martin: by the time parlatore signed on, gallagher was already in the brig, and the full weight of the federal government had descended on his family. n.c.i.s. agents executed what they call a standard search warrant at his home when only his two sons- ages eight and 18- were there. >> parlatore: they dragged the kids out of the house at gunpoint in their underwear.
7:29 pm
didn't give them the opportunity to get dressed. searched the house. >> martin: did they have a valid search warrant? >> parlatore: they did, but the way they did it was excessive. >> martin: this was a murder case. >> parlatore: yeah, but the suspect was already in custody it was pure intimidation. >> martin: did it work? >> parlatore: no. it just made eddie mad. ( laughs ) and more importantly, it made andrea gallagher mad. >> andrea gallagher: they came out with assault rifles fully kitted up like they're going to war to, i guess, assault a house with two kids in it. >> martin: gallagher's wife, andrea, was out at meetings, promoting her website the better business babe. >> andrea gallagher: i took my background in marketing and business and branding and i pretty much made a brand out of him. >> martin: the brand was #freeeddie, and the campaign to get him out of the brig included petitions signed by members of congress and appearances on president trump's favorite network, fox news.
7:30 pm
and it worked. after gallagher had spent six months behind bars, the commander in chief tweeted "navy seal #eddie gallagher will soon be moved to less restrictive confinement while he awaits his day in court." >> andrea gallagher: and that's when we felt like we had finally broken the barrier the president had finally intervened. >> martin: there were reports the president would intervene again and pardon gallagher before he ever went to trial. >> eddie gallagher: we didn't want to be pardoned. i wanted to go to trial. >> martin: you wanted to go to trial for life without parole? >> eddie gallagher: yeah. >> martin: that's a big risk. >> eddie gallagher: it is, but-- >> martin: no matter how convinced you are of your innocence. >> eddie gallagher: if i had been pardoned, i would have had that presumption of guilt the rest of my life. >> marc mukaskey: and eddie never not once said "i'm gonna fold." never. >> martin: marc mukasey, an attorney for the trump organization, joined the gallagher defense team two months before the trial began.
7:31 pm
>> mukasey: i sent an email to the prosecution team and said" my name's marc mukasey, and i look forward to working with you guys." >> martin: that went to the lead prosecutor, navy commander chris czaplak >> mukasey: i got an email back saying "we look forward to working with you too." turns out that that email that they sent back to me had a beacon on it, a tracking device on it. >> martin: for what purpose? >> mukasey: obviously they were looking to see who we were communicating with. in my view, it is unforgivable. >> martin: czaplak was removed from the case and, along with two other lawyers, remains under investigation for his professional conduct. but the charges- and all the evidence- against gallagher, remained. >> parlatore: and this is why we have trials. >> martin: the trial transcript runs thousands of pages, but it all came down to one word spoken by navy seal corey scott, the prosecution's star witness
7:32 pm
who testified he saw gallagher stab the isis fighter and was there when the prisoner died. >> parlatore: he used an interesting word. he said, "i continued to monitor him until the terrorist asphyxiated." and it went right over the prosecutor's head. >> martin: the word asphyxiated means what? >> parlatore: it means deprived of oxygen. the prosecutor wanted to hear stopped breathing. >> martin: you heard asphyxiated. >> parlatore: oh, yes. >> martin: parlatore rose to cross examine scott, who was testifying under a grant of immunity. >> you said asphyxiated. as a combat medic, you know that word means deprived of oxygen. he said, "yes." why'd you use that word? "'cause that's how he died." and then the question is, who deprived him of oxygen? >> parlatore: correct, i said, "you didn't say eddie gallagher
7:33 pm
suffocated him, did you?" "no." "did you?" "yes." >> martin: protected by his immunity, corey scott had just confessed to the murder >> parlatore: i just can't believe that this just happened. and so, as soon as i composed myself i looked back up at him and i said, "how?" >> martin: here is courtroom audio of scott's response. >> scott: after chief gallagher left the scene, i was left there monitoring him. i thought he would die. he was continuing to breathe normally, as he had been before. so i held my thumb over his e.t. tube until he stopped breathing. >> martin: did he say why he put his thumb over the-- breathing tube? >> parlatore: yes, he did. he did it because he knew that the iraqis were going to torture, rape, and kill this terrorist. and he just didn't want to hear the screams anymore. >> martin: the jury deliberated for eight hours before reaching
7:34 pm
a verdict. >> eddie gallagher: it was definitely the scariest moment of my life. i'm-- i could feel my heart just, like, leaping out of my chest over and over and over. >> martin: when gallagher and his defense team burst out of the court room, the verdict was written all over their faces. not guilty of murder. president trump tweeted," congratulations to navy seal eddie gallagher, glad i could help." the case was closed, but the fight was not over. gallagher had been convicted of posing for the photo and demoted- until the president ordered his rank restored. next, the navy moved to strip him of his trident pin, the symbol of his elite status as a seal. president trump said no way. >> donald trump: well, they wanted to take his pin away, and i said, "no, you're not going to take it away." he was a great fighter. he was one of the ultimate fighters. tough guy. >> martin: gallagher kept his pin, but the secretary of the navy, richard spencer, lost his job-- abruptly fired for going behind the secretary of
7:35 pm
defense's back in an effort to stop the president from intervening. now retired and living in florida, the 40-year-old gallagher still looks fit, but his years as a seal have taken their toll: two bulging discs and 18 documented concussions. the glory wall in his garage gym tells the story of his career including that last ill-fated deployment to iraq. there's the motto of the platoon he led: kill 'iem all. kind of has a different meaning after what you were accused of. >> eddie gallagher: yeah. >> martin: there's one thing not on the wall-- did you get the knife back? >> eddie gallagher: i did. >> martin: why don't you put it up here? >> eddie gallagher: it's actually right there. >> martin: is it really? >> eddie gallagher: yeah. >> martin: this one here? >> eddie gallagher: yup >> martin: no blood was ever found on the knife, although it has become tarnished over time, much like the reputations of so many involved in this case. in addition to the three lawyers
7:36 pm
under investigation for their conduct, seven n.c.i.s. agents have either left, been reprimanded or demoted for their handling of the gallagher case. ( ticking ) >> president trump and the case of eddie gallagher at 60minutesovertime.com, sponsored by pfizer. along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting. chantix reduces the urge so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. stop chantix and get help right away if you have changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, depressed mood, suicidal thoughts or actions, seizures,
7:37 pm
new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking, or life-threatening allergic and skin reactions. decrease alcohol use. use caution driving or operating machinery. tell your doctor if you've had mental health problems. the most common side effect is nausea. quit smoking slow turkey. talk to your doctor about chantix.
7:40 pm
7:41 pm
there's a growing consensus among scientists that climate change is what's making hurricanes stronger and more destructive. that's very bad news for the bahamas, a string of more than 700 low-lying islands stretching from florida nearly down to cuba, in the heart of what's come to be known as" hurricane alley." but the bahamas has found a ray of hope-- specifically, a solar array-- that can help its islands survive future hurricanes. and in the process, it may have important lessons the rest of the world should learn, as mother nature continues to brew devastating storms like dorian. ( wind ) with sustained winds of 185 miles per hour, gusts above 200, and a storm surge well over 20 feet in some spots. >> please pray for us! >> whitaker: hurricane dorian wreaked unimaginable havoc on
7:42 pm
the bahamian islands known as the abacos. >> vernon malone: there's not enough words in the dictionary to describe what hope town looked like after that storm. >> whitaker: hope town has been vernon malone's home for all of his 82 years. his family has lived here since 1785. he's the town baker and grocer, and he and his wife rode out the storm in his store. it survived, but their home just up the street did not. >> vernon malone: the entrance went right in there. >> whitaker: vernon's son brian had a home just around the corner. had a home. that pile of rubble we see there? >> brian malone: that's actually two and a half houses. mine's on the bottom. >> whitaker: hope town is a bahamian landmark. its candy-striped lighthouse dates to 1863 and is pictured on the country's ten-dollar bill. the lighthouse stood up to dorian, but as we saw coming into the harbor, not much else
7:43 pm
did. i hear generators everywhere. is this how you guys are getting through? >> brian malone: yup. >> matt winslow: yep. >> whitaker: brian malone and matt winslow, an american who owns a vacation home on the island, told us why all those generators are still running. >> winslow: the substation in marsh harbor which feeds us the power's destroyed. and then, of course, you can see all the utility poles-- are pretty much destroyed. so this isn't a case where you-- you come in and replace some poles, and you flick a switch. this is months, and months, and months of-- of work. >> whitaker: hope town is on one of several small islands ravaged by dorian, which then moved across seven miles of open water to marsh harbour, the largest town in the abacos. at least 60 people died in marsh harbour, and destruction is still everywhere. total damage and loss from dorian is estimated at $3.4 billion. when you see the extent of the
7:44 pm
destruction, where do you even begin? how do you even begin? >> hubert minnis: that's always the question: where do we begin? >> whitaker: bahamian prime minister hubert minnis and viana gardiner, a top aide, visited marsh harbour with us, and pointed to one huge priority: restoring electric power. how do you bring this back? >> minnis: the power. we had to make determination to set up-- micro-grids. >> whitaker: the microgrids prime minister minnis is talking about are small-scale systems. more and more, they're solar arrays with battery storage for when the sun's not shining. they can either feed electricity into the larger grid or operate independently to power a single facility or a neighborhood. the way electricity has been produced in the bahamas is with diesel-fueled generating stations on each inhabited island, about 30 in all, feeding power to everyone through
7:45 pm
overhead lines. >> chris burgess: the main power plant for this island is literally 25 miles south of here. that's 25 miles of line that has to be rebuilt. >> whitaker: chris burgess and justin locke run the islands energy program for an american non-profit called the rocky mountain institute. they have solar projects throughout hurricane alley. after category five maria hit puerto rico in 2017, they put microgrids on the roofs of ten schools. maria also brushed st. vincent; this is its first microgrid. now, the islands energy program has come to marsh harbour. so how big will this solar array be? >> burgess: 15 acres, right through here. >> whitaker: that microgrid will satisfy 10% of marsh harbour's total power needs, and will be built right between its government center and hospital, both were without power for weeks after dorian.
7:46 pm
>> justin locke: this is high ground, which makes it less vulnerable to storm surge or other types of disaster events. >> whitaker: so if-- a storm like dorian hits again, the power to these two critical facilities stays on? >> locke: correct. >> burgess: stays on. >> whitaker: the push to build storm-proof solar microgrids in the bahamas began in 2017 after hurricane irma- another category five storm-- tore through tiny ragged island, at the southern tip of the island chain. >> minnis: after ragged island was devastated, i made a statement. let us show the world what can be done. we may be small, but we can set an example to the world. >> whitaker: so it's your-- your goal to make ragged island a green island? >> minnis: absolutely. absolutely. after which, we can expand it. we can expand it. >> whitaker: to see the prime minister's green experiment, we flew to ragged island with
7:47 pm
whitney heastie, c.e.o. of government-owned utility bahamas power and light. engineer burlington strachan met us there, and took us to what he calls the very first hurricane- proof solar microgrid being installed in the bahamas. >> burlington strachan: unlike other solar designs, it's very low to the ground. so this installation is rated to withstand 180 mile an hour winds. >> which is an even harder punch than irma landed back in 2017. >> it was significant devastation on this island. as you can see, some of the poles snapped right at the very base of the pole-- >> whitaker: i see. they just snapped right at the base. is that what happened all over the island? >> strachan: that happened throughout the island. >> whitaker: this microgrid will produce enough electricity for ragged island's roughly 100 residents. the prime minister calls it a laboratory for the solar future. the past is a diesel generator needing boats to deliver fuel from hundreds of miles away, a system whitney heastie says is"
7:48 pm
a nightmare." >> whitney heastie: you know, in summer we're almost on the verge of running out of fuel in some of these islands, because bad weather sometimes prohibits the ships from actually getting to some of these location. >> whitaker: the bahamian government spends nearly $400 million a year on imported fuel to keep its power plants running, and passes that cost along to its citizens. they pay three to four times what we pay on the mainland u.s.-- >> burgess: right. >> locke: that's correct. >> whitaker: --for electricity here? >> burgess: right, and that isn't price gouging. i mean, that's ch-- that's just inherent cost. >> whitaker: everything costs more in the islands. the bill to install this new solar microgrid is $3 million. heastie insists it's money well spent. so you have this initial big outlay to build these-- >> heastie: yeah. >> whitaker: --panels. but over time, the cost of generating power actually goes down. >> heastie: absolutely. absolutely.
7:49 pm
by using what god has blessed us with, which is the natural sun. >> whitaker: it's not a perfect solution on ragged island; notably, the power from these panels will still feed into the vulnerable overhead power lines; the money's not there yet to bury them. >> matt winslow: one of the first things that i think everyone can agree on is everything has to go underground. >> back in hope town, matt winslow says they have the funds to bury their lines. americans with second homes here add a lot to the economy. winslow's family foundation has donated nearly a million dollars to rebuilding efforts. they already have a makeshift microgrid powering the fire station and health clinic, and winslow has hired engineers to help plan a much bigger one on a nearby island. >> winslow: it's possible that over in great abaco we could put-- you know, a solar array, 18 acres. and that goes-- that power is piped through the-- you know, hope-- preferably a new undersea cable to the island. and that could be a main source of our power.
7:50 pm
>> whitaker: that would be enough to power this island? >> winslow: absolutely, the >> bahamas' goal is to produce 30% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. justin locke and chris burgess of the islands energy program believe the country can do even better. >> burgess: the price of renewables have come down to the point where they're now very, very competitive with diesel, and in most cases, way cheaper than diesel. >> locke: the key game changer has been battery storage. battery storage has decreased in cost over 60% over the last five years. and what battery storage does is it enables the sun to shine when the sun is not shining. >> whitaker: renewables make more sense here than anywhere else in the world. and microgrids in the caribbean are starting to show their value. when earthquakes struck puerto rico in january, the entire island's big electrical grid was shut down for days. but remember those solar microgrids installed at schools?
7:51 pm
they kept providing power. the lessons can really apply anywhere. >> locke: california has the same system architecture as here in the caribbean, right? fossil fuel, long transmission distribution lines, right? and you see that pg&e had to proactively shut off power to millions of people in order to prevent fire. >> whitaker: if there had been these micro grids might it have been that pg&e would not have had to cut off power to millions of consumers? >> locke: correct. correct. >> whitaker: here in the bahamas there are still huge economic obstacles. losses from dorian equal nearly 30% of the country's entire annual g.d.p. you've got this incredible outlay to rebuild these islands that were devastated by dorian. can you afford to bring on a new form of electrical generation? >> minnis: we cannot afford it. we recognized from day one that
7:52 pm
we cannot do it alone. >> whitaker: just weeks after dorian hit, prime minister minnis spoke at the united nations. he emphasized that most of the bahamas was not damaged, and eager for tourists, the lifeblood of the economy. then he said that first-world countries and their pollution are at least partly to blame for the threat of ever stronger hurricanes. >> minnis: it is a threat which we cannot survive on our own. first world nations-- and this is what i said at the u.n. i said, "first world nations make the greatest contribution to climate change." they are the ones responsible for the changes that we see. the increase in velocity and ferocity of the hurricanes and the different-- and the changes, typhoons that we see today, but we're the innocent victim. we're the ones that are being impacted by what you have created. >> whitaker: minnis and leaders of other island nations have
7:53 pm
proposed that the u.s. and european countries contribute to an insurance fund- think of it as a "really rainy day" fund- to help rebuild from future storms. that's what you say, and what you said at the u.n., the first world nations should do? >> minnis: absolutely. >> whitaker: are they doing it? >> minnis: it's an ongoing discussion. it's an ongoing discussion. >> whitaker: does this make the change to renewable energy that much more important, imperative, urgent for you here in the bahamas? >> minnis: it is, 'cause even though our contribution to climate change is minimal, it's mini-- it's miniscule to compare with first world nation, but we still have a responsibility. ( ticking )
7:54 pm
>> cbs sports hq is presented by progressive insurance. i'm greg gumbel in new york. st. john's upset number ten creighton. the blue jays were the fourth top-ten team to lose the an unranked team. ohio state won a top 25 big 10 showdown between dwayne washington jr. 's guy hyme 22 points. and xavier and georgetown went to the wire. marshal's 3-pointer in the final seconds won it for the musketeers. for more go to cbssportshq.com. insurance guy, aren't you? t the pasty one? oh, yeah. as if! like i'm gonna go into some spiel about how you can get options based on your budget with the name your price tool. hey, robbie, you tell them about the mushroom puffers? just about to, pam. wait, are we in a progressive commercial? ♪ come on down to portabella's ♪ it's food, family, and fun what is happening? kelly clarkson! what're you doing on our sofa? hey there!
7:55 pm
what're you doing on your sofa? try wayfair. you got this! woah. yeah! let me try! all alright, get it! blow it up! that's what i'm talking about. except that's my seat, so. all right, so maybe after the movie let's talk about that bedroom of yours! when was she in our bedroom? it's not getting in my way.? i had enough! joint pain, swelling, tenderness... ...much better. my psoriasis, clearer... cosentyx works on all of this. four years and counting. so watch out. i got this! watch me. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are feeling real relief with cosentyx. cosentyx is a different kind of targeted biologic. it treats the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis to help you look and feel better. it even helps stop further joint damage. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx.
7:56 pm
before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability... ...to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen... ...or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. i just look and feel better. i got real relief with cosentyx. watch me! feel real relief. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. the one thing you learn pretty quickly, is that there's a lot to learn. grow with google is here to help you with turning ideas into action. putting your business on the map, connecting with customers, and getting the skills to use new tools. so, in case you're looking, we've put all the ways we can help in one place. free training, tools, and small business resources are now available at google.com/grow
7:57 pm
grand now we have to deal withed us this.rs. climate change is an emergency. that's why i wrote the nation's most progressive climate law. and that's why i'm endorsing tom steyer. because when big oil tried to stop our clean air laws, he led us to victory. same with the keystone pipeline. when tom says we can save the world and do it together believe him. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message. [ fast-paced drumming ]
7:58 pm
7:59 pm
8:00 pm
and ford. we go further, so you can. captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org - previously on "god friended me"... - i have breast cancer, and i am about to undergo treatment. - you think that the god account could help ali somehow? - if alphonse is behind the god account, then i need to strike a new deal. - i'm not behind the god account. - we know you hacked "new york sun." - whoever this guy is, he is gone. - look what he left us. - here for the game? then swipe your key. - that queen of hearts that tze left behind... it's an invitation. - so the location for the poker game changes every week? - yeah, but adam was able to get the address for tonight. - adam? really? that's very nice of him. - so we just scan this card and hope for the best? - well, that's assuming the chip inside the card doesn't have tze's personal information on it, or worse, his picture. - yeah, but tze wouldn't have left it behind
429 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KPIX (CBS)Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1561393596)