tv NBC Nightly News NBC March 28, 2012 6:30pm-7:00pm EDT
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on our broadcast tonight, midair meltdown. what really happened in the clock pitd at 30,000 feet. tonight, we're learning a lot more about the jetblue captain and the passengers who took him down. final arguments in the supreme court showdown over health care is so-called oba obamacare doomed? women and cancer. news tonight about what may be a growing risk for women. and the jackpot. what would you do with half a million dollars? "nightly news" begins now. good evening. the title airline captain dates back to the days of shippen
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captains and they are the captains of their own ship. at 30,000 feet, they are the authority figure, what they say goes, and they're responsible for all souls on board. when the horror stories emerged from yesterday's jetblue flight, it send chills through the public. an airline pilot telling passengers to say their prayers because they were going down. thanks to crew members andparages who moved fast and with incredible force, we're reporting nothing worse tonight than a bizarre episode and what we might learn from it. we start off again this evening with tom costello in washington. good evening. hi, brian. the criminal complaint said the captain showed up to work late on tuesday. he missed a flight briefing and then became increasingly erratic as the flight left for leg. from the criminal complaint, we're learning much more about
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the actions of the captain and what seems to be a serious breakdown. screaming about bombs and al qaeda, passengers had to use their own belts to restrain him and keep him away from the exit door. it started at jetblue flight 191 was departing new york for las vegas. he was talking about being evaluated by someone. he asked the first officer to take control as he made incoherent comments about religion. he allegedly said, things just don't matter. yelled over the radio at air traffic controllers to be quiet, and he told his first officer we need to take a leap of faith, and we're not going to las vegas. an off-duty pilot locked the door and changed the combination. when he realized he was locked out of the cockpit, he charged the door. as the first officer got on the
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p.a. and asked passengers to restrain him. >> he was screaming things out like, let me in, let me in. we have to get this plane down. you better start saying the lord's prayer. we got to get out. we got to get out. >> a pilot's help is closely watched. the faa required a full medical exam every six months for pilots over 40. a variety of health conditions will ban them from flying, certainly anxieties, bipolar, or personal disorders, and psychosis. they will allow pilots to fly while on certain non-sedating medicines, but a chicago doctor said it could be something else. >> there are certain medical conditions which can certainly result in a rapid deterioration of a person's stability. a drop in blood sugar, for example, can do that. >> we anyhow thatthy he has been flying for 25 years, since 2000, he mhas worked at jetblue, most
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recently as a standards captain. on the "today "show, they said he has been a consummate professional. >> i have known the captain personally for a long period of time and there's been no indication of this in the past. >> they insist the copilot was capable of flying and landing the plane on his own without the help of the off duty pileaot wh came to assist, but it was appreciated. >> a few papers having fun, but take a look at the graphic from our friends at flight tracking website. about 7,000 flights aloft in the air any given time. all of them will go well and begin and end safely over the united states tonight. tom kausz tecostello reporting washington tonight. now we turn to the final day of the marathon argues at supreme court over president
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obama's health care law, and it might be on life support. today's focus was this, how much can be salvaged if the court throws out the controversial requirement that all americans be forced to buy health insurance? again tonight, our justice correspondent pete williamsset the supreme court. pete, good evening. >> brian, we're long way from knowing whether the court will strike down the law, but if it does, the justices seem to agree that more parts of the law should go with it, and mini of them suggest tossing out most of it. outside the court, passionate sidewalk debates. >> what will we do? >> reduce the cost of health care so more people can access it. >> we have had that for hundreds of years. >> the justices seems unanimous if it's thrown out, two closely related for visions would have to go, too. one bans insurance companies
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from refusing to cover people with pre-existing conditions and the other limits when companies can charge higher rates. what other parts of the law should go for. >> once you cut the guts out of t who knows. who knows which of them were really desired by congress on their own and which ones weren't? >> my approach would say if you take the heart out of the sfachute, the statute's gone. >> and some of the conservatives said it would be unfair to keep the law's other demands that insurance companies broaden coverage and take away the income they get from making everyone buy it. >> is it within the proper exercise of this court's function to inpose that kind of risk? can we say that congress would have intended there be that kind of risk? >> bus justice stevphen breyer said the part of the law not tied to the mandate includes hundreds of rules that could be saved. >> here's the rest of it, you know, and when i look through the rest of it, i have all kinds of stuff in there. so what do you propose that we
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do other than spend a year reading all of this and have you argue over it? >> and the court's liberals said it should be up to congress, not the supreme court, to decide what to keep. >> what's wrong with leaving it to in the hands of people who should be fixing this, not us? >> why shouldn't we say it's a choice between a wrecking operation, which is what you are requesting, or a salvage job? and the more conservative approach would be salvage rather than throwing out everything. >> the best hope for the obama administration would be this, that the justices would find it so hard to decide what to throw out and what to keep that they simply let the entire law stand. but tonight, that seems a dim prospect, brian. >> pete williams from the court, thanks. once again here with us in the studio is our legal correspondent, savannah guthrie. by all accounts, a rough day. the administration lawyer was
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beaten up again today in front of the knourt. this is a big, three-day argument. something that will affect all americans, as they say, what have we learn ♪ ♪ >> we have learned a lot. going in, the administration lawyers were confident. you would see legal scholars on all sides of the idealogical spectrum saying more likely than not, the law is going to be upheld. maybe upheld 6-3. no one is talking like that anymore. it seems like it will be a squeaker, whichever way they go. and there's no question that even some of the legal arguments that some have looked at as unserious or legal lawnshots, the justices were taking seri s seriously. we're set up for a decision in june in the middle of an election year. and don't think the justices are not aware of and for some justices concerned about the credibility of a court as an institution if it hands down a 5-4 ruling along partisan lines that shows the court is as politically divided as the rest
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of the country. >> electronic for your counsel. >> the trayvon martin case landed on the floor of the house of represent tchbs as congressman bobby rush of chicago took off his suit jacket to reveal he was wearing a hoodie underneath as he spoke about the need to end racial profiling in this country. he pulled up the hood, put his sunglasses on. that ruled him to be ruled out of order, let out of the house chamber because it's against house rules to wear a hat or hood while on floor. >> there's dramatic video c captured on a cell phone of one family's harrowing escape from the deadly wildfires burning near denver. they were forced to drive through smoke and treeing. crying of obviously frightened children can be heard in the background until finally the father is saying, it's okay. we're out. today, colorado's governor stopped the use of the so-called flanked pirns like the one suspected of sparking these
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massive fires which so far have destroyed dozens of homes. and tonight, what many fear could be the next environmental disaster. a dangerous gas leak in the north sea and a possibility of a massive explosion is causing a lot of people to ask, could this become a crisis like the one we watched unfold in the gulf of mexico? our chief environmental affairs correspondent anne thompson is with us tonight from aberdeen, scott lnld, good evening. >> good evening, brian. as officials here in aberdeen try to figure out how to stop that leak, they're also trying to stamp out growing concerns about a flair that is still burning on the abandoned platform. the flair burns off high-pressure gas and it does so some 500 feet above and 400 feet away from where the exploding gas is leaking, according to company officials, but one industry official we spoke to today said any ignition source,
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even the smallest spark, could trigger an explosion and a fire on the platfernal and send fire down the well. but officials i spoke to tonight, they dismiss that as speculation, saying there is no immediate concern about the flair and they added that the wind is actually working in their favor, blowing the gas cloud away from the flair. they also added that in their opinion, this is not a repeat of the bp disaster in the gulf of mexico. this platform is in fairly shallow water, about 300 feet, but its well goes much deeper into the worth, some four miles. that distance plus the solid rock in the north sea is going to make drilling a relief well much tougher. the estimate is six months. you remember in the bp case, it was three months. brian. >> anne thompson on this still unfolding story off the coast of scotland, anne, thanks. in cuba today, on the final day of the pope's visit, an
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historic mass. andrea mitchell is there and has our report. >> in an unusual homily with a sharp political edge in a square thatsome b somymbolizes cuba re, with raul castro front and center, the pawnf called for freedom. he preached cuba and the world need change, but this will occur only if each one is in the position to seek the truth. and he called for free thoughts, respect for human dignity, and more freedom for the church, including the right to religious school. after asking raul castro to make good friday a national holiday. although hundreds of thousands attended, the pope did not meet with dissidents. disappointing human rights groups who fear that prominent activists known as the ladies in white, last seen in church on sunday, may have been detained.
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their home and cell phones went dead last night, but he met with a notally frail fidel castro. the vatican said the two men joked about their age. the 84-year-old pontiff telling castro, who is 85, i'm old, but i still know how to do my job. castro told the pope he had watched the mass on television and was struck by how the liturgy has changed. before leaving, the pope criticized the 50 year u.s. economic embargo for imposing what he called an unfair burden on the people of cuba. and still ahead for us tonight, women, weight, and cancer. what could be a very dangerous combination, and there's new research tonight they're saying could save lives. and later, a half a billion dream. a lot of people tonight are in it to win this. [ male announcer ] every day thousands of people are choosing advil®. here's one story. pain doesn't have much of a place in my life. i checked the schedule and it's not on it. [ laughs ]
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as we mentioned, new numbers on cancer deaths tonight are showing something of a gender gap. the numbers are getting better for men but not as much for women. our chief science correspondent robert bazell has more for us. >> in its annual report to the nation on cancer, the government finds that the overall death rate is falling, but not as much for women as for men. and the snenls of cancer continues to decline for men, but for women it's leveled off. no one knows all of the reasons for the trends, but in a industry report, the government emphasized that obesity and lack of exercise are increasingly recognized as major risk factors for many kinds of cancer. fully half of all cancer deaths in the u.s. could be prevented. the biggest preventable cause, not surprisingly, remains
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tobacco, possible for one third of cancer deaths. 189,000 a year. but obesity now accounts for one fifth or 114,000 deaths annually. many experts worry that the obesity epidemic threatens to wipe out many of the gains. much more on this study on bob's blog tonight on our website, nbcnightynews.com. as part of the political trail mix as allegations of a swiss bank account and his wife having several cadillacs, a four-car garage and a car elevator for each of the cars, the plans were put off presumably because it looks bad and sounds bad, but they have since been revealed, and his opone nlts will have at it.
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it was a mechanism for storing cars in tight places. when we come back here, what can happen when a lot of people make it their natimission to he this nation's fighting men and women. to do about medicare and social security... security. that's what matters to me... me? i've been paying in all these years... years washington's been talking at us, but they never really listen... listen...it's not just some line item on a budget; it's what i'll have to live on... i live on branson street, and i have something to say... [ male announcer ] aarp is bringing the conversation on medicare and social security out from behind closed doors in washington. because you've earned a say. from behind closed doors in washington. sometimes life can be well, a little uncomfortable. but when it's hard or hurts to go to the bathroom, there's dulcolax stool softener. dulcolax stool softener doesn't make you go, it just makes it easier to go. dulcolax stool softener. make yourself comfortable.
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i bathed it in miracles. director: [ sighs ] cut! sorry to interrupt. when's the show? well, if we don't find an audience, all we'll ever do is rehearse. maybe you should try every door direct mail. just select the zip codes where you want your message to be seen, print it yourself, or we'll help you find a local partner and you find the customers that matter most. brilliant. clifton, show us overjoyed. no, too much. jennessa. ah! a round of applause. [ applause ] [ male announcer ] go online to reach every home, every address, every time with every door direct mail.
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aboard the aircraft carrier museumic sss intrepid, an effort to help veterans find civilian job skz back home. it's parts of hiring our heroes, a joint project by nbc universal and the chamber of commerce. more than 4400 vets and their spouses attended events today. 16,000 more participated online. our own parent company, by the way, comcast, nbc universal pledged to hire 1,000 vets over the next three-year period. wes moore is here with us in the studio. he was a captain in the u.s.
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army, 82nd airborne in afghanistan and has worked to get other vets hired since he was home. you had a degree from john hopkins, you were a rhodes scholar, and someone hired you, and as i said on the broadcast, if you have seen a sergeant major in the army in the field, you would hire that person so fast because they can get anything done. >> it's so true. it's important for america to understand that not just working with vets, but hires vets, isn't a charity, it's an investment. there's two real misconceptions that people have about veterans. people think particularly in light of the sergeant bales incident, they're ticking time bombs. the vast majority of people who come home don't have post traumatic stress or brain injury, and with proper treatment, there's no correlation with the incidents and the murder sprees that we saw with sergeant bales. and many people think they're
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robots, yes, sir, no, sir. these veterans coming back home are entrepreneurial, fearless. and being able to bring them in the employment workfold can only help our nation in the longrun. >> thanks for being here. wes moore with us. we'll have more on this on rock center tonight, and there's a lot more on all of the upcoming job fairs around the country and the world on our website, nbcnight nbcnightlynews.com. reuters is reporting that hawker beachcraft will file for bankruptcy as part of a prearranged deal to obtain finances and make planes while reorganizing. it's been owned since early's 07 by investment groups. a team that includes magic johnson will purchase the los angeles dollars for $2 billion. it's the most ever paid for a
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sports franchise. up next here tonight, long odds and a big payoff, half a billion dollars. this one goes out to all the allergy muddlers. you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word. you have yet to master the quiet sneeze. you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts. well, muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour 1 on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour 3. zyrtec®. love the air. they claim to be complete. only centrum goes beyond. providing more than just the essential nutrients, so i'm at my best. centrum. always your most complete.
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it's the one doctors recommend most for arthritis pain. two pills can last all day. ♪ two pills can last all day. sergio! christina! question for you. what factors led you to buy your explorer. definitely the ecoboost option. what's pretty amazing is that you can get the fuel economy of a car in an suv. that basically did it for us. and the technology... oh, my goodness, the technology is amazing. everything is touch. you can actually talk to the car and it talks back to you. what have your friends said about your explorer? can we drive it? can we borrow it? what's your answer? no. no way. uh uh. (laugh)
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to say on tv, all you need is a dollar and a dream. the dreams are big tonight, so is the jackpot in the mega millions lottery. it's the biggest it's ever been. orreport on it tonight from kevin tibbles. >> the winning numbers -- >> didn't win last night? me neither. but don't despair. that means the mega millions jackpot just keeps growing. setting up friday's drawing to be the biggest ever, a staggering $500,000,000. lottery players can be forgiven for doing a little dreaming. >> a nice place on the beach. a lifetime supply of oreos. >> at northwestern memorial, dr. david zeke prepared me for the big win. >> when you find out you win, quite frequently, the blood pressure drops. and i faint. >> and you faint, right. >> that's how the last nbc
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employee felt when she won $266 million. >> i felt like my legs were going to fall out from beneath me. she now runs her own charitable organization, and when richard won his own money, he, too, donated millions to charity. that's what all of the people i spoke to today said they would do, too. >> donate some to charity. i don't need all that money. >> with the odds of 176 million to 1, the good doctor also said this diagnosis for all of us future losers. how do you explain the ailment i have if i find out i have to go back to work on monday? >> that's much more serious. >> still, your chance of hitting two holes in one in the same round of golf are 19 times better than hitting the jackpot on friday night. >> kevin will work here at "nightly news" for a good long time. that's our broadcast on a wednesday night. thank you for being here with us. i'm brian williams.
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