tv NBC Nightly News NBC June 3, 2015 6:30pm-7:01pm EDT
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little warm and sunnier. >> okay. thank you, glenn. >> and for all of us here at nbc 10, the news continues now with "nbc nightly news." have a good evening. on this wednesday night, terror charges. new arrests in an isis inspired plot to kill police officers and behead a victim. what nbc news has learn good an imminent attack. the suspect armed with knives, the fbi listening in. twice as bad as we were first told. turns out anthrax was fedexed to dozens of locations in at least 17 states and three different countries. far more people put at risk. what went wrong? the cost of cancer. what's behind the skyrocketing price of cancer drugs? some costing $10,000 a month. for some, medications to survive means going bankrupt. and here come the bride. so many of them flocking to a tiny post office for a very big reason. we'll lift the veil on a wedding secret
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you'll love. "nbc nightly news" begins right now. ♪ good evening. in boston, new details this afternoon of an alleged terror plot to kill police officers including plans for a beheading. the fbi who had been surveilling one of the suspects says two men met over the weekend to discuss the plan. one is now in custody and appeared in federal court today. the other believed to have been influenced by isis social media messages was shot to death yesterday when he confronted police and agents who had gone to question him, with a military-style knife. our justice correspondent, pete williams reports. >> reporter: investigators were back today at the scene where a boston police officer and an fbi agent yesterday shot the man authorities say of plotting to kill
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police. 26-year-old usaama rahim of boston. the fbi revealed new details about the investigation. nbc news has learned that three weeks ago based on rahim's social media postings and messages the fbi put him under 24-hour-a-day surveillance. agents disclosed they were watching as he went on line may 25th and 27th ordering three knives with long blades from amazon. they sarah he will and three others met last sunday and talked about a plan to behead a victim in another state, someone not named in court documents. just yesterday, the fbi says, rahim changed his plan saying in a wiretapped phone call that he wanted to attack police tuesday or wednesday, adding "i'm just going to go after them, those boys in blue, because it's the easiest target." yesterday, alarmed by the call, the fbi decided to break cover and question him before he got on a bus with one of his knives. officials revealed today that when five boston police officers and fbi agents approached he drew this knife and refused to drop it.
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they say he was shot as they were backing away. hoping to calm community leaders, boston police today showed them surveillance video of the shooting. those who saw it called it inconclusive. but disputed a claim by rahim's brother that he was shot in the back while talking to his father on a cell phone. >> what the video does reveal to us very clearly is that the individual was not on the cell phone. the individual was not shot in the back. >> reporter: also today, one of the men the fbi says was in on the plot 25-year-old david wright appeared in federal court, arrested a little yesterday after police and federal agents searched his house in the boston suburb of everett. a shock to neighbors. >> say hi to him every day. they're out to hurt us you know. to hurt the police. >> reporter: wright was charged with encouraging rahim to get rid of evidence by destroying his smartphone. investigators say wright told them he knew of and supported the plan to behead someone in another state said to be a prominent person in new york.
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a plot one official dismisses tonight as a fantasy. as for how many people like rahim are under constant surveillance the fbi will say only that it's well over 100. lester? >> all right thank you. another big story we're following tonight, new developments in that anthrax scare at labs all across the country. the pentagon now revealing they mistakenly shipped potentially live anthrax bacteria to at least 51 locations in 17 states and three different countries. more people put at risk than we knew. our pentagon correspondent, jim miklaszewski, reports. >> reporter: the announcement out of the pentagon was a shocker. the potential shipments of live anthrax more than twice as high than first reported. and defense secretary bob work warns it can only get worse. >> we expect this number may rise because the scope of the investigation is going on. >> reporter: as of today, suspect anthrax samples were sent to 51 research labs in 17 states washington, d.c. and three
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foreign countries. two labs one in maryland the other in canada actually received live anthrax spores. the anthrax samples provided by the military are irradiated to kill any live spores before they are shipped to other labs for research into how to protect against a bioterror attack. but the killing technique failed. four large batches, retested in past two weeks, contain live anthrax. >> those start tests did not detect the presence of live anthrax. we need to know why. >> with one milliliter of liquid -- >> reporter: amazingly, anthrax both live and inactive are routinely shipped in small vials via federal express, packed in several sealed containers in dry ice to keep them frozen. so far without incident. >> as of this point, we see absolutely no danger to the broader american public. >> reporter: in fact defense officials claim the small amount of liquid anthrax in question would pose
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little threat to anyone in good health. >> what they are saying is scientifically accurate in that the chances of getting anthrax from the dilution of these samples and in the form in which they were in is virtually nil. >> reporter: despite those assurances u.s. officials tell nbc news the centers for disease control may suspend all anthrax shipments from any qualified agency until can be determined exactly why the military's irradiation process failed to kill those live anthrax spores lester. >> jim miklaszewski thank you. there are new twists in a murder investigation that has captivated so many people in this country. the family and their housekeeper held hostage, then killed inside their mansion, set on fire. a suspect was later arrested after a multistate manhunt. now the focus has moved to who else may have been involved. our national correspondent, peter alexander, has new details. >> reporter: tonight deeps are zeroing in -- d.c. police are
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zeroing in on cell phone records from the savopouloses and their housekeeper. search warrants reveal how the killer or killers may have forced their way into the multimillion dollar mansion, breaking a window pane and set of french doors and kicking in a door found broken near the lock with a shoe or bootprint visible on the outside. police now searching for the footwear that matches that print. darin wint is the only suspect currently charged in the brutal murders. the document show the investigation is focusing on mr. savopoulos's a assistant who admitted he lied about when he was first contacted to get the $40,000 ransom money and how he delivered it. police now combing his phone history. wallace has not been charged with any wrongdoing in connection with the case. court records detail the evidence police were searching for inside the chevy cruise that wint was arrested in and the box truck traveling with him. weapons used in the murders, duct tape to
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bind hands and feet and a red bag used to carry ransom money. also on investigators' list clothing or shoes with blood on them credit card or paperwork from the home and digital recordings from surveillance cameras at the house. investigators have not said what if any of those items they've found. tonight the pressure on police to find the killers intensifies as the savopouloses' two teenage daughters are leave to grieve. jurors in the colorado movie massacre trial, now in its sixth week hearing from the shooter himself. his chilling thoughts, twisted logic even regrets about the atrocity he carried out inside that theater. nbc has more. >> reporter: they are the mumblings and confessions of a mass shooter. >> i thought i would kind of make myself more valuable by killing people. >> reporter: 22 hours of interviews with a court-appointed psychiatrist theater gunman james holmes in
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his own words. >> the reason why i chose mass murder over something like a serial killing. >> tell me why. >> because it was impersonal. it was something i could actually do. >> reporter: up until right before he opened that theater door holmes says part of him wished the fbi or his psychiatrist would stop him. >> i kind of regret that she didn't lock me up so everything could have been avoided. >> reporter: holmes shot 82 people that day. 12 of them fatally. >> i only count fatalities. >> what about the wounded? >> they were like collateral damage i guess. >> reporter: especially difficult testimony for a courtroom full of survivors and victims' families. >> all he wanted to do was kill a bunch of people. and they were collateral damage. to know that your child was caught in that randomness, it's truly devastating.
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>> reporter: the psychiatrist who conducted the interview says holmes was mentally ill but legally sane. >> how did it feel to be really doing it? >> then it was auto pilot. >> reporter: key testimony from the gunman himself who has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. nbc news, los angeles. a pair of deadly crashes in our nation's highway today involving buses and tractor-trailers. in pennsylvania a semi was split in half when it collided with a bus carrying italian tourists through the poconos. the bus driver and at least two others on the bus were killed. in texas, at least two people were killed when a passenger bus slammed into the back of a big rig about 90 miles from houston. ten others were taken to hospitals. a desperate mission underway now on the other side of the world. rescuers racing against the clock to get to anyone who may still be alive after that cruise ship known as the "oriental star" capsized with hundreds
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on board. our ian williams has more on the frantic search in china. >> reporter: with time running out, rescue workers began cutting open the hull of the "oriental star." salvage ships lined up preparing to raise it. there have been no further signs of life from inside the ship. more than 400 passengers are still missing. divers are now finding only bodies. this one says visibility in the rough rough, muddy waters is near zero, forcing them to rely solely on touch. authorities tightly control access to the site and to survivors. just 14 have been found so far including the captain and chief engineer who are in police custody. they face questions about why the ship caught by a passing vessel's security camera just before the accident didn't take shelter from the storm that apparently sank it as others reportedly did after severe weather warnings. state madia has been playing up the work of the authorities, knowing that in china
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despair can quickly attorney anger. distraught relatives are demanding answers. why did the "oriental star" sink so quickly with so many of their loved ones on board? it's now i did-- now daybreak on a wet thursday morning. the search area has been extended 135 miles dunnownstream. officials fearing people may have been swept away by the fast-running yangtze river. preparations are being made for the worst. ian williams, nbc news, china. we're keeping a close eye on a massive hurricane churning off the coast of mexico. hurricane blanca on the verge of becoming the most powerful a category 5 storm. the sixth cat 5 storm on earth this year. and our hurricane season just got started this week. it's expected to hit the baja peninsula this weekend, cabo san lucas right in the path as of now. still ahead, the cost of cancer. the price of lifesaving drugs rising sharply.
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some over $100,000 a year. so many desperate patients including one woman forced to sell her home and declare bankruptcy to save her life. also facebook's cheryl sandberg speaking about the loss of her husband. her heartfelt message about grief and what she's learned in the toughest we all enter this world with a shout and we see no reason to stop. so cvs health is creating industry-leading programs and tools that help people stay on medicines as their doctors prescribed. it could help save tens of thousands of lives every year. and that would be something worth shouting about. cvs health, because health is everything. there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber. try phillips' fiber good gummies plus energy support. it's a new fiber supplement that helps support regularity and includes b vitamins to help convert food to energy. mmmmm, these are good! nice work, phillips!
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introducing the first ever gummy multivitamin from centrum. a complete, and tasty new way to support... your energy... immunity... and metabolism like never before. centrum multigummies. see gummies in a whole new light. we are back with our special series about the cost of cancer which touches just about everyone. drug prices driving patients and their
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families into bankruptcy including one woman you're about to meet forced to move out of her home just to pay for the medicine she needs to keep her alive. nbc's anne thompson shares her story. i win! >> reporter: lauren bowman's laugh masks the growing anger about the price of her life. >> without this pill we die. our families are left because we couldn't afford a pill. >> reporter: the pill glevec helps manage her chronic myeloid leukemia. the daily dose that keeps the single mom of 9-year-old aubrey alive. even after her insurance kicks in, lauren's monthly co-pay can run as high as $2,200. twice the average mortgage payment. it's helped drive lauren into bankruptcy though she has a full-time job. now she's packing up her condo and moving back in with her mom. >> on days i feel like i can't go on anymore, all i have to do is look at her. she's my reason. >> reporter: gleevec is a nearly $5 billion a year drug for
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novartis. nearly tripping since the 2001 debut from $2,600 a month to $9,200 today even though the drug has not changed. >> that's not inflation, right. that's happened as they've recouped their investment in the drug many many times over. >> reporter: memorial sloan kettery's dr. peter bach says the market is completely broken. what is it that drives the price of cancer drugs then? >> essentially companies set the prices as high as they think they can get away with. they say it's the cost of research or something like that. but there's no evidence of that. >> reporter: in the last five years, there have been at least 15 new cancer drugs that cost more than $10,000 a month. but unlike gleevec, these drugs may only extend life by an average of months, not years. bach says drug prices should be tied to performance. >> the prices have nothing do with value so they're hard to explain. they're hard to justify. >> reporter: how many programs have you been
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on? almost every month for four years, lauren's begged her church charities, even novartis to help her pay for gleevec. >> i sent a picture of her so they can see it's not just me, it's her. >> reporter: last month, novartis agreed to help. lauren will pay just $10 a month but will need to reapply every year for the rest of her life. in a statement, novartis says profits pay for research which has led to the approval of gleevec for five more rare cancers. the majority of patients it says pay less than $100 out of pocket per month. it offers an extensive assistance program for those who can't afford the medicines like lauren. >> to me that's you playing god. you're getting to pick and choose who's living and who's dying all because of a buck. >> reporter: the high cost of life that for lauren and so many others is priceless. anne thompson nbc news louisville kentucky. tomorrow our series continues with the unique way cancer patients are raising money to pay their bills. back in a moment with facebook's sheryl sandberg opening up
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los angeles just became the largest city in the nation to raise the minimum wage to $15. the city council voted 13-1 to hike the minimum wage by the year 2020. cities like seattle and san francisco have already voted to raise their minimum wages to $15. one of the most prominent businesswomen in the world is opening up about her personal tragedy. facebook's sheryl sandberg posted a heartbreaking message today that social media site about the sudden death of her husband about a month ago. we have more on sandberg's struggle to carry on. >> reporter: it went viral almost immediately after it was posted. facebook's sheryl sandberg thanked friends today for helping her pull through the last 30 days mourning the loss of her husband, david goldberg. the coo and mother two of shared what she learned about the
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grieving process. "i think i got this all wrong before. i tried to assure people that it would be okay thinking that hope was the most comforting thing i could offer." she went on to say, "real empathy is sometimes not insisting that it will be okay but acknowledging that it is not. when people say to me you and your children. find happiness again, my heart tells me, yes, i believe that. but i know i will never feel pure joy again. those who have said "you will find a new normal but tell never be as good," comfort me more because they know and speak the truth. these ends with a touching promise to her late husband to carry on for his sake and their children's and signs off, "i love you, dave." nbc news. >> powerful and touching message. 50 years ago today, this country stepped into a new era. america's very first walk in space. astronaut ed white performed an eva, that's extra vehicular
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activity staying outside his orbiting gemini 4 capsule for 20 minutes, getting an amazing view and providing unforgettable images. ed white died a year and a half later in the "apollo 1" fire but his space walk helped pave the way for americans to walk on the moon. when we come back, why so many couples are traveling hours just to send their mail. [sfx: bell] [burke] it's easy to buy insurance and forget about it. but the more you learn about your coverage, the more gaps you may find. [burke] like how you thought you were covered for this... [man] it's a profound statement. [burke] but you're not even covered for this... [man] it's a profound statement. [burke] or how you may be covered for this... [burke] but not for something like this... [burke] talk to farmers and see what gaps could be hiding in your coverage. [sfx: yeti noise] ♪ we are farmers bum - pa - dum bum - bum - bum - bum ♪ introducing the first ever gummy multivitamin from centrum. a complete, and tasty new way to support... your energy... immunity...
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finally tonight, it's june. that means it's wedding season. a lot of planning goes into that perfect day which brings some couples flocking to an unusually named town in the pacific northwest to get the one thing missing from their invitations. our hally jackson explains. >> reporter: in a building the size of a postage stamp in a town not much bigger -- >> this is i think the only business here. >> reporter: -- business is booming at the third smallest post office in america. >> wedding invitations? >> yes. yes. we do. >> reporter: after all, it's wedding season and this is bridal veil. home to a particular postmark coveted by couples like christine and tyler who drove two hours to get two doves and two hearts on their wedding
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invitations. >> everybody pays attention to the little details. they kind of push them over the edge and make them that much more meaningful i think. >> reporter: soon-to-be brides also flock post offices in romance, arkansas bliss, new york and loveland colorado. but at bridal veil bridal mail is 95% of its business. would this post office exist if it weren't for the -- for the brides? >> i don't think so. luckily, there are plenty of brides. there is no shortage of brides, trust me. >> reporter: nearly 200,000 invitations a year come from as far as south korea and australia. >> they want the fairytale, and i want to be a part of that fairytale in a positive way. >> reporter: sure, it's not the biggest part of the wedding day -- what are you most looking forward to? >> marrying the woman of my dreams. >> reporter: good answer. >> yeah. >> reporter: >> thanks for calling -- >> reporter: as any married couple knows, it's the little things that can mean the most. signed sealed and
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delivered with love. >> that's good right there. >> reporter: nbc news bridal veil, organization. we'll be watching the mail for our invite. that will do it for us on this wednesday night. i'm lester holt. for all of us at nbc news, thank you for watching, and good night. caitlyn jenner's docuseries. >> i'm the new normal. >> why she could crush the kardashians with a $500 million payday now on "extra."
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>> new video caitlyn jenner looking at her new face in the mirror. >> you start learning the pressure that women are under. >> why jenner's older kids won't go on camera for "i am cate" and the endorsement deals already pouring in. plus, kim goes country. our new interview in nashville. is she pregnant with twins? >> yeah we always say what do we do p next season? the duggars break their silence to fox's megan kelly. megyn kelly revealing her plans for the tv tell-all. >> plus what's been shot that may never see air. new empire secrets and spoilers. what terrence and taraji just let spill. >> don't judge me. plus whys saying this about michael strahan. >> he'll have nightmare bz ripping his groin. >> now on "extra" at universal
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