comparemela.com



kony, the man who has kidnapped tens of thousands of young african children. tonight we're asking her what she thinks of the new documentary that's exploded on the internet. it looks to make the warlord so famous that he gets captured. and like music? movies? how about the newest technology? it all comes together as south by southwest. this hour right here on cnn. hello, everyone, i'm don lemon. we're going to start with this in the cnn newsroom. a washington state man in custody tonight. and a community is breathing a sigh of relief after a courthouse shooting and stabbing. 34-year-old steven kravitz surrendered this afternoon without incident. an unlikely source led deputies to the suspect. kravitz's mother called police after seeing media reports. he was arrested at her house which was surrounded by s.w.a.t. teams including a rooftop sniper. neighbors are relieved tonight. >> i was terrified just because it's like all these guys have big guns. i don't know what's going on. >> you never really know who's next door especially when they're kind of a reclus. >> it happened after police say he approached inside the courthouse. he then allegedly stabbed the deputy, shot her with her own gun and then stabbed a judge who ran to the deputy's aid before escaping through the door of the courthouse. >> when i went to assist the deputy, he had a weapon in his hand, a knife or something. and he was stabbing at her. >> he got away from the deputy and went pop, pop. and turned and looked at me, and then he went out of the courthouse with the gun in his hand. >> the deputy and the judge are okay. angry protesters gathered outside the stanford, florida, police headquarters today demanding answers in the death of a teenage boy. they're calling on the police chief to make an arrest in connection with his death. it's been two weeks since 17-year-old trevon martin was shot and killed by a neighborhood watch captain. earlier i asked attorney holly hughes about what charges the shooter could face if he's arrested. >> i don't understand why he's not facing them already. >> really? >> because what we're talking about, he's an unarmed young man. so how in the world did you shoot him? that is not equal force. that is not self-defense because you can't -- you know, if somebody punches you, you can't take out an uzi and cut him in half, okay? it has to be equal force in order to be self-defense. so when we're talking about an unarmed young man, i'm surprised we haven't seen charges yet. but now that we are bringing light to the story, you know, you and i are talking about it here on cnn, the world is going to be talking about it, hopefully we will see something done because he was advised, don't interfere with this young man. >> that was holly hughes. the police chief insists his department is conducting a full investigation and will release information to the state attorney's office soon. flight attendants are supposed to be a source of calm. but yesterday one of them triggered chaos on board an american airlines plane that was about to take off from dallas, texas. i want you to listen to what passengers heard from her. >> we're going to crash! we're going to crash! >> well, passengers say the flight attendant went on a rant over the p.a., mentioning crashing several times and talked about problems with her labor union. this happened friday on flight 2332 to chicago. notice the man in blue, in the blue cap. connor ford was one of the handful of people, fellow passengers and crew, who restrained the flight attendant before officers took her away. and i spoke with him earlier tonight. >> you heard her escalate the conversation until eventually she started saying "the plane is going to crash." "the pilot's not listening." i had two boys sitting across the aisle from me who started screaming and were saying they wanted off the plane. the plane was going to crash. so the second time when she said "crash" is when, you know, i noticed the pushing in the ghaly with the flight attendant and a pilot and a passenger in first class. and i saw them shove her back from the cockpit. and so that's when i got out of my seat and went to go help. >> what made you go up front? what triggered you to act? >> i saw that they needed help and that nobody was really in control. there was no pilot that came over. you know, somebody had to take control. there was scared people around me. i saw that going to the front of the plane that it was completely open. you know, i knew i could help. so i just got out of my seat and ran to the front and, you know, helped the other passengers and flight attendants, you know, help the lady who was having a very bad day. >> what did you do to help restrain her? >> i came around, they shoved her, i caught her in my arms. i placed my arm around her upper chest and subdued one of her arms and then put her in an open seat that was right on the right of me. >> okay. >> and then just held her down. >> okay. rob, hold on. can we re-rack that tape and listen to it? because she's screaming the entire town. because i want our viewers to hear it. we're going to be quiet, connor, and then i just want to hear. >> we're going to crash! it's going to crash! >> so it seems like she stopped, she screams, and then she stops and then she's screaming more. did she say anything as you guys were trying to hold her down? >> [ bleep ]. >> she did. we tried to talk with her to calm her down. it really wasn't working. she was talking about terrorists and how she hopes the plane blows up. you know, the screams sound really bad, but at that point we did have her controlled. you know, i was really just hoping that we could get back and give her some medical attention, you know. she did say she was with the airlines for over 20 years. you know, obviously, she did something well for 20 years to keep her job. you know. but definitely the screams did scare a lot of people. >> what do you make of it? what's the takeaway for viewers and for passengers, especially after 9/11, people are very afraid to fly, including i am one of them. i have to admit that. >> you know, i mean, the takeaway is that, you know, thank the people for taking the footage so we can learn from what happened. you know, having that footage is valuable to us where we could learn from, you know, what happened that friday morning. you know, all the individuals that called 9/11, you know, the response time on the tarmac. you know, and then just not just myself, but all the passengers did help, and we did rally around one another and, you know, we were able to take a bad situation and keep it, you know, pretty minimal, you know, once we pulled the plane over. >> conner ford, appreciate it. we want to say the flight attendant went to the hospital for evaluation, not facing any criminal charges. but conner, thank you. we're glad that you and everyone is okay from that plane. i think it bears repeating, officers took the flight attendant to the hospital for evaluation and, again, no criminal charges will be filed against her. politics now. rick santorum picked up a win in the kansas caucuses today, adding to his three victories on super tuesday. he got 51% of the votes in a state largely abandoned by the romney and gingrich campaigns. still, kansas played to santorum's strengths. political reporter shannon travis is in overland park, kansas, tonight. >> reporter: don, a win is a win, but let's talk about how senator santorum pulled it out here in kansas. i was at a caucus site earlier today speaking with some different voters. obviously, they want to oust president obama. this was a republican-only caucus, and they also talked about their concerns about the economy. but another thing keen in their minds were social issues, issues that senator santorum really pushes on the campaign trail. another thing, some of the voters were undecided on who to caucus for, but they felt like santorum has the passion that they want out of a presidential candidate. one other thing of note, ron paul attended the caucus site i was at earlier, and i caught up with him. even though he didn't pull it out, he talked about his strategy amassing delegates. take a listen at this. >> well, it's everybody's race to win. i'm sure even though romney's not here, he's always hoping for the best, and i think we all do that. i never think it's do or die for anything. everybody's still in the race. there's no declared winner. so i think we're all going to keep doing what we're doing, maximizing our chances to get more delegates. and we feel good about that. >> reporter: obviously, next up for all of the candidates, tuesday with two important primaries in alabama and mississippi. don? >> shannon, thank you very much. appreciate that. after wrapping up his win in kansas, santorum moved on to campaign in missouri. a happy man. >> that was a great win. awesome win. feeling great. >> so santorum wins kansas, but it wasn't a shutout today. mitt romney won caucuses in guam, a u.s. territory, and the northern mariana islands, a u.s. commonwealth like puerto rico. he picks up 18 more delegates. still no official winner in the virgin islands. nefrl nevertheless, three delegates are already supporting him. it is a viral video with a message. you may have seen the kony 2012 short film. it is a campaign to expose and help track down a notorious ugandan warlord. if you haven't heard about it, we've got you covered here. [ man ] predicting the future is hard. but i have this new smartphone. and now i can see everything more clearly. ♪ i can organize the analysis. sort through all the data. maybe even rattle some cages. i predict that i'm going to like the future. because the future is where i'll be serving up humble pie. a la mode. [ male announcer ] at&t introduces the samsung galaxy note. phone. tablet. both. ♪ but when she got asthma, all i could do was worry ! specialists, lots of doctors, lots of advice... and my hands were full. i couldn't sort through it all. with unitedhealthcare, it's different. we have access to great specialists, and our pediatrician gets all the information. everyone works as a team. and i only need to talk to one person about her care. we're more than 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. imagine if you could always see life [music] in the best light. every time of day. outdoors, or in. transitions® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it is meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. experience life well lit, ask for transitions adaptive lenses. but we couldn't simply repeat history. we had to create it. introducing the 2013 lexus gs, with leading-edge safety technology, like available blind spot monitor... [ tires screech ] ...night view... and heads-up display. [ engine revving ] the all-new 2013 lexus gs. there's no going back. [ male announcer ] engine light on? come to meineke now for a free code scan read and you'll say...my money. my choice. my meineke. a push for peace in syria looks like it's going nowhere. former u.n. chief kofi annan met with syria's president today. but bashar al assad flat out refuses to consider talks with the opposition until the violence is over. he insists his forces are fighting armed terrorists. the two sides are expected to meet again tomorrow. while annan pushes the president to give aid groups access to hard-hit towns, the bloodshed goes on with at least 63 people killed today. tanks prowled the streets in the north, and activists report that heavy shelling is happening in that city. he tells cnn that security forces are searching house to house for members of the opposition. anyone caught faces an ugly fate. like this man. clearly wounded, bleeding heavily and dragged by soldiers who load him into a military truck. cnn can't confirm the authenticity of this video or the fate of the man. the person who posted this online said it was evidence of the government conducting mass arrests. each town hopes to avoid the fate of homs. in that city they take part in suicide runs, driving supplies across open spaces, dodging sniper fire. sometimes they make it. other times the drivers aren't so lucky. security forces crushed the resistance in that town, but the violence isn't over. cnn's arwa damon and her team were inside the besieged syrian city of homs, one of the most dangerous places in syria right now. join us sunday night as she gives us an eye-opening firsthand account. a cnn special, "72 hours under fire." tomorrow night, 8:00 p.m. eastern only here on cnn. kony 2012. it's been hard to turn on the tv or logon to facebook or twitter or your e-mail and not hear about ugandan warlord joseph kony. most had never heard of him. now millions of people do know the name thanks to the video posted on youtube this week. and as miguel marquez reports, that was the plan. >> reporter: it is a 30-minute video. its hope, to change the world. >> in order for it to work, you have to pay attention. >> reporter: with the narrator and filmmaker want you to pay attention to is this man, joseph kony. he leads the lord's resistance army, and his goal is to overthrow the ugandan government. in his 26-year campaign, kony has kidnapped more than 65,000 boys and girls, kids, forcing them to maim their fellow villagers and sometimes to prove their loyalty to kony, kill their own families. kony says he's doing it all in the name of god, but the children's stories paint a picture of hell on earth. cnn has covered it since the beginning. >> translator: we were forced to bite him with our bare teeth as he screamed in pain. we continued biting until he was dead. >> reporter: russell and his charity, invisible children, are on a mission because of a promise he made to a 12-year-old boy in 2003. jacob was kidnapped by the lord's resistance army. his brother killed by it. >> reporter: after spending a few weeks with jacob, he told me something i would never forget. >> he gets better when you kill us. you kill as you kill as. for us, we don't want now to stay. >> you don't want to stay on earth? >> we are only two, no one is taking care of us. we are not going to school. >> you would rather die than stay on earth? >> yes. >> now, even now? >> even now. how are we going to stay in our future? >> reporter: he told me more about his brother. and what he would say to him if he were still alive. >> i love you, but now i miss you. so it is better when we meet. we are not going to meet, but we may meet in heaven. you see? so it is better. i will not talk. it will start something. because if i saw my brother once again, i don't -- >> a mission to stop this brutal warlord has gone viral. after the break, we'll meet a woman who survived joseph kony's terror, and we'll hear what she thinks is missing from this campaign. an emotional interview coming up. oh! [ baby crying ] ♪ what started as a whisper ♪ every day, millions of people choose to do the right thing. ♪ slowly turned to a scream ♪ there's an insurance company that does that, too. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? ♪ amen, omen chocolate lemonade ? susie's lemonade... the movie. or... we make it pink ! with these 4g lte tablets, you can do business at lightning-fast speeds. we'll take all the strawberries, dave. you got it, kid. we have a winner. we're definitely gonna need another one. small businesses that want to grow use 4g lte technology from verizon. i wonder how she does it. that's why she's the boss. because the small business with the best technology rules. contact the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 1-800-974-6006. (car horn) paying with your smartphone instead of cash... (phone rings) that's a step forward. with chase quickpay, you can send money directly to anyone's checking account. i guess he's a kicker... again, again! oh, no you don't! take a step forward and chase what matters. he was abducted by joseph kony's lord's resistance army when she was just 9 years old. four years later, she escaped, but not before an explosion blew off part of her face while in captivity. she is now 22, and she's seen kony 2012, that film. earlier she said to me, maybe the idea of making kony famous is not the best way to get this story out. >> i would be glad to see the faces of the children who are being abducted to make those kids become well known to the people around the world. not the face of joseph kony because joseph kony, he is the one who abducted those young kids. and i feel like it would be better to show the faces of the children. it's better than joseph kony himself. >> mm-hmm. evelyn, the kony 2012 nimr mafis say we should support the army to get kony and military strategy, right? you were there. do you believe that this is the best way to apprehend or kill him? i understand that you say we should be showing the children, but do you think this is the best strategy to apprehend him? >> i think there's no other way we can find a solution to figure that one out, trying to catch joseph kony. i have a very strong opinion about this. and i do not agree with this one because joseph kony is not in there in the bush right now by himself. he has 1,000 young kids surrounding him. and in order to do that, we need to look at a way to put a plan, a structure, to protect those kids if they want to catch joseph kony. >> as a survivor of joseph kony, and i'm not sure if you've spoken to any other survivors since this film has been out, what sort of memories and what sort of feelings does all of this stir for you when you see it, you know, on social media and when you see the kony 2012 film and so much attention being paid to what happened? >> i feel, in my point of view, i feel really hurt because -- i don't know. it's not easy to be a survivor, but i'm glad i was able to escape. maybe the purpose is why i am sitting here. it's very painful for me to hear that joseph kony right now in the united states is a celebrity. and i ask myself what is celebrity? the kids are the ones who are supposed to be the celebrity because they've been through a lot with all kinds of tragedies he has put in these kids' life, and you traumatized them, and they don't know what to do for their life. and these kids are the ones who are supposed to be spread around the world. they're the ones who have supposed to be the celebrity because they lived their life every single day. and i am not happy that just showing the face of joseph kony, the guy committing all of these atrocities on young people like me life. i do not agree with any of this in 2012. >> you can see my entire interview with that amazing woman, evelyn apoko, on our blog, cnn.com/don. go to cnn.com/don. tomorrow night, sunday night, 7:00 p.m. eastern, jason russell, the co-founder of invisible children and the filmmaker behind the "kony 2012" documentary will join us live here on cnn to talk about the film, the motivation behind it, the social media phenomenon it has created and the controversy surrounding it tomorrow night, sunday night, 7:00 eastern. again right here on cnn. you know, it is unthinkable, tens of thousands of people forced to be sterilized right here in the united states, and it was legal. one victim is speaking out. >> what really t'ed me off was my last one now. >> there will be no more follets. >> now he's demanding more than an an apology. his story straight ahead. it's the tastiest, the sweetest, the freshest. nobody can ever get enough. [ male announcer ] it's lobsterfest at red lobster, the one time of year you can savor 12 exciting lobster entrees like lobster lover's dream or new maine lobster and shrimp trio. [ laura ] hot, right out of the shell. i love lobster. i'm laura mclennan from spruce head, maine, and i sea food differently. ♪ ♪ and the flowers and the trees all laugh when you walk by ♪ ♪ and the neighbors' kids... what does being true to yourself have to do with being healthy? everything. ♪ but you're not ♪ you're the one ♪ one, one, one, one, one ♪ the one ♪ one, one, one, one, one ♪ the one ♪ one, one, one... let me get that door for you... [ man ] i loved my first car... sometimes the door gets stuck... oh sure. ooh! [ man ] ...and then, i didn't. um... [ sighs ] [ man ] so, i got a car i can love a really, really long time. [ male announcer ] for the road ahead, the all-new subaru impreza. ♪ experience love that lasts. it is a chilling part of american history that most of us have never heard about. tens of thousands of american citizens forcibly sterilized and even more shocking, it happened in more than half the states in america. it was part of eugenics, the belief that it's possible to improve humans by weeding out imbeciles and degenerates. now one man is looking for more than an apology. cnn's senior medical correspondent, elizabeth cohen, reports. >> reporter: 1945. california's sonoma state home. charlie follet, a 14-year-old ward, is singing in a field when he's ordered inside. >> first he shot me with some kind of medicine. supposed to deaden the nerve. then the next thing i heard was snip, snip. and that was it. >> reporter: did they tell you what they were doing to you? >> no. >> reporter: they didn't have to tell him. he knew. a sterilization by force. how did you know what it was? >> well, because there's been others in there that had it before me. >> reporter: the other boys at the home had warned him how much it would hurt. >> well, when they done this side here, it seemed like they were pulling the whole insides out. >> reporter: the 1930s through the 1950s were the heyday of the y movement in the united states. the goal, to rid the country of the feeble-minded, defectives. and it wasn't some fringe or secretive program. it was well known and paid for by the states where it was practiced. entire families labeled schiffless, degenerates, 60,000 sterilized. some living at home. others like follett in state institutions. his parents were alcoholics and couldn't care for him and his sisters. 32 states had programs, but california was in a league of its own. the golden state sterilized 20,000 people, more than twice as many as the next state, virginia, and a full third of the nation's total. it was led by california's elite including at the time the president of stanford university and the publisher of "the los angeles times." the efficiency of california's program didn't go unnoticed. in the 1930, the nazi group asked for advice, and californians were only too happy to help. they sent this book to the nazis. >> yes, they did. >> reporter: so the nazis used this book as a model for their program? >> absolutely. >> germany used california's program as its chief example that this was a working successful policy. >> reporter: california, the leader in forced sterilizations, but decades later, not a leader in making amends to victims. a few hundred survivors are still alive by one scholar's estimate, but the state has offered no reparations. follett's tried for years but says he can't even bet get a politician to talk to him, not even his own state representative who also refused a request for interview. his friend, a nursing student, shows me letters he's written to no avail on folett's behalf. do you think the state of california wants to forget it ever happened? >> honestly, i hate to sound so cynical, i think they're just waiting for the victims to die and forget this whole thing ever happened. >> reporter: compare that chilly response to the state of north carolina. >> the state of north carolina is a partner with you in trying to bring awareness. >> reporter: governor bev perdue has invited sterilization victims to the capitol, heard her stories, apologized personally, set up a task force to help them, and recommended that each victim receive $50,000 in reparations. in california, just a statement of apology by governor gray davis in 2003 saying, in part, "it was a sad and regrettable chapter in the state's history, and it is one that must never be repeated again." an apology from the governor. is that enough? >> no. no. it's a start. but it's only a start. these people deserve to be compensated just like any other victim that has had their rights violated. >> reporter: keeping them honest, i went to california to get some answers from the state's leaders. we've been calling and e-mailing your office for a long time now. governor edmond brown wouldn't talk to us but said he regretted what happened. we asked him again his policy on reparations. his policy told us, "we have nothing more to add." we sought out another politician, assembly speaker john perez. so can we come on in and speak to him? >> you know, he's actually tied up with meetings right now. >> reporter: his spokesman, john vigna. >> this is a subject i'm just learning about, i'm looking into it. >> reporter: another spokesman, andrew lamar. 2003. why hasn't anything happened since then? >> that's a good question. >> reporter: follett now has lung cancer and just celebrated his birthday in the hospital. he says he'd use any money he got to buy a place of his own and live out his last few years independently. tragically aware of the policy worked exactly as intended. he has no children. >> what really t'ed me off was that they killed my last -- my last day now. >> reporter: there will be no folletts. >> if i should dpi tomorrow, everything's died. >> reporter: whether he and other victims will get justice or just die away is up to politicians in california. >> elizabeth cohen is here now. tell me more about the people behind this forced sterilization movement. >> don, to me this is one of the most distressing parts to the story is the people who led this movement were the best and the brightest, the ee lelite of the elite. i talked about the attorney general for california, professors, i mean, people who should have known better were the ones who were saying, let's sterilize these undesirables. >> part of it was called the better baby movement. what is that? >> it had two parts, one was to sterilize people you thought were undesirable. the other was to encourage people who you thought were great examples of what every family should look like, to encourage them to have more children. so they would have better baby contests where people would bring in their children, and they would say, oh, you win this contest. and we think you should be having more children to populate the world. >> oh, my goodness. it's just odd to think that this even goes on. >> well, it went on, but it went on pretty recently. you know, this isn't hundreds of years ago. >> right. >> this isn't another country. this is our country relatively recently. >> charlie. what's next for charlie? >> i think charlie feels a bit like he has reached the end of the road because he has sent letters to the governor, to the attorney general, to his own state assemblyman and senator. and he is not getting anywhere. i mean, not only are they not giving him money, they're not even talking to him. you know, he's 82 years old. he has lung cancer. i think he's sort of wondering if there's any other place for him to turn. >> i have to ask you because i know you're a mom. we were just talking about your kids. as a mom, do you think your kids, you know they're going to grow up to be different, and no one is perfect. did this story have an effect on you as a parent? >> you know, it definitely had an effect on me as i think what used to be acceptable for people to do to other people's children. you know, it used to be acceptable to look at other people's children and say i don't want them to reproduce. we're going to make sure they get sterilized. it definitely had an effect on me in that way. >> thank you. appreciate it. good story. check out this video for you. it is unbelievable. this is one of those deadly tornadoes rip ago cross the u.s. last week. we'll show you more in just two minutes. back then, he had something more important to do. he wasn't focused on his future but fortunately, somebody else was. at usaa we provide retirement planning for our military, veterans and their families. now more than ever, it's important to get financial advice from people who share your military values. call now for our free guide and tips on planning for your retirement this tax season. i want you to check out this video. it's from kentucky. surveillance images from last week's violent ef-3 tornado that ripped through morgan county. you see the storm approaching. the winds pick up. then as it hits, you can see debrises and roofs ripped from houses. a pharmacist from inside the store described it as surrounding not like a freight train but 100 trains all at once. pro-labor groups in madison, wisconsin, rallied at the state capitol today in what they call a reclaim wisconsin march. thousands gathered to listen to speakers urging them to support efforts to recall governor scott walker. the rally came one year after the state government passed a controversial measure restricting collective bargaining rights. a spokesman for wisconsin's republican party described the rally as a misinformation tour by liberal union activists. mississippi's attorney general says he is looking into his options after losing his legal battle over the state's recent controversial pardons. on thursday the state supreme court upheld the pardons of more than 200 convicts including four convicted killers granted by former governor haley barbour as he was leaving office. jim hood who had challenged the pardons expressed sympathy for the prisoners' victims. >> i feel for them. having had a first cousin murdered in 1976 and gone through a trial and understanding how victims feel, you know, i think they've been victimized twice. and the criminal justice system has let them down. >> barbour says his decisions were based on what he called repentance, rehabilitation and redemption. tomorrow marks the one-year anniversary of the 9.0 magnitude earthquake that struck japan. it triggered a massive tsunami that killed nearly 16,000 people. a year later, more than 3,100 people are still missing. with so many victims burying the dead became an overwhelming challenge for survivors. funerals were rushed. the time for grieving was postponed. our reporter met one family trying to honor their son one year after his death. >> reporter: amid the terror of the tsunami, the cries of children mourning as a desperate family drove their dead son to an evacuation center for an impromptu funeral at this car. the 16-year-old was under this blanket. his body pulled from the wreckage of his grandparents' home, as it was swept from the home. "don't give up hope," he says. "keep living for my son." this was the best a grieving father could do to honor his son as the thousands of victims overwhelm the region. it has taken an entire year. hiroki's father is now finally giving the son the ceremony he never got. survivors gathered at this buddhist temple. time has passed. the pain has not. "he was just 16," his father tells me. "he'd be 17 today." it was a chaotic time. "it was. i wasn't sure we could hold a ceremony at the time. it was the last time he would ever see his friends. i wanted to give him that farewell." his father says his son was a sweet boy, always smiling and laughing. he loved soccer and his friends. most of all, he loved the coastal city that now lies in ruin. the total number of people killed or missing stands at just under 20,000, only about 5% of those are children. but for the parents, it is the cruelest part of this disaster. for burying your child defies the natural order. it's already been one year, says hiroki's father. i still don't know what to say or how to describe how i feel. hiroki's family move add way from this city five years ago, but the boy wanted to spend the rest of his childhood here, so he moved in with his grand parents. he loved it, which is why they're planning on burying his ashes here. although the house and town are gone, says hiroki's father, we feel like we can see him here. you still feel his spirit here? "i feel his spirit is always here." for me, says hiroki's father, that day one year ago never stopped. i feel it always. kyung lah, cnn, japan. tonight at midnight eastern, tune in for live coverage of a ceremony taking place in japan to mark this tragedy. that's midnight eastern right here on cnn. a woman is found dead in her car. police make an arrest, but now key evidence in the case is missing. imagine if you could always see life [music] in the best light. every time of day. outdoors, or in. transitions® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it is meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. experience life well lit, ask for transitions adaptive lenses. will be giving away passafree copies of the alcoholism & addiction cure. to get yours, go to ssagesmalibubook.com. a murder mystery is playing out in the high-end community of grosse point park, michigan. a woman is dead and the man accused of her murder says her husband asked him to kill her. but now key evidence from the case is missing. cnn's ted rowlands is following the story for us. >> i think if i would have had more information, maybe, things would have changed. >> reporter: standing in his front yard, steve virgona broke down talking about the murder of jane beshara. >> sorry. but i want justice served. >> reporter: she was found strangled to death in her abandoned mercedes on january 25th. virgona said his frand, joseph, a handyman came to him after the murder. >> he was anxious and crying about it and everything. but sometimes it's a situation you just can't get out of. you've got to make the right choice. >> reporter: virgona says the choice was to tell police what happened, that gentz killed her in her garage, that her husband, bob, convinced him to do it. >> he was manipulated. >> he was manipulated. >> reporter: he says he went with gentz to turn himself in february 23rd, but after hearing his story, police let gentz go. gentz who virgona and others say has a low i.q. was arrested a month later for murder and conspiracy to commit murder. he's currently undergoing a mental evaluation. her husband remains free and maintains his innocence. >> we have cooperated with law enforcement agencies and will continue to do so. >> reporter: investigators won't comment on the case except to say that the investigation continues, meaning bashara could still be arrested. news that bob not only has a girlfriend but also owns an s&m dungeon below this storefront shocked the ritzy community of grosse pointe park where they lived. the attorney thinks bashara's private life has unfairly clouded the investigation. >> it appears that things such as that, the s&m and the rest of it, things that around admissible in a courtroom are what caused them to zero in on bob. >> reporter: the investigation may have hit a big of a snag. the clothes that jane bashara was wearing when she was found appear to be missing. according to the detroit police department, they sent the clothes to the state crime lab. according to the state crime lab, they never received them. ted rowlands, cnn, grosse pointe, michigan. it's one of the largest technology festivals in the world. coming up, we head to texas for a south by southwest for a little couch surfing. but first -- we've all seen the destruction left by last week's rash of deadly tornadoes, but amid the devastation, a cnn hero is hard at work, offering free recovery assistance to strangers in need. cnn's rob marciano caught up with 2008 hero tad agolia in the hills of kentucky. >> take it away from us, lord. take it, lord. >> reporter: as the fierce storms tore through the midwest and south last weekend, taking 40 lives, emergency recovery teams scrambled to respond to devastated communities across ten states. >> keep pushing it forward. >> reporter: among the relief workers headed into the destruction zone was cnn hero tad agolia and his team. >> let's get this debris cleared enough to get the claw in here. we got here just a few hours after the tornado struck this community. we've cleared the road. we've provided the light towers. we powered up the grocery store. we powered up the gas station to provide the essentials that this community needs. >> reporter: since 2007, agolia's team has crisscrossed the country providing recovery assistance to thousands of people at 40 zodisaster sites f free. this week, they've worked tirelessly for days, restoring services and clearing tons of debris. >> steve, you can grab the claw, actually cut roof right in half. it's very hard for traditional equipment without the claws to actually grab this debris. that's why you need specialty equipment like this. >> reporter: what do you do with it? >> we remove it from the community, but time is of the essence. there's a lot of people that want to get back in here. they're looking for anything they can salvage. >> reporter: why do you do this? why did you choose this road? >> when i'm watching those supercells go right over these small communities, i want to be there to help. >> reporter: we'll let you get to work. you do good stuff. >> thank you. >> reporter: thanks, tad. >> tad agolia, great guy. remember, nominations for cnn heroes are open. and all of our heroes are chosen from people you tell us about. nominate someone who is making a difference in their community. go to cnnheroes.com. your nomination could help them help others. ♪ [ man ] hmm. a lot can happen in two hundred thousand miles... ♪ are you guys okay? yeah. you know...he's got your smile. ♪ [ man ] i had a great time. thank you, it was really fun. yeah...that was...uh... ♪ [ crash ] ♪ i'm so sorry... how did you not see me? i was just sitting at this stop sign! i'm going to write down my number, but don't use it. [ laughs ] alright, bye. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] for the road ahead, the all-new subaru impreza®. experience love that lasts. ♪ not financially. so we switched to the bargain detergent but i found myself using three times more than you're supposed to and the clothes still weren't as clean as with tide. so we're back to tide. they're cuter in clean clothes. thanks, honey. yeah. you suck at folding. [ laughs ] [ female announcer ] just one dose of tide original liquid helps remove food stains better than an entire 40 load bottle of the leading liquid bargain brand. that's my tide. what's yours? (car horn) paying with your smartphone instead of cash... (phone rings) that's a step forward. with chase quickpay, you can send money directly to anyone's checking account. i guess he's a kicker... again, again! oh, no you don't! take a step forward and chase what matters. well, the city of austin, texas, overrun right now by music lovers, film lovers, tech nerds. it's the kind of scene where a flash mob paying tribute to the video game "angry birds" would break out. ♪ love the angry birds. yes, that is the magic of sxsw. and very lucky brooke baldwin is at the annual festival getting her nerd on. brooke, i want you to fill me in on the sensation from sxsw. >> reporter: so we met this guy earlier. he has this really cool app. and so the whole idea is, you ever hear of couch surfing? let's say you don't quite have enough money. you don't want to buy a hotel room. you're kind of skeeved out of the idea of staying in a stranger's home. there they can see if you're anemic, if you have a.d.d., if somebody has an odd tick. whatever it may be. they'll set you up with a couch surfer spot. let's see. if you wanted to come, you don't have the money for a hotel, you want to crash on someone's sofa, but you're scared of the idea, how can you help me find a couch in >> if i wanted to get on your sofa for south by southwest, you would be able to connect to your facebook on the right site, and it would say jack is a slob like you're a slob. so you guys are get along fine. but if you are very anal retentative and i'm a slob, you don't want me on that sofa. >> reporter: for people who have never been here, just a couple words, how do you sum it up? >> a circus. >> reporter: totally. >> total a circus. >> reporter: totally. all right. thank you. >> thank you. >> south by southwest. runs through tuesday. check out cnn.com/sxsw. sxsw for all the ramg ge in aus. a quick reminder, ncaa, march madness almost here. selection sunday is tomorrow. don't forget. you can test your bracket skills in the official ncaa march madness bracket challenge game. just go to cnn.com/brackets and join the cnn group, see if you can pick the ncaa brackets better than i can. i'm sure you can. straight ahead, the manhunt is over for a man who allegedly shot and stabbed a deputy, then attacked a judge. we'll tell you how police caught him. [ merv ] thanks, other merv. mr. clean magic eraser extra power was three times faster on permanent marker. elsewhere against dirt, it was a sweep, with scuffed sports equipment... had it coming. grungy phones... oh! super dirty! and grimy car rims... wow! that really works! ...all taking losses. it looks like mr. clean has won everything. the cleaning games are finished? and so are we. okay, but i just took a mortgage out on the cabinet. [ male announcer ] clean more, work less, with the mr. clean magic eraser extra power. make that new stouffer's steam meal so tasty. actually, the milk from my farm makes it so creamy, right dad. ah, but my carrots have that crunch. it's my milk in the rich sauce coating the chicken and the pasta. boys! don't you think stouffer's steam perfect bag should get some credit? my carrots. my milk. my carrots. my milk. [ female announcer ] new from stouffer's. farmers' harvest steam meals for one in the steam perfect bag seal in all the goodness. they taste so good, we'll bet the farm on it. nestle. good food, good life. carrots! creamy! the hyundai genesis. in a new, faster-acting formula. zero-to-sixty in less time than a porsche panamera s. the 429 horsepower genesis r-spec. from hyundai. but when she got asthma, all i could do was worry ! specialists, lots of doctors, lots of advice... and my hands were full. i couldn't sort through it all. with unitedhealthcare, it's different. we have access to great specialists, and our pediatrician gets all the information. everyone works as a team. and i only need to talk to one person about her care. we're more than 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. police say kravitz stabbed a deputy yesterday, shot her with her own gun and then stabbed a judge before escaping through the front of the courthouse. the judge and deputy are recovering. in politics, republican rick santorum won the caucuses in kansas today. mitt romney won guam and the northern mariana islands and also picked up delegates in the virg virgin islands. here's the latest delegate count. a candidate needs 1144 to earn the republican presidential no nation. tomorrow is the beginning of

Related Keywords

One ,Joseph Kony ,Plane ,Survivor ,Passenger ,Action ,Soldier ,Warlord ,Music ,Documentary ,Kidnapped Tens Of Thousands Young African Children ,Internet ,Cnn ,Everyone ,Technology ,Don T You Think Stouffer ,Movies ,South By Southwest ,Hello ,Community ,Relief ,Courthouse Shooting ,Breathing ,Afternoon ,Incident ,Cnn Newsroom ,Washington State Man In Custody ,34 ,House ,Swat ,Kravitz ,Media Reports ,Neighbors ,Mother ,Deputies ,Rooftop Sniper ,Police ,Led ,Suspect ,Courthouse ,Guys ,Door ,What S Going On ,Guns ,Reclus ,Deputy ,Judge ,Gun ,Who ,Aid ,Weapon ,Something ,Knife ,Hand ,Pop ,Stabbing ,Boy ,Death ,Police Chief ,Protesters ,Answers ,Arrest ,Connection ,Stanford ,Police Headquarters ,Florida ,Two ,Shooter ,Holly Hughes ,Captain ,Trevon Martin ,Neighborhood Watch ,17 ,World ,Somebody ,Self Defense ,Order ,Force ,Half ,Uzi ,It ,Story ,Charges ,Flight ,We Haven T ,Flight Attendants ,Information ,Oman ,Investigation ,Don T ,Department ,Source ,Calm ,State Attorney S Office ,Passengers ,Chaos ,Texas ,American Airlines ,Dallas ,Flight Attendant ,Times ,Labor Union ,Blue ,Rant ,Problems ,Connor Ford ,Chicago ,P A ,Blue Cap ,2332 ,People ,Officers ,Handful ,Conversation ,Crew ,Pilot ,Boys ,Listening ,Aisle ,Seat ,Help ,Crash ,Ghaly ,Class ,Cockpit ,Nobody ,Fact ,Front ,Control ,Lady ,Arms ,Arm ,Chest ,Town ,Viewers ,Right ,Rob Marciano ,Hold On ,Tape ,Anything ,Terrorists ,More ,Wasn T Working ,Bleep ,Attention ,Screams ,Point ,Lot ,Takeaway ,Airlines ,Scare ,Job ,20 ,Footage ,9 11 ,Tarmac ,Individuals ,Rally ,Situation ,Another ,Plane Over ,Conner Ford ,Evaluation ,Hospital ,Conner ,Win ,Rick Santorum ,Caucuses ,Politics ,Kansas ,Victories ,Votes ,Super Tuesday ,Three ,51 ,Shannon Travis ,Estate ,Mitt Romney ,Campaigns ,Overland Park ,Gingrich ,Strengths ,Thing ,Obama ,Voters ,Caucus ,Caucus Site ,Economy ,Concerns ,Republican ,Some ,Passion ,Issues ,Campaign Trail ,Caucus For ,Minds ,Ron Paul ,Delegates ,Strategy ,Candidate ,Listen ,Note ,Winner ,Everybody ,Race ,Best ,Doing ,Do Or Die ,Wall ,Reporter ,Mississippi ,Candidates ,Chances ,Primaries ,Alabama ,Campaign ,Wins ,It Wasn T A Shutout Today ,Missouri ,U S ,Commonwealth ,Territory ,Northern Mariana Islands ,Virgin Islands ,Guam ,Puerto Rico ,18 ,Video ,You Haven T ,Kony 2012 Short Film ,Ugandan ,Message ,Track ,Nefrl ,2012 ,Everything ,Smartphone ,Cages ,Analysis ,Data ,Announcer ,Phone ,Tablet ,Both ,Asthma ,La Mode ,Samsung Galaxy Note ,Humble Pie ,At T ,Advice ,Lots ,Specialists ,Doctors ,Pediatrician ,Unitedhealthcare ,Hands ,Life ,Team ,Person ,Care ,Numbers ,Health ,70 Million ,78000 ,Transitions ,Lenses ,Outdoors ,Amount ,Way ,Experience Life ,Better ,History ,Lexus Gs ,Safety ,Blind Spot Monitor ,Tires Screech ,Night View ,2013 ,Heads Up Display ,Engine Revving ,Choice ,Engine ,Code Scan ,Say My Money ,Meineke ,My Meineke ,Push ,Kofi Annan ,Peace ,Nowhere ,Syria ,U N ,Bashar Al Assad ,Forces ,Sides ,Opposition ,Aid Groups ,Violence ,Talks ,Activists ,Shelling ,Bloodshed ,Towns ,North ,Streets ,Tanks ,63 ,Anyone ,City ,Fate ,Soldiers ,Security Forces ,Members ,Cnn Can T ,Government ,Evidence ,Arrests ,Authenticity ,Military Truck ,Homs ,Part ,Resistance ,Suicide Runs ,Spaces ,Driving Supplies ,Drivers ,Violence Isn T Over ,Sniper Fire ,Arwa Damon ,Special ,Places ,Sunday Night ,Account ,72 ,Most ,Logon ,E Mail ,Tv ,Ugandan Warlord ,Twitter ,8 ,00 ,Plan ,Thanks ,Millions ,Name ,Youtube ,Miguel Marquez ,30 ,Filmmaker ,Work ,Hope ,Narrator ,Lord S Resistance Army ,Kids ,Defectives ,Villagers ,Boys And Girls ,Loyalty ,26 ,65000 ,Children ,Families ,Beginning ,Stories ,In The Name Of God ,Hell On Earth ,Translator ,Picture ,Teeth ,Mission ,Spain ,Invisible Children ,Charity ,Jason Russell ,Promise ,Jacob ,12 ,2003 ,Brother ,No One ,Stay ,Yes ,Earth ,I Love You ,Heaven ,Evelyn Apoko ,Terror ,Break ,Interview ,Baby ,Whisper ,Policy ,Insurance Company ,Scream ,Responsibility ,Omen Chocolate Lemonade ,Amen ,Liberty Mutual Insurance ,Strawberries ,Business ,Movie ,4g Lte Tablets ,Speeds ,Kid ,Susie S Lemonade ,Dave ,4 ,Businesses ,She S The Boss ,4g Lte Technology ,Small Business ,Customers ,Disabilities ,Technology Rules ,Verizon Center ,Verizon ,1 800 974 6006 ,6006 ,800 ,974 ,1 ,Car Horn ,Step ,Phone Rings ,Money ,Checking Account ,Cash ,Chase Quickpay ,Kicker ,Matters ,Chase ,Idea ,Face ,Captivity ,Explosion ,Making Kony Famous ,9 ,22 ,Four ,Faces ,Evelyn ,Nimr Mafis ,Military Strategy ,Army ,Solution ,Opinion ,Bush ,1000 ,Structure ,Survivors ,Stir ,Social Media ,Feelings ,Memories ,Film ,Point Of View ,Don T Know ,Celebrity ,Purpose ,Ones ,Kinds ,Tragedies ,Atrocities ,Tomorrow Night ,Eastern ,7 ,Controversy ,Co Founder ,Phenomenon ,Motivation ,Victim ,Tens Of Thousands ,Apology ,Follets ,Sweetest ,Freshest ,Tastiest ,Red Lobster ,Lobster ,Sea Food ,Spruce Head ,Shell ,Trio ,Shrimp ,Lobster Entrees ,Lobster Lover S Dream Or New Maine ,Laura Mclennan ,Maine ,Trees ,Laugh ,Flowers ,Car ,Um ,Love ,Subaru Impreza ,States ,Have ,Citizens ,Eugenics ,Elizabeth Cohen ,Degenerates ,Humans ,Belief ,Weeding Out Imbeciles ,1945 ,Charlie Follet ,California S ,Field ,Sonoma State Home ,Award ,14 ,Snip ,Kind ,Medicine ,Sterilization ,Nerve ,Others ,Home ,Country ,Side ,Insides ,Heyday Of The Y Movement ,1950 ,1930 ,Wasn T ,Program ,Fringe ,Follett ,Parents ,Programs ,Living ,Alcoholics ,State Institutions ,Sterilized ,Couldn T Care ,Schiffless ,Sisters ,32 ,60000 ,Nation ,Many ,League ,Third ,Virginia ,Elite Including ,20000 ,Nazi ,President ,The Los Angeles Times ,Publisher ,Efficiency ,Program Didn T Go Unnoticed ,Stanford University ,Book ,Nazis ,Model ,Californians ,Victims ,Leader ,Sterilizations ,Chief Example ,Amends ,Scholar ,Germany ,John Perez ,Preparations ,State Representative ,Estimate ,Nursing Student ,Letters ,Request ,Avail ,Behalf ,Folett ,Response ,North Carolina ,Sterilization Victims ,Partner ,Bev Perdue ,Capitol ,Task Force ,Awareness ,Gray Davis ,Saying ,Statement ,Chapter ,50000 ,0000 ,Start ,Rights ,Office ,Edmond Brown ,Leaders ,Calling ,Nothing ,Add ,Meetings ,John Vigna ,Subject ,Andrew Lamar ,Place ,Lung Cancer ,Birthday ,Hasn T Anything ,Question ,Last ,Justice ,Politicians ,Folletts ,Dpi ,Attorney General ,Parts ,Sterilization Movement ,Movement ,The Best And Brightest ,Ee Lelite Of The Elite ,Undesirables ,Professors ,Better Baby Movement ,Family ,Contests ,Contest ,Examples ,Goodness ,Isn T Another Country ,Isn T Hundreds ,Senator ,State Assemblyman ,Bit ,The End Of Road ,Anywhere ,Mom ,Sort ,82 ,Effect ,Parent ,Tornadoes ,Veterans ,Planning ,Retirement Planning ,Values ,Military ,Tips ,Guide ,Somebody Else ,Usaa ,Retirement ,Tax Season ,Tornado ,Kentucky ,Storm ,Roofs ,Images ,Winds ,It Hits ,Morgan County ,Ef 3 ,3 ,Store ,Pharmacist ,Houses ,Groups ,Freight Train ,Wisconsin ,Pro Labor ,Madison ,100 ,Thousands ,Speakers ,Scott Walker ,Measure ,Efforts ,Collective Bargaining Rights ,Wisconsin March ,Pardons ,Misinformation Tour ,Battle ,Options ,Liberal Union ,Haley Barbour ,Jim Hood ,On Thursday The State Supreme Court ,Convicts ,Killers ,Sympathy ,200 ,Criminal Justice ,Prisoners ,Trial ,Cousin ,System ,1976 ,Decisions ,Repentance ,Rehabilitation And Redemption ,9 0 ,Tsunami ,Earthquake ,Japan ,3100 ,16000 ,Son ,Challenge ,Grieving ,Cries ,Funerals ,Body ,Evacuation Center ,Funeral ,Blanket ,Grandparents ,Wreckage ,16 ,Father ,Don T Give Up Hope ,Keep Living For My Son ,Hiroki ,Ceremony ,Region ,Buddhist Temple ,Friends ,Farewell ,Number ,Stands ,Soccer ,Ruin ,5 ,Child ,Disaster ,Rest ,Childhood ,Family Move Add ,Ashes ,Grand ,Five ,Spirit ,Coverage ,Kyung Lah ,Case ,Ceremony Taking Place ,Tragedy ,Alcoholism ,Copies ,Addiction Cure ,Ssagesmalibubook Com ,Murder ,Murder Mystery ,Michigan ,Grosse Point Park ,Things ,Husband ,Standing ,Ted Rowlands ,Steve Virgona ,Yard ,Jane Beshara ,January 25th ,Mercedes ,Handyman ,Joseph ,Frand ,25 ,Gentz ,Bob ,Garage ,Police Let Gentz Go ,23 ,February 23rd ,I Q ,Conspiracy ,Jane Bashara ,Investigators ,News ,Innocence ,Law Enforcement Agencies ,Storefront ,Attorney ,Girlfriend ,Grosse Pointe Park ,S M Dungeon ,Courtroom ,Zero ,Clothes ,State Crime Lab ,Hit A Big Of Snag ,Detroit Police Department ,Couch Surfing ,Technology Festivals ,First ,Coming Up ,Recovery Assistance ,Hero ,Strangers ,Need ,Rash ,Devastation ,Chills ,Tad Agolia ,Destruction Left ,2008 ,Lord ,Storms ,Communities ,Lives ,Midwest ,Emergency Recovery Teams ,40 ,Ten ,Debris ,Claw ,Relief Workers ,Hero Tad Agolia ,Destruction Zone ,Road ,Gas Station ,Grocery Store ,Community Needs ,Towers ,Essentials ,Clearing ,Services ,Tons ,Agolia ,2007 ,Equipment ,Roof ,Claws ,Steve ,Supercells ,Essence ,Heroes ,Stuff ,Nominations ,Tad ,Great Guy ,Someone ,Nomination ,Difference ,Cnnheroes Com ,Two Hundred Thousand ,Smile ,Yeah ,Was Uh ,Bargain Detergent ,Tide ,Honey ,Folding ,Bottle ,Dose ,Food Stains ,Liquid Bargain Brand ,Angry Birds ,Scene ,City Of Austin ,Music Lovers ,Film Lovers ,Tech Nerds ,Flash Mob Paying Tribute ,Brooke Baldwin ,Magic ,Festival ,Nerd On ,Sensation ,App ,Stranger ,Staying ,Hotel Room ,Skeeved ,Sofa ,Hotel ,Odd Tick ,Couch Surfer Spot ,Let S See ,Slob ,Couch ,Facebook ,Site ,Jack ,Fine ,Retentative ,Circus ,Runs ,Words ,Total A Circus ,March Madness ,Bracket Skills ,Selection Sunday ,Ncaa ,Ncaa March Madness Bracket Challenge ,Ramg Ge ,Aus ,Game ,Brackets ,Manhunt ,Group ,Magic Eraser Extra Power ,Mr ,Phones ,Sweep ,Dirt ,Elsewhere ,Merv ,Scuffed Sports Equipment ,Permanent Marker ,Grungy ,Cleaning Games ,Mortgage ,Losses ,Cabinet ,Car Rims ,Carrots ,Milk ,Stouffer S ,Steam ,Farm ,Chicken ,Dad ,Pasta ,Sauce ,Crunch ,Steam Meal ,Farmers ,Steam Perfect ,Credit ,Food ,Steam Meals ,The Farm ,Nestle ,Formula ,Hyundai Genesis ,Spec ,Panamera S The ,Dr ,Porsche ,429 ,Sixty ,Hyundai ,Deputy Yesterday ,Unpitted Olive ,Angel Nieves Diaz ,Out Of Control ,Fork ,Ceramic Plate ,Bizarre ,Delegate Count ,Virg Virgin Islands ,1144 ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.