Im shot, im shot joce but privacy is often a casualty in the larger concern over transparency. Jennifer storm all of a sudden your loved ones death becomes a hashtag. And it becomes seen by millions of people and forwarded and retweeted and facebooked. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] . Sharyl welcome to full measure. Im sharyl attkisson. It is the sunday after thanksgiving. In case youre tired of turkey, we have a helping of shrimp and a few questions. You may not think much about how the seafood gets to your plate. But the question of whos catching it and where is at the center of a global controversy. Its where an industry that survived Hurricane Katrina and the bp oil spill is finding itself threatened with extinction by foreign competition. These fishermen could be shrimpers lost, and theirs could be a lesson for us all. Today, were going shrimping in venice, louisiana. Acy cooper is our guide. How important is the shrimping business to your personally . Acy cooper its everything to me. You know, my family does it. My dads 80 years old, he still fishes. And my two boys has entered the business and my daughter, she married a fisherman. Sharyl louisianas shrimp industry has been a Family Affair for more than a century. While the men condition the flow boats, the womenfolk do their knitting. Down where louisiana is neither land nor sea, the bayou dwellers home becomes the base of annual operations that keep mom, pop and the kids busy as the dickens. Sharyl venice is one of the souths shrimping capitals. Coopers sons make four acy cooper thats my son, my youngest one. Sharyl after dragging our nets in the gulf of mexico, we brought up an assortment of sea creatures, mostly shrimp. Youd think thered be automatic job security today in the family business, considering americas appetite for shrimp. We each eat an average of four pounds per year. Shrimp is now more popular than tuna fish. Were there good times in the last 20 years . Acy cooper there was, there was good times. At the beginning, before they started coming in, look, we were making a living, we didnt, we had to work hard, because we had to push ourselves to go out here every day. We fight the elements. You know, we work hard to make a living. But we did good. My dad did good, he taught me well. We did good. Now, my sons and all, they starting to struggle now, because of whats going on. Sharyl hes talking about foreign shrimp flooding the market from places china, indonesia, vietnam, and thailand. The u. S. Has become a massive importer of a resource we have about 94 of the shrimp we eat comes from abroad, selling for a fraction of the price of the ones caught at home. Theres no getting around it. The u. S. Shrimping industry is dying. Acy cooper theres no way we can survive this this the way its going. You know we cant keep up our boats. We cant keep deckhands because nobody wants to work, because theyre not making any money. We cant make it where the price is at now. Sharyl take the haul from this boat, the ba ken. After 12 days out, it returned with more than a ton and a half of shrimp. But after paying for fuel, ice, and four deck hands, the owner will clear just 166 for each day at sea. Hardly enough to keep the boat running, let alone help pay the bills in the offseason. Robert nguyen and his son face the same harsh reality. Nguyen came to the u. S. As a refugee from vietnam and ended up in louisiana in 1985. He became so prosperous as a he owned his own dock, a big boat, and had nine employees. Over a seafood lunch at his home a few miles from the dock, he shows pictures of how his family weathered Hurricane Katrina. Cheap imports flooding the market are todays threat. As shrimp prices have fallen, nguyen has sold his dock, downsized his boat, and now relies on his son to be his deckhand. Robert nguyen shrimp, it not like before. Every year, its going down. Going down. Sharyl foreign competition could mean the death of a lot of family businesses. Why does foreign shrimp cost so much less . Other countries may use cheaper methods banned in the u. S. In thailand, some seafood farmers recently got caught using slave labor. Videos posted on the internet methods banned in the u. S. Appear to show images of Foreign Workers injecting gelatin into shrimp to make it plumper. Acy cooper our government doesnt allow us to put anything in it, but yet they can test, and they only test about 1 that sharyl hes right. The fda is responsible for the safety of imported shrimp, but tests only 1 of imports each year. In october, the fda issued an import alert warning about shrimp from china, saying its use of unapproved antibiotics or chemicals raises significant Public Health concerns. Beyond the health concerns, cooper says its hard not to think of shrimping as another american industry that could be lost to foreign competition. Do you see this as a reflection of anything else going on in the country . Acy cooper you have farmers that have been generations after generation. The steel workers. We gonna be the same way, just like these guys. Sharyl he thinks the only thing that can save the shrimpers is for our government to step in and limit imports. Acy cooper pull it back, put a cap on it. We know were gonna have to have imports in this country. You know, youre not gonna stop it. And we dont expect them to stop it. A living. Sharyl our trip was just a few hours. But shrimpers routinely work 15hourplus days during the season. Cooper says hell be lucky to get 60 cents a pound for the small, brown shrimp we caught. How much is this worth . Acy cooper probably about 120 dollars for 200 pounds. Its not much. We work hard for our way of its not something that we just pop up and said that we gonna do. Its been something thats been going generation, after generation, after generation. We just want the government to listen to us a little bit and help us out here. Dont put us to the brink of where were broke and out of business. And thats where were at at this point in time. We on the verge of out of business. Sharyl one potential win for american shrimpers could be the election of donald trump. He has promised to kill the Trans Pacific partnership, a trade deal that some claim could open the doors to unsafe foreign shrimp. Coming up next, the u. S. Military is ramping up the use against terror. We went to find out whats sharyl the monthslong battle to retake the iraqi city of mosul from isis fighters has become the long, hard fight many predicted. U. S. Special Operations Forces are acting as spotters for targeted airstrikes. Special ops are often the tip of the spear in u. S. Military operations and are now in greater demand than even before. What does it take to be the best imaginary war zone to observe a real exercise in the making of a green beret. Scott six times a year, the serene central piedmont of North Carolina becomes a battleground. [gunfire] stretching across 19 counties and 10,000 square miles. The men who survive this final exercise will join the elite ranks of the armys green berets. The drill is called robin sage. And we were granted rare access to observe the 118 soldiers on the brink of becoming special forces. You wanna go . Yep, lets go. Lt. Colonel seth wheeler there is no tougher scenario in the military than to go through robin sage. Scott Lieutenant Colonel eric wheeler is an instructor at robin sage. Hes been a green beret for 13 years and served 6 deployments in iraq. So, for someone whos never been or what robin sage means, they might make some gross assumption that you guys are the guys who are out there just kicking down doors. You would say. Lt. Wheeler green berets are special forces soldiers of character who are comfortable operating in ambiguous, decentralized, and hostile environments. Dont shoot, dont shoot. Scott i think its interesting that green berets are much more than just muscle. Lt. Wheeler they are much more than muscle. So, its combination of knowing when to smile, when to negotiate, and when to pull the trigger. Scott all skills honed for the last 60 years in a new country west of i95 and south of virginia. Lt. Wheeler all of our training for robin sage is actually through a fictitious land called pineland, of course. Scott and this is pineland. Lt. Wheeler this is pineland. Scott we are in a guerrilla base camp in pineland, where these green beret trainees, whose faces we cannot show, are helping the locals mount a resistance to the united province of atlantica, which has overrun pineland. We plan and we go through what it takes, the steps to get to stand up to an unwanted occupier is the green berets primary mission. This training goes from a fictional land to action in the real world, with real names, like syria, iraq, and afghanistan. Kenny tyndall is one of dozens of volunteers who lends his farmland. Kenny tyndall when you go rushing into a building and its a baited ambush, its a nowin situation sometimes for them, but sometimes we hope it teaches them about certain things, and also about trust and building rapport. Does that make a life changing moment for them when theyre difference when they are downline . Kenny tyndall we hope it does, we certainly hope it does, because if it doesnt, they are going to get killed. Youve got two over here, lets get these pictures. Kenny tyndall the training of the green beret is to train other countries to put their soldiers in line. Scott the goal of this days exercise against an overwhelming force of volunteers posing as enemy combatants is for them to do with two wounded. The Army Special Forces became known as green berets in 1961, when president john kennedy toured fort bragg, watched their tactics, and, noting their headgear, sent their commander a letter stating, the challenge of this new form of operations is a real one. I am sure that the green beret will be a mark of distinction in the trying times ahead. Kennedy sent 400 green berets to vietnam to train the south vietnamese soldiers in the fight against the communistbacked viet cong since vietnam, the green berets have specialized in counterinsurgency and guerrilla warfare. If conventional warfare looks like the shock and awe of Operation Iraqi freedom, then its the Unconventional Warfare that the green berets do best. They were one of the lead responders in afghanistan. Months before troops and tanks arrived, the green berets were organizing and training the tribal leaders fighting like natives alongside the northern alliance. Scott back in pineland, the United States army has amassed a conventional force along the southern border. Led by Major General james linder, the forces are updated by the trainees about how their covert support of the local resistance is going. We got to hang in there, hold out for the help, helps coming. Major general james linder were selecting soldiers who are going to go out in small teams and in environments where there are no absolute answers. And theyre all going to be, theyre going to be independent, and theyre going to have to figure out how to problem solve on scott problems like a helicopter that has unexpectedly bombed their base camp. So give me two cases that are ready to go. Scott or an enemy that has inflicted mass civilian casualties. One, two, three. Hey, i got a strong radio pulse. Scott and thats the real world, too, though right . Major gen. Linder thats the real world. Thats much of what we see today under the areas were operating, executing the armys task of special warfare is what we see these soldiers doing. Scott why is whats happening to the future of how the u. S. Military handles all the challenges we face . Major gen. Linder the experiences that you learn in robin sage build upon a rolodex of experiences that kind of roll around in the back of your head. Robin sage is all about a series of dilemmas that is posed upon the student, where there might not be right or wrong answers and just consequences to the decisions. Scott there are plenty of real world consequences. On august 23rd, staff sgt. Matthew thompson, a green beret serving in afghanistan was killed by a roadside bomb, a loss that Sergeant MajorRoberto Oquendo, a fellow green beret, says is immeasurable. Roberto oquendo it hurts, you know, and, and even if you dont know the person personally, its another sf brother that paid the ultimate sacrifice. Scott thompson graduated from Concordia University irvine in 2010, his classmates honored him Roberto Oquendo it could happen to any of us. So, we understand that when we come in, and when it does happen, it really hurts. [gunfire] scott for their final test, the team we observed captured their target in a nighttime raid. They passed robin sage and many of these new green berets will be deployed overseas within the year. Of the 118 soldiers who started robin sage during our visit, 101 beret. Sharyl well, we can always imagine they go through rigorous training, but when you are watching this, what about a did you not expect or what surprised you . Scott it is fascinating how entire communities or towns take part in shaping the soldiers and making green berets. They donate time, land, some of them are roleplaying, they come together multiple times a year, it is a collaborative effort sharyl i guess some of them may be think it is a patriotic thing to do to contribute. Scott they take great pride in doing this year after year all throughout the area. Sharyl thanks, scott. Next on full measure. Police body cams are the new reality tv bringing real crime stories and Police Action into the public eye. Well tell you why some say sharyl Police Body Cameras are producing key evidence in trials involving police shootings. Earlier this month, video was key in the trial of a Cincinnati Police officer who shot a motorist at a traffic stop. That ended in a jury deadlock. Full measure correspondent joce sterman found as other cities rush to equip police with cameras, one issue has gone out of focus, the privacy of crime victims. [gunshots] joce Police Body Cams are becoming a new and sometimes disturbing reality tv. Im shot. Joce with his body camera rolling, this florida officer pulled an injured mother from the scene of a domestic shooting. Coax her Young Children out of the house. Come here, sweetheart, come here. Joce to many, what the officer did appeared heroic. His department thought so and made it public. Victims advocates say thats a privacy violation of the highest order. Theres no question to you, videos like this cross the line . Jennifer storm totally. In my opinion, absolutely. Joce Jennifer Storm is a victims advocate who has helped shape state and federal laws for crime victims. This video, posted online by police and shared, has now been viewed millions of times. The family was not asked for consent. Storm and other advocates believe its a classic example of a forgotten issue in the great body camera debate. Jennifer a body camera is going to get every single thing the officer sees. Youre going to see it. Joce youre there . Jennifer its like reality tv and not in a good way. Its bad reality tv, incredibly traumatizing for these families and survivors. Joce what the lens captures can but privacy is often a casualty in the larger concern over transparency. In cases of murder, sexual assault, and domestic violence, pictures can bring the accountability that many demand, but theres a price. Jennifer all of a sudden your loved ones death becomes a hashtag. And it becomes seen by millions of people and forwarded and retweeted and facebooked. Joce thats what happened in a pennsylvania case where video of a deadly enc suspect went viral the mans last moments now online haunt his family. Jay stanley the real challenge is balancing how to get the advantages of these cameras without turning it into a privacy meltdown. Joce jay stanley is with the American Civil Liberties union , which has a split take on body cams. While they take a dim view of surveillance cameras, they do support Police Cameras as a check against the abuse of power. If theres a question of police releasing the tape even against the wishes of a victim or their family. [gunshots] jay when those two values come into direct conflict, you have to make very tough calls. We think, in those situations, the default should be that they should be made public because of the overwhelming Public Interest in doing that oversight and it cant be vetoed by the family or the victims themselves. By the fact that police are the ones who usually have veto power. But a study on body camera use funded by the Justice Department found something stunning many departments dont have specific written policies for how they should be used and when video should be released. Lindsay miller goodison it was very concerning, because obviously we want agencies to have good strong policies in place. Joce Lindsay Miller goodison conducted the survey for the Police Executive research forum. What that study offered were informing victims they are being recorded, getting consent, and crafting Firm Policies for when its appropriate to make footage public. Lindsay youre dealing with people who are in very vulnerable situations and those agencies need to think about how theyre going to handle those types of situations at the outset. Joce even big agencies can be behind the curve. The nypd says is still drafting its formal body camera policy without a federal standard to base it on. And some in Law EnforcementJonathan Thompson every agency is different. Every community is different. Joce thats why Jonathan Thompson, the executive director of the National Sheriffs association, says each jurisdiction needs the freedom to map out their own policies with input from their own communities. He suggests concerns over victims rights are not forgotten by Law Enforcement, just carefully balanced. Joce whose voice wins in this debate . Jonathan thats been a very big debate internal to the who wins . Is it the victim or is it Law Enforcement or is it transparency . I think there is no real correct answer. Joce but without clear answers or standards for the use of Police Body Cameras, a dangerous dilemma remains. Jennifer they shouldnt have to think, oh my god, if i call 911, is it going to be filmed and am i going to end up on the internet . Public safety should never come with those kinds of questions or consequences ever. The video. Much of the debate hinges on state laws. 17 states have at least one law specific to the release of video. 17 more have attempted to pass legislation and failed. Sharyl next week unfolding. The growing threat of superbugs, the antibioticresistant bacteria that are killing more americans. Shes like, im dying, do i have cancer . And i said, you dont have cancer, you have this bacteria. We dont know, i said, its not good. Sharyl we follow the fight on three fronts, saving patients, stopping the bacteria from entering the country, and stopping illegal antibiotics from entering the u. S. Thats next week on full measure. Im sharyl attkisson. Until then, thanks for watching. And wed love to thank all the people who help make full groans oh. Oh, boy. Look at that. You know, thisthis yeah, its you know, tax the rich. Yeah. muttering oh, yeah. exhales deeply this world. Do not get me started. Hey, guys, guys, look. That coyotes in the yard again. Really . Yeah. Oh, cool oh cause he hasnt caught the road runner yet. Can we feed him . No, we cant feed him. You dont feed wild animals. Yeah, your dads right. Could be dangerous. Oh, but look. Hes all alone out there. Honey cant we just give him a bowl of milk . Just a little no how about getting a bowl of milk, put some cereal in it, and bring it back to dad here . How about coyotes leaving. Wait. Coyote