in some states, the person who determines how someone died is an elected official. bergman: you ve been elected how many times? ten. bergman: you re a politician. oh, don t call me a politician.píiño in some places, there are few qualifications. > yes, sir, that s correct. .and there is no national regulation. one pathologist had been arrested for drunk driving on his way to work. he was giving crazy answers about how he thought people died. tonight. bergman: the body was found over there? .frontline correspondant lowell bergman reports with propublica and npr on death investigation in america. you call a death an accident or miss a homicide altogether, a murderer goes free. lots of very bad things happen if death investigation is not carried out competently. frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major funding is provided by the john d. and
snarling airports and paralyzing cities. suarez: and betty ann bowser tells the story of a colorado clinic helping diabetes patients stave off the devastating consequences of the disease. we re winning the war because we see less long-term complications happening. we have fewer patients ending up with diabetes caused. causing blindness or with kidney failure. brown: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth. like electricians, mechanics, carpenters. they strengthen our communities. every year, chevron spends billions with small businesses. that goes right to the heart of local communities, providing jobs, keeping people at work. they depend on us. the economy depends on them. and we depend on them. moving our economy for 160 years. bnsf railway, the engine that connects us. and by t
for the egyptian people. suarez: and we look at the makeup of the opposition: who are they, what do they want, and how can their demands be met? brown: then we get the latest on the snow and ice storm hitting much of the country, snarling airports and paralyzing cities. suarez: and betty ann bowser tells the story of a colorado clinic helping diabetes patients stave off the devastating consequences of the disease. we re winning the war because we see less long-term complications happening. we have fewer patients ending up with diabetes caused. causing blindness or with kidney failure. brown: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth. like electricians, mechanics, carpenters. they strengthen our communities. every year, chevron spends billions with small businesses. that goes right to
are they, what do they want, and how can their demands be met? brown: then we get the latest on the snow and ice storm hitting much of the country, snarling airports and paralyzing cities. suarez: and betty ann bowser tells the story of a colorado clinic helping diabetes patients stave off the devastating consequences of the disease. we re winning the war because we see less long-term complications happening. we have fewer patients ending up with diabetes caused. causing blindness or with kidney failure. brown: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth. like electricians, mechanics, carpenters. they strengthen our communities. every year, chevron spends billions with small businesses. that goes right to the heart of local communities, providing jobs, keeping people at work. they depend