united states got four people that they wanted. some of them are sick. he wanted to get them out. what the russians got, i think you d have to say, they got the they got their people out so they wouldn t have to have them on trial here, and potentially release some information about how they collect information in the united states. but you know, it s a good question, campbell. has did the russians get for their money from these people? still kind of unclear. all right. jill dougherty, tonight, and jill, we re going to turn to that question right now. we want to talk about that group of spies that russia wanted back. the ten spies are already back in moscow. less than 24 hours after appearing in an american courtroom. cnn s matthew chance has been following that side of the story from the russian capital. reporter: well, the ten russian spies deported from the united states arrived in moscow and were quickly spirited away in black vehicles, we expect debriefed by russian
flaming out. finally here s cnn entertainment correspondent brooke anderson. reporter: it s not the kind of spotlight mel gibson wants. the actor/director is allegedly caught on tape berating and cursing at his ex-girlfriend oksana ga grigoryeva. they released this on a website a shocking conversation report think between gibson and grigoryeva. it s a public [ bleep ] embarrassment to me. ing you look like a [ bleep ] because you provoked it. you are provocatively dress all the time and with your fame [ bleep ] you feel you have to show off. cnn cannot validate the voice is actually gibson s and the actors reps have neither confirmed or denied the tape s
he served seven years of an 18-year sentence and reportedly has family in the u.s. russian media say the third man released, sergei is a former military intelligence agents. he was serving a 13-year sentence for spying on behalf of british intelligence. he reportedly has diabetes. and then there s this man. former kgb major reportedly arrested 12 years ago for contacts with the cia, and arrested again on illegal weapons charges. and jill dormanty joins me right now. we re hearing the white house is putting out new details how the arrests an the swap actually happened. what can you tell us? reporter: they did. late this afternoon, campbell. and what they re saying, the most important thing is it was a u.s. idea to do this swap, and the way they lay it out is, back in february they were briefing the white house. this they meaning the cia, the fbi, department of justice
everybody. reporter: it comes in? yeah. it comes in. reporter: as hard as this is, life may soon get worse. a judge recently showed up to inform the camp s 1,000 residents that the owner of his land wants them to leave his property. they asked us to leave, but we don t have anywhere else to go, says lucien s mother. we re waiting for the authorities to tell us what to do. in some case, land owners have taken matters into their own hands, pushing people off their land. how many people were living here? it was 52 families. reporter: 52? 52. reporter: and where are they now? they re they go around they go to other camps. reporter: aide workers say they they re called in to resolve public disputes.
then we ll have a very aggressive and very comprehensive survey of that area for reopening. and dr. sanjay gupta joining us live now from new orleans. sanjay that is incredible to me, that they are not testing for dispersants at this point. you you have any sense having talked to anybody and investigated when that s going to start happening? reporter: they say the test is in development now. for some time, campbell, they weren t sure exactly which chemicals or which components of the dispersants they should test for. if you look at the list, there s 12 things they test for chemically, those are oil breakdown products. figuring out what to test for specifically is the first step and now developing the test. when it comes to dispersants, they don t bioaccumulate in fish. they don t build up. even if a fish is exposed to it, they say it s unlikely a human who eats that fish is going to have an exposure.