chris? chris: james, thank you. immigration officials have arrested 83 people in new orleans and two tennessee cities. a newspeople report quotes in i.c.e. spokesman saying that 54 people have violated several immigration law, but have no serious criminal history. former suitable executive martin shkreli has been convicted on federal charges of deceiving investors in a pair of failed hedge funds. shkreli is the eccentric businessman who gained infamy when he raised the price of a life-saving drug from $13.50 to $750 per pill. he was acquitted on five other counts. more heat in the northwest, more flooding in southern california. the wicked weather continues out west. chief correspondent jonathan honda is keeping track of all of it tonight from los angeles. frightening moments for about 200 passengers onboard a metrolink train just outside of
these defendants lied about what occurred during a police involved shooting in order to prevent independent criminal investigators from learning the truth. reporter: all three officers were there the night of the shooting. the indictment alleges they lied, falsely saying that mcdonald was assaulting officers, forcing van dyke to shoot him. while they are sworn to serve and protect as well as uphold the law, they are not above the law. reporter: and tom, the officers charged today have not yet entered pleas. van dyke has pleaded not guilty. tom. alex perez, thank you. back here in new york, a tough time seating a jury in the martin shkreli s fraud trial. the former drug company exec ti is facing federal charges for allegedly taking funds for one of his companies to repay investors in hedge funds he managed. people know him for raising the price of a life-saving drug by 5,000%, so some potential jurors are saying they can t be
1980s. rick leventhal is digging intos origins of the crisis and getting to know the people who are trying to help. reporter: on any given day, the fire department rolls on a dozen calls, traffic accidents are routine, and so are overdoses on opioids. we spray this up. reporter: rescue lieutenant, dunleavy shows one of the methods for delivering the life saving drug for opioid overdose. he has seen an uptick in his rescue calls, and sometimes sees the same people over and over again. they are this close to dying, you get them back, they are awake and talking, they said i didn t do anything, then they admit, i was doing heroin, okay don t do that again, next week you come back, there they are again.
method for administering a life-saving drug for overdoses. he has seen a dramatic uptick in calls and sometimes he s the same people over and over again. they are this close to dying and then you get them back. they are awake and they are talking. they are like, oh, no, i didn t do anything. then they admit they were doing heroin. next week you come back and there they are again. you hit them again. what are you doing? think of the worst drug induced epidemic in u.s. history. she is a neuroscientist. she says the crisis traces its origins to a pair of studies in the 1980s, including this one in the new england journal of medicine which declared addiction was rare for patients treated with narcotics. pharmaceutical companies launched aggressive campaigns promoting paro from ads like vicodin and oxycontin. there was movement to name pain
the rescue lieutenant shows a method for administering a life-saving drug for overdoses. he has seen a dramatic uptick in calls and sometimes he s the same people over and over again. they are this close to dying and then you get them back. they are awake and they are talking. they are like, oh, no, i didn t do anything. then they admit they were doing heroin. next week you come back and there they are again. you hit them again. what are you doing? think of the worst drug induced epidemic in u.s. history. she is a neuroscientist. she says the crisis traces its origins to a pair of studies in the 1980s, including this one in the new england journal of medicine which declared addiction was rare for patients treated with narcotics. pharmaceutical companies launched aggressive campaigns promoting paro from ads like