advantage of him sexually. he tells the worker i need work digging. let s go do some digging or anything that he might offer that welcome. but he has something else in mind. gomez says he s been approached four times recently. always saying no. one time he was offered 400ed. others offer their home to let them shower and try to take vachk them afterwards. down in southern california, solicitations for sex are even higher. a study done found that about 40% of day laborers have been approached for sex. n nearly 10% of those men have: accepted the offer. and a majority said they didn t use condoms. health officials fear that will increase the sexually transmitted diseases and more sex education for this demographic is needed. new tonight at 6:00, the murder of a gay man in june may not have been a murder at all but may be a tore risk. the attorney for the man arrested said today that the victim died in a terrible accident during consensual sex and some erotic form of asphyxi
alisyn: pilot michael trapp is very lucky to be alive today. he meant to fly to a family reunion but his plane stalled out and crashed into lake huron instead. that was the start of his epic ordeal. he spent the next 18 hours treading water without a life jacket when a group of boaters spotted him he was using a sock to flag them down. michael trapp joins us live from the covenant medical center in michigan. michael, it is nice to see you. it s nice to be here. alisyn: i bet it is. michael, you have to explain to us how you survived for 18 hours in the water. what did you do when you got tired of treading water? well, it s amazing what you can do when you have to do it. i just laid on my back, found a
would be a huge feather in someone s cap. absolutely. let s go back a couple of years, michael, during the george bush administration when valerie plane was inadvertently outted as a c.i.a. operative. there was an investigation. there was a lot of trouble for people. why no outrage here? same thing happened, didn t it? i think it s much worse. she probably didn t have a lot of enemies around the world that remember going to come looking for them. but this fellow responsible for usama bin laden s death or in part for it is certainly at risk. as secretary gates said about the identities of the seals, sir. absolutely. so why would this web site gawker do this? as i said, i think most of the media is anti-agency. and they think it s fun to put people at risk. they don t like some of the things the agency does. for example, you know, the pulitzer prize for treason, if i remember correctly, went to the
woman at the washington post who exposed the agency s black sites during the rendition program. so the media and the media establishment rewards this kind of conduct. and ultimately, from what i understand, michael, is they published the picture of the guy and identified, yeah, that s the guy right there. it was completely unsubstantiated, didn t have anybody who said yeah, that s the guy. they just said ok, according to what we figured out, that s him. yeah. steve, the average high school yearbook staff has more integrity and common sense than gawker or a.p. they might have put an entirely mistaken personality on someone s bull s eye. it s an extraordinarily reckless unprofessional thing to do. it certainly is. and ultimately, is it news in your estimation? the news was bin laden was killed. the officers in the military and the agency responsible for that should have been congratulated, end of story. no one needs to know anybody who was involved in that operation.
degrees. which means it was only matter of hours before hypothermia set in. he believes he swam 15 miles before he got caught in a very strong current about two miles away from the shore. he was totally exhausted. he finally saw a boat. he took off a sock and started waving it and guess what? the boat began to slow down. listen. i was like oh, my god, yes, thank you, thank you. and, you know, 18 hours ain t a long time when you re on vacation or partying or something like that. i m telling you what, 18 hours is a long time in the water. reporter: doctors say his muscles were pretty extensively exhausted but other than that, allison, he is fine as you saw there, sitting talking to him. he survived this whole thing. alisyn: what a remarkable story, trace. we will let our viewers know exactly what it was like out there on the waters when we talk to that survivor. pilot michael trapp is going to join us live this hour.