staring a porpoise right in the face. oh, just got me again. a once top-secret military program that s enlisting animals to protect the country. but first, inside a polygamous sect. we re dealing with the exploitation of children of young girls for sexual purposes. reporter: gary tuchman takes you where most people never go exposing polygamy s dirty secrets. reporter: the scenery is spectacular and the polygamist families who live here along the uft-arizona border have been able to live their lives with little interference from the outside world for generations. stepping into their world is both jarring and surreal. how many brothers and sisters do you have? i have 18. reporter: albert, how many brothers and sisters do you have? 22. i am the oldest of 32. reporter: these are not members of the salt lake city-based mormon church known as the church of ladder day saints. they belong instead to a splinter group who believe in polygamy and call themselves th
what could be the largest municipal bankruptcy in u.s. history. good morning to you all. thank you for spending part of your weekend with us. i m t.j. holmes. we do need to start with a debate that was supposed to be over already. we are less than three days from a possible u.s. default. this clock is still ticking and a deal is not done. we are expecting a lot of action on capitol hill today. both houses in session, but whether there s going to be any real progress, that s anybody s guess. this is what we ve got going on today. the house starts debate at noon with the likely vote on a democratic proposal expected some time after 1:00 p.m. not expected to pass, however. then over on the senate side, they kick off debate on the democratic proposal around 1:00 eastern time. they could be debating that for up to 12 hours before they even vote on whether to vote. kind of a procedural vote would take place, possibly around 1:00 a.m. we did hear from president obama this morning
this scene played out across scandinavia earlier today. people pausing to remember the victims of that attack. as norway mourns we are hearing more from people who risked their lives to save others. our cnn s michael holmes caught up with one of them. it s not a huge boat. how many people did you put in here? the first round i believe it was 14. reporter: 14. yes. and then i had to address the oldest one and said you have to stay ashore. i promise i will come back and get you. they respected that. i said, sit down and wait. i went to the mainland. i went back again and they were agreed upon sitting there and i just waved to them like this and they waved back and we made a contact and got them in the boat. well, the clock is ticking on the debt limit crisis. there is no deal, if no deal by august 2nd, that means higher interest rates for you, a financial mess for the country, and the talks over the weekend, well, essentially they didn t go anywhere. so now republic
serial killer. that s how we know that we re dealing with a monster. ha mysterious murders. four of the victims were found in a burlap-type material. kaj larsen traces the trail of a serial killer still on the loose. this is long island, an hour s drive away from manhattan and it is known for beautiful million-dollar homes and secluded beaches. but that same isolation that people come here to seek, as of late, has been masking a darker eleme element. in december, police in long island make a shocking discovery. i don t think it is a coincidence that four bodies ended up in this area. for the past couple of years, women kept disappearing on long island. now, police think they may know why. we have a serial killer. we are dealing with a psychotic murderer. police still don t have answers, so we tried to get to the bottom of this eerie mystery. gus, man neighbors call the unofficial mayor of this community, shows me around. that s the house. that s where
deborah feyerick takes you inside one of the biggest manhunts in fbi history. the church bells of saint monica, near the harbor in south boston, have sounded for generations of irish immigrants. it s a tight-knit community that has always protected its own. a place james whitey bulger, one of boston s most notorious gangsters, called home. bulger learned to fight and survive on the mean streets of south boston, known as southie to locals like john shay who decades later would work for bulger. the guy was legendary. he made tough guys shake. he made them shake. reporter: bulger s life of crime started early. arrested in his teens, he was robbing banks by age 20. his shock of blond hair earning him the name whitey, a name he is staid to disguise. with his rugged good looks and reckless flamboyance, bulger imagined himself boston s version of hollywood s gangster, jimmy cagney. but instead of red carpets, he was headed to alcatraz. a string of bank robberies earning