jumpsuit, agreeing to be extradited back to idaho. his family seen for the first time, claiming cops have the wrong man. blues new video from a traffic stop showing the suspect. and story of survival, how a four-year-old girl and nine-year-old boy survived this 250-foot drop. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening and thank you for joining us on this tuesday night. tonight, political chaos in the house of representatives, nlike anything we ve seen in a century. after the new congress adjourns on a day on day one without a speaker. plus, the ongoing weather threat a dozen tornadoes have already been reported. but we want to begin tonight with the terrifying scene in in
revealed. i don t get a chance to explain it? you don t control this anymore. hidden bombshell evidence. he s on the property where a woman is murdered, and we don t know who he is. had everybody is social media is, like, that s the guy that did atit. who was in prison? the real w killer or the wrong man? . we still have ail murderer o there. you never know how something is going to go.ou hello and welcome to dateline . michelle mockby met the love of herve life dan at the warehouse wherean they worked. they were busy juggling jobs ann family. then a day that began like any other, suddenly turned deadly. a security camera quickly led police to acu suspect. but justo when michelle s love ones thought justice had been served,us a scandal turned this story on its head.
because racism was so strong in greenville. they was looking for. ..investigating for two months before they locked on me. this was a high profile case. it was a white man who was killed in a black neighbourhood known for drugs at that time. it was all over the news. there was a lot of pressure to get somebody for this murder. i heard so many stories that they wanted me for drugs. they said i was a big time, known drug dealer. i was known, a lot of people know me, but whatever reason it was, you ve got the wrong man. this is something that s sort of well known in reviews of innocence cases. when you have a white victim
you ve got the wrong man. this is something that s sort of well known in reviews of innocence cases. when you have a white victim who, tragically, is harmed, we see greater penalties associated and we see greater instances of wrongful convictions related to those crimes. dontae being a black man in greenville, north carolina in the 1990s was central to why he was convicted and central to why his conviction was not overturned sooner. every time i went to court, it was a white man over me, i was in a black and white case. racism was part of the reason why they went so hard they tried to solve it and get somebody and it happened to be
but when a white guy got killed, you couldn t walk down the street, you couldn t stop. isaid, man, whoever they lock up for that through. that s what i said. because racism was so strong in greenville. they was looking for. ..investigating for two months before they locked on me. this was a high profile case. it was a white man who was killed in a black neighbourhood known for drugs at that time. it was all over the news. there was a lot of pressure to get somebody for this murder. i heard so many stories that they wanted me for drugs. they said i was a big time, known drug dealer. i was known, a lot of people know me, but whatever reason it was, you ve got the wrong man. this is something that s sort of well known in reviews of innocence cases.