Transcripts For MSNBC In the Dark of the Valley 20240707

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>> hi. my name is denise duffield. it's okay, thank you. i am the mom who started the chains dot or petition that now has over 6000 signatures for the folding of the santa susana field lab. you're going to hear a lot today. we've got a lot of facts. we know the facts. we are all intelligent people here. but i think what is lacking is courage to do the right thing. and so, i wanted to bring you my daughter, my daughter is a two-time cancer survivor at nine years old. >> can you do it? would you like to go to disneyland today? >> okay, let's go to disneyland! >> oh, yeah! >> are you coming? >> i'm coming too. >> she earned all these beads during her cancer treatment program. each bead represents something different. for example, red represents when she had a blood transfusion black when she got booked with a needle, yellow for inpatient state, white for chemotherapy. this is what you earned the first month. i'd like to share with you what she's earned over the last two times fighting cancer. a few of the photos, i just wanna fly through real quick. to some of them that we've met, who are local, they camped with us last weekend. he's about to lose a second i. his little boy has leukemia. he's doing all right. we've had several who passed away. we need you to step in and protect us, and protect our children, do the right thing, thank you. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> thank you. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> hi. [inaudible] sorry, i know you're not feeling well right now. is it okay? >> when grace turned four years old, we found it was all over her body. i took her to the pediatrician, and quickly found out that she had an incredibly rare and aggressive form of childhood leukemia. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> she had a 20% survival rate. she really endured a lot of suffering that first year. and then, she had a year and a half of just, wonderful cancer free childhood. [applause] [noise] ♪ ♪ ♪ >> and then, her cancer relapsed and it came back. >> it was april 2013, and my daughter hazel was two years old. and i was noticing that she was not quite herself. i kept calling the doctors, and everybody was going, it's probably just a flu. and i turned to my husband, and i said my mommy instincts are telling me that something is really wrong. he said, i think she has cancer. they performed some blood work tests, and then, an ultrasound. after several days of tests, we knew it was neural. >> all right, hazel, are you ready to play simon says? simon says touch you nose. simon says touch your head. simon says touch your mouth. simon says touch your ears. simon says blow a case. simon says say i love you. >> i love you. >> simon says sing twinkle twinkle. >> twinkle twinkle little star -- ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> hazel! [applause] [noise] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> hazel got into this when she was only two and a half years. and in 2016, she relapsed. >> good job! >> the first time grace had cancer, we lived over 100 days that first year at children's hospital in los angeles. >> how cool is that? >> yeah -- >> and as we were meeting families, we just casually, ask where are you from? >> this is exactly what happened with the bumstead family. they were at the hospital at the same time we were. and then grace, her daughter and hazel immediately became friends. they're so similar in so many ways. and so, it just felt great to have that connection. >> happy birthday to you -- ♪ ♪ ♪ >> and we found out that we lived within 20 minutes of each other. >> and we committing other families. and said, oh, how about that? we just lived around the corner, two blocks over. as the bird flies, three miles, five miles. >> and then, several other moms and dads in simi valley and west hill and thousand oaks, we were really at a time just thankful for it. and i think as time went on, we were like, wait a second, how is it that so many of us live nearby. we are going all to a children 's hospital los angeles. a world we downed hospital. so people are coming from all over the world to come there for treatment. and yet, we are meeting people that live on our street. >> i just kept pushing back against my own mental red flags. and that's until i met a family that said, oh, we live on your street. and granted, we lived on a long boulevard. it's three miles. but they live on our street. and she said, my neighbor had the same exact brain cancer that my son had. and there were two of them, neighbors, plus my daughter, that's three on the same street. so, i panicked. and i set up a facebook route for all the local cancer parents. and we started mapping ourselves out on google maps. and for a long time, we couldn't find the connection. we couldn't see what was going on, but we would tell that there were too many of us, and it was about a year after that, that someone mentioned for the first time the santa susana field lab. i have never heard of it. we've already lived there for seven years. we all had to start wrestling with the fact that maybe our children's cancer could have been avoided. maybe, other children were endangered. maybe, our government haven't protected us the way that they should have. and maybe, our whole community has been hyping this giant secret. giant secret - llamas. - llamas. so save money shopping back to school on amazon. you sure that's not a camel? yeah. whatever you say. this is the gillettelabs with exfoliating bar. the bar in the handle removes unseen dirt and debris ahead of the blades, for effortless shaving in one efficient stroke. 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(vo) the network you want. the price you love. only from verizon. this? this is supersonic wifi from xfinity. it's fast. so gaming with your niece has never felt more intense. incoming! hey, what does this button do? no, don't! welcome to the fastest internet on the largest gig speed network. are you crying uncle ed? no! a little. only from xfinity. unbeatable internet made to do anything so you can do anything. hi, i'm jason and i've lost 202 pounds on golo. being a veteran, the transition from the military into civilian life causes a lot of stress. i ate a lot for stress. golo and release has helped me with managing that stress and allowing me to focus on losing weight. for anyone struggling with weight and stress-related weight gain, i recommend golo to you. this is a real thing. this is not a hoax. ♪ ♪ ♪ you follow the plan, you'll lose weight. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> awareness brings compassion. and compassion leads to write action. that is what we are missing. i'm daniel hirsch. i am president of the committee and i'm recently retired as the director of program on environmental nuclear policy at the university of california of santa cruz. >> and the associates director for social responsibility in los angeles. >> in the mid to late 1940s, the u.s. government was trying to find a location to do nuclear reactive development and testing. also rocket dusting. >> it was originally selected as a location to be away from populated areas, because they knew they were going to be doing research that could be potentially dangerous. >> they did it marvelously in the study to determine which would be the least dangerous place for a reactor testing facility. it ranked very poorly. they were concerned that any radioactivity that was released could probably get to populated areas nearby. it shows to -- anyway. >> santa susana ranked fifth or sixth because of the meteorological conditions, but it was selected, anyway because of the driving time to ucla. >> at the time that the santa susana facility was established, there was relatively little population and city around it. >> this is a quiet place. the adam four were get pieces quiet. >> they built ten nuclear reactors, and fuel fabrication facility for plutonium. it was dangerous. they made nuclear fuel out of it. they would shift in the radiated nuclear fuel to be cut apart, none of those reactors, by the way, had it contained structure. those domes were associated with nuclear power plants. they were just regular rooms. >> it was called a sodium reactor experiment. >> sre, the sodium reactor experiment was radically different from other reactor concepts. >> sustained atomic -- had been obtained in this nuclear reactor. built for industrial application, medical research and scientific exploration. >> on the first full power run of the reaction, all systems operated smoothly and full power was obtained. >> for the first time in the united states, an entire community was illuminated by electricity, generated by an atomic reactor. >> when we lived here before, we learned the news. it was just utopia. we had a rural atmosphere close to the city. we had children who left playing in the creeks. and i thought we had found a dream place. >> it was the 50th, the 60th. it was magical. in those days we would go out the door and mom would say come back before dinner. and it was totally safe. nobody locked their doors. we just played outdoors all day, all the time. >> this is now american families are living in their new homes. >> it was an ideal place to go. it was agricultural at that time. it was rural. it would have been really the most idyllic place to raise a child, but for the situation it's unfolding now. >> i think it was 19 years old when i came to california. i started working at atomic center national in santa susana in 1963. i felt a sense of pride to be there and be involved. and worker felt a sense of pride. i didn't know anything about what they were doing and where i worked except it was secret. >> the employees of center susana field laboratory changed the face of humanity. my father was employed between 1962 and 1969. it was the senior inspector on the saturn five rocket program. i was never concerned about when my dad for a living. he didn't really elaborate on what his job duties were. they were sworn to secrecy. >> we did not know what we had really been dealing with all these years and what was really going on of there. >> it just changed, because then we did not know if we came and brought our children to a place that could be harmful to them, because how did we know? my girls loved playing in the creeks and getting frogs. it was scary. it was scary. and so, as time went on it was even worse than we could even imagine. ♪ ♪ ♪ (brad) over the years, we've helped millions of renters find their perfect place. like andrea, whose new apartment finally has a dishwasher. 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(brad vo) uh-oh! what? this isn't right! what is that? a fork? hot, hot, hot! ooo! mayday! mayday! hey, get me out of here. seems like andrea got a dishwasher that's fully functioning. apartments-dot-com. the place to find a place. >> my name is john pace. i was there when the worst nuclear accident in the history of the united states took place. i was 19 when i was hired there. in 1959. i didn't even know when i was doing when i first went there. >> we always use operators. they're fairly young fellows. all they need is a high school education. with some major science knowledge. >> it was a post war time at that time and we're trying to help the united states outdo the russians. >> inside the fortunes of freedom, on the other -- communism. >> it was an honor to work there. i was working with the very best scientists in the nuclear business. i had overseen the reactor -- doctor marvin j. fox. he is the one that helped invent the atomic bomb that was dropped on hiroshima. on july 13th, it was probably about 11:00. it was the graveyard shift. went in the building. i pulled up into the control room, and looking through the door, i had seen my crew was already there. then i looked even closer and i was seeing doctor marvin j fox, and he had two others with him, i wasn't sure who they were. there is something that is just not right. so i got brave. i opened up the door real quiet. then as i stood there, i heard the words coming out of dr. fox's mouth. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i heard my supervisor asked, can we tell our families would have been today? the three looked at each other for a minute. doctor fox, he turned around real quick and stared me in the eyes. almost nose to nose. nobody will say a word. from that point on, there was a cover-up of what happened. >> it was the first step in a nuclear nightmare. the government officials said that a breakdown of an atomic power plant in pennsylvania today is probably the worst nuclear reactor accident to date. >> i was teaching at ucla in 1979. there was an accident at a nuclear power plant in pennsylvania called three mile island. my students wanted to research whether there were nuclear activities in the los angeles area. i said sure, go ahead. i didn't think they find anything. within a period of a few weeks, they discovered that there had been a partial meltdown at the reactor that we know called the santa susana field lab. they obtained documents and photos and also film footage. off the inside of the melted core. >> 13 of the 43 uranium fuel elements eventually became overheated. the fuel swelled and size and structural damage was sustained. >> a partial meltdown occurred in the reactor that had no containment structure. the activity was so high that they had to open this huge garage typed or to try to vent the radioactivity out. one scholar had estimated that the radio active iodine from the meltdown could have been 250 tons greater than the amount released -- tmi was a larger reactor. this was a smaller reactor, but had nothing to prevent the reactor from getting out. >> radiation is clear off the scale. wherever the wind is blowing, whatever direction, that's where the radiation travels, of course. it's like smoke with fire. i was working there. i was so disturbed about it. radiation went all over the homes. >> five weeks after the accident occurred, they issued a news release for saturday morning in the papers. the press release did not say there had been a partial meltdown. they did not say there was a serious accident. they did not sit was any radiation. they said the opposite, that at the very moment they issued that press release you were venting radioactive gases into the environment. >> the official news release claimed there was no indication of unsafe reactor conditions. >> they lied. and i could not say the word. 20 years of silence. people remember ads with young people having a good time. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's a pool 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experiment, or sre. but in 1959 when it saw its fuel rods melting the general public was not informed. local public safety officials weren't told much either. >> today is the first time that i've heard of the 59 incidents you mentioned. >> the experts tell us that certain risks were taken. >> i was really appalled and the sort of the cavalier attitude that they demonstrated. >> it's actually very undramatic. it did not appear to be a hazard to the public oratory employees. >> i feel less concerned about it than i would do the long term effect over los angeles. the >> potential of hazard, of major release in the environment was not there. >> and it's taken until this week, 20 years later, for the details to be widely broadcast. >> we all have the idea, all of us who were involved in this project, that it had been a cover-up. we learned that we had to approach this in a very, very careful way, because we knew that we were looking at a very powerful industry that had not been challenged in the way that we were prepared to challenge it, ever before. it was a scary proposition to take on a nuclear industry. it's a very scary proposition. >> so the accident at was santa susana serious. and if there was room for debate on how well it was handled. >> we heard something that was really important, particularly in the context of what was going on at three mile island. i think what it reveals is that this great guarantee of the ultimate safety of the industry was a phony. it was fake. it was wrong. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> it was probably one of the worst nuclear accidents in history to that point. no one knew, until my students uncovered the documents two decades later. >> the material that we got mostly came from breach the cap, which is an anti nuclear group. >> what happened at santa susana would not happen at a well run facility. this was a case of tremendous environmental negligence. they cut corners over and over and over again. the risk continued for many decades. >> the nuclear work was over for decades. the other aerospace or didn't really sit until 2006. so, over the course of decades, and the course of accidents, releases, unintentional. the soil and the groundwater and the surface water runoff has become very contaminated. >> produced by iodine, a division of -- in the canyons of southern california, the engine sometimes called a rocket, sometimes called a power plant, sometimes the booster is bond. >> and we all lived in knowing that there were rocket tests we used to have a big booms, and we would see, like, mushroom clouds above the facility. >> i would play outside with my friends until it got dark. i'd be in the cul-de-sac, and then -- we could hear those auroras. >> in california's santa susana mountains, rocketdyne engineers have graded america's largest propulsion field laboratory. >> the hole was a valley with a shutter -- >> just go -- [inaudible] [noise] ♪ ♪ ♪ >> tens of thousands of rockets passed and those huge blooms of contamination that were being spread at a substantial distance. >> on the ashes of campfires built here, and gyms brought forward the pillars of faith. >> those engine tests, a lot of the chemical contamination onsite as a result of that. >> they ended up flushing out rocket test engines with a very toxic solvent, called d.c.. hundreds of thousands of gallons, leaving half 1 million dollars of tcb in the ground order. >> it was a hot lap there where they would be processed, spent nuclear fuel that was shipped in from around the country. they had fires. >> they also had an open burn pit. there they would take each month, 100 or so, 55 gallon drums filled with toxic chemicals. and they would shoot at them with rifles ignite them and they will catch fire. they emit huge plumes of toxic smoke. workers were killed because they were the legally disposing of hazardous material and blowing them up on the property. ten nuclear reactors, three of which suffered accidents, these activities went on for decades. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> during that period, population just mushroomed around the field laboratory. >> anyone who has a fear of anything like that, they should be told, get a chance to say no, i don't want to live there. it >> did not appear to be a hazard to the public or trump lawyers. potential hazard of major released to the environment was just not there. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> the santa susana field lab hill is contaminated with a who's who of toxic chemicals from heavy metals to dioxins to volatile organic acids, and multiple radioactive nuclear ads which come from the nuclear partial meltdown, and also, numerous axioms over the years with the other reactors onsite. when it comes to a new clients, who actually describe not the half-life, which is the time after which it would be have a spotted as it was, as a degrades, we describe something called its hazardous life, which is actually 20 half-lives. so these are the most dangerous, which we have well studied, and well in high awareness of their health impacts that go on for these hundreds, if not half 1 million years. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> right now half 1 million people live within ten miles of the site. >> i asked over and over again, where is it safe? where would it be dangerous? after studying this for almost 40 years, i'm afraid i can't answer that. people need to understand that the bus santa susana field lab is on a mountain. they can carry that contamination downhill. there is not a glass wall surrounding santa susana that prevent contaminants from being blown offside by the win. the wind will carry the contaminants. there is not some kind of dame built around at the site that will erase the rainfall won't carry the contaminants. so, when it rains, the surface water carries the radioactivity down in the mid of streams. it's the headwaters of the los angeles river, so, in terms of l.a. county, you contaminate everything along the l.a. river and the various streams that lead to what. there is a children's camp called the brandeis-bardin institute. it's a choice training institute for college students. it is right beneath santa susana field lab. there have been some contamination found on the brandeis-bardin property, and there is concern about the health of the children who have been or are going to that facility, soil contamination goes down through the brandeis camp and into the aurora, where that contaminated water percolates into the groundwater. >> is this like gel? >> you, dude. my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. i'd like to thank our sponsor liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. contestants ready? go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. moderate to severe eczema still disrupts my skin. despite treatment it disrupts my skin with itch. it disrupts my skin with rash. but now, i can disrupt eczema with 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[noise] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> oh wow. that's fancy. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i would like to -- best wishes for a successful evening and the continued fight for cancer research. [applause] >> i don't know if you know, but the cause of leukemia. melissa, you can tell me, if you remember. one in 1 million. and while we all know that it's less than one and 1 million, she shouldn't have that kind of diagnosis. you've talked all of us here. how to keep going in the face of something difficult, and we'd like to -- [applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ >> thanks, everybody. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> my daughter is a fighter. she is incredibly strong. i could not be more proud of her, and yet, part of me still grieves that she has to be back with us. you know, i wish more than anything she could've just had a normal childhood. you know, she was diagnosed when she was four. that's almost before anyone can have a memory. she was immediately-limited for being around other kids because of the germ factor. but also, my son was so emotionally impacted. both of my children lost a big part of their childhood. it's not fair. we can never get that back. my husband and i are trying to heal our marriage from all the separation and pain that we went through. and then, what's left over is me. but i have a lot of friends who also suffered. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> she didn't get to make a choice if she wanted her child to the next to this radiation. she probably never heard of it before. i don't think any of us should have had to pick up this burden. but i can't on more what i know. >> so, the -- we have to wait for the phone. >> [inaudible] >> where there are -- you know what? why don't you kill her and being interviewed for a documentary on santa susana, and that i'll call her when i'm done. for fear bleep god. the site has responsible parties. there's the department of energy which leads part of its property for boeing. there is nasa and then there is bowing itself, which owned most of the site. >> at some point, rock a dime was sold. and rockwell international eventually sold its rocket time division to boeing. and boeing assumed the liabilities of rocketdyne for the contamination at sinuses anna. the ultimate regulator of the sentences and a field site is california. and specifically, the department of toxic substances control, which is a subdivision of the california epa. california is the one who gets to say this is how much gets cleaned up. >> we have the authority to shut down a business when we feel like the health of the community is at risk. and when we see evidence of harm to the environment or the human health. but are these lines enough? a subaru with eyesight... 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for ed! all right! you don't need those calories. can we at least split it? nope. advanced security that helps protect your devices in and out of the home. i mean, can i have a bite? only from xfinity. nah. unbeatable internet. >> it came out of nowhere. made to do anything so you can do anything. everything is different. >> it is truly the biggest nightmare any parent could ever imagine. >> in 2006 there was a cluster of retinoblastoma. it's a rare eye cancer -- >> you might be wondering, why should we care about a nuclear accident that happened more than half a century ago? because as you are about to see, thousands of people in the san fernando and simi valleys have been secretly exposed to dangerous radioactive fallout. >> it was pretty clear to me that there were people inside certain government agencies, like the de-tsa, who are very close with boeing. >> it was a very effective way for bowing to my protection for themselves. i was looking into the department of toxic substances control, and i decided to look into how is it really regulating toxics. and we did get a very revealing material, that showed us that though dtse is what i called haphazard agency. it's captured by the polluters that's actually supposed to be regulating. but >> insiders at the state department of toxic substance controlled told us that they were often too lenient with polluters who didn't cleanup contamination. >> boeing maintains that there have been no adverse health impacts from contamination at santa susana. the dtse has admitted that contamination has gotten off the site, and they'll say it's not getting off-site in levels that are harmful to human health. and that is not true. >> polluters are very adept at flattering regulators, not grooming them, taking them by the hand when they didn't know that much, kind of showed him the direction of what they wanted things to look like. >> i also, as you know, represent many private companies, we have also found this to be balanced, and to be thorough, and to be just as open as she claims to be. >> is santa susana kind of a textbook civics lesson in the way government works. people work in government on an issue, in this case, santa susana, and then, they leave government, and they can make a lot more money becoming lobbyists for the company involved in the issue in this case, boeing. >> the flotilla of fixers that war hired by boeing, many of them had direct connections to jerry brown, or had worked for him. >> it's been like a game of musical chairs. a former environmental aide to governor brown, a former head of the state epa, and the former chief lawyer of the d tsv, have all switched sides and worked on behalf of boeing to kill a full cleanup of santa susana. >> the santa susana field lab is a really complex cleanup. it costs a lot of money. and anytime it costs a lot of money, there's going to be politics at play. that leads to delay. >> in 2007, there was an order signed between the dtse and the responsible parties, that basically did not establish much of the cleanup standards. it was very weak. and it was exactly what boeing wanted. >> a recreational cleanup, which is what boeing is pushing, is based off of people being on the site of aryan frequently. that would result in 98% of contamination not being cleaned up. people who live in near santa susana do not live in recreational areas. they live in residential areas. >> all through the 2000s, there was an effort to require full cleanup. then, state senator sheila, who represented the area, introduced a bill after bill. >> workers, the neighbors, have become sick, and too many have died. it's time to require full and complete cleanup. i ask for your high vote on s b 9.90. >> in 2007, she finally got her legislation through. >> i believe it or not, under arnold schwarzenegger, there was an actual serious effort to clean up that site. but after the governor came to office, things shifted very dramatically. >> boeing however went to court over turning the law, and so exceedingly troubling action by the administration that the lawsuit was lost. within five weeks of jerry brown being sworn in in 2011, the secret stipulation was interlinked between the state and boeing in that lawsuit. >> the state of california actually stipulated that they would not contest any material fact that boeing would put forward in the suit. and they actually agreed to that stipulation that's my understanding, before ever having seen the material facts that boeing is going to put forward forward. the judge found it very easy to overturn the law. >> the state waved the right to dispute anything that boeing might say, without knowing what those things would be. >> it was a major blow, and it was exactly what boeing wanted. and they got it. >> there's also people who think your agency is too cozy with boeing. >> i haven't seen it, i need to look for it. >> nasa and the department of energy also signed 2010 agreements with the state of california. and these were actually really historic agreements. and what they do is they say, that santa susana field lab has to be cleaned up to background levels. and essentially, what that means, if there is contamination on site, it gets cleaned up. >> from your vantage point, what is the status of nasa's actions, with respect to the cleanup? >> congresswoman, all the information related to, is my understanding as well where we are. and nasa is committed to fulfill our obligations under the ac. >> i'm trying to fight. let's clean up the background. let's get this site closed. these things happen, yes, they were unfortunate, and we've made a commitment to clean up. >> the cleanup was supposed to already have been concluded by 2017. and boeing and the federal agencies have ensured it hasn't even started. and i am certain that these federal agencies do not want to set a precedent, in terms of really clinging up to a proper standard. and what happens when you cut your corners on safety is you kill people. and that's exactly what boeing did with a. that is their style. >> the department of energy, nasa, and boeing have made repeated promises to clean up. as has the state toxics agency that have seized them. and those promises have been broken over and over again. >> would anyone from your agency talk to us at all? >> many people have talked to you. >> we've made a commitment to clean it up. >> i said all i'm gonna say. >> it's the right thing to do. >> you've said nothing? >> and that means that there have been years and years of additional migration possible that wouldn't have been possible, if they had lived up to their commitments. >> it's my commitment to the people of california that when i am gone, i have left in place a system that is robust, defensible, and meaningful for the future. >> can you see how some people would think this is more lip service? >> i would hope they wouldn't. ♪ ♪ ♪ my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. i would say that to me an important aspect is too... meta portal with smart sound. helps reduce your background noise. bring that sense of calm, really... so you come through, loud and clear. meta portal. the smart video calling device that makes work from home work for you. so how many vaccines have you given to people? me? about 1000. walgreens...millions. ♪♪ i cannot miss her big debut. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here ♪♪ >> you are going about your business, and from out of nowhere, everything is different. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> it is truly the biggest nightmare any parent could ever imagine. >> in 2006, there was a cluster of neuroblastoma, this is a rare eye cancer affecting young children. it's just under 300 diagnosed in the united states, and there are 11 cases right near the site. we are very, very strong evidence that the first group of mothers, whose children suffer from neuroblastoma did sue boeing, and it settle. and as part of that settlement, will we're no longer allowed to talk to the media, or get involved. if you have a child with cancer, it's very expensive. i know one mother in particular, have i talked to recently, said the family is bankrupt caring for their daughter. so i can understand, if i was one of those mothers, why they might have went with that agreement. and now, several years later, we are seeing new cases of pediatric cancers that are near the site. >> [inaudible] >> the report which came out in 2006, that landmark study ended up showing that there is no linear threshold that any level, any level of radio nuke like exposure of that background had an inherent increased risk of cancel cancer. there is a dramatic increase in very rare and bizarre cancers that typically may happen a few times across the nation. and what we have been noting over the years, we have children, not one, not two, nor three, nor for children within the communities surrounding the test lab have these unusual cancers. >> voting itself did risk assessments of what the risk would be if someone were to live on the property. and in their own estimate there, for some of the locations, it was that the cancer risk was as high as 96 out of 100, meaning if 100 people live their, 96 would be canceled from contamination. >> they normally required the risk be kept at one in 1 million, so you can see how serious the contamination is, and how large the problem would be if they left behind. >> we found documents that show the radiation has moved off site, including at the brandeis-bardin institute. >> my name is li bai cell. and i was the president of the brandeis collegiate institute from the spring of 2000 to 2003. prior to accepting the job, i asked the chair of the board if there was anything that i needed to be worried about. she said, it's all good. we have had a settlement. and everything on that land has been cleaned up. and there's nothing to worry about. >> i think one of the most surprising documents we unearthed was an internal report commission by the camp, like proved there was a lot of contamination from santa suzannah, but ran down to children's camp, and it was the basis for the camp suing the owners of the field lab, and then, secretly settling that lawsuit. >> when i hear about a settlement, what comes to mind is that there's a reliability here. we don't often want to hear those sides of things. we don't often want to hear that there's something wrong. they have not been transparent and exactly what's going up up there, even now. >> how can one person be noticed with thyroid cancer at age four, with two recurrences. and then, end up with an extremely rare uterine cancer with no family history of any kind. >> we were four women that will we're all cancer free, and now, fast forward, only one cancer free. >> i had stage 3 to 4 bladder cancer. i was just shocked, and then, i was so angry. >> my mother was diagnosed with glioblastoma in 2001. she passed away, several weeks later at the age of 58. and my father was diagnosed with chronic leukemia in 2003. he passed away in 2010. >> my middle sister developed a tumor when she was 11 years old, and then that later was zero cancer. my father survived his cancer and my mother suffered with ovarian cancer and colon cancer. she couldn't take it. my mom actually ended up committing suicide. my oldest sister was diagnosed with brain cancer, and neuroblastoma. as she was dying several years later, her daughter was diagnosed with cancer, to. and she passed just eight months after my sister. >> to hear that your child has a life-threatening disease, absolutely 60 to your core. >> it was really, really devastating to the family. every day was like the rug was taking out from us. >> our world ended that day and there's new reality had to come into -- >> i really did. she did. >> i've been in denial. >> it's a beautiful thing, you, all to be in denial because you get to enjoy every moment. you know? that's the best thing. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i can't just leave. it's hard to give everything up, because somebody can't do the right thing. >> what do you go that you really know you are safe, you know? i mean, i moved here thinking i was safe. >> and why should we leave? we came here in good faith, why should we leave? they need to clean up their crap. you can't sit back and pretend it's not real. you have to do something. >> who is the person who could make a difference in all of this? ♪ ♪ ♪ >> who can make a difference? an make a difference ♪ ♪ this is the moment. for a treatment for moderate-to-severe eczema. cibinqo — fda approved. 100% steroid free. not an injection, cibinqo is a once-daily pill for adults who didn't respond to previous 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i never trusted myself. i never really valued myself. i do feel incredibly small. and it is hard to say that, because with that comes the lack of control that i feel. when gracie got diagnosed, there was one moment in the hospital where she had a poor underneath her skin and they had to pierce it with a needle to get her chemo or blood transfusions or whatever she needed. they had a very specific process of cleaning and sterilizing the equipment before they attach the tube. two days earlier, we had had a huge lesson on how to do that properly because we had to do that at home. we are in the operating room. and i saw the nurse wipe it twice. and they were supposed to do at least ten seconds of that and supposed to let it dry for 20 seconds. and then, that one second i realized, i need to say something, i need to stop this woman. because if she does that and there is bacteria it could go straight into gracie's bloodstream through her heart and it could kill her. and in that same exact second, i thought if i say something, she will say what do you know you are not trained. how dare you. embarrass you for bringing this up and rocking the boat. and as she is going, i didn't do anything. because i ended up being more afraid of what she would say, than protecting my daughter and thank god nothing happened, but i swore that moment, i would never, ever let my children be put in danger, because i was too scared to speak up. and i think that was the day that i decided, i am going to make a difference. >> melissa bumstead. >> i hope i'm not talking too fast, but i am pretty nervous. >> this is a alarming, we are concerned. they cancer moms in my community, these children are on my street that had it. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> >> a group of seven mothers and, i not really understanding what we were doing, came to our first department of toxins control substance meeting, to find out what is wrong, are we in danger, and that was the first day i realized that we are in danger. due to the change. org partition, we started to gain traction and people started to care and i realize that we were not alone in this fight. >> i'm a public school teacher and a mother, and i am not irrational. >> we are here because of numerous failures of regulators to protect the public. >> they should not be happening. , i got up, there was shaking my hand, how dare you do this to my community. you lied to us, try to confuse us. >> because it is cheaper for boeing to pay the relatively measly fees that your poor imposes and clean up the mess. you regulate boeing, not the other way around. >> we are a force to be reckoned with. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i really, changed really healed. and i'm willing to have confrontation. not for confrontation's sake, but to protect the people i care about. i still wanted to throw up afterwards. >> she has always been fierce. her motivation to never stop just keeps getting stronger and stronger. >> melissa bumstead is a hero. >> she is the face of this cleanup. people like melissa will change the tide of this fight and i know that she is changed already. >> there was nothing like a mom wanting to -- protect her children. there is no force on earth that's more powerful. >> my daughter went through excruciating pain. she buried three of her friends last year. and we are praying to god that we finally get the cleanup, because sometimes i cannot sleep at night worrying that my children are in danger. and i know that i am not the only one. >> or pity me bill do not remember is that we are fitting a lifetime into a year or two, or three, or five. and that is true, it's true for all of us. >> one of the things i wish we could have done, because she was in the process of getting a second wish granted. her wished was to go to klein feld's in new york and try on wedding dresses, because your favorite show was say yes to the dress. we would watch in the hospital all the time. and we got approved, we were planning it in january of last year. and we were going to try to go in april. but she did not get to. and sometimes it's really hard, because i go oh gosh, she never got to try on a wedding dress. she will never get to walk down the aisle. and like you said, we are trying to fit in a lifetime in just a small number of years. and that is so powerful. >> the day that she passed away, my husband and i, we were not ready to go home. we left her at the hospital, that was the hardest thing we had ever had to do, was to leave there without her. it was so hard to trust in anything, because all you feel is that tangible loss. >> stay strong. >> i try to get to protest the other day, but my body would not let me. >> melissa and i tell each other all the time, just do what you can, that is okay, do not feel bad. but it was hard, because i continue to feel guilty, because i was like, this fight does not stop just because i do. but watching what melissa has done over this last year, it has just been remarkable. being a mom is hard enough. being a mom of a child who had cancer makes it harder. and being a mom who is trying to protect all the kids in her community from some insidious, exposure, the level of responsibility that you end up taking on and feeling is daunting and draining and overwhelming. i have seen the toll that it has taken on her because it is frustrating when people do not listen. but she still gets up and she still fights. and she is still pushing so hard. because she has watched her friends bury their children. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> melissa is the key to the cleanup. melissa is now the community in this effort and her voice is critical and the leadership that she is shown in organizing her community is critical. and that will make or break everything. >> anything else that is worth putting a flag on? >> i was thinking something like this might be good to put out to the community. might try to figure out how to message it, to target. we don't really know with the next target is and then randomly. >> i admire melissa more than i can begin to say. she is taking this personal tragedy and used it as motivation and energy to try to protect others. and i have been in meetings with melissa, in grace of god, to meet with state senators and they touch their hearts and so it becomes much easier to do it. if you don't see who gets hurt from. >> we have to look to our decision-makers to commit to us that the site will be cleaned up in a timely manner and that they will make it a priority. >> it sounds like he was talking as a human instead of a politician. maybe he will actually do it like you said. >> these hundreds of thousands of signatures on the petition have turned things around quite a bit. the question is, is it enough? in only 8 weeks. the virus multiplies daily and can damage the liver over time. mavyret stops hep c and cures it. if you've had hepatitis b, it may flare up... ...and cause serious liver problems during and after treatment. tell your doctor if you've had hep b, a liver or kidney transplant, other liver 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all right, bye. hey, hon. i got a call from john cox campaign manager. they weren't really making a huge effort and now it's four days before the election and now they are pounding me to come host this thing where cox can step in with all these crying cancer moms. it was so much pressure on a short amount of time to figure things out. denise has been great, saying melissa, in the end this has to be your call because this is your community and you have to do what you feel is right. and then, down is going like, you can't do this. you walk into a trap essentially. and so, when i got that word, i called them up, i complained about it. i don't feel good about it. i'm sorry, i just can't do it. so, i canceled. . i hate that. i hate that politics has to be part of anything i do, to be honest. it's like to be honest and do what i feel is right and kind of always have my cards out. but i know i made the right choice, and now people are mad at me, and i don't know -- i just don't know anything. and then, dan saying, he said, you know, it's kind of on your shoulders now, because. that you've got to make this happen or we are all gonna lose. and i was like, you know, some people are trying to say like oh these people are using you, these people are using you. i'm a very small person, you know? this is not what i thought my life would be. and i feel so little. and i feel so powerless right now, and it doesn't stop. and then, i have these little times of melting out, and then i pack up. and i wash my face, and then, i go pick up the kids from school. my life just moves on. i think that's all i have to say. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i've been dealing with the santa susana facility for 39 years. i tried to walk away from the santa susana issue several years ago, after the afc was signed, i thought there was no need for me to get -- it's gonna get cleaned up. and then, when the administration started to undo it, i filled it, trying to stop them. i have not been able to somehow break what i feel is a promise i made to those people, even though it was a promise i had no idea it could take so long. >> santa susana is not for the faint hearted. it is a long complicated struggle. i am an advocate. we have been working for 30 years with other groups who have invested a similar amount of time. and so, now, also, we wonder, you know, what more -- is there anything more that could've been done? >> it's a fight between those who have conscience and those who's concern is primarily power in profit. these fights never end, and if you don't fight them, you always lose. always lose. >> right now, this fire is still growing quickly here, blowing out of the north, northeast. and still, continuing out 35, 40 miles north. we're gonna look at some of these hotspots out here. it is very disheartening. some of these folks that are living nearby -- [noise] ♪ ♪ ♪ >> the fire, now over 30,000 acres. >> it's just a monster, and nightmare. >> this entire neighborhood has been obliterated. all the mountains around here are scorching -- >> the situation -- >> this fire is fast. it is fueled by the santa susana winds. it's continuing to burn. we have been seeing this really run down at the hillside. you really can see how fast this wildfire is, threatening tens of thousands of homes. >> firefighters doing everything they can to slow this thing down. this fire here is still being very stubborn, working its way out of the rocketdyne complex over at the bell canyon. but those that are left here from the rocketdyne testing justify all the way around. it's the largest fuel -- >> you can see how terrible the air quality is there as well. we have some clear breather out here -- >> our worst fear for 15 years, that if a fire ever happened at the lab, it would be the easiest way for those contaminants to get to the public. and here it's happened. ♪♪ add downy to your wash for all the freshness and softness of home. even when you're not at home. feel the difference with downy. welcome to thursday 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>> the potential of hazard, major released into the environment was just not there. >> significant about the woolsey fire is that it started on the property of the santa susana field laboratory. it's very distressing, when you know how terribly polluted it is, to then turn on the television and see it in flames. after the fire, you know, 80% of the site burnt. we have learned since then that nasa took down tanks and piping, and removed a fire station. the tide they've been in place, could have put that fire out, regardless of what happens to the site, it's always going to be in a fire risk area, so why one would remove water tanks and piping? i don't know. >> not getting far systems up to date is, to me, that's a cardinal sin. i have worked in nuclear radiation, radiological cleanup. those sites have multiple fire crews, multiple trucks, tons of equipment, because it's a legitimate concern. there is no secrets surrounding the state of california and the fire is the tap in here. >> and after the dtse released an interim report, they released a report that shows them doing in a monitoring after the fire, silly. the greatest risk is during the fire. they have now admitted that the burnt vegetation made the contaminants in the soil more mobile, and that's part of the reason why we have these 57 exceedances in stormwater going off after the fire. but bottom line is, if it had been cleaned up as it should have been, by 2017, we wouldn't be having these this conversation. >> the vegetation on-site is contaminated, and as the vegetation burns, they aerosolized high up into the atmosphere, and then it was able to spread across the basin. our concern, for the fire, was that the contaminants are probably spreading mainly the toxic angles, which come from the burning of fuels, and other rocket engine firing. the dangerous levels of exposure to chemical contaminants, somewhat follow a similar pattern to the radio new clients. every level increases the risk >>. >> it's like chernobyl. the burning of these things, you have ash, and small pieces of what would be considered nothing falling on people, and killed hundreds of people. the people on those bridges, the people in those cities, did not realize there was a massive level of misinformation given. you know, boeing has come out and said, yeah, absolutely, you know, all these exceedances came from the fire. i mean, they can't deny that. what they're trying to deny is the impact that it could have. there are people close enough to that site that absolutely suffered the effects of it. and they will. >> my name is mike distance from. i'm a member of the expert panel, so i'd like to say that we've been involved in this, the panel has, since almost the inception of the fire. we are independent panel. we are funded by boeing, and we've been using tech to assist us. what you see, there is a trend of decreasing exceedances, as we move forward in time. >> over the course of the season, concentrations are returning to free fire levels. >> what we have here is a lot of, it exceeds the area we don't see a lot of legacy contamination. >> so the systems are already recovering, and we are happy about that. >> my name is denise duffield, i'm associated director for social responsibility of los angeles. i feel like, i am living an alternate universe, though, after this very overwhelming presentation. it's 57 exceedances in violation, it's astonishing. the expert panel is made by boeing. and that begs a lot of credulity on their independence. >> it's an open wound in our community that threatens our public health every time it rains, where the wind blows, or the fires burn. i live in simi valley. i am a golden state water customer. i've got groundwater from below assembling pumped into my home at every bat, with every meal. it's your job to protect my water source. you regulate boeing, not the other way around. >> thank you. >> i'm a little disappointed today. i had actually assumed that it would be an independent panel, expert panel speaking today. i didn't know anything about politics until the last five years. and i have learned that you always have to follow the money, that's the basic understanding of how america works these days, unfortunately. it's very disappointing, i'm sure the conflict is better -- it's not an independent panel. and the people of los angeles deserve better on such a critically important issue. we've got a lot of facts. we know the facts. we are all intelligent people here. but i think what is lacking is courage to do the right thing. and so, i wanted to bring you my daughters beads of courage. my daughter is a two-time cancer survivor at nine years old. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i heard a lot of good news about phenomenal exceedances, but you need to understand that these exceedances affect us. we've come to find out that our area is above the national average for childhood cancers. we've had several who passed away and this is the cost of exceedances. and i really ask you to have the courage to do the right thing. thank you. >> thank you. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> this was part of what was so amazing about this story, to me. i grew up near the field lab, thousands of people have lived near the field lab. and most people have never heard of it. the santa susana issue was almost dead, and that fire jump-started a whole new round of attention. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> millions are learning about the toxic threat from the contaminated santa susana field lab, all because of tweets from the kardashians. >> the woolsey fire, it blew up. >> without a doubt, there is new life. >> people need attention. >> people are listening. >> the communities have radically changed. kim kardashian tweeted, and all of a sudden, get 100,000 shares! >> kim kardashian telling her 58 million twitter followers she shocked, furious to learn that woolsey fire started at santa susana, and is potentially radioactive. >> the reporting we did throughout, got some attention, but of course, the kardashians can bring the issue way more attention. >> people are believing this. you know, this is the real thing. we're not just playing games anymore. >> on the other side of the sign, okay? >> these are all my other children here. >> and second of changes happening that i'm hopeful it could be ripped out from underneath us at any moment. >> i know what it's like to lose a child with cancer. and nobody should ever have to face that again. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> it's gone so fast that i'm still out of breath. we're trying to put together a coalition with all of our elected officials. people need to start passing the ball, take leadership. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> they are counting on us. they are counting on us not to be able to see the big picture, and really hope we're not sitting here in ten years, with a follow-up of why the damn thing didn't happen. >> we never know what domino we are setting into effect, when we just do what we can. >> mister secretary, you're supposed to be completed by 2017. you haven't started by 2019. when you come to the san fernando valley? >> i need to explain to people when the site will be fully cleaned up. >> the cleanup timeline timeline was 2017. back in 2010, 2019, we haven't even got started. >> the level of toxicity is just depressing. i mean, it's a complete mess. >> when i got to say, i'm a mom we started to change the potential. we had 650,000 signatures, and i was like, don't 50, 000, no? 650, 000, all of a sudden they were, like what's your name again? where are you from? >> it's not about winning and, it's about children. it's about family's. it's about quality of life. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i know that there is a risk of a large segment of this community, and maybe even the larger vast area looking at this. and questioning our sanity. but i would urge anybody to put on your glasses, and with 13 pages, it's only 13 pitches, 2007 report, filling the report at the santa susana field lab. and then, call me crazy. it is as if the officials have not read at the data. they're completely unaware that the citizens could be at risk. and that was alarming to me because i felt like we weren't being taken seriously. it makes me sick that this woman has given so selflessly of themselves, and have fought. they continue to fight. this is not what i want to talk about over dinner. they don't want to sit up and read epa documents. they want to have a good time. they will have a barbecue, and they want to watch their kids growing up. and -- i want that, too. sorry -- i want that, too, and i want that for my family, but -- i can't read, and i'm not gonna pretend that i didn't read it. sorry -- the next, camels. - llamas. - llamas. so save money shopping back to school on amazon. you sure that's not a camel? yeah. whatever you say. this is john. he hasn't worked this hard to only get this far with his cholesterol. taken with a statin, leqvio can lower bad cholesterol and keep it low with two doses a year. side effects were injection site reaction, joint pain, urinary tract 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the cleanup plan had been made and broken, it's always a concern that this is going to another administration. >> they signed a legally binding document in 2010, while we thought we had one of the victory. >> additionally, studies performed after signing the aoc identified less contamination than previously projected. >> i had no idea it was all gonna get thrown apart. >> i am a two-time cancer survivor. it has turned my life upside down, and i never feel safe. i want to feel safe. >> this way. >> we are here at the nasa meeting right now, where we're trying to justify why they should be able to leave contaminated waste in our community. >> i want to show you one of these justifications that i can't believe, and i've seen a lot of, just amazing. >> oh my god, they find no discernible differences to health and safety across the action alternatives. that's absurd! >> nasa claims that under federal environmental law, that they have to look at different alternative ways to clean up the scent that suzanne field lamp. they are wrong. california has been clear over the years, that the level that the site has to be cleaned up to is the background. so there is contamination, gets cleaned up. >> we signed an agreement for full cleanup, and they have proposed these two meetings to break those, and walk away from the contamination. >> they thought contamination on the surface, we're gonna have to dig 20 feet down the bedrock. and that's gonna landscape the property. you don't have to dig 20 feet down to see the contamination that's on the surface. they're doing that to try to scare people and all that stuff. >> not a department of energy, what they've been doing in the last few years is looking at different levels of cleanup, rather than different ways of reaching the standards that california has set. >> they're saying, oh, we found more contamination that would result in even more damage. so, we want to do that recreational cleanup. >> recreational measures are, it's just, it's an absolute joke. that's almost doing nothing. >> it is not okay to just clean it up a little bit. it's kind of like, you can't be just a little bit pregnant. either you are radioactive or not. >> nasa says it will take 25 years to remove the soil and it needs to be removed, in order to comply with the administrative order on consent. >> and reaching out to larger contractors in the industry, all these guys agreed to the same level that they are likely inflating numbers to get an approval to not go that far. >> for the department of energy and an asset to be successful, in walking away from the santa susana field lab, all that has to happen was that nobody stands in their way. >> in order to make our influence public opinion, we need to have individuals -- >> when you go to a public space, and everyone says it's a setup -- >> this is what we do. and during private conferences, we give an opportunity, a platform. if they have a powerpoint, they can show that. >> in public hearings, when they were done the way they used to do them, we would stand in front of the microphone, and people before the responsible party, before their community members speak for two minutes, and give their input on a proposal before them. nasa just destroyed all of that. >> this whole thing was set up intentionally to prevent people from making informed public comments. no presentation, only posters with an abscess propaganda spent. the community needs to hear the truth, we're gonna do it as part of our public comment. >> right, the public is being explained -- >> this is -- they're not gonna show people. >> this is gonna take away from -- >> its a public hearing! >> nasa is preventing public comments on their i.s. that breaks their cleanup commitments. if people want to be able to show you how they're violating the law, nasa is physically blocking you from seeing it. >> this is why right now, you guys, this is crazy. they sit this up in this kind of a situation where we don't have a microphone like we normally do. and as the l.a. times reporter has, a little table in the corner it's not marked, trying to limit public participation, prevent the media from knowing how much we like the proposal, and preventing officials from knowing that too. there is a protocol for how the public hearings are handled, and that's not it. >> the only, the only option we have right now is to try to reach our comments, and just that's just absurd. >> contamination not cleaned up -- this is illegal, and a direct threat to public health, and the environment. nasa is preparing the supplemental -- >> they are trying to evict me before i can make my public comment. >> we should be able to get three minutes, then you can do what you want. >> my eye ask on what basis again? >> trespassing. the hotel once you out of here. >> trespassing? this is a public hearing, sir! [noise] >> free speech! free speech! free speech! >> you willingly left. no you ordered me to leave, sir. >> i did say you have to leave because -- >> yes, you ordered me to leave. >> they wanted you gone. >> i am in a government public hearing. there is a lot at stake here. that site is dangerous. this is a legal process that i can be in, and i can make my comments, so, i know -- >> the 15 years of this kind of work i've never experienced such a thing. nasa knows what it's proposing to do is indefensible. and they took every measure that they could to prevent the public from hearing about it. >> for the responsible parties, this is a game. nasa and boeing continued to put forth a storyline that their recommendations, their offerings of cleanup are adequate. and we know as we have alluded to, that so many of the agents, there is absolutely no safe level. and again, if there is no safe level, and you far exceed those levels on site, and again, we know that those contaminants migrate 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at home and on the go to block millions of threats. only from us... xfinity. >> an emergency response. advance your career to the next level at notre dame de namur university. ndnu specializes in delivering the workforce of the future. we offer flexible schedules to help maintain balance in your life, and in your career. with multiple financing options and small classes to foster personalized mentoring, ndnu prepares you for careers in ndnu prepares you for careers in classes start year-round. advance your career at ndnu dot edu today. potential exposure, people living near goldwater creek in st. louis county. interest uranium was detected inside the corner middle school. the cleanup at san francisco's point has residents taking matters into their own hands. there are calls tonight for a new investigation and to another possible can circles and central indiana. our kids are sick. >> it's a little bit tough to realize this is happening all over the country. when we sat in a room, and listen to people from other areas, it was exact the same issues, burn pits, tests. core. because i realized that this is not an accident. nor is it a mistake. >> there are many santa suzanne 's all across this country. they remain highly contaminated. they threatened communities and have not been cleaned up. >> it is all across america. it is the same players. different units, but the same agencies, the same attitudes. >> let's face it, this community has been traumatized enough. >> if it was not for this group of moms that made this facebook page, i would have not known. >> there is an endemic problem with the whole system. you can have wonderful environmental laws, and have really powerful ones, but if they are not enforce, they're useless. and that has happened at dozens and dozens of toxic sites in the state of california. and probably is emblematic of what goes on unfortunately all across the country. >> those stories are not uncommon. where you have entire towns, entire neighborhoods that are having to similar issues. and until it's completely undeniable, nothing is done. >> oversight and investigations to now come to. order i would like to introduce the honorable and white, the assistant secretary office of environmental management department of energy. bottom chair. the government's nuclear defense program played an integral role in and in world war ii and the cold war. our nation was unified in its effort to end those wars. and that kind of resolve and unity of purpose is needed today. as we address the resulting environmental legacy. we remain committed to completing cleanups. so that our host communities can envision a vibrant future. and we can continue to live in the past, or we can can choose to understand the. pass make corrections and move forward, with collaborative solutions. it is time to choose the latter. >> i have been on this committee a long time. we have seen d. o. e. make these promises before, with regards to cleanup operations. >> what exactly does it mean that d. o. e.'s environmental management office does not follow leading management practices. >> anybody that has been on this job site should be fired. they are not doing their job. right >> where his hands hurts, it sits on the columbia river, where does the savannah side set, sits on the savannah site. these are areas that are environmentally sensitive. >> i am not a nuclear engineer, but i am a mom and a citizen and i can tell you that leaving it out there longer, waiting for some type of accident. it is not making our constituents across this country safer. >> we need to do better in programming and project management. and i think we can do better. >> i do not believe government has done enough to try and build that bridge of trust. >> my name is and white and my position was assistant secretary of energy for environmental management. referred to as iain one. obviously when you have got portions of the public all over the country that are unhappy with what you are, doing you are probably not doing enough. especially for a site like santa suzanna. a small sigh, doesn't even usually come to the radar of and edm one. it is tough. those kinds of big bureaucracies are very challenging. it kind of felt sometimes like a culture of molasses. since 2011, am has spent over 45 billion to address cleanup responsibilities. and now we see snow closer to cleaning up the site or responsibility. >> cleanup right now is the third biggest liability to the u.s. taxpayers. >> we throw seven billion dollars a year to that pot. and the liabilities do not go down. >> did the taxpayers a good value for the six billion am sent last year for nuclear waste cleanup? >> i believe the taxpayer got good value for their money. we can do better though. >> so many of these sites are in places where they are the only game in town in terms of employment. if the cleanup gets completed, the jobs go away. and so, to some degree, iain has become a jobs program. >> cleanup of these sites is incredibly important. we need to have it happen. and we cannot be sitting here again in five, ten, 20 years, hoping that it. will >> the actions needed to take involves significant cultural change at d. o. e. headquarters. and contractors. >> involves kids, moms. and all of these things. maybe they have been heard, but not listened to. >> and there is a difference i suppose. there is a big difference. >> and at santa suzanna right now, honestly, the conversation could be so poison, that there is no reversed here, in terms of building that trust. >> you just may never come to common ground. and that is a pity. but, that is maybe the nature of the beast there unfortunately. >> didn't have enough energy for ethan. didn't we did it last year. , i don't adhere to what we do at this year. >> post or something instead. , need to push down. >> thanks, it's pretty. >> it is pretty, i like how glittery it is. >>, i feel more hopeful, even though right now things are looking pretty glum again for the cleanup right now. i am more at peace, with the thought that this could be the rest of my life. >> before that thought was just too frightening. and i feel like whether or not it is the santa suzanna field, lab or maybe helping other sites, if this were to be the rest of my life, i would not fight it. >> i had my own plans for my life. i wanted to illustrate kids books and i wanted to be an author and i wanted to garden and i had a really simple life planned out. and it sounded just fantastic. and have not getting to have time to excel at any of those things, it was really hard. as i was praying about, i thought god said i was allowed to have a hot of the. was like all right, i can take my dreams and let them be a hobby. and doing this is more important than anything i had had planned. i definitely feel like this is where i am supposed to be in my life right now. it took gracie a lot of hard work and time to really kind of be a regular kid again. she is not the kind of kid to just lay down and take it, she is really strong. but the health effects will follow her the rest of her life. >> i have had some people accuse me of using grace's story to some degree. that is really true. if i could have brought peoples hearts along, without having to show gracie's story, i would have. but, if it helps others families to not have to go through the same thing. you know, then, i don't regret it. i don't think grace would regret, it i think she understands that we are willing to do anything to protect other kids from what she's gone through. seeing her name and her birthday and stuff, it's just so final. sorry. the santa suzanna field lab is, i wouldn't say it's always in the front of my, mind but it is consistently in the back of my mind. in the back of my mind when i give my kids water. or give them a bat. in the back of my mind when i see a new kid diagnosed. in the back of my mind when i see a another kid who has passed away. it is a hard one. i can't put all of my energy there. i am still working my way back to being fully present with everybody. and my kids need their mom. i have been slowly putting pieces back together. and i am not as lost. i'm still lost. but not as lost, if that makes sense. for me, i know i could never give up trying to fight, but i also know that i have to use this brain sparingly. because it is focused on so many different things right now, on trying to heal, trying to process, trying to grieve, trying to be a mom. but it is always there. it's always this lingering question in my mind. this idea that is there. and, it can't be quieted until it's cleaned up i think. >> i hope there is an end to this story. given what is happening in our country, i worry about all of our efforts to protect public health. i worry that focusing on santa suzannah, will seem like a luxury. that it will seem like the days have passed when you actually could fight a fight and you might just win and you could get a cleanup agreement, and you could do community organizing, and you could speak freely. >> we are in a world of distraction, and of self-centered-ness. we do not sense any connection to others, particularly to those who suffer, we don't connect to the damage we do to the planet. the everyday people, who are affected by polluters, are just being walked all over. the damage that is done will last for centuries. and we simply have to keep fighting. >> i've been a reporter for 38 years, i've seen just about everything, i was still surprised that there were government officials who looked me in the eye and said, santa suzanna is not a problem. >> even when there were so many government documents that said otherwise. but, i think that the public is not so easily fooled. they know there is something here. and the truth always comes out in the end. >> i think that it takes an enormous amount of courage, and a hell of a lot of work to see that there is accountability and that something is done. it is up to the mothers, and others who have the courage, have the time to make sure that something happens. >> it may be the only way. >> who's going to be the next child, who's going to be the next person in your community. you don't ever give up on something like this, because it's the right thing to do. when the people leave, the leaders will follow. >> being at a low right now, it doesn't be like defeat, it's part of the journey. and the thing that is heartbreaking, is that it's just going to continue. but it is the kids who have to suffer. it's the parents who have to bury them. that have to bear that for the rest of their lives. i am not going to stop. so we will just have to find out who has more endurance, me or them. with xfinity internet, you get advanced security that helps protect you at home and on the go. you feel so safe, it's as if... i don't know... evander holyfield has your back. i wouldn't click on that. hey, thanks! we got a muffin for ed! all right! you don't need those 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owned by this ice cream parlor, the sons of confederate veterans own the tiny piece of property where the flag stands. >> that flag is not mine. some piece of property in the confederate zone. >> initially, -- accepted the flag, but that changed in the aftermath of the 2015 church shooting in charleston. >> breaking, news a mass shooting -- nine people have been killed inside an african american church. >> dylan is under arrest. >> a photo of him posing with a confederate flag. >> after the charleston shooting, the confederate veterans came down with a flag that was three times as large as one they've ever had on there. people were screaming at me, calling me a racist. i said something's gotta happen. >> after newly 20 years of flying the confederate veterans flag is being removed from this business. >> i've been told not to take it down. >> that flag is coming down. >> no it isn't. >> we own it on our property. why should we compromise? >> i would never said five or ten years ago that i thought this was the most racist thing in the world. standing here i feel these peoples hearts. >> we will little judge decide that. >> fine. >> are you still going to try to take it down? >> absolutely. it will be no stopping me at this point. we came down here because of the fishing and nice people we've meant. then my wife debbie and i got bored, this little restaurant looked like a good opportunity. it belonged to maurice's bbq shop and was need of repair. i had never deemed it as racist. it was history to me. it was cool, because it was like a rebel flag. that meant that you were against the grain. you were at that house. when i lived in maryland, i was a race car driver. out we had a rebel flag, not on the car, but we had a flagpole by the race car. especially when we'd go up north, because we were guys from down south. we were the guys to beat. i was cleaning up my closet. founded in the closet. i would wear this in public anywhere i wind without a problem. when it became what it is today, my wife had said that there was no place for that on a race team. i'm not a racist by any means, or a hater. -- was the best place for it. >> my name is buzz braxton, and i'm a lieutenant commander at camp 842. this is general robert e. lee. probably the greatest man that ever walked the face of the earth. a lot of people don't understand the sons of confederate veterans. the confederate battle flag is the soldiers like. that's why we are so proud of it. do you, it sounds -- the sons of confederate veterans, it is your duty to see that the true history of the south is presented to future generations. that's what we try to do. it's a tough job. there is a picture of maurice bessinger, we had the federal flag. >> i'm maurice bessinger, chairman of the -- enterprise incorporated. the south shall rise again. >> mr. maurice bessinger was a member of this camp. he owned and operated my barbecue restaurant -- >> after almost four decades and a bitter debate, south carolina removed the confederate flag from the south carolina state. >> after 38 years, the flag began its descent down the flagpole. >> july the 1st 2000, the flag was taken off the dome. . >> -- to protest, to take it down of the heritage flak. >> mr. maurice called me one day and asked me if we would like to have a little piece of property where the flag lives. that was one of the best thing he needed to worry about. the last thing he needed to worry about. after the incident in charleston, the whole emphasis came to the flat. i said of the flag is going to be under attack, the bigger the better. (kid) i'm ok. (vo) your family is safer in a three-row subaru ascent. love. it's what makes subaru, subaru. kids don't always take the best care of school supplies. so save money shopping back to school on amazon. while they... 0oh... uh... figure their stuff out. welcome to allstate, where you can bundle and save. isn't that right phil? what in the world are you doing? i'm in the metaverse, bundling my home and auto insurance. save up to 25% when you bundle home and auto with allstate. you can give people information, but you cannot give them courage. >> hey, tommy. what's up, man? tommy reached out and said look, i'm having issues on my property. can you take a look? >> i remember as a kid writing to orangeburg with my grandparents at the piggy park restaurant. maurice put a sign on his restaurant saying the government has to serve the neighbors but we're gonna get that money to the kkk. >> -- the flag was there. a knew it was there. would they didn't know was with the culture was like here, specifically in orangeburg. >> orangeburg is a majority african american town. >> it's 60% black according to the 2010 census. that makes me and minority. >> there is a racial divide in orangeburg, and that's got a lot of to do with history. i feel like they sometimes feel like we've done something wrong to them even though that happened years ago. >> even though i do see whites and blacks all around, and they can be in the same facility, everybody knows what's going on. ha >> after that original showdown -- local -- they can't regulate speech but they can regulate the use of the property. this is the actual zoning map. you can zoom in, and you will see, that is us right here. that entire area is zoned business commercial. that's it. this is the little piece that this fight is over. 0. 003 acres. a legitimate commercial piece of property. it's not. the sons of confederate veterans want to use that piece of property to keep maurice hatefully d. c. to live on in perpetuity. >> a battle to remove the confederate flag that is near and ice cream shop continues tonight. >> they took their concerns to the city and the zoning over where that flag sits could be challenged. >> what's a? >> just clear the record. i was contacted by camp 842, and the issues that were being presented for the very foundation of when our american constitution is made up of. the constitution is very important to me being an attorney and an american. >> good evening, ladies and gentlemen. -- the board and zoning appeals meeting to order. >> this particularly was shown to be one general commercial. the moment that mori's passenger sub divided that piece of property into two separate parcels, each parcel wasn't required to comply with you house zoning ordinance. this properties intended to be used and it has been used for will retain years as a historical marker. zero commercial use. i would ask that you find that this piece of property, flag included, this violate the city of orangeburg zoning ordinances. >> with all due respect, that was a beautiful argument that was made, but this is not the form to handle a piece of property that has been defeated to a private entity with no problems. there are being summaries, but uniquely, they're being raised schematically all across the united states of america. this is first amendment speech. it would be who the leadership of this group to not overturn a well founded decision by the zoning that falls in accordance with the law. thank you. >> -- the current use is flying the confederate flag and maintaining a monument. the city of orangeburg does not regulate the location of flags are the display of flags they're owned by zoning or any other regulation. therefore, the property is in compliance. thank you. >> all in favor to the motion of our zoning administrator, let it be known by showing your right hand. any opposed? the zoning -- agreed upon the decision that the zoning [inaudible] this meeting is adjourned. [ applause ]. >> we lost for an issue that is this contentious. i would be hesitant to against the suns of the confederate veterans. côte d'ivoire >> they went to the path of least resistance. >> they got it wrong. >> a confederate flag and it's a south carolina screen parlor is a new concern. >> -- this racially charged -- >> his business has been vandalized multiple times. his employees have been harassed and in a riot nearly started outside his shop. >> keep that flag flying! this is where they're property -- and that paid their, when you stand out here for a moment, you heard them hollering takedown, or leave it alone, if you. >> my wife debbie thinks that the sons of confederate are going to burn our house down. she's up all night. it's aggravating to me. she's going through all this suffering. >> so, i guess you know in this bigger world, it's not perfect these days, is it? >> no, ma'am. that means they be tells you that jesus wet? >> he loves us. >> like, so much. >> i was in the doctor's office one day and the lady said to me, i heard you people beat up black people. that's the kind of rumors -- she had some of her grandchildren with them. i said you bring those babies to my bible study on wednesday night, and you're going to know what we are about. >> you need to have react what? >> faith. >> it's so stressful and sad, because i want to please everybody. i want to love everybody. sometimes i often wondered, god, why did you bring me to this place? why did you bring me to this town? why? >> the confederate flag -- undying devotion for the cause for which it stands. thank you. you may all be seated. for those of you who have not heard or do not know, we did have a wonderful victory at. our flights will continue to fly. i hope it will continue to fly forever. i could've waited to tell my doctor my heart was racing just making spaghetti... but i didn't wait. i could've delayed telling my doctor i was short of breath just reading a book... but i didn't wait. they told their doctors. and found out they had... atrial fibrillation. a condition which makes it about five times more likely to have a stroke. if you have one or more of these symptoms irregular heartbeat, heart racing, chest pain, shortness of breath, fatigue or lightheadedness, contact your doctor. this is no time to wait. (vo) the fully electric audi e-tron family is here. with models that fit any lifestyle. contact your doctor. and innovative ways to make your e-tron your own. through elegant design and progressive technology. all the exhilaration, none of the compromise. the audi e-tron family. progress that moves you. i was injured in a car crash. i had no idea how much my case was worth. i called the barnes firm. today, we are actually going to when a truck hit my son, i had so many questions about his case. i called the barnes firm. it was the best call i could've made. your case is often worth more than insuran call the barnes firm to find out i could've made. what your case could be worth. we will help get you the best result possible. ♪ the barnes firm, injury attorneys ♪ call one eight hundred,est resul eight million ♪ appeal the decision. an appeals, go straight to the court. it removes that political element that is realistically there on a local level. >> the world is very much changing around me and everybody else. this just, you see a lot more. more that you may not be comfortable with. i try not to use the n-word. but, if there's somebody out there that's just doing everything wrong in their behavior and their conduct, i might say that word. and i can't say that i would apologize for it. >> the day i filed the -- challenge the next morning, my door was. and there is a pick up truck in my driveway, in the back. >> did somebody come to the wrong house that night? i don't know. but, when you pair that with what was going on, it makes a little nervous. [noise] i've had conversations with people, they see the fight that we're in with the veterans in the zone. and they literally are like, wait, isn't orange bird like 16 to 70% black? why is bringing down that flag even a discussion. it should've been down. and you just have to let them know that white supremacy has its roots everywhere. orangeburg, there's no difference. >>, you know orangeburg it's home to one of the biggest massacre in terms of civil rights in south carolina. students were protesting for the integration of the local bowling alley, fearing violence, the governor said in the howard patrol. one night, the patrol broke out in gunfire, killing three students and injuring 28 others. it was 50 years ago. but that's not something that people in town had forgotten. it's kind of like the shadows of a dark era are constantly on you. and, i think some people just don't want to think about the confederacy or think about what it means or what it meant. you would have this expectation that when you do have black leaders in a city that, on issues like this, they will be very bold, they'll be very outspoken. and a lot of times, they aren't. not everybody in government or in politics is comfortable with what comes with booking a system that's been in place for 400 years. as long as there are confederate monuments everywhere, white supremacy will always be here. i just don't know what to do. the community, the city council, the city administrator, none of them are helping to get this thing going. i think they've got somebody coming in to make sure they don't commit. but, then i almost thought, we'll never get to the bottom of that. it's sucks! >> the controversy over a confederate flag continues tonight. >> justin and i have tried to exhaust all reasonable evidence, and it's just not walking. >> tommy darius is not threatening to remove the flag and confederate marker himself. he -- just so he could shove that flag up the s of everybody in orangeburg fraternity. >> they stun the sons of the confederate telling them if they want their flag in marker, you need to come and get. it >> would if i don't need this whole like to the confederacy and they put flags and swat stickers and what the hell ever. is the city going to be okay with that? no! so they better get their ass is on board. >> if you go right around the monument -- i'm just getting ready for pick of. the science a confederate, i don't need it to them. >> more days go by without something happening. . okay, since we were here last, you can see where he's been thinking around the monument. he's been trying to cause so less chaos that somebody's trying not to overreact. i just understand, i just don't understand. i want people to know that our ancestors are good people, most of them didn't have slaves. i've talked people all along, that was the best thing that ever happened to folks that came over. they would not be driving bmw's to date. and their ancestors remained in africa because they would've been eaten by other tribes or eaten by lions and tigers. i know that isn't politically correct to say. but it's true. my father had across eastern washington d. c., in 1968, i was about 12. my father was working the story. and they were expecting a -- about 1:00 that, night we had a phone call. the store burned to ground, i'll never forget this. my father stood in front of the storm cried. my father was a huge man. and in the meantime i saw black people lining up over here and it was like you know, that these guys, all these people are lining up. and i thought it would be bad. so the first person walked up to my dad said i owe you money. and i'd like to pay. my father said, man, i have no idea how much do on me. they all blend in the store. and she said, i think it's 12 hours in some sense. she paid, within minutes a linebacker and the people paid my dad money. and, we left. my father never had a racist bone in this body. i wanted people to know i'm not know racist bastard standing home holding up that flag. you sure that's not a camel? yeah. whatever you say. before we begin, i'd like to thank our sponsor, liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. and by switching, you could even save $652. thank you, liberty mutual. now, contestants ready? go! why? why? only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty.♪ (brad) we've helped millions of renters find their perfect place. only pay for what you need. like andrea, oh- (brad vo) ow! what? this isn't right! hot, hot, hot! mayday! mayday! seems like andrea got a dishwasher that's fully functioning. apartments-dot-com. the place to find a place. so how many vaccines have you given to people? me? about 1000. walgreens...millions. ♪♪ i cannot miss her big debut. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here ♪♪ this morning, new details over a dispute of the confederate flags flying near an orangeburg restaurant, is unfolding before a circuit court judge. we are continuing here, at an appellate hearing today. i am standing before martin luther king junior quote which says that justice anywhere is justice everywhere. and i feel that too, on my heart. there's a real assault on our traditions, our history and particularly the confederacy. >> anybody else here for jury duty? >> tell me doris versus city of orangeburg. >> when i arrived, there and i see that flag, i think about the fact that, as a, kid i used to ride by there and be afraid. >> this is not a challenge. we are challenging the underlying use of the property. >> and now, as a man, i get to ride by there and think i can play a role to make it go away. that's a pretty don't dream. . the judge is going to. review >> she's going to go through the argument that was me today, she's going to look at the record that's up on appeal. and then she's going to reach her decision. so now we're just going to have to wait. >> so, sometimes i wonder if maurice wasn't up there chuckling. look at bus. he's catching held down there. he's doing all right. the sons of confederate veterans have starched feelings about the fact that some of their ancestors fought in the civil war for the confederacy. but, if you were to give half of those members the original document of south carolina, most of them probably either have been dreaded, refused to read it because they know what it says or will read it and say, yes but that's not why my ancestors fought. >> i'm not gonna say that saver, in any way shape or form, involves the decisions. but those men did not leave their families and their homes and there were beds to go to fight so somebody can own the saves. declaration of the immediate causes reaching the justified of south carolina from the federal union -- a geographical line has been drawn across the union and all the states north of that line have united in the election of a man to the high office of the president of the united states, whose opinions have purposes that are hostile to slavery. the slave holding state will no longer have the power of self governance. and the federal government will have to become the -- if you want to come at me and say that the sole purpose was slavery, so be it if that's what you desire. but if we agree to disagree that will be all right, you know. because i admitted, the slavery played a part in it. slavery was a factor but there were other factors involved. >> if you stand for an institution that supported slavery and you don't denounce that and you choose to ignore it, i think that it implicitly means that somewhere in you, you are okay with it. >> new developments tonight, a circuit court judge agrees that a flag in front of the creamery does not violate the city of orangeburg zoning ordinance. owner of the -- creamery, now says, because it affects his business, he closed that shop and is now selling it. >> here is my closed down a little story. and it's all gone. it's just, it's not comfortable to be here. >> i think people couldn't differentiate between this property being someone else and this property being a creamer. i think it's insane, because nothing that plants there is going to be successful as long as that is not saw. >> i do feel like i've been pushed down. but we know exactly what happened when they put that bigger flag up, and the people were killed in charleston. we knew exactly what was going on. and that was in their hearts. >> now it's closed, and it's over, i'm very relieved. >> at the end of the day, getting my family away from here and moving back to familiar people in places is just a plus, plus. >> shop closed! yes, shop is closed. >> our success in orange burqas inspired and their people to stand up. >> everybody else is taking them down. and we're putting them up. >> today, we're raising the first confederate battle flag on i-95 in south carolina. [applause] >> when a liberal as them has lived hard and comes down the road and pence down to see a battle flag, that we want. because they don't have anything to do -- they could have their history, we want to keep ours. >> do you worry that there will be a day when the confederate flag is not flying in orangeburg? >> yes. how can you help not to worry about it? i don't dwell on it, but there are times when i can foresee and i worry about that there may not be a confederate flag flying in the city of orangeburg or the majority of the united states. >> [noise] george floyd! >> huge number of people coming up in every single state in the country. standing together to say, this is not acceptable anymore, black lives matter. >> black lives matter! black lives matter! >> african american, ahmaud arbery's seen running [noise] >> no justice, no peace. >> george floyd repeatedly cried, my neck hurts, i can't breathe. >> i can't breathe! i can't breathe! >> breonna taylor shot eight times and killed by police. >> hands up, don't you! >> here in south carolina, all across the nation, community members have been challenging their local and state government to take down confederate statues. >> why do we want? justice! >> when do we want? it >> now! >> today, they will vote on a resolution to remove a confederate statue. >> a protests outside of city hall, members want the 20 -- confederate statue removed. >> when people say it's not my head -- it's our heritage, it's not our heritage. i think of confederate, i am unfair. it's been one of those things where you can talk about, it and you don't say anything about. it but, we are now in the time where we have the voice. >> we are here today because of course the mere city council are meeting on the resolution in regards to the statue. >> we just hope that the city will remove the statue from downtown square and rename it. >> -- >> where do you live? >> i live in north carolina. >> are simple as part of the symbol of oppression. >> our first goal is to remove the racist statue and racist street names in orangeburg. and of course, the confederate flag at the creamery. we called the mayor's office, we called the city council members. >> i am excited to see what's going on in orangeburg. we are seeing people who want change. and they're not asking for change in how they're demanding. >> as we continue, we've got to do a much better job collectively of being willing to fight the fight when it's not the popular thing to do. , and if we can keep doing that, keep pushing for change than we can keep standing up>> and i loe day where i jump in my car in orangeburg, and that confederate flag is no longer flying there. >> i'm craig, melvin and i'm natalie morales. >> and this is dateline. >> lead isn't a very good anniversary gift -- >> we need an emergency, ambulance my wife has a gunshot. >> a fatal gunshot, just hours after celebrating 16 years of marriage to a police officer husband. >> he told me, she may have tried to clean my gun, and it may have accidentally went off. >> police were suspicious, the victim's own mother wasn't. >> she was so opposed to anyone even exploring the idea that her only daughter had

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