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Transcripts For WUSA 60 Minutes 20170312 : comparemela.com
Transcripts For WUSA 60 Minutes 20170312 : comparemela.com
Transcripts For WUSA 60 Minutes 20170312
Nearly 14 years as prisoner 760 in
Guantanamo Bay
. How much english did you speak when you landed in guantanamo . Almost none. Improbably, while fighting for his own release, he taught himself english, wrote a best selling book about his life in american custody and became good friends with some of his guards, one of whom youll hear from tonight. Do you think you might go and visit him now that hes been released . I would love to someday. Im steve kroft. Im lesley stahl. Im bill whitaker. Im
Holly Williams
. Im scott pelley. Those stories, tonight on 60 minutes. man vo it was may, when dad forgot how to brush his teeth. woman vo in march, my husband didnt recognize our grandson. woman 2 vo thats when moderate alzheimers made me a caregiver. avo if their alzheimers is getting worse, namzaric is approved for moderate to severe alzheimers disease in patients who are taking donepezil. It may improve cognition and overall function, and may slow the worsening of symptoms for a while. Namzaric does not change the underlying disease progression. Dont take if allergic to memantine, donepezil, piperidine, or any of the ingredients in namzaric. Tell the doctor about any conditions; including heart, lung, bladder, kidney or liver problems, seizures, stomach ulcers, or procedures with anesthesia. Serious side effects may occur, including muscle problems if given anesthesia; slow heartbeat, fainting, more stomach acid which may lead to ulcers and bleeding; nausea, vomiting, difficulty urinating, seizures, and worsening of lung problems. Most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, dizziness, loss of appetite, and bruising. woman 2 vo i dont know what tomorrow will bring but im doing what i can. avo ask about namzaric today. Looking for clear answers for your
Retirement Plan
. Start here. Or here. Even here. And definitely here. To make
Retirement Plan
ning simpler. We let you know where you stand, so when it comes to your
Retirement Plan
, youll always be absolutely. Clear. Time to think of your future its your retirement. Know where you stand. Time to think of your future the toothpaste that helpstax, prevent bleeding gums. If you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. Try new parodontax toothpaste. Its cliniy callproven to remove plaque, the main cause of bleeding gums. For healthy gums, and strong teeth. Leave bleeding gums behind. New parodontax toothpaste. Find fast relief behind the counter allergies with nasal congestion . With claritind. [ upbeat music ] strut past that aisle for the allergy relief that starts working in as little as 30 minutes and contains the best oral decongestant. Live claritin clear, with claritind. I thodid the ancestrydna toian. Find out im only 16 italian. So i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors was eastern european. This is my ancestor who i didnt know about. Stahl questions continue to surround the role russia may have played in
President Trump
s election last fall, and about the president s professed admiration for
Vladimir Putins
skills as a strong leader. What the president doesnt talk about is the unfortunate fate that stalks some of putins most prominent critics. They have been victims of unsolved shootings, suspicious suicides and poisonings. Tonight, the story of one of them. Vladimir karamurza was an opposition activist on the front lines, protesting putins policies, organizing demonstrations and town hall meetings. He knew he was on a dangerous mission. When we met him last year, he told us that one day in may, 2015, he learned just how dangerous. Vladimir karamurza i was in a work meeting with my colleagues in moscow, when i suddenly started to feel really sick. And i went, within about 20 minutes, from feeling completely normal to feeling like a very sick man. Then, i dont remember anything for the next month. Stahl you were out for a month . Vladimir karamurza i was in a coma for a week, and i dont remember anything for a month, and had basically a cascade of all my major life organs failing, one after another; just switching off, you know, the lungs, the heart, the kidneys. Stahl he was shuttled from hospital to hospital in moscow for two days, as doctors frantically tried to figure out what was wrong with him. Vladimir karamurza i was, at one point, connected, i think to eight different
Artificial Life
support machines, and doctors told my wife that theres only going to be about a 5 chance that ill survive. Stahl but he beat the odds. When we spoke with him last year, hed been recovering for a year, but he was still walking with a limp from nerve damage. So what happened . Vladimir karamurza well, it was some kind of a very strong toxin. Because, you know, with these things, as people who know more about this than i do explained to me, you basically have to know exactly what youre testing for in order to find it. Stahl so they never found the exact compound . Vladimir karamurza they never did. Stahl it wasnt until the fourth day, and after he had been on a dialysis machine, that blood was drawn and sent to a
Toxicology Lab
in france. It found heavy metals in his blood, but no specific toxin. Still, karamurza maintains that he was poisoned. Vladimir karamurza i have absolutely no doubt that this was a deliberate poisoning, that it was intended to kill. Because, as i mentioned already, the doctors told my wife that its about a 5 chance of survival. And when its that kind of percentage, its not to scare. Its to kill. Stahl can you be sure that what happened to you was directed by mr. Putin . Vladimir karamurza well, of that we have no idea. I dont know the precise circumstances, i dont know the who or the how, but i do know the why. Stahl in recent years, quite a few of putins enemies hav perished by swallowing things they shouldnt have. In 2006, russianspyturned kremlincritic
Alexander Litvinenko
drank tea laced with polonium210. Two years earlier, the ukrainian politician
Viktor Yushchenko
had somehow ingested dioxin. He survived, but was disfigured. But what would the motive be in the case of the critic
Vladimir Karamurza
. Cambridge educated, he was for years a washingtonbased reporter for a russian tv station. So he was wellconnected and had perfect english, which he used to incessantly criticize the regime on the international stage. Vladimir karamurza a government that is based on genuine support does not need to jail its opponents. Stahl as if his outspokenness wasnt enough to anger the kremlin, he made matters worse for himself when he joined forces with this man. Bill browder its death if you cross the putin regime. Stahlll investor in russia and putins champion, but he turned into a dogged adversary when his russian tax attorney
Sergei Magnitsky
blew the whistle on alleged largescale theft by government officials. Browder we discovered massive corruption of the putin regime. Sergei exposed it, testified against officials involved. He was subsequently arrested, put in pretrial detention, tortured for 358 days and killed at the age of 37. Stahl browder was so outraged, he joined with
Vladimir Karamurza
to lobby the u. S. Congress for a law targeting those responsible for that death and other human rights violations. They succeeded the magnitsky act passed in 2012. It is the first law that sanctions individual russians, 44 so far. Browder the magnitsky act is designed to sanction, to freeze the assets and to ban the visas for people who commith stahl so they cant get their money, which may be stashed in the
United States
. Browder and so
Vladimir Putin
is extremely angry that the magnitsky was going to be passed. He was even angrier when it got passed. And he was angrier when people started getting added, names started getting added to the magnitsky list. Stahl one reason
Vladimir Karamurza
is convinced he was targeted is because six people connected to the magnitsky case, as he was, have ended up dead. One of them was boris nemtsov, a leader of russias opposition and karamurzas partner in lobbying for the magnitsky act. Vladimir karamurza on the 27th of february 2015, he was killed by five bullets in the back as he was walking home, as he always did, out in the open, without bodyguards stahl this was an assassination. In some of the deaths, proving there was foul play has been a challenge. Take the case of this russian banker, who came forward with browder
Alexander Perepilichny
was a whistleblower. At the age of 44, he went jogging outside his home in surrey, outside of london and dropped dead. The police deemed it an unsuspicious, natural death. Stahl well, they did look for poison. They just couldnt find any. Browder they did a very firstround toxicology screen. They didnt find anything on the first run through. Stahl detecting poison can be extremely difficult, and theres a reason this cold war c. I. A. Memo reveals that the soviets ran a laboratory for poisons in a large and super secret installation known as the chamber to test undetectable compounds. In the case of the banker in london, the coroner wasnt willing to give up. He ordered more tests, and three years later it was revealed in court that an exotic toxin was found, with the help of an authority on flowers. B his stomach contents was sent to a
Botanical Garden
outside of london, and one of the scientists found a compound called gelsemium elegans, which is a chinese herb. They call it the heartbreak grass, and it causes a person to die unexpectedly without explanation. Stahl still, theres no direct evidence of a kremlin connection, but the list of those whove come to die unexpectedly after running afoul of mr. Putin is long. Political opponents and human rights lawyers have been shot; overlyinquisitive reporters have perished in mysterious plane crashes or by car bombs, by poison or gunfire. Journalist
Anna Politkovskaya
was poisoned and shot. Then there are enemies who kill themselves, one by hanging, one by stabbing himself to death with two knives, and one by tying himself to a chair and some of putins opponents are in prison, others forced out of the country, like mikhail khodorkovsky, probably putins most famous living critic. Are you afraid for your own life . Mikhail khodorkovsky translated for a period of over ten years,
Vladimir Putin
had ample opportunity to put an end to my life in a very easy way, just by snapping his fingers. And today, its a little more difficult. Stahl khodorkovsky was once the richest man in russia, until he took to opposing putin. He was put on trial, his oil company confiscated, and then thrown in prison for ten years. Home is now london, where he funds a russian prodemocracy movement and this is where the plot thickens because one of his senior organizers on the ground in russia is none other than
Vladimir Karamurza
. There are people who say that whatap a message to you, a message to you to back off. Khodorkovsky translated you know, for ten years, i was receiving lots of messages from our authorities of various sorts. And some of these messages were rather unpleasant, concerning my physical well being. But the authorities saw i ignored these messages. I would like to believe that they have not forgotten that. Stahl in 2015, once
Vladimir Karamurza
was stabilized, he was flown to washington d. C. To continue treatment near his wife, yevgenia, and their three children, who live in the u. S. For their safety. But as soon as karamurza got better, he was itching to go back to russia. Yevgenia karamurza i think what my husband believes in will always outweigh the fear. Stahl even for you . Yevgenia karamurza of course im terrified. But at the same time, you know, i married the guy 13 years ago, and i knew what i was getting into. La know, i think theres
Nothing Better
this regime, the putin regime would like us to do than to give up and run away. And were not going to give him that pleasure. Its our country. Stahl even after being poisoned . Vladimir karamurza its our country. We have to fight for it. Stahl he told us this in june. He went back immediately after, even though threats against him had intensified, like this video posted on instagram putting him in the crosshairs of a sniper rifle. He was continuing his opposition work, when just last month yevgenia karamurza all of a sudden, he begins experiencing this very elevated heart rate, his
Blood Pressure
drops very low. He begins sweating and he has trouble breathing. Stahl his wife thinks her husband was attacked, the same way as before. Yevgenia karamurza the first time, he had been dragged from one hospital to another to yet another, where they were trying to establish the cause. This time, he was taken directly to the hospital, to the same medical team that had treated him in 2015. And the moment they saw him, they knew what they were dealing with. Stahl and what do you think happened . Yevgenia karamurza the russian doctors official diagnosis is an acute intoxication by an undetermined substance, which is poisoning. Stahl this happened just as washington was raising questions about
President Trump
s relationship with mr. Putin. So last month, vlaidmir kara murza became an issue on the senate floor. John mccain vladimir has once again paid the price for his gallantry and integrity. Stahl politicians on both sides of the aisle spoke out against the apparent poisoning, but the
Trump Administration
has not. Remarkably, karamurza survived again. Less than three weeks after he collapsed, he was flown to the u. S. , and two weeks later, we spoke to him for a second time. You look pretty good. How are you actually feeling . Vladimir karamurza well, youre very kind. I dont think i feel as good as i look. Stahl he said hes recovering faster because his doctors knew just what to do the kremlin has denied any involvement, and since no poison has been found yet, supporters of putin question whether he was really poisoned at all. Weve been told that we are very naive, naive journalists, gullible, and that this whole thing is concocted by the opposition to fool the
American People
into thinking that that regime would do such a thing. Vladimir karamurza to those who say that this is a plot, i honestly and i mean this sincerely i wish they never have to experience what ive experienced twice in the last two years, when youre trying to breathe and you cannot. When you feel your organs shutting down, giving up on you one after another. And when you feel the life coming out of your body in the next few hours, and you dont remember anything for the next month. And then for the next year youre trying to r relearn how to walk, how to use cutlery, you know, how to talk to your kids again. I wish these people who tell you these things never have to experience this. I honestly, sincerely do. Stahl you were very, very sick and went back. Now, are you finished . Are you saying, im not going back any
Vladimir Karamurza
oh, god no, of course not. Stahl youre going to go back . Vladimir karamurza of course, i will absolutely go back to russia. I am russian, this is my country, and i believe in what i do, in what my colleagues do. There are many of us. Stahl but not many have almost died twice. Vladimir karamurza many, unfortunately, have died. Im the fortunate one. Im still here, im still talking to you. Many of my colleagues cannot do that. If he was poisoned twice, why isnt he dead . The search for an answer at 60minutesovertime. Com. Sponsored by lyrica. Before i had the shooting, burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet kicked off a lot of high school games. Built a life for my family. And liked elto hp others in need. But i couldnt bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. So i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. Nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. Lyrica is fdaapproved to treat this pain. Allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. Tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. Or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. Common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. Dont drink alcohol while taking lyrica. Dont drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. Those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. Now i have less diabetic nerve pain. And its great to help others get back on their feet. Ask your doctor about lyrica and learn about our 25 copay offer at lyrica. Com. Say carl, we have a question about your brokerage fees. Fees . What did you have in mind . I dont know. 4. 95 per trade . Uhhh. And i was wondering if your brokerage offers some sort of guarantee . Guarantee . Where we can get our fees and commissions back if were not happy. So can you offer me what schwab is offering . Ask your broker if theyre offering 4. 95 online equity trades and a satisfaction guarantee. If you dont like their answer, ask again at schwab. It shouldnt be whateverfleas and ticks. Home. No, no no no no. Seresto® kills and repels fleas and ticks for 8 continuous months for effective protection in an easytouse, nongreasy collar. 8month seresto®. From bayer. Your date with destiny has arrived. Lets do this new cinnamon frosted flakes are finally here. Sweet cinnamon and the frosted crunch you love. Well . Tastes like victory t. Tastes like victory. Theyre great march is
Colorectal Cancer
awareness month. What better time to ask your
Health Care Provider
about a screening that may be right for you . Cbs cares. Stahl president obama tried and failed to close the prison at
Guantanamo Bay
, a place he believed, hinders our fight
President Trump
disagreed, and has vowed to load it up with some bad dudes. Just 41 prisoners remain at guantanamo, and of the nearly 800 who were there at some point, not many have been interviewed. But tonight,
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>. How much english did you speak when you landed in guantanamo . Almost none. Improbably, while fighting for his own release, he taught himself english, wrote a best selling book about his life in american custody and became good friends with some of his guards, one of whom youll hear from tonight. Do you think you might go and visit him now that hes been released . I would love to someday. Im steve kroft. Im lesley stahl. Im bill whitaker. Im
Holly Williams<\/a>. Im scott pelley. Those stories, tonight on 60 minutes. man vo it was may, when dad forgot how to brush his teeth. woman vo in march, my husband didnt recognize our grandson. woman 2 vo thats when moderate alzheimers made me a caregiver. avo if their alzheimers is getting worse, namzaric is approved for moderate to severe alzheimers disease in patients who are taking donepezil. It may improve cognition and overall function, and may slow the worsening of symptoms for a while. Namzaric does not change the underlying disease progression. Dont take if allergic to memantine, donepezil, piperidine, or any of the ingredients in namzaric. Tell the doctor about any conditions; including heart, lung, bladder, kidney or liver problems, seizures, stomach ulcers, or procedures with anesthesia. Serious side effects may occur, including muscle problems if given anesthesia; slow heartbeat, fainting, more stomach acid which may lead to ulcers and bleeding; nausea, vomiting, difficulty urinating, seizures, and worsening of lung problems. Most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, dizziness, loss of appetite, and bruising. woman 2 vo i dont know what tomorrow will bring but im doing what i can. avo ask about namzaric today. Looking for clear answers for your
Retirement Plan<\/a> . Start here. Or here. Even here. And definitely here. To make
Retirement Plan<\/a>ning simpler. We let you know where you stand, so when it comes to your
Retirement Plan<\/a>, youll always be absolutely. Clear. Time to think of your future its your retirement. Know where you stand. Time to think of your future the toothpaste that helpstax, prevent bleeding gums. If you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. Try new parodontax toothpaste. Its cliniy callproven to remove plaque, the main cause of bleeding gums. For healthy gums, and strong teeth. Leave bleeding gums behind. New parodontax toothpaste. Find fast relief behind the counter allergies with nasal congestion . With claritind. [ upbeat music ] strut past that aisle for the allergy relief that starts working in as little as 30 minutes and contains the best oral decongestant. Live claritin clear, with claritind. I thodid the ancestrydna toian. Find out im only 16 italian. So i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors was eastern european. This is my ancestor who i didnt know about. Stahl questions continue to surround the role russia may have played in
President Trump<\/a>s election last fall, and about the president s professed admiration for
Vladimir Putins<\/a> skills as a strong leader. What the president doesnt talk about is the unfortunate fate that stalks some of putins most prominent critics. They have been victims of unsolved shootings, suspicious suicides and poisonings. Tonight, the story of one of them. Vladimir karamurza was an opposition activist on the front lines, protesting putins policies, organizing demonstrations and town hall meetings. He knew he was on a dangerous mission. When we met him last year, he told us that one day in may, 2015, he learned just how dangerous. Vladimir karamurza i was in a work meeting with my colleagues in moscow, when i suddenly started to feel really sick. And i went, within about 20 minutes, from feeling completely normal to feeling like a very sick man. Then, i dont remember anything for the next month. Stahl you were out for a month . Vladimir karamurza i was in a coma for a week, and i dont remember anything for a month, and had basically a cascade of all my major life organs failing, one after another; just switching off, you know, the lungs, the heart, the kidneys. Stahl he was shuttled from hospital to hospital in moscow for two days, as doctors frantically tried to figure out what was wrong with him. Vladimir karamurza i was, at one point, connected, i think to eight different
Artificial Life<\/a> support machines, and doctors told my wife that theres only going to be about a 5 chance that ill survive. Stahl but he beat the odds. When we spoke with him last year, hed been recovering for a year, but he was still walking with a limp from nerve damage. So what happened . Vladimir karamurza well, it was some kind of a very strong toxin. Because, you know, with these things, as people who know more about this than i do explained to me, you basically have to know exactly what youre testing for in order to find it. Stahl so they never found the exact compound . Vladimir karamurza they never did. Stahl it wasnt until the fourth day, and after he had been on a dialysis machine, that blood was drawn and sent to a
Toxicology Lab<\/a> in france. It found heavy metals in his blood, but no specific toxin. Still, karamurza maintains that he was poisoned. Vladimir karamurza i have absolutely no doubt that this was a deliberate poisoning, that it was intended to kill. Because, as i mentioned already, the doctors told my wife that its about a 5 chance of survival. And when its that kind of percentage, its not to scare. Its to kill. Stahl can you be sure that what happened to you was directed by mr. Putin . Vladimir karamurza well, of that we have no idea. I dont know the precise circumstances, i dont know the who or the how, but i do know the why. Stahl in recent years, quite a few of putins enemies hav perished by swallowing things they shouldnt have. In 2006, russianspyturned kremlincritic
Alexander Litvinenko<\/a> drank tea laced with polonium210. Two years earlier, the ukrainian politician
Viktor Yushchenko<\/a> had somehow ingested dioxin. He survived, but was disfigured. But what would the motive be in the case of the critic
Vladimir Karamurza<\/a> . Cambridge educated, he was for years a washingtonbased reporter for a russian tv station. So he was wellconnected and had perfect english, which he used to incessantly criticize the regime on the international stage. Vladimir karamurza a government that is based on genuine support does not need to jail its opponents. Stahl as if his outspokenness wasnt enough to anger the kremlin, he made matters worse for himself when he joined forces with this man. Bill browder its death if you cross the putin regime. Stahlll investor in russia and putins champion, but he turned into a dogged adversary when his russian tax attorney
Sergei Magnitsky<\/a> blew the whistle on alleged largescale theft by government officials. Browder we discovered massive corruption of the putin regime. Sergei exposed it, testified against officials involved. He was subsequently arrested, put in pretrial detention, tortured for 358 days and killed at the age of 37. Stahl browder was so outraged, he joined with
Vladimir Karamurza<\/a> to lobby the u. S. Congress for a law targeting those responsible for that death and other human rights violations. They succeeded the magnitsky act passed in 2012. It is the first law that sanctions individual russians, 44 so far. Browder the magnitsky act is designed to sanction, to freeze the assets and to ban the visas for people who commith stahl so they cant get their money, which may be stashed in the
United States<\/a>. Browder and so
Vladimir Putin<\/a> is extremely angry that the magnitsky was going to be passed. He was even angrier when it got passed. And he was angrier when people started getting added, names started getting added to the magnitsky list. Stahl one reason
Vladimir Karamurza<\/a> is convinced he was targeted is because six people connected to the magnitsky case, as he was, have ended up dead. One of them was boris nemtsov, a leader of russias opposition and karamurzas partner in lobbying for the magnitsky act. Vladimir karamurza on the 27th of february 2015, he was killed by five bullets in the back as he was walking home, as he always did, out in the open, without bodyguards stahl this was an assassination. In some of the deaths, proving there was foul play has been a challenge. Take the case of this russian banker, who came forward with browder
Alexander Perepilichny<\/a> was a whistleblower. At the age of 44, he went jogging outside his home in surrey, outside of london and dropped dead. The police deemed it an unsuspicious, natural death. Stahl well, they did look for poison. They just couldnt find any. Browder they did a very firstround toxicology screen. They didnt find anything on the first run through. Stahl detecting poison can be extremely difficult, and theres a reason this cold war c. I. A. Memo reveals that the soviets ran a laboratory for poisons in a large and super secret installation known as the chamber to test undetectable compounds. In the case of the banker in london, the coroner wasnt willing to give up. He ordered more tests, and three years later it was revealed in court that an exotic toxin was found, with the help of an authority on flowers. B his stomach contents was sent to a
Botanical Garden<\/a> outside of london, and one of the scientists found a compound called gelsemium elegans, which is a chinese herb. They call it the heartbreak grass, and it causes a person to die unexpectedly without explanation. Stahl still, theres no direct evidence of a kremlin connection, but the list of those whove come to die unexpectedly after running afoul of mr. Putin is long. Political opponents and human rights lawyers have been shot; overlyinquisitive reporters have perished in mysterious plane crashes or by car bombs, by poison or gunfire. Journalist
Anna Politkovskaya<\/a> was poisoned and shot. Then there are enemies who kill themselves, one by hanging, one by stabbing himself to death with two knives, and one by tying himself to a chair and some of putins opponents are in prison, others forced out of the country, like mikhail khodorkovsky, probably putins most famous living critic. Are you afraid for your own life . Mikhail khodorkovsky translated for a period of over ten years,
Vladimir Putin<\/a> had ample opportunity to put an end to my life in a very easy way, just by snapping his fingers. And today, its a little more difficult. Stahl khodorkovsky was once the richest man in russia, until he took to opposing putin. He was put on trial, his oil company confiscated, and then thrown in prison for ten years. Home is now london, where he funds a russian prodemocracy movement and this is where the plot thickens because one of his senior organizers on the ground in russia is none other than
Vladimir Karamurza<\/a>. There are people who say that whatap a message to you, a message to you to back off. Khodorkovsky translated you know, for ten years, i was receiving lots of messages from our authorities of various sorts. And some of these messages were rather unpleasant, concerning my physical well being. But the authorities saw i ignored these messages. I would like to believe that they have not forgotten that. Stahl in 2015, once
Vladimir Karamurza<\/a> was stabilized, he was flown to washington d. C. To continue treatment near his wife, yevgenia, and their three children, who live in the u. S. For their safety. But as soon as karamurza got better, he was itching to go back to russia. Yevgenia karamurza i think what my husband believes in will always outweigh the fear. Stahl even for you . Yevgenia karamurza of course im terrified. But at the same time, you know, i married the guy 13 years ago, and i knew what i was getting into. La know, i think theres
Nothing Better<\/a> this regime, the putin regime would like us to do than to give up and run away. And were not going to give him that pleasure. Its our country. Stahl even after being poisoned . Vladimir karamurza its our country. We have to fight for it. Stahl he told us this in june. He went back immediately after, even though threats against him had intensified, like this video posted on instagram putting him in the crosshairs of a sniper rifle. He was continuing his opposition work, when just last month yevgenia karamurza all of a sudden, he begins experiencing this very elevated heart rate, his
Blood Pressure<\/a> drops very low. He begins sweating and he has trouble breathing. Stahl his wife thinks her husband was attacked, the same way as before. Yevgenia karamurza the first time, he had been dragged from one hospital to another to yet another, where they were trying to establish the cause. This time, he was taken directly to the hospital, to the same medical team that had treated him in 2015. And the moment they saw him, they knew what they were dealing with. Stahl and what do you think happened . Yevgenia karamurza the russian doctors official diagnosis is an acute intoxication by an undetermined substance, which is poisoning. Stahl this happened just as washington was raising questions about
President Trump<\/a>s relationship with mr. Putin. So last month, vlaidmir kara murza became an issue on the senate floor. John mccain vladimir has once again paid the price for his gallantry and integrity. Stahl politicians on both sides of the aisle spoke out against the apparent poisoning, but the
Trump Administration<\/a> has not. Remarkably, karamurza survived again. Less than three weeks after he collapsed, he was flown to the u. S. , and two weeks later, we spoke to him for a second time. You look pretty good. How are you actually feeling . Vladimir karamurza well, youre very kind. I dont think i feel as good as i look. Stahl he said hes recovering faster because his doctors knew just what to do the kremlin has denied any involvement, and since no poison has been found yet, supporters of putin question whether he was really poisoned at all. Weve been told that we are very naive, naive journalists, gullible, and that this whole thing is concocted by the opposition to fool the
American People<\/a> into thinking that that regime would do such a thing. Vladimir karamurza to those who say that this is a plot, i honestly and i mean this sincerely i wish they never have to experience what ive experienced twice in the last two years, when youre trying to breathe and you cannot. When you feel your organs shutting down, giving up on you one after another. And when you feel the life coming out of your body in the next few hours, and you dont remember anything for the next month. And then for the next year youre trying to r relearn how to walk, how to use cutlery, you know, how to talk to your kids again. I wish these people who tell you these things never have to experience this. I honestly, sincerely do. Stahl you were very, very sick and went back. Now, are you finished . Are you saying, im not going back any
Vladimir Karamurza<\/a> oh, god no, of course not. Stahl youre going to go back . Vladimir karamurza of course, i will absolutely go back to russia. I am russian, this is my country, and i believe in what i do, in what my colleagues do. There are many of us. Stahl but not many have almost died twice. Vladimir karamurza many, unfortunately, have died. Im the fortunate one. Im still here, im still talking to you. Many of my colleagues cannot do that. If he was poisoned twice, why isnt he dead . The search for an answer at 60minutesovertime. Com. Sponsored by lyrica. Before i had the shooting, burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet kicked off a lot of high school games. Built a life for my family. And liked elto hp others in need. But i couldnt bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. So i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. Nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. Lyrica is fdaapproved to treat this pain. Allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. Tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. Or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. Common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. Dont drink alcohol while taking lyrica. Dont drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. Those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. Now i have less diabetic nerve pain. And its great to help others get back on their feet. Ask your doctor about lyrica and learn about our 25 copay offer at lyrica. Com. Say carl, we have a question about your brokerage fees. Fees . What did you have in mind . I dont know. 4. 95 per trade . Uhhh. And i was wondering if your brokerage offers some sort of guarantee . Guarantee . Where we can get our fees and commissions back if were not happy. So can you offer me what schwab is offering . Ask your broker if theyre offering 4. 95 online equity trades and a satisfaction guarantee. If you dont like their answer, ask again at schwab. It shouldnt be whateverfleas and ticks. Home. No, no no no no. Seresto\u00ae kills and repels fleas and ticks for 8 continuous months for effective protection in an easytouse, nongreasy collar. 8month seresto\u00ae. From bayer. Your date with destiny has arrived. Lets do this new cinnamon frosted flakes are finally here. Sweet cinnamon and the frosted crunch you love. Well . Tastes like victory t. Tastes like victory. Theyre great march is
Colorectal Cancer<\/a> awareness month. What better time to ask your
Health Care Provider<\/a> about a screening that may be right for you . Cbs cares. Stahl president obama tried and failed to close the prison at
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>, a place he believed, hinders our fight
President Trump<\/a> disagreed, and has vowed to load it up with some bad dudes. Just 41 prisoners remain at guantanamo, and of the nearly 800 who were there at some point, not many have been interviewed. But tonight,
Holly Williams<\/a> has the story of one very unusual former detainee, in his
First Television<\/a> interview. Williams
Mohamedou Slahi<\/a> was set free by the
United States<\/a> and sent to his home country of mauritania last october, after nearly 14 years as prisoner 760 in
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>. Improbably, while fighting for his own release, he taught himself english, wrote a best selling book about his life in american custody, and became good friends with some of his guards, one of whom youll hear from tonight. Slahi spent about onethird of his life at guantanamo, and his book offern look inside the prison. Though it includes descriptions of torture, it can be funny at times, and we discovered that, in person, slahi has a keen sense of humor. Six weeks after he was released from guantanamo, we went to northwest africa to meet him. Whats it like losing all control over your life . Mohamedou slahi it sucks. laughs its very challenging. I dont know how to describe it in words. But you feel like humiliation. You feel selfpity. You feel, like, panic. I didnt have a plan. I was learning as i was going. Williams
Mohamedou Slahi<\/a> is unce again adapting to this time, home and freedom. To learn how he went from here to guantanamo and back again, we traveled to the
Islamic Republic<\/a> of mauritania. Its a tribal and deeply religious nation of nearly four million people, where the
Sahara Desert<\/a> meets the sea. About the size of texas and new mexico combined, the country is due east of cuba, separated from slahis old prison home by the width of the atlantic. You know whats there . Slahi yes. Williams guantanamo. Slahi
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>. Williams about 3,800 miles slahi yes. Williams in that direction . Slahi i say, goodbye. I hope never to see you again. Williams before we explain how slahi ended up in guantanamo in the first place, well tell you how a talent for languages helped him survive there. How much english did you speak when you landed in guantanamo . Slahi almost none. Williams in the office of his new apartment in mauritania,
Mohamedou Slahi<\/a> showed us how he learned english in guantanamo. He reads and writes his fourth language with some help from the u. S. Navy. Where did you get those glasses . Slahi these glasses i got from
Navy Hospital<\/a> in
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>. Thank you, doctors. And they had choices. And i took the ugliest one. Williams you you chose the slahi as a sign of protest. Williams he was his own teacher in guantanamo, soaking up new vocabulary wherever he could. Slahi im letting you now into my world. Okay, this how i learn the english language. This is the original. Williams so so you would, what, hear something, and write it down . Slahi hear something, write it down, and ask. Williams and then ask a guard . Slahi yes, a guard, or an interrogator. Williams how do you spell that . Slahi whomever i meet, whomever i meet. Williams yeah. To chortle. Slahi to chortle. Williams thats thats a very thats a very good slahi snorting a joyful laugh. Suicide. You were just working on building your vocabulary . Slahi its what i do. I take this, and then i just go in myself back and forth, and memorizing everything, every day. Williams she threaded her fingers through that thick mane of exquisitely dyed hair. Slahi yes. Williams what were you reading . Slahi i think that was ya ya sisterhood. Williams in 2005, three years after he arrived at guantanamo, slahi used his new
Language Skills<\/a> to demand his immediate release. He handwrote his own petition for a writ of habeus corpus, a legal document challenging the u. S. Governments right to imprison him. He also began a correspondence with his american lawyers that became the guantanamo diary. Its been translated into 27 different languages, but it took seven years for his legal team to convince the government to allow its publication, and they only permitted a heavily censored version. Slahi so its like it was i was shoutingth then i saw a very small hole that i could shout through which was my lawyer. Williams i dont know if youve seen this before. It is the original copy of the review of your book in the new york times. Have you seen it before . Slahi never. First time. Williams you were locked in a prison, with so little contact with the outside world. And meanwhile, your work was being discussed slahi that shows the greatness of
American People<\/a>. Not my greatness, because
American People<\/a> believe in justice. And they decided to give me a forum, to give me a voice. Williams by 2004, the u. S. Government regarded him as a cooperative prisoner, so slahi was livi i he had access to books, movies and his own vegetable garden, but he was still a prisoner, struggling with solitude, 4,000 miles from home. Slahi you can bet your
Bottom Dollar<\/a> that i was lonely. Williams i mean, in the book you describe the guards as your family. Slahi yes. Williams was that true . Slahi they really a lot of them treated me as one as a brother. Williams we found one of slahis former guards, who asked us to disguise his appearance and withhold his name. He had security concerns because of his work at guantanamo. How long did you guard him for . Guard ten months. Williams and when was that, the first time you met him . Guard in july of 04. Williams any
First Impressions<\/a> . Guard just that he wasnt this horrible terrorist that, you know, i i was expecting to go guard. You know, that i was told it was everybody there was the worst of the worst, and this guy comes out, with a smile on his face. Not what i was expecting. Guard yeah, i felt something was off. Definitely. Williams you didnt think he was going to harm you . Guard no. If he wanted to i mean, there were times where we slept while he was sleeping, and his door was open. And, like, if if he wanted to kill us, he couldve. Williams but you were pretty sure he wasnt going to do that . Guard yeah. I had no issues. Williams you trusted him . Guard definitely. Slahi he was very shocked because, he told me, they told him this is the worst of the worst. And i wasnt very open to the guards because i was afraid of them. He kept poking me until we open up to each other it was very good time with him. Guard wed play monopoly, a lot of rummy, watch movies, like, over and over. And yeah, and just hang out with us. Williams we heard there was one film in particular that you guys watched over and over. Guard the big lebowski. Like, nonstop. Like, he could quote it, like, word for word. Like a giant por portion of the movie. It was hilarious. Williams i mean, i was struck by that. Whats interesting about the big lebowski is they get the wrong guy. Lebowski you got the wrong guy. Im the dude, man. Slahi yes, i i am not your guy. laughs williams you played a role in
Mohamedou Slahi<\/a>s release. You wrote a letter to the review board that decided on whether he he would finally be released. Guard uhhuh. Williams and i think is that the letter, there . Guard that is. Williams yeah . Guard that is. Williams i just want to read you a section of it. You said, based on my interactions with mr. Slahi while in guantanamo, i would be pleased to welcome him into my home. Based on my interactions, i do not have safety concerns if i were to do so. I would like the opportunity to eventually see him again. Guard for sure. Thats totally honest. Williams last year, when the militarys periodic review board finally cleared him to go home, slahi says his guards and interrogators seemed even the officer in charge. Slahi she was smiling the most beautiful smile i ever see in my life. Said, you know youre leaving . I said, no, i i i didnt know. Williams what were you feeling . Slahi i was feeling happy. But i i always learned not to overcelebrate. Because so many people received clearance, but they lingered in prison for so many years, including to this day. Williams you didnt want to jinx it. Slahi i never heard jinx it, but i presume its the right word here. laughs williams he says he was flown home from
Guantanamo Bay<\/a> the same way he arrived shackled and blindfolded. Slahi strapped on a chair too. Its very painful. More than ten hours in a chair. Williams did you ask, why are you doing this to me . Slahi why in the world i didnt want them to change their mind. I said, do whatever you got to do. I need to go home and go home quick. Williams slahis long road to guantanamo began not with the war on terror but with another war covered here on 60 minutes. In 1988, correspondent
Harry Reasoner<\/a> and producer george crile traveled to afghanistan to tell the tale of a congressman from texas named charlie wilson. gunfire he persuaded the u. S. To arm the mujahideen, a band of holy warriors who were fighting the soviet union and their communist allies. explosion a few years later, slahi who was studying in germany, decided, along with thousands of other muslim men from around the world, to join the battle against the communists. Slahi this was a big coalition, including my country and your country. Williams what made you decide to go to afghanistan as a young man . Slahi i saw those horrific pictures of people, children being gassed, and i said, i want to do something. Then thats when i decide to travel, and i took a visa and then i went there, twice. Williams you thought you were fighting for a just cause. Slahi yes, i was sure then. I did not know. Today, i know. Williams in afghanistan, slahi was trained to fight, not by the afghans, but by a group of foreign fighters dedicated to the cause. At the time they were led by a young, charismatic leader, called osama bin laden. Slahi says he left afghanistan the second time, without ever firing a shot in battle. Slahi when i saw that the afghanis were butchering each other i was completely disgusted. Williams the first time you you went to afghanistan, what did your family think . Slahi they thought i was a nitwit. Williams a nitwit . Slahi yes. I should never have gone to afghanistan. I had a scholarship that many people in the whole world dreamed to have. And what i did, i threw everything away and i went to afghanistan. This is the definition of a nitwit. Williams and when you left afghanistan for the second time, did you still consider yourself a member of al qaeda . Slahi absolutely not. I cut all my ties with the organization. To me, i joined for the sake of participating in jihad in afghanistan. Jihad in afghanistan turned into a quagmire. I did not want to be part of a civil war. And i went back. Thank god i resumed my studies. And i worked to help my family. Williams slahi denies he ever had anything to do with terrorism, but he doesnt deny that some of his friends were still members of al qaeda. He also had a cousin who was a spiritual advisor to osama bin laden. Slahi that was really the trouble. That where the trouble began. Williams one day in 1999, he got a phone call from that cousin, a man known as abu hafs. Williams and if you had known at the time that he was calling you from bin ladens
Satellite Phone<\/a> . Slahi i would have burned his house down. Williams would you have taken the call . Slahi absolutely not. But looking back, its better than i took it, that the people who were listening s know what i was talking about. That where the trouble started honestly. Williams after 9 11, the
United States<\/a> government made catching slahi a priority and the mauritanians were happy to help their powerful ally. On november 20, 2001, secret police knocked on the door of his mothers house. He followed them back to their station, driving his own car. Is it over here . Thats the car. Williams 15 years later, it still sits in the exact place where he parked it. Wow, its a bit of a wreck. Its the right license plate . Slahi yes, its my license plate. Its caput. Williams after eight days in a mauritanian jail, his government handed him over to the c. I. A. , who flew him to a prison in jordan where he spent eight months. U. S. Agents then took him to
Bagram Airbase<\/a> near kabul, afghanistan. After two weeks there, he was put on a military transport plane for the long trip to cuba. At what point did it hit you in the stomach im really in a jam here . Slahi it doesnt, actually. You would be surprised. We if there is no hope, there is no life. Williams in guantanamo, interrogation plan was personally approved by secretary of defense donald rumsfeld. The treatment he received has since been outlawed. In a moment, slahi describes what happened to him. This cbs sports update is brought to you by the lincoln motor company. Im greg gumbel. The ncaa tournament begins tuesday night with first four on trutv. The first round gets under way on cbs, tbs, tnt an trutv on thursday. Heres a will be at the top seeds by rage. The overall number one is villanova in the east. Its kansas atop the midwest. North carolina the top seed in the south. Gonzaga is the one out west. For more sports news and information, go to cbssports. Com. Lease a 2017 lincoln mkx for 369 a month. Only at your lincoln dealer. This this this is my body of proof. Proof of less joint pain and clearer skin. This is my body of proof that i can take on
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Simpler Health Care<\/a> system. Unitedhealth group. Built for better health. Williams of the nearly 800 men whove been incarcerated at some point in
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>, prisoner 760,
Mohamedou Slahi<\/a>, was the only one to detail his treatment there in a book that came out while he was still detained in the prison. Published in 2015, it is a unique, firstperson account of life in guantanamo and americas now outlawed enhanced interrogation program. When slahi arrived at the prison, his time spent in afghanistan in the early 1990s and connections to al qaeda made him a top priority for u. S. Intelligence. We begin the second part of our story by asking slahi the same questions his interrogators asked him, over and over. Did you meet any of the 9 11 hijackers . Slahi no. Williams did you have any prior knowledge of the 9 11 attacks . Slahi absolutely none whatsoever. Williams and when you saw on television those attacks, what did you think . Lahi it was heartbreaking, you know, knowing that those people, just like my family, children, men, women, just regular people who went to their work. They didnt do anything to anyone. But they were yet they were killed in cold blood. Williams when you discovered that it was the work of al qaeda, what did you think . Slahi i thought, this is evil. Thank god that i left afghanistan so many years. Williams living freely in his home country of mauritania, slahi is working on a new edition of his book, guantanamo diary, that fills in some of the blanks put in by the u. S. Government. Slahi arrived in guantanamo in august 2002. For several months, he was interrogated by the f. B. I. In 2003, the military began subjecting him to socalled enhanced interrogation, that included both physical and psychological abuse. His uncensored story, which youre about to hear, is supported by several reports and investigations from congress and the departments of jtice and defense. Slahi they had plans. Very carefulthought plans. Williams he says those plans began when he was moved to a special cell in the india block section of the prison a place he nicknamed the fridge. Why the fridge . Slahi yeah, its a very
Small Holding<\/a> cell that is cold. And you dont see anything, you dont see outside. Completely cut off. Williams no daylight . Slahi nothing. I remained there 70 days, continuous interrogation. Williams what do you mean by continuous . Slahi that mean i had three shifts of interrogators. Williams every day . Slahi every day. Williams were you allowed to sleep at all . Slahi there is, between the night shift and the day shift, maybe two hours. I dont know, its not long. I didnt i didnt have any feeling for time really. Williams what did it do to you . Slahi i lived in a haze. I was very nervous, very angry, very easy to be angry. And i was crying for the simplest reason. Williams what else happened . Slahi then they brought another marine guy. He wore marine; it does not mean that hes a marine. Im just saying this for the record. And then he kept pouring this water on me. Then i kept really shaking. Williams he was pouring water on you . Slahi yes. And then he said, answer me, but i couldnt talk because because my mouth couldnt move because i was very cold. Williams you were just too cold to talk. Slahi yes, i couldnt move my lips. Williams but it was another tactic that brought slahi close to the edge. An interrogator who claimed hed been dispatched from the white house gave slahi grave news. He was shown a fictitious letter stating that his mother had been detained and might be transferred to gitmo. There was no implication that shed done anything . Slahi no, they said only because i wouldnt i wouldnt confess. Williams the idea that she was going to be held with male prisoners was terrible for you. Slahi that is an understatement. Williams what was your fear . Slahi i cant even think about it. I dont want to think about it. Williams later he was dragged from his cell and put on a boat. Slahi they opened my mouth and pouring salt water until i start choking. Williams they were forcing you to drink salt water . Slahi yes. Williams what happened next . Slahi so they start to fill me with ice cube. Ice cube williams inside your uniform . Slahi inside your uniform. Ice cube, full. My body was full. And then i was like shaking uncontrollably, like this. They start hitting me everywhere, hitting. Williams beating you . Slahi yeah, beating me, everywhere. Williams for how long . Slahi again, i didnt have feeling for time. But it must have been three hours. Williams how much pain were you in . Slahi i was moaning like a woman giving birth. Williams and what did you decide to do . Slahi i decide i will tell them everything they want to know. Williams they broke you. Slahi absolutely. They broke me. I told the captain, that the boss of my team, you write anything and i sign it. And if you buy, im selling. Williams and you were lying to them . Slahi not everything i said lie my life, i told them my life truthfully. But the crimes, i was lying about. Every single crime, i falsely confessed to. Williams slahi says he told his interrogators that he was an active recruiter for al qaeda, and was involved in a plan for a bombing in toronto but that plot never actually existed. Williams your life got a lot better slahi yes. Dramatically better. No more beating. No more i was allowed to sleep. I was afraid of conf false confessing, but it was a relief because now he the captain could not torture me anymore, because i gave him what he wanted. Now he had to sell this first to the f. B. I. , to c. I. A. And then they have to sell this to the prosecution, military prosecution, and those people are intelligent and smart. And then what they pretty much told him, this is a bunch of b. S. Williams you told them what they wanted to hear, because you wanted the torture to stop. Slahi yes. Absolutely. I falsely confessed to crime. It was bad business. Bad business. Williams in 2004, the military officer chosen to prosecute slahi resigned from the case, saying later that he was convinced that slahi had been the victim of torture not by anything slahi said, but solely from u. S. Government documents from the intelligence databases, detailing, specifically, what had been done to him during the interrogations. In 2010, a federal judge ordered slahis release and wrote there is ample evidence that slahi was subjected to extensive and severe mistreatment at guantanamo. Evidence gathered through torture has complicated the governments military prosecutions at guantanamo. There have only ever been eight convictions, and three were later overturned. You were one of the worst tortured in guantanamo, so youre in a unique position to answer this. Does torture work . Slahi in what way . Tha it if its if workings bringing pain on me, yes. If working is giving false confessions, yes. If works is giving good intelligence, no. If it works resulting in my in my conviction, hello im here, after 15 years. And not even charged, let alone being convicted. So how can you convince anyone possibly who has a shred of intelligence that it works . Williams how did you manage to not lose your sanity . Slahi thank you very much, that the premise is that i did not lose my sanity. This psychiatrist told me 760, that what they call me. You are really very sick. Williams sick with what . I was hearing noises. Williams hearing voices . Slahi yes. Williams what were they saying . Slahi it was my family, just talking to me every day and this wouldnt stop. And then he came to me, this doctor, and they help me. They gave medications over many years, heavy medication. And i was helped. Williams they gave you psychiatric medicine slahi yes. Paxil, klonopin, and you see sop the sopranos . Williams yes. Slahi yes, that medication he took. Prozac. Slahi things like that. They gave me a lot of this stuff. Williams hows your health today . Slahi i dont have time to think about pain, which is good. The pain will go away. Williams but you didnt really answer my question, mohamedou. Are you dealing with psychological trauma . Slahi im not a doctor. Williams do you sometimes relive the torture in your head . Slahi of course. I still have nightmares. I still wake up and i think im in
Guantanamo Bay<\/a>. Williams at 46 years old, freedom has been a major adjustment. So has fame. He returned to mauritania a national hero. Many here are angry about what the u. S. , one of their allies, did to slahi, but are also proud that hes come home with his dignity intact. Hes been embraced by a large extended family, including some members who werent yet born when he disappeared. Hes been a new discovery. Slahi yeah, many, among many. Williams there have also been losses. Its been more than 15 years since he got in his car and headed to the
Police Station<\/a> on his way to guantanamo. Slahis mother said goodbye that night, but she wasnt there to welcome him home. She passed away in 2013. Again . Slahi no, i never see her again. It was the last time. Its seared in my memory, that picture frozen in time. Williams if you had to sum up the last 15 years of your life, what would you say . Slahi pain and suffering is part of growing up, and i grew up. Williams
Mohamedou Slahi<\/a> says the u. S. Government is holding several other books he wrote while in prison two novels, and a selfhelp book about staying positive no matter the situation. At times during our trip to mauritania he seemed exhausted, but there was almost always a smile on his face. He told us getting out of guantanamo was like being born again. Cmohappy birthday i survived a heart attack. Im doing all i can to keep from having another one. And im taking brilinta. For people whove been hospitalized for a heart attack. I take brilinta with a baby aspirin. No more than one hundred milligrams as it affects how well it works. Brilinta helps keep my platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. Brilinta reduced the chance of another heart attack. Or dying from one. It worked better than plavix. Dont stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. Brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. Dont take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. Tell your doctor about bleeding, new or unexpected shortness of breath, any planned surgery, and all medicines you take. Talk to your doctor about brilinta. Im doing all i can. That includes brilinta. If you cant afford your medication, zeneca may be able to help. I have no idea whats in tbut with this usp seal i know exactly whats in my nature made gummies. Nature made has the first gummie certified by usp. A
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