Transcripts For WUSA CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 2016

Transcripts For WUSA CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20160608



images are hard to watch. the suspects, we're told are, in custody, and we have more now from jonathan vigliotti. >> reporter: the gunmen went table to table inside a packed restaurant, shooting their victims at pointblank range. surveillance video showed diners scrambling for cover as the attackers continued to fire. israeli security forces arrived quickly, and this cell phone video purports to show police firing on one of the gunmen. a few blocks away, a second shooter was captured. police combed the area looking for a possible third attacker, but found none. the two gunmen were identified as palestinians, cousins from the same village in the west bank, which has been a flashpoint for violence in recent months. israeli pleadia said both men were wearing suits, disguised as orthodox jews. at this point, we don't know the exact motive behind the shooting, but, scott, it's one of the deadliest attacks in an eight-month wave of violence where palestinians have targeted in the london newsroom tonight. jonathan, thank you. well, five months from today, american voters will elect the 45th president of the united states. it laib choice between donald trump and hillary clinton. clinton claimed the democratic nomination last night, and she talked with us today from her home town of chappaqua, new york. there was a moment last night that you stopped to take it all in. you stretched your arms out wide, and i wonder what was going through your mind at that moment. >> i wasn't really thinking. i was just feeling the moment. i-- i was so overwhelmed by the energy and the excitement of the crowd, and i knew how many thousands and millions of people had made that moment possible. so i was especially just wanting to feel it because it was historic for me, but i think it many others, as well. >> pelley: donald trump just had the worst 72 hours of his political life, denounced by republican leaders, labeled a racist and a bigot. and yet, yesterday, nearly two million people voted for him. who are his supporters? and why do they seem to be unshakable? >> well, you'll have to ask them, scott. because i do not believe his views or his rhetoric will find that favorable an audience in the general electorate. because i think that as i said last week in san diego, what he's already said, both words and deeds, disqualifies him from being president. and i have more votes than he does. so i think i have a good, solid foundation to start from. >> pelley: but it is possible that your biggest obstacle is yo 52% of the american people who participated in our cbs news poll have an unfavorable opinion of you. that is the highest negative impression of anyone ever nominated pie the democratic party since we started asking that question in 1984. do you bear any responsibility for that? >> oh, i'm sure i do, but i thinithink when i was secretaryf state, and serving our country, i had an approval rating of 66%, and i think it's fair to ask, well, what's happened? and what's happened is tens of millions of dollars of negative advertising and coverage that has been sent my way. i understand that, and i know that it's up to me to take this base that i built and expand it by reaching out to senator sanders' supporters, to many others country our country, including, i hope, republicans and independent a running mate as conventional or unconventional? >> i don't know because i have no idea yet. un, i'm looking broadly and widely, and i'm going to begin to really, you know, dive in to thinking hard about this. so i'm going to be looking, first and foremost, as to who i believe could fulfill the responsibilities of being president and commander in chief. >> pelley: there's more in this interview, and you can see the interview with secretary clinton on our 24-hour digital news service cbsn. well, despite clinching the nomination, clinton is still being pursued by the zombie candidacy of bernie sanders. republicans, for their part, rolled out a new donald trump last night, trump 2.0. nancy cordes and chip reid are with us. nancy, sanders declines to be defeated. >> reporter: that's right, scott. and there are half a dozen lawmakers here on capitol hill who are backing him, and even they aren't quite sure timetable is. they don't expect that he will drop out of the race before the d.c. primary, the final primary on the calendar next tuesday. but they acknowledge that clinton is the presumptive nominee, and they say he should do the same sooner rather than later. here's what's going on. sanders upons assurances from the clinton campaign and the party that they won't turn theirs backs on his progressive agenda the minute that he gets out of the race. so the two campaigns are in negotiations. he is sitting down with the president at the white house tomorrow, and, scott, every democrat i spoke to up here today is willing to give him a wide berth because they need his nearly 12 million voters, not to mention his record-breaking donor base as well. >> pelley: nancy, thank you. chip reid, the party shackled trump to a teleprompter last night. >> reporter: that's right, scott, in a speech last night, he was almost unrecognizable. he was calm, thoughtful, and, yes, he read from a teleprompter just like the politicians he usually rails against and he promised the republican party he will never let them down. just hours before, that leading republicans were did you nouncing him as un-american, even racist for accusing a federal judge of mexican descent of being biased against him. today, that torrent of criticism mostly subsided though, there were some harsh words. trump supporter newt gingrich said trump, "made a really stupid mistake in criticizing the judge." trump promised to stop talking about the judge, but sent another wave of nervousness through the republican party when he promptly ignored that promise and discussed it in three separate interviews. >> pelley: chip reid, nancy cordes for us tonight, thank you, both. well, a young sexual assault victim's haunting courtroom statement received worldwide attention this week. we've been telling buit on this broadcast. it happened especially after the judge gave a light sentence to the attacker, a star swimmer at stanford university. well, tonight, we're learning more. we learnha to say to the judge, and here is john blackstone. >> reporter: before brock turner was sentenced on three counts of sexual assault, he pleaded with the judge not to be sent to prison, and he apologized for his actions. but in the letter obtained by cbs news, turner fails to take full responsibility, instead blaming "the party culture i briefly experienced in my four months at school." at stanford drinking alcohol, he wrote, became "what i expected when spending saturday with friends." in spite of being found guilty, turner insistses what happened that night was consensual. "at no time did it ever occur to me that shooefs too drunk to know what we were doing." the victim's own letter to the judge condemns turner refusal to acknowledge she was unconscious. controversial sentence of just six months in county jail was based, the judge said, on turner's youth and lack of prior offenses. the judge also received 39 letters of support, a hool teacher wrote, "i would completely trust brock turn wer my daughter." law professor evan lee, an expert in sentencing guidelierngz expect aid much more severe sentence. >> maybe three years, if you take into account the lack of record, maybe if you take into account the intoxication. but six months is really shocking. >> reporter: turner has begun serving his sentence here at the santa clara county jail, but in a letter to the judge, his family asked that he be transferred to a facility closer to his home in ohio. with time off for good behavior, scott, he could be released as early as september. >> pelley: john blackstone reporting for us. john, thank you. tonight, cbs news exposeses an insurance scam, and it turns out you, the taxpayer, are the victim. it seems especially egregious because members of the u.s. military are being duped to help pull off the fraud. here's jim axelrod. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: with its pulsing music, this club in west hollywood, might not seem like like the ideal location for a business meeting. but this was where we were inviteed by dustin warren, a salesman work a lab that does genetic testing and drug screening. we record the meeting undercover. warren gave us a test of the hardball pitch he uses to get doctordoctors to order the test. >> reporter: with the right contacts, he told, we could expect to make big money. thanks, in part, to genetic tes that assess cancer risk. he said military insurance, called tricare, reimburses the most for a single test. the tests are conducted and bill billed by a lab in dallas, cockerell dermapathology, which also offers another test, a drug screening, and that made the lab more than $5 million from tricare last year. to entice soldiers tob screened so tricare could be billed, others working with cockerell labs set up a makeshift clinic in this strip mall just a mile from the gates of fort hood. we have learned that beginning last summer and rung all the way through this past february, soldier would line up by the dozens every day in this parking lot and provide their d.n.a., urine, and t in exchange for a $50 walmart gift card. >> are it was a lot of people. it was full. >> reporter: linda bozeman, the wife of a soldier, told us she visited the clinic a few times last year to make a little extra money for christmas presents. >> they just said that they had this clinical research going, and that they paid you by walmart cards so that you would give your urine. >> reporter: but it wasn't for research. documents show cockerell dermapathology used linda bozeman's samples to bill tricare 418 separate times, unneeded screenings for dozens of drugs, like p.c.p., cocaine, and methadone. nearly $7,000 at taxpayer expense. and this wasn't the only place near fort hood where soldiers lined up. there was this storefront a few blocks away, but they were only there a little setting up shop at a more professional-looking site. a couple months ago, they moved a few miles down the road to this location. now, from the looks of things, they're no longener business here, either, but we found plenty of evidence in the trash they had been. soldiers' social security numbers, medical information, d.n.a. specimens, and more than 60 photo copies of military i.d.s, including linda bozeman's. which left us with a lot of questions for cockerell dermapathology and its owner, dr. clay cockerell, a dermatologist. >> i run a pathology laboratory. i have been doing that well over 20 years. >> reporter: our producer caught up with him outside the lab. off.'m going to have to take that's not my laboratory. >> it is your lab, they're using your contracts. >> but i'm not running that. >> they're using your contacts and your license. >> reporter: and with that, . to answer any more questions on camera. in a written statement, representatives of cockerell dermapathology confirmed it is his lab. they also said, "there is a possibility that individuals were operating outside of the organization's strict exwiens requirements." the lab says it is voluntary refunding what it calls, "significant amounts of money," but wouldn't say how much or to whom. we asked pentagon if it is investigating, and they told us, scott, they can't discuss it. >> pelley: great investigative reporting by and you producer emily rand. thanks very much, jim. jim is going to show us tomorrow how marketers have also targeted private insurance. that will be tomorrow on "cbs this morning"." coming up next on the cbs evening news, when a would-be kidnapper grabs a child, a mother fights back. and later, after eight years in prison, an innocent man is free. 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judged they were an easy mark. david begnaud tells us what he got was the fight of his life. >> reporter: it is videotape that would horrify any parent. surveillance footage shows 30-year-old craig bonello dragging a girl allegedly trying to kidnap her it from a dollar store in hernando, florida. her mother immediately chasees after them and throws herself on top of her daughter. >> i give great accolades to the mom. i thought the mom was stellar in this case. the mom was on him. he was getting his butt kicked by mom. >> reporter: after a struggle, bonello gives up and runs out of the store into the parking lot where off-duty sheriff's done jonathan behnen had just pulled up. >> he fought a little bit, but when he realized that i had the upper edge, he kind of complied with everything. he didn't say much of anything to me. >> reporter: investigators do not know why bonello targeted the girl. the teen and her mother told authorities they'd never seen him before. >> it's sad that we have people like that in society. >> reporter: investigators say the suspect told them he had tried this before, but the sheriff insists there's really no way of verifying that. scott, the suspect's attorney says he's a veteran with a history of mental health issues. >> pelley: david begnaud for us, david, thank you. coming up, one of the world's top tennis players is banned. and with her, a flood of potential patients. a deluge of digital records. x-rays, mris. all on account...of penelope. but with the help of at&t, and a network that scales up and down giving them the agility to be flexible & reliable. because no one knows & like at&t. burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet were the first in my family to graduate from college and trained as a nurse. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. 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. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't 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. ask your doctor about lyrica. >> pelley: today, maria sharapova was suspended from tennis for two years for doping. the winner of the five grand slams tested positive for which boosts blood flow. it was banned in january but sharapova said she didn't know and plans to appeal. in louisville, there were long lines for tickets for friday's funeral for muhammad ali. all 15 were gone in an hour. they were free, but some ticket holders turned around and sold theirs. a muslim prayer service will be held tomorrow. ali died friday at 74. the way the story goes, a fairy brought the wooden puppet pinoako to life, but the truth is, it was animator willis pyle, whose death was announced today. pyle once said he looked into a mirror to watch his own expressions and gave them to pinoako. pyle also worked on "bambi," "fantasia," and "mr. magoo." the son of dust bowl farmers, pyle was the brother of the late "dukes of hazards "actor denver pyle, and the nephew of correspondent ernie pyle. willis pyle was 101. up next, a few short steps to freedom for an innocent man. when my doctor told me i have age-related macular degeneration, amd we came up with a plan to help reduce my risk of progression. and everywhere i look... i'm reminded to stick to my plan. including preservision areds 2. my doctor said preservision areds 2 has the exact nutrient formula that the national eye institute recommends to help reduce the risk of progression of moderate to advanced amd... after 15 years of clinical 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a heart valve problem, pradaxa helps stop blood cells from pooling in the heart... forming a clot... which can travel to the brain and cause a stroke. pradaxa was better than warfarin at reducing stroke risk in a study. in the rare event of an emergency, pradaxa has a specific reversal treatment to help you clot normally again. pradaxa is not for people who have had a heart valve replacement. don't stop taking pradaxa without talking to your doctor. stopping increases your risk of stroke or blood clots. ask your doctor if you need to stop pradaxa before any planned medical or dental procedure. pradaxa can cause serious, and sometimes, fatal bleeding. d seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have kidney problems, stomach ulcers, a bleeding condition, or take certain medicines. side effects with pradaxa can include indigestion, stomach pain, upset or burning. ask your doctor about pradaxa. and its specific reversal treatment. >> pelley: an innocent teenager was thrown into prison eight years ago. today, he walked free. michelle miller tells us why justice was so long in coming. >> hey! >> reporter: taminko sanford is talking with her son, davont awho woke up in prison this morning. it's a phone call they waited valerie newman is their lawyer. >> the hope is i'm going to be driving up there today to pick you up. >> reporter: you lost eight years. is there any way to regain that, that time? >> can't get back. >> reporter: in 2007, then-14-year-old davontae sanford was charged with a quadruple murder at a drug house in his detroit neighborhood. according to a judge's review, police interrogated the teenager without a lawyer over multiple days, allowing him little sleep, until he confessed. >> reporter: the judge also said sanford's trial lawyer, bob slameka, who has since had his license suspended, never challenged inconsistencies in the confession, and a police official may have lied on the witness stand. two weeks after the teenager was sentenced, a self-proclaimed hit man, vincent smothers, confessed to the killings, and told police where to find the murder weapon, but davontae sanford remained in prison. >> failure after failure after failure, just systemic failure. >> reporter: a yearlong reinvestigation of sanford's case led to a judge saying he was innocent. this afternoon, sanford, now 23, walked out of a place where he should have never been. his mother waited at home, too emotional to make the two-hour trip. >> i think when i hold him, it will be real. i haven't touched him, hugged him, anything in eight years. >> reporter: but tonight, she finally will. michelle miller, cbs news, detroit. >> pelley: and that's the cbs evening news for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. i don'or wonder whether i theshould seek treatment.c. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients who've had no prior treatment. it transformed treatment as the first cure that's one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. harvoni is a simple treatment regimen that's been prescribed to more than a quarter of a million patients. tell your doctor if you've had a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or any other medical conditions, and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni may include tiredness, headache and weakness. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. a horrifying crash takes three young lives and casts a dark cloud over graduation at clarksburg high school in upper montgomery county. i'm adam longo. parents and friends tonight desperately hoping that the death of three teenaged football players convinces students to slow down on the roads. police say 17-year-old jacob dennis was likely speeding after a pregraduation get- together and lost control on a curve on burnt hill road. his ford truck fishtailed into one tree and then slammed head on into another with such force that it broke the axle and sent the front wheels flying. also killed were his passengers, patrick

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Transcripts For WUSA CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20160608

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images are hard to watch. the suspects, we're told are, in custody, and we have more now from jonathan vigliotti. >> reporter: the gunmen went table to table inside a packed restaurant, shooting their victims at pointblank range. surveillance video showed diners scrambling for cover as the attackers continued to fire. israeli security forces arrived quickly, and this cell phone video purports to show police firing on one of the gunmen. a few blocks away, a second shooter was captured. police combed the area looking for a possible third attacker, but found none. the two gunmen were identified as palestinians, cousins from the same village in the west bank, which has been a flashpoint for violence in recent months. israeli pleadia said both men were wearing suits, disguised as orthodox jews. at this point, we don't know the exact motive behind the shooting, but, scott, it's one of the deadliest attacks in an eight-month wave of violence where palestinians have targeted in the london newsroom tonight. jonathan, thank you. well, five months from today, american voters will elect the 45th president of the united states. it laib choice between donald trump and hillary clinton. clinton claimed the democratic nomination last night, and she talked with us today from her home town of chappaqua, new york. there was a moment last night that you stopped to take it all in. you stretched your arms out wide, and i wonder what was going through your mind at that moment. >> i wasn't really thinking. i was just feeling the moment. i-- i was so overwhelmed by the energy and the excitement of the crowd, and i knew how many thousands and millions of people had made that moment possible. so i was especially just wanting to feel it because it was historic for me, but i think it many others, as well. >> pelley: donald trump just had the worst 72 hours of his political life, denounced by republican leaders, labeled a racist and a bigot. and yet, yesterday, nearly two million people voted for him. who are his supporters? and why do they seem to be unshakable? >> well, you'll have to ask them, scott. because i do not believe his views or his rhetoric will find that favorable an audience in the general electorate. because i think that as i said last week in san diego, what he's already said, both words and deeds, disqualifies him from being president. and i have more votes than he does. so i think i have a good, solid foundation to start from. >> pelley: but it is possible that your biggest obstacle is yo 52% of the american people who participated in our cbs news poll have an unfavorable opinion of you. that is the highest negative impression of anyone ever nominated pie the democratic party since we started asking that question in 1984. do you bear any responsibility for that? >> oh, i'm sure i do, but i thinithink when i was secretaryf state, and serving our country, i had an approval rating of 66%, and i think it's fair to ask, well, what's happened? and what's happened is tens of millions of dollars of negative advertising and coverage that has been sent my way. i understand that, and i know that it's up to me to take this base that i built and expand it by reaching out to senator sanders' supporters, to many others country our country, including, i hope, republicans and independent a running mate as conventional or unconventional? >> i don't know because i have no idea yet. un, i'm looking broadly and widely, and i'm going to begin to really, you know, dive in to thinking hard about this. so i'm going to be looking, first and foremost, as to who i believe could fulfill the responsibilities of being president and commander in chief. >> pelley: there's more in this interview, and you can see the interview with secretary clinton on our 24-hour digital news service cbsn. well, despite clinching the nomination, clinton is still being pursued by the zombie candidacy of bernie sanders. republicans, for their part, rolled out a new donald trump last night, trump 2.0. nancy cordes and chip reid are with us. nancy, sanders declines to be defeated. >> reporter: that's right, scott. and there are half a dozen lawmakers here on capitol hill who are backing him, and even they aren't quite sure timetable is. they don't expect that he will drop out of the race before the d.c. primary, the final primary on the calendar next tuesday. but they acknowledge that clinton is the presumptive nominee, and they say he should do the same sooner rather than later. here's what's going on. sanders upons assurances from the clinton campaign and the party that they won't turn theirs backs on his progressive agenda the minute that he gets out of the race. so the two campaigns are in negotiations. he is sitting down with the president at the white house tomorrow, and, scott, every democrat i spoke to up here today is willing to give him a wide berth because they need his nearly 12 million voters, not to mention his record-breaking donor base as well. >> pelley: nancy, thank you. chip reid, the party shackled trump to a teleprompter last night. >> reporter: that's right, scott, in a speech last night, he was almost unrecognizable. he was calm, thoughtful, and, yes, he read from a teleprompter just like the politicians he usually rails against and he promised the republican party he will never let them down. just hours before, that leading republicans were did you nouncing him as un-american, even racist for accusing a federal judge of mexican descent of being biased against him. today, that torrent of criticism mostly subsided though, there were some harsh words. trump supporter newt gingrich said trump, "made a really stupid mistake in criticizing the judge." trump promised to stop talking about the judge, but sent another wave of nervousness through the republican party when he promptly ignored that promise and discussed it in three separate interviews. >> pelley: chip reid, nancy cordes for us tonight, thank you, both. well, a young sexual assault victim's haunting courtroom statement received worldwide attention this week. we've been telling buit on this broadcast. it happened especially after the judge gave a light sentence to the attacker, a star swimmer at stanford university. well, tonight, we're learning more. we learnha to say to the judge, and here is john blackstone. >> reporter: before brock turner was sentenced on three counts of sexual assault, he pleaded with the judge not to be sent to prison, and he apologized for his actions. but in the letter obtained by cbs news, turner fails to take full responsibility, instead blaming "the party culture i briefly experienced in my four months at school." at stanford drinking alcohol, he wrote, became "what i expected when spending saturday with friends." in spite of being found guilty, turner insistses what happened that night was consensual. "at no time did it ever occur to me that shooefs too drunk to know what we were doing." the victim's own letter to the judge condemns turner refusal to acknowledge she was unconscious. controversial sentence of just six months in county jail was based, the judge said, on turner's youth and lack of prior offenses. the judge also received 39 letters of support, a hool teacher wrote, "i would completely trust brock turn wer my daughter." law professor evan lee, an expert in sentencing guidelierngz expect aid much more severe sentence. >> maybe three years, if you take into account the lack of record, maybe if you take into account the intoxication. but six months is really shocking. >> reporter: turner has begun serving his sentence here at the santa clara county jail, but in a letter to the judge, his family asked that he be transferred to a facility closer to his home in ohio. with time off for good behavior, scott, he could be released as early as september. >> pelley: john blackstone reporting for us. john, thank you. tonight, cbs news exposeses an insurance scam, and it turns out you, the taxpayer, are the victim. it seems especially egregious because members of the u.s. military are being duped to help pull off the fraud. here's jim axelrod. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: with its pulsing music, this club in west hollywood, might not seem like like the ideal location for a business meeting. but this was where we were inviteed by dustin warren, a salesman work a lab that does genetic testing and drug screening. we record the meeting undercover. warren gave us a test of the hardball pitch he uses to get doctordoctors to order the test. >> reporter: with the right contacts, he told, we could expect to make big money. thanks, in part, to genetic tes that assess cancer risk. he said military insurance, called tricare, reimburses the most for a single test. the tests are conducted and bill billed by a lab in dallas, cockerell dermapathology, which also offers another test, a drug screening, and that made the lab more than $5 million from tricare last year. to entice soldiers tob screened so tricare could be billed, others working with cockerell labs set up a makeshift clinic in this strip mall just a mile from the gates of fort hood. we have learned that beginning last summer and rung all the way through this past february, soldier would line up by the dozens every day in this parking lot and provide their d.n.a., urine, and t in exchange for a $50 walmart gift card. >> are it was a lot of people. it was full. >> reporter: linda bozeman, the wife of a soldier, told us she visited the clinic a few times last year to make a little extra money for christmas presents. >> they just said that they had this clinical research going, and that they paid you by walmart cards so that you would give your urine. >> reporter: but it wasn't for research. documents show cockerell dermapathology used linda bozeman's samples to bill tricare 418 separate times, unneeded screenings for dozens of drugs, like p.c.p., cocaine, and methadone. nearly $7,000 at taxpayer expense. and this wasn't the only place near fort hood where soldiers lined up. there was this storefront a few blocks away, but they were only there a little setting up shop at a more professional-looking site. a couple months ago, they moved a few miles down the road to this location. now, from the looks of things, they're no longener business here, either, but we found plenty of evidence in the trash they had been. soldiers' social security numbers, medical information, d.n.a. specimens, and more than 60 photo copies of military i.d.s, including linda bozeman's. which left us with a lot of questions for cockerell dermapathology and its owner, dr. clay cockerell, a dermatologist. >> i run a pathology laboratory. i have been doing that well over 20 years. >> reporter: our producer caught up with him outside the lab. off.'m going to have to take that's not my laboratory. >> it is your lab, they're using your contracts. >> but i'm not running that. >> they're using your contacts and your license. >> reporter: and with that, . to answer any more questions on camera. in a written statement, representatives of cockerell dermapathology confirmed it is his lab. they also said, "there is a possibility that individuals were operating outside of the organization's strict exwiens requirements." the lab says it is voluntary refunding what it calls, "significant amounts of money," but wouldn't say how much or to whom. we asked pentagon if it is investigating, and they told us, scott, they can't discuss it. >> pelley: great investigative reporting by and you producer emily rand. thanks very much, jim. jim is going to show us tomorrow how marketers have also targeted private insurance. that will be tomorrow on "cbs this morning"." coming up next on the cbs evening news, when a would-be kidnapper grabs a child, a mother fights back. and later, after eight years in prison, an innocent man is free. the wolf was huffing and puffing. like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! 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judged they were an easy mark. david begnaud tells us what he got was the fight of his life. >> reporter: it is videotape that would horrify any parent. surveillance footage shows 30-year-old craig bonello dragging a girl allegedly trying to kidnap her it from a dollar store in hernando, florida. her mother immediately chasees after them and throws herself on top of her daughter. >> i give great accolades to the mom. i thought the mom was stellar in this case. the mom was on him. he was getting his butt kicked by mom. >> reporter: after a struggle, bonello gives up and runs out of the store into the parking lot where off-duty sheriff's done jonathan behnen had just pulled up. >> he fought a little bit, but when he realized that i had the upper edge, he kind of complied with everything. he didn't say much of anything to me. >> reporter: investigators do not know why bonello targeted the girl. the teen and her mother told authorities they'd never seen him before. >> it's sad that we have people like that in society. >> reporter: investigators say the suspect told them he had tried this before, but the sheriff insists there's really no way of verifying that. scott, the suspect's attorney says he's a veteran with a history of mental health issues. >> pelley: david begnaud for us, david, thank you. coming up, one of the world's top tennis players is banned. and with her, a flood of potential patients. a deluge of digital records. x-rays, mris. all on account...of penelope. but with the help of at&t, and a network that scales up and down giving them the agility to be flexible & reliable. because no one knows & like at&t. burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet were the first in my family to graduate from college and trained as a nurse. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. 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. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't 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. ask your doctor about lyrica. >> pelley: today, maria sharapova was suspended from tennis for two years for doping. the winner of the five grand slams tested positive for which boosts blood flow. it was banned in january but sharapova said she didn't know and plans to appeal. in louisville, there were long lines for tickets for friday's funeral for muhammad ali. all 15 were gone in an hour. they were free, but some ticket holders turned around and sold theirs. a muslim prayer service will be held tomorrow. ali died friday at 74. the way the story goes, a fairy brought the wooden puppet pinoako to life, but the truth is, it was animator willis pyle, whose death was announced today. pyle once said he looked into a mirror to watch his own expressions and gave them to pinoako. pyle also worked on "bambi," "fantasia," and "mr. magoo." the son of dust bowl farmers, pyle was the brother of the late "dukes of hazards "actor denver pyle, and the nephew of correspondent ernie pyle. willis pyle was 101. up next, a few short steps to freedom for an innocent man. when my doctor told me i have age-related macular degeneration, amd we came up with a plan to help reduce my risk of progression. and everywhere i look... i'm reminded to stick to my plan. including preservision areds 2. my doctor said preservision areds 2 has the exact nutrient formula that the national eye institute recommends to help reduce the risk of progression of moderate to advanced amd... after 15 years of clinical studies. preservision areds 2. because my eyes are everything. spending the day with my niece. that make me smile. i don't use super poligrip for hold, before those little pieces would get in between my dentures and my gum and it was uncomfortable. even well fitting dentures let in food particles. just a few dabs of super poligrip free is clinically proven to seal out more food particles so you're more comfortable and confident while you eat. so it's not about keeping my dentures in, it's about keeping the food particles out. try super poligrip free. with usaa is awesome. homeowners insurance life insurance automobile insurance i spent 20 years active duty they still refer to me as "gunnery sergeant" when i call being a usaa member because of my service in the military to pass that on to my kids something that makes me happy my name is roger zapata and i'm a usaa member for life. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. if you have afib not caused by a heart valve problem, pradaxa helps stop blood cells from pooling in the heart... forming a clot... which can travel to the brain and cause a stroke. pradaxa was better than warfarin at reducing stroke risk in a study. in the rare event of an emergency, pradaxa has a specific reversal treatment to help you clot normally again. pradaxa is not for people who have had a heart valve replacement. don't stop taking pradaxa without talking to your doctor. stopping increases your risk of stroke or blood clots. ask your doctor if you need to stop pradaxa before any planned medical or dental procedure. pradaxa can cause serious, and sometimes, fatal bleeding. d seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have kidney problems, stomach ulcers, a bleeding condition, or take certain medicines. side effects with pradaxa can include indigestion, stomach pain, upset or burning. ask your doctor about pradaxa. and its specific reversal treatment. >> pelley: an innocent teenager was thrown into prison eight years ago. today, he walked free. michelle miller tells us why justice was so long in coming. >> hey! >> reporter: taminko sanford is talking with her son, davont awho woke up in prison this morning. it's a phone call they waited valerie newman is their lawyer. >> the hope is i'm going to be driving up there today to pick you up. >> reporter: you lost eight years. is there any way to regain that, that time? >> can't get back. >> reporter: in 2007, then-14-year-old davontae sanford was charged with a quadruple murder at a drug house in his detroit neighborhood. according to a judge's review, police interrogated the teenager without a lawyer over multiple days, allowing him little sleep, until he confessed. >> reporter: the judge also said sanford's trial lawyer, bob slameka, who has since had his license suspended, never challenged inconsistencies in the confession, and a police official may have lied on the witness stand. two weeks after the teenager was sentenced, a self-proclaimed hit man, vincent smothers, confessed to the killings, and told police where to find the murder weapon, but davontae sanford remained in prison. >> failure after failure after failure, just systemic failure. >> reporter: a yearlong reinvestigation of sanford's case led to a judge saying he was innocent. this afternoon, sanford, now 23, walked out of a place where he should have never been. his mother waited at home, too emotional to make the two-hour trip. >> i think when i hold him, it will be real. i haven't touched him, hugged him, anything in eight years. >> reporter: but tonight, she finally will. michelle miller, cbs news, detroit. >> pelley: and that's the cbs evening news for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. i don'or wonder whether i theshould seek treatment.c. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients who've had no prior treatment. it transformed treatment as the first cure that's one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. harvoni is a simple treatment regimen that's been prescribed to more than a quarter of a million patients. tell your doctor if you've had a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or any other medical conditions, and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni may include tiredness, headache and weakness. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. a horrifying crash takes three young lives and casts a dark cloud over graduation at clarksburg high school in upper montgomery county. i'm adam longo. parents and friends tonight desperately hoping that the death of three teenaged football players convinces students to slow down on the roads. police say 17-year-old jacob dennis was likely speeding after a pregraduation get- together and lost control on a curve on burnt hill road. his ford truck fishtailed into one tree and then slammed head on into another with such force that it broke the axle and sent the front wheels flying. also killed were his passengers, patrick

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