city of mckelly. dr. jeffrey tavid has come 800 miles from park city. hundreds are waiting, who have been screened by the nurses. reporter: each of them with a tiny piece of tape bearing a number above their eye. he quietly gets ready in the corner of this room with the kit he brings from home, a lone yellow bag with the instrument he ll use to perform a cataract procedure. they have sought out the blind all over the world, 500,000 surgeries together. we ll do one every seven or eight minutes. reporter: and right there in the crowd that little face, number 245, nurses putting on her hospital gown. you can see the huge cataract in her left eye. she walks in. the doctor holds up a finger. she can t see it. we ask, does she think the doctor will fix it?
he was working with mckelly. he said he wasn t doping but helping with the training regular minute. when lance started working with him, when he starts working with him, there were allegations about him even then. so the fact he chose to work with that doctor was highly suspicious. highly suspicious and came out in the news and lance s story was the same at the time. i m not working with him for doping purposes. i m working with him just to train. and that was also a brazen move that was very kind of characteristic of lance armstrong. he was working with a doping doct doctor or alleged doping doctor but thought he could control the criticism and deflect it criticism and for awhale it worked. is there a lesson to be learned? we think one of the morals to the story is that, you know, yes, cycling was a mess and armstrong was the master of it and others were doping and cheating, as well, but when you win at a rigged game, you re going to pay the steepest price
guilty despite their claimed innocence. chris father john is relieved. innocent. they did not kill my son. joining me now are scott he willington, prosecuting attorney in the arkansas second judicial district. jeff rosen swag representing mckelly. and patrick representing damion he can kels. thank you. and also we have dr. michael baden, former new york city chief examiner and fox news contributor. thank you all for being here tonight. i m going to start with the attorneys for the defendants. 18 years have passed. the forensic expert is dead. there is no d.n.a. connecting your clients to the commission of these murders. so, why even have your clients plead guilty? well, i represented jesse
guilty despite their claimed innocence. chris father john is relieved. innocent. they did not kill my son. joining me now are scott he willington, prosecuting attorney in the arkansas second judicial district. jeff rosen swag representing mckelly. and patrick representing damion he can kels. thank you. and also we have dr. michael baden, former new york city chief examiner and fox news contributor. thank you all for being here tonight. i m going to start with the attorneys for the defendants. 18 years have passed. the forensic expert is dead. there is no d.n.a. connecting your clients to the commission of these murders. so, why even have your clients plead guilty? well, i represented jesse miss kelly, as was referred to
innocence. chris father john is relieved. innocent. they did not kill my son. joining me now are scott he willington, prosecuting attorney in the arkansas second judicial district. jeff rosen swag representing mckelly. and patrick representing damion he can kels. thank you. and also we have dr. michael baden, former new york city chief examiner and fox news contributor. thank you all for being here tonight. i m going to start with the attorneys for the defendants. 18 years have passed. the forensic expert is dead. there is no d.n.a. connecting your clients to the commission of these murders. so, why even have your clients plead guilty? well, i represented jesse miss kelly, as was referred to