changing and evolving. good to see you, doctor, thank you. that s going to do it for me this hour, i m chris jansing, see you back here at this hour, every weekday at 10:00 a.m. contessa brewer picks up things next. did you ever sit by the phone, waiting for joe to call you? no, i was the one that approached joe in the first place. a, that doesn t surprise me. and b, a lot of women would be lying about that. i had too many things going on, if you know what i m saying. a mystery in mexico, two u.s. teens killed in a hail of bullets at a car dealership across the border from texas. and facebook seems to make it easy for stalkers and now founder mark zuckerberg falls victim himself. we re looking at that issue. and a dangerous stunt with deadly consequences. plus two favorite el nino stars join me live, next.
to get into regular sleep cycles, and the long-term ones, about trying to deal with the aspect of being isolated for so long. and in this ways, establishing a brotherhood with 33 men altogether and being separated from the families. so doctors say they are reestablishing their connections to their families, being brought up to speed on some of the personal events that took place while they were away, and hopefully taking time. but remarkably, one of the miners, 54-year-old jose rodriguez, was on the phone establishing a new contract at another mine and plans to go back to work. but first, he says, he s going to take a much-needed vacation. thomas? kerry, thank you. mystery in mexico, why did police stop searching for an american man? are drug gangs actually taking over and running that part of the country? also, a reality check on the travel alert for americans in
the senate was on vacation. another million could lose benefits if nothing gets done by the end of the month. now to a mystery in mexico. the country s mired a drug cartel war, murders, kidnappings, terror. we talk about it a lot on this news task and now a man who heads a task force to curb kidnappings is missing. talk about irony. someone might have kidnapped the anti-kidnapping boss. rafael ro mo is the senior editor of latin american affairs and he s following the story for us. as you may imagine, a lot of concern in mexico. it s been more than a week since edgar contreras silva disappeared. he was reported missing by his own family. according to the prosecutor s office, silva is a supervisor in the anti-kidnapping division of the local prosecutor s office in mexico city. so as you can imagine, his disappearance has led many to think that he s become a victim of kidnapping himself. authorities have opened an investigation into his possible