Tea leaves and chemicals and machines all of it used to make about two tractortrailer loads of that synthetic marijuana. You can see the dump truck here to take out some of the materials inside for quite some time. This wasnt the only spot raided. There was one in the bronx and two in brooklyn. Live in the morris park section of the bronx, jessica schneider, cbs 2 news. New at 5 00 now, outrage in a new jersey neighborhood. Residents just cant believe someone stole a childs wheelchair. Now the little boys mother faces some new challenges. Cbs 2s elise finch has the story from elizabeth. Its okay. Its okay. Reporter Andrew Pacheco is restless. He doesnt like to be carried but she has no choice suns someone stole his wheelchair Tuesday Morning as she was getting him ready for school. I usually park it up my driveway. I dont want to come up and down the stairs with him in it. So i left it there just a few i was actually very shocked that someone would take a medical use chair. Reporter an
Now we are going to try to have a conversation, hopefully it will be interactive. Im going to start first with some questions for each of our three judges just to talk about the beginnings and what they did earlier. And then we will switch to some other topics. We are going to start first with the presiding justice of the second department. Randy, where were you born . I was born in china. I came to the United States at the age of six months. I was born in december, i was hereby the fourth of july. Do i understand he went to brooklyn tech . I did. It was the best i could do. Before you became the first asianamerican judge in new yorkit was the best i could do. You are also the first asianamerican prosecutor. I was the first asianamerican assistant attorney in new york state. All of that is a function of age. I happen to be among the oldest of the postwar generations. I always had an interest in criminal justice. I was very happy, i had been appointed to the office of the queen attorney
She could die. She doesnt understand, and she doesnt know how she got it or why she got it. And no one is doing anything to help me. No one should feel that hopeless. Yet its a way of life for millions of parents. Their children fighting for life and every breath. Despite your best efforts, you couldnt protect her. Yes. Its your kids. Sorry. Its your kids. Yeah. And heres the real shocker. These kids may not have to be sick. Go in there and say, listen. Im not livin like this. This is my house. For nearly two years, dateline has been investigating the disease that sends more children to hospitals than any other chronic illness, asthma. I cant breathe surprisingly, a leading cause is poverty. Its a tale of two cities, the haves and havenots. So three times higher chance behind you . Kids growing up city blocks apart from each other. Our undercover cameras take you inside the battle. How it can be won. You can see the mold is back. Boy, it is everywhere. And why were losing. Everybodys g
Dateline has been investigating the disease that sends more children to hospitals than any other chronic illness, ashma. A leading cause is poverty, a tale of two cities, the haves and have notes. Three times of a chance behind you a child having ashma than here . Our undercover cameras take you inside the battle. How it can be won. The mold is back. Its everywhere. And why were losing. Everybody has a breaking point. Im lester holt and this is dateline. Tonight, breathless. My mommy says when i cough, i need my asthma pump. Imagine living a life tied to a machine. Imagine struggling for air as you play, walk or even sleep. Imagine fearing that your next breath may be your last. Welcome to the world of sixyearold amanda santos. I cant breathe. I cant breath. Okay. All right. Amanda is one of 7 million children in the u. S. Who suffer from asthma, but there is Something Different about her disease. She and hundreds of others like her are more likely to develop, more likely to be hospita
Welcome to the world of sixyearold amanda santos. I cant breathe. I cant breath. Okay. All right. Amanda is one of 7 million children in the u. S. Who suffer from asthma, but there is Something Different about her disease. She and hundreds of others like her are more likely to develop, more likely to be hospitalized for, more likely to die of asthma than other children. I cant breathe i cant breathe nearly a year and a half ago as part of the nbc news in plain Sight Initiative that reports on poverty in america and supported by the ford foundation, i, along with a team of date lane investigative producers set to find out why those kids are more at risk, up close and under cover and you may be outraged by what we discovered. I certainly was. Because this is a story not just about asthma, its about how illness is made worse by neglect and incompetence where asthma rages most of all. Im sitting in amandas apartment in new york at the Kitchen Table where time and time again shes been strap