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Transcripts For DW Kick Off - More Than Football 20180607 23:30:00

climate change. waste. pollution. isn't it time for good. eco africa people and projects that are changing our environment for the better it's up to us to make a difference let's explain are. you going to be farming magazine. long d. w. . is going to win it's all in russia today's kickoff world cup countdown continues with group g. and with england we have to wonder will this summer the end of fifty two years of good question how far can england make it on the sixteen i think that's that's more than an all time why don't all the brits just play together with scotland wiles and northern ireland. imagine an international football team of the frontline of garrison style current time and will great and make cambridge tells us why he is english up there oh. but we've got germans today japanese and german japanese who should make it so right for this summer. course those are the. let's get things started with all that's me hungry jane. taking a trip back in time to nine hundred ninety six when the old wembley still stood here and england hosted the european championship. in their iconic tournament and david baddiel and frank skinner sang about it. and when england made it through to the semifinal it looked as though the white for a first trophy since the sixty six world cup could be over. but we all know what happened next germany's revenge for sixty six down south they missed. the therapy to be chicken pizza obviously. and eventually became a month ago. so now more than two decades on england is still waiting. but will it happen again russia twenty eight c. will this summer the end of fifty two years of let's find out. the three lions have one of the tournament favorites in group g. belgium along with central americans woke up dead beats on panama and north african side to musea. it might be a country where football was born but for over half a century kids here have been growing up without seeing that same win anything so how does that feel and i can tell you that between all the penalty shootout losses the hands of god and the embarrassing defeats it just hurts too much so i asked some friends to tell me if there's any reason to still be optimistic take it away. when i mistook it i guess my name is rob davis i work for scott olds i am a gallery manager and freelance journalist but i'm from over last night's fifty two years now been supporting england all my life so thirteen years mom says that when the winning goal went in on the final goal in the world cup final everyone jumped in train them i jumped out my car i think as an england fan when you were my age in the light six more early seventies not to get into football you had a you had a high expectation but we know what i had sort of disappointments in seven in seventy four stuff that i kind of brought your expectations then automatically my heart as a fan would have been it's really not you got to see the same in the camaraderie among my fans was absolutely fantastic. as we're going to mention you think we're going to start badly in the bridge site got better got better got better and then both tomcat scored that goal to get there with your kind of think this might be easy going to be out on but it wasn't just. the high point was probably again france not yeah i really felt like we could do well michael owen it is very best share up front and. always go against argentina is one of my favorite for many races what is my earliest obviously thought we were going to win it didn't happen and then from there on it was just a gradual spiral word disappointment i guess that it's almost like a low point there isn't one specific hung i can mention you know there's too many to mention. i hope it is going to southgate at this thought that by just bluff the kids bring the kids in. to get the kids in charge of the experience next time around. i think you need to choose the best team that we have at that moment whether that is someone who's thirty five or someone he's sixteen seventeen years of age or whatever the best players are at that time of the play. as the need to go to the plate. shows that we have a set of real hard working players we have quality as well the hurricane is the focal point. steady alley. we could do well wrecking stylings playing well rush for. a forward line looks pretty good and that's half the battle i think you know where we're sure in in defense and you know off the perch situation is still an issue. really if you can't beat panama into his year then. it's a group that we should get through obviously my prediction for him of the world cup oversight quarterfinals. not with those sort of massive expectations on them or something could be going to go with it because response by some of these and from one of the free friendlies but the good impression i think we're going in there on the rights of the sixteen i think that's that's more than enough out of sight for us to say nice would be out something three gold. the way i see it will be lucky to make the quarter finals and you know what that's ok a lifetime of never really getting any further than that has taught me to enjoy it anyway there's one thing i ask please no more of this. to that minority of england fans who seem to take pleasure in turning host cities into war zones please stop giving giving us all a bad name for a long long time. so that's england but what about the things they're facing in the great to talk about that across town to another stadium. this one stamford bridge because it's here that the belgian captain played his football there are a few players in the world who could rival eight and i was up for sensational dribbling he's not the only belgian at chelsea. is the man between the sticks for both sides. they aren't alone as premier league stars in the belgium squad in fact they can hardly be two teams in football they know each other as well as england and the red devils just look at chelsea's london rivals top. they have two of belgium center hobson young for the all the world class midfield in force. and we can just as easily be doing the belgium section from manchester except our budget didn't cover the trade. since joining manchester city given the broiler has become one of the best players in the world while teammate vincent kompany has just won his third premier league title. across the city united's romelu lukaku is belgium's all time top scorer at the age of twenty four and has also not ruled for lightning. so we could see belgium first eleven with seven right premier league players and a couple more coming off the bench who knowing their enemy help england stop belgium in their tracks although they just make a. another painful summer then fans watching their team get beaten by a team that was made in england. in any case the real question for belgium is can this golden generation finally shake off near achieve it. i'm going to say no. talent i don't see this belgium team beating the likes of france or brazil like with england another some of the frustration is in store. at least england of what it wants so. the good news for belgium is that whatever happens in the match between them they shouldn't have too much trouble the other side's in group g. two countries who have never made it past the group stage at a world cup in fact i never even qualify for a world cup of. gold from roman torres against costa rica in the final qualifier secured panama's place at their maiden world. it was a huge moment for the nation finally qualifying for the world cup the eleventh attempt that puts england's woes into perspective but since then their preparations have been going well. recently friendlies against denmark in switzerland conceding seven and scoring. anything can happen in football but panama winning a game at russia twenty eight would be a giant achievement and the same could be said for. the country might be set for its fifth appearance at a world cup but the team has only one wants in twelve games. it is very first world cup match against mexico way back in one thousand nine hundred seventy eight since then its full t.v. is of. frankly what i'm saying is even england can screw up this group. they still wouldn't go on picking belgium to finish first. ahead of southgate site. i'm back in panama to get a win at the first ever world cup to finish third ahead of tunisia. and then might not end fifteen years of hurt in russia but most fans would be happy with a performance reminiscent of nine hundred ninety six a combination of passion hard work and more than a few goals in mind to be a trophy but it would be something to be proud of and join me next time for the final. what. we waited for years but now it's finally here. it's finally a world cup time again. get you world cup ready. all you really wanted to know about russia twenty eight sitting right here. into the details so who are the biggest players what are the biggest stories but not just from the office we've traveled across the world to answer your questions and missy during this time. there. what do you think is going to work. fly around the world and bland in russia to track germany's golden voice with chico . to be keeping a special high on team germany. let's do it let's get the cup again. which you know was lunch. they seem nice for my dear four hundred. school favorite during the world cup so it's good to subscribe to kickoff you keep all of our woke up to. see nations will take part in the world cup so why doesn't anybody play as part of a unified scene great britain let's ask our experts and mccambridge. imagine in. the national football team is the front line of gary's battle hurricane and will freak i'm not doing that well great thing. is you know i don't want to do it if humiliate me and a lot of a lot of people respect me. griggs all five. britain has an off policy when it comes to sports it has a combined combined rugby team even combined. so have you ever wondered why england scotland northern ireland and wales have separate football teams we did a quick google. think it was super sleuth dude if i'm right you all have to buy me a beer and you will. according to super still do this because players are too shy to get into a combined great british team that's not the case even if it is true the real reason great britain has four separate football teams it's all to do with timing football as we know it was invented in england in the mid nineteenth century with the first international match being played in eight hundred seventy two england against scotland in glasgow and. how exciting. but it's one thing for came along in ninety nine for england scotland ireland and wales had only been playing each other in tournament for twenty years they were deemed too well established to combine over the next one hundred and fourteen years these four proud footballing nations won one world cup between them is not very good but there have been times that great britain has played together nine hundred forty seven is match of the century for example a british eleven featuring stanley matthews against the european eleven the game up twenty seven years and two world wars since the four nations were parts of the game ended six one to britain we must be good together at the olympic games in twenty twelve in london a great british team competed for the first time in more than fifty years for a gold medal the team was kept in by walsh when rowing digs in the squad featured daniel sturridge craig bellamy and the welsh himself but the team didn't feature any scots or northern irishman and guess how we went out in the quarter finals on penalties the good news is we didn't lose to germany but uses. at the twenty six think games in rio great britain thin and so it seems scotland wales and northern ireland didn't fancy joining england over. the radar. so would you guys like to see a cold war and great riches levon at the next olympic games in tokyo twenty twenty just imagine it gareth by zero hurricane and well craig seen it. it's not all about england some fans are more than one nationality like nicole. hi i'm a coach or not nikita or an acquittal we could all the names from to cab just like him my jets series again filming with his film and that's my mom but typical german as you can see they say the world cup is coming up and that all fans want their home country to him. what does that mean for me should i root for japan or germany. tough question since i live in germany and don't really know much about japan i have to do some research on japan. we want to check out japan and the football there japan or germany which team should i support. some who are would top your colorful low chinese grades now where's the football here this week first dive into an underground bunker shot up a sales japan was originally a baseball country and football used to be played in black and whites on paper money like you. next month that brings me here to check out the virtual sight of football in a gaming hall where we could have spent the whole trip they've got plenty of buttons here oh man i love buttons wait is there any actual for. yeah. you can tell japan is excited for the world cup to finally of all the true heroes the blue some overnight. keep it all being torn off probably even here i went to meet john cabot he sits high up in the sky like he's a famous commentator covering the blue summer games for the upcoming so happy that's what makes it so exciting for you. it's going to be the do or die game hopefully we will do and go to the round of sixteen and maybe face england isn't that going to be fascinating. i'm not so sure is it. and should i even believe this guy i'm more interested in the blue summarize chances in the tournament. it's going to be a tough one for japan. as you know the coach was fired i know i know i heard that already somehow this is all making me very tired we have a new japanese coach. being japanese and being. the best actually coach of jamie winning more games than any other coaches in the history of daily so i believe. he's the man who else could it be i'm not sure if i'm really so i'll ask him about your parents frank we have the south american technique probably not do we have the strength and. you know the muscular power of the europeans probably not but as you can see how mexicans have been successful in the past tournaments size doesn't matter so it's a determination. we have it doesn't matter. to me ok. japan or germany challenge number one food first. i'm not really my thing and germany oh hello hello hello hello both of them always good german if you put it up one you. can't. he's a sports journalist from. i'm pretty sure he even was everything about football before chanting he shows me the coolest pitch in the city on the roof. i haven't seen much in my young life but i know that was something special but what can i get something i need to know who's going to be lining up for the new summer right. now. i'm sure. everybody who talks about i believe he's the best. now going to go. it's going to. be. so it's a lot of. pretty. sure but you know the one of. i'm. going to do them all thankfully go through a lot of. our trip we move on to sites i'm not sure how much except my dad's diamonds from this place they're always up and the j.b. and i especially proud of one player he was born here and grew up with the red sox but she can't i know him already since he plays in germany. his parents invited me over to hang up when somebody is a story about his son and it's not for me. to . know. that he did it. because i think you. are. well. that's a. that's going to. be interested to. know. all right then challenge number two. can you step stands for and mom for germany where is the dark had it that well besides all this. say it's headed towards germany but mom is messing with the dog so no one's getting a point this time i'd say afterwards we do something really clever and we had to training watching the rats was my first two taste of the genie. and then a dream comes true i get to meet one of these bodies and the player himself now. he engaged to be a close friend so he seems like a nice guy. but it's. more what i was you know i thought that he might not that i must be. part of the show. not that. sure i agree i'm pretty sure if he said i'm a few. i think so he. said he we had to keep going. to our next stop is for. i've been told the people there are crazy football crazy japanese football was supposedly born here and twenty national team players come from here one of them is the captain my cultural has a bit and here in a little sporting goods store i ran into a buddy of his. school education such as the crew for clothes shop is filled with nice collectibles great stuff related to resist new design make a difference and russia. for the form of a single hard study. good luck to see. what's this thing don't people usually kissing it just like tim ford. in the end he's got to clear. the air with you moved in and. when you pull over you but you can. take the final challenge let's settle this on the pitch i try to play football even though i can't even walk but let me give it a go anyway and there it is gold for japan what was above them. but even in japan there is a reminder of how great germany is because germany's best ambassador plays right into this stadium for this local but guess who rides could be the legendary lucas put odds. on germany players and here he is smiling at me play he as an expert of both countries who am i supposed to root for. the boys closer to. what a calming life is good for our stuff some of those used by about put your microphone from the shadows on the front of my goats and so on the boredom back would pull you up on my back all. the poland's and other countries to worry about how exhausting. so a lot well i do. our trip is over and top i once to know if i made up my mind to love japan i like the people here in this jewelry especially the food but everything except maybe the food. i find both jewish these cool blue and white as long as both my countries are in. each other i'm five both of them boring too bad for you and for the sitemap. your romantic song thirty minutes w. . as long as. my measures do not go to day nothing would change you know the banks pain you know you're lying and so was the language you're a banker. for speaking the truth global news that matters w . made for mines. what keeps us in shape what makes us sick and how do we stay healthy. my name is dr carson because i talk to medical experts. watch them at work. and they discuss what you can do to improve your health. stay tuned and let's all try to stay in good shape. d.w. . time for an upgrade. your clothes. our house with. design highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that will turn your whole interest for special. upgrade yourself with g.w.s. interior design channel on you tube. is the positive feelings me. she was infected at birth. she probably won't live to the age of five. the program dream aims to prevent the mother to child transmission of the virus. hiv positive women give birth to hiv negative baby's.

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Transcripts For MSNBCW Dateline Extra 20180806 02:00:00

>> enter the a team. private eyes. there had been a brief encounter with a mysterious stranger. >> on the train coming home. she met this woman. >> did that hold the answer? >> she is talking about how someone has tried to assume her identity. >> a chilling case of a daughter in danger. strangers on a train. >> hello and welcome to date line extra. she was beautiful. talented and trusting and sometimes troubled. a young woman from a prem innoce prominent family. when the police were unable to find her. her family hatched a plan. to solve the mystery. here's keith morris son. >> it began in the great morning A young woman disappears, and a chance encounter with a stranger on a train may hold some answers. visa. a paperwork mixup sort of thing that would have sent her into a tailspin once, but now, the new kate vowed to try again later. boarded the palmetto for charleston and once home threw herself into college classes and a children's book she'd been writing. big brother joe was, to say the least, encouraged. >> she when i talked to her was the happiest i can remember hearing her in the last ten years. she sounded good. she sounded as if she was ready, had a conviction about what she wanted to do. >> and then it was june. heat rising in charleston's deepening green. on saturday morning, june 13, tom waring at his summer house outside the city felt an absence. cell phone hadn't rung. no call from kate. kate who always called or texted her parents almost hourly. >> she always checked in and it was unusual. they'd call the police. then when monday came, there was word. no, not from kate. from kate's bank. >> once i got off the phone with the branch manager, i called the police. >> yeah. what were you thinking then? >> i was thinking something is wrong. >> something was wrong, but could they discover what? and would the police help? >> i thought i'm not going to put up with this. we've got to get going. we've got to get moving on this. friends, colleagues, gathered here are the world's finest insurance experts. rodney -- mastermind of discounts like safe driver, paperless. the list goes on. how about a discount for long lists? gold. mara, you save our customers hundreds for switching almost effortlessly. it's a gift. and jamie. -present. -together we are unstoppable. so, what are we gonna do? ♪ insurance. that's kind of what we do here. ♪ (door bell rings) it's ohey. this is amazing. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, are you okay? even when i was there, i never knew when my symptoms would keep us apart. so i talked to my doctor about humira. i learned humira can help get, and keep uc under control when other medications haven't worked well enough. and it helps people achieve control that lasts. so you can experience few or no symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. are you ready to take your then you need xfinity xfi.? a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. named ethan mack standing at the counter of a bank waiting to cash a check signed by kate waring. problem was her account barely totalled $100, and this check was for $4500, and the signature seemed off. the teller called kate's dad. he called police. >> i never met ethan, didn't know ethan's last name. all i knew was the name ethan who was a friend. it's too strong to say that she had a secret life, but she certainly had friends and did things that we didn't know anything about. >> of course she did. she was 28 years old. and even though she was financially and emotionally dependent on her parents, she had lots of friends. some they knew, some they didn't. it was howard gatts, for example, a martial arts trainer in the midst of a contentious divorce with whom kate had been carrying on something of a romance. >> i felt that in my heart something was wrong. and i was -- i was concerned. >> then there was jason locke, a young lawyer with whom she often shared lunch and a spirited debate. >> she was strong-willed. she was very energetic. she was rarely, rarely incorrect. that's a -- >> her best friend, as she made clear to all the others, was ethan mack. >> she really liked ethan. she really trusted him. "this is my best friend, jason." she put a lot of trust in him. >> she's a lovable person, full of energy, always rambunctious. >> ethan worked in a local hotel. a very different background than kate. but he'd been her best buddy for years and in a way her protector. everybody in ethan's neighborhood knew you didn't mess with kate when ethan was around. they loved each other like -- well, siblings. >> i made sure no harm would come to her when certain little boyfriends would act like they got hand problems. i would put them in their place -- >> it wasn't a romance at all then? >> never at all. she was like a little sister to me. >> it was a token of his family's regard for kate that she was godmother to ethan's nephew, malachi. on her moscow trip, kate bought herself and ethan matching brass bulldog key chains. and on that monday morning in june, said ethan, he was very worried about kate, just as he had been for years as he helped her battle her demons. >> calm her down and talking to her and understanding what was going on in the world of kate. >> but now he complained, here was kate's dad sending the police to talk to him about a check kate told him to cash. ethan explained to the cop, david osborne, about the money he'd given kate for jewelry and other expenses and that the check was to pay him back. >> he was basically best friends with katherine, had been for several years. >> in fact, ethan told detective osborne he was very likely the last friend to see her before she disappeared. >> he said that he had saw her friday night, had dinner, had drinks, came back, dropped kate off back at her house. >> did he say what time? >> yeah. i think the time would have been probably around 11:30, 11:45 at that time. >> the detective checked, of course, and found text messages that confirmed what ethan told him. he even went to the house ethan shared with his mom. >> and they both let me in. and they both allowed me to search it. the mother and ethan both told me this is his room, this is where he stays. >> but to say that the instant suspicion on the part of the warings and the police was upsetting to ethan was probably an understatement. >> good evening, mr. waring and mrs. waring. this is ethan mack calling -- >> this is the voicemail he left for the warings after that policeman poked around his place as if he was some murder suspect. >> i think you need really check that and go find out or go see what really happened and find the person who did something to her and stop harassing me. cause the only thing i ever did was try to help her in a million ways. >> so dead end. the police moved past ethan, checked kate's cell phone record, found she'd made a call late that friday that pinged on a tower in a place called james island, several miles from her house. but phone pings can be funny that way sometimes, they told the warings. one tower's busy, the next over picks it up. probably made the call from home, they said. they also promised to keep looking for her. but really kate was known to have gotten herself in and out of trouble a time or two, and police resources were limited. and well, tom waring got the cops' message. >> we do not know for a fact that a crime has been committed here. >> after all, the warings were reminded, kate was a world traveler. could well have just picked up and gone back to russia. might be aboard some tramp steamer even now. she and kate had words. but at 8:00 p.m., a drugstore camera showed kate relaxed, talking on her cell, buying wine and snacks while waiting on her prescription refill. ethan paid for dinner. chicken, salmon teriyaki. >> like a japanese like -- kind of like cuisine-type thing. >> she didn't drive, so he took her home. dropped her off before midnight. something earlier that friday that bothered the warings at first was terrifying them now. the more they thought about it, the worse it seemed. just before she went to the drug store friday evening, she started telling her father about some problem. >> saying that she felt like she perhaps had unintentionally got herself in trouble. and i said, "well, why don't you tell me about that." and she wouldn't tell me any details. >> was she clearly worried? >> she was concerned. >> clearly worried. >> about something. >> naturally they told the police about that. nothing came of it. and as the air thickened into a steamy august, the weeks that passed brought no new leads. just tourists clamoring for the cool shade of historic carriage rides. and kate waring, the urgency of finding her, began to fade. >> and that was driving me nuts. i thought, i'm not going to put up with this. we've got to get going. we've got to get moving on this. >> and in the hushed cool of his perch overlooking the city, someone was listening. a new investigation begins. but it's not the police who are behind it. >> we're the cream of the crop, and our job was to find kate waring. not finding kate was not an option. >> who are these guys? when strangers on a train cons. continues or if you forgot your bike was on the roof rack, you only pay one deductible -instead of two- for a claim involving both your auto and home. and when you save that much, it's almost like it... never even happened. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. you know how painful heartburn can be. for fast-acting, long-lasting relief, try doctor recommended gaviscon. it quickly neutralizes stomach acid and helps keep acid down for hours. relieve heartburn with fast- acting, long-lasting gaviscon. and helps keep acid down for hours. my gums are irritated. i don't have to worry about that, do i? actually, you do. harmful bacteria lurk just below the gum line. crest gum detoxify works below the gum line to neutralize harmful plaque bacteria and help reverse early gum damage. and, now there's new crest gum & enamel repair. it gives you clinically proven healthier gums and helps repair and strengthen weakened enamel. gum detoxify and gum & enamel repair, from crest. gums are good, so is my check-up! crest. healthy, beautiful smiles for life. of rooms overlooking the city where an influential philanthropist flipped through his mental roledex and placed a call to his friend, the chief of police. >> i really need a favor. i really need some help with this situation. >> the caller was this man, john rivers. happened to be a childhood friend of tom waring, watched kate waring grow up. john rivers told the police chief he was worried about kate, too. >> and he told me that, you know, they got a lot of stuff going on. >> sure. >> but that he would assign his best and brightest to the case. and i felt pretty good about that. >> but now almost two months later, kate was still missing. and the investigation such as it was had accomplished nothing. and john rivers couldn't stand what it was doing to his best friend, tom waring. >> i could see that he really was having a hard time functioning. >> so rivers picked up the phone again and told this man, "do what it takes." his name is andy savage, former prosecutor, now famously tenacious criminal defense attorney. savage had heard about kate, too, and how police had no evidence of any crime. really? >> as soon as we scratched the surface just a little bit, we were absolutely convinced that foul play was involved. >> savage was given just two mandates -- find kate waring, tell police everything you find. that last part, keeping the police in the loop, should be easy, figured andy, given the team he assembled. a band of retired policemen-turned-private eyes. each with a particular talent. >> bobby minter. >> bobby minter, human blood expert. tracking people his specialty. >> bill capps. >> bill capps, techno geek. tracks bad guys through cyber-space. happens to be a crack shot. >> james randolph. >> james randolph. ex-police department rebel. strategy his specialty. shaking things up a particular skill. >> we're the cream of the crop. and our job was to find kate waring. not finding kate was not an option. >> experience told james the best place to start was with kate herself. >> if we listen to kate, she'll tell us where she is. >> james went to the house on the battery, up the stairs, down the hall, and into kate's bedroom. >> these type cases, you have to take on the personality, and you have to see this person's world through their eyes. >> he sat there for a bit, looked around. the russian notes in kate's handwriting made sense, but why chinese paper money? and why was her brand-new prescription sitting there untouched? >> the medication in which she had gotten for a prescription was still on her dresser, unused. >> that medication was her lifeline. she needed it to counter depression, anxiety, insomnia. she never left home without it. meanwhile, cyber-sleuth bill capps buried himself in social media sites. kate used them. bill scoured them all. >> if she was awake, she was facebooking, she was texting, she was calling people on the phone, she was e-mailing. and at the time she went missing, when everything immediately ceased, i mean, that was completely out of character for her. >> using kate's friends, capps built an electronic map of her communications the friday night she vanished. from kate's friend jason locke, capps retrieved the weird voicemail left that evening. >> 10:06 p.m., missed call. voicemail. voicemail said that someone had "stolen her identity," and had obtained a couple of credit cards in her name. she wanted me to sue the person responsible. >> the gym trainer and kate's romantic interest, howard gatts, told capps he heard from her about 10:30 p.m., still at dinner with ethan then. there was another call. it was after midnight. well after police believe she was dropped off at him. >> she told me she was at some friend's house. they had already made it to the house. she sounded a little buzzed. >> and then a very last message from kate. a text. very strange. >> "i'm off to greenville to pick up some lovely." whatever lovely was i had no idea, you know, and, "i'll be back in a few days." >> did that make sense to you? >> no. >> be careful, he replied. but this time she did not text back. silence from kate. except the middle of the night, her cell phone pinged out on james island, miles from her home. the cops had surmised, remember, that a closer tower to her house may have been too busy to handle the call. but at 1:53 in the morning? not a chance, thought andy savage. >> just preposterous. they were looking for an explanation, plausible explanation, consistent with their theory that she voluntarily left. [ ringing ] >> that middle of the night call, by the way, was to her voicemail. >> the mailbox is full -- >> the voicemail box that had been jammed full once during which time she hadn't used it or called it at all. so the question -- >> why would she call voicemail? she would not be doing it. >> only one conclusion to draw. >> somebody else was using her phone. >> but where was kate now? had she as the one text suggested left town looking for drugs or lovely? if that's what lovely meant? for the moment, it was a dead end. and then -- then he called. eugene frazier, legendary 34-year homicide detective now retired. >> i believe that if a man commits a crime, he should be prepared to do the time. >> thing is about gene frazier, over here on charleston's james island where his ancestors go back to slave days, gene gets tips. all kinds of tips. and one day a church friend told gene he'd heard the police had been to ethan mack's house. and something strange about that. >> said, "listen, i don't think this is right," he says. "ethan mack is living in an apartment that i have rented out to his father." >> but the police didn't search this place where ethan actually lived, said the landlord. they searched his mother's house on a different island miles away where ethan told them he lived. >> and he says, "i think that he's trying to mislead the police." >> what did you think when you heard that? >> this guy got something to hide. >> and on that very day, gene frazier joined a band of ex-cops which, from now on, we'll call the a-team. >> a mysterious woman enters the picture. >> katie had this strange girl in the room with her. >> who was she? the a-team was about to launch a hidden camera surprise. when strangers on a train continues. are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? 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>> she doesn't have a car. how's she going to get there? >> it was after that when the a-team's gene frazier got a tip. kate's best friend ethan lied about where he lived. he didn't live where he allowed police to search. he really lived in one of two apartments five miles away which you presented to the police. >> yes. >> and? >> they didn't search the house. they never got a search warrant. they never asked for permission to search the house. they never said, "hey, you misled us two months ago." >> but as the a-team discovered, ethan failed to mention something else, too. he had a girlfriend in this little place, a woman named heather angelica kamp. and when janice waring heard that, her mind went straight to an afternoon at home three months earlier. >> i heard voices upstairs. and so i went up, and katie had this strange girl in -- that i'd never met before in the room with her. >> and that was her name, heather kamp. kate explained she met and rapidly became fast friends with heather on the train to palmetto during her trip down from washington. typical kate, janice thought back then. drawn to someone who needed help, who had told her a hard luck story. >> she said when she got on the train, her pocketbook was stolen. and she's here in charleston, and she doesn't have any money. and i'm helping her out until she can whatever. >> but kate told her mother that heather would pay her back soon because she was a pediatric surgeon in charleston to take a new post at the local medical center. then a few days later, a distraught kate told her mother that heather's daughter back home in new jersey had been killed in a car accident. but something seemed odd about that, said janice. >> didn't seem like she was rushing to go up to new jersey to attend to the child that had been -- >> or that she was a grief-stricken woman. >> grief-stricken woman. she did not look that way at all. >> and now here was news that heather was living with kate's friend, ethan, in this tiny apartment. >> to me, she looked like a con artist. >> but no, said kate back then. janice had it all wrong. heather was nice. in fact, kate said she'd introduced heather to her friend ethan and very quickly a romance had blossomed. they were even talking marriage. really? if janice waring was suspicious about heather back then, the a-team was doubly so now. sure enough a few key strokes on the internet told bobby that mother's intuition was right. >> she had been arrested for forgery in indiana. but she'd been arrested in other states, too. >> essentially if you just googled her name, i suppose you could find out a fair amount. >> that's how i found her. she'd been impersonating a doctor. i just googled her. >> and ethan wouldn't be her first husband. she had been married before and had four children. now that they knew about heather a few fuzzy details were suddenly clearer. the one thing -- the last dinner with ethan made more sense because there were three meals on the dinner bill. the other diner was heather kamp. and more important, that check ethan tried to cash, the one the teller flagged, maybe that was another heather forgery. right away, point man james randolph rushed that information over here to police headquarters. surely somebody here would put two and two together. a woman known to have committed forgery in indiana and other states, a so-called best friend who tries to cash a bogus check with kate's name on it and lies to police. seems like evidence these two were involved in her disappearance up to their necks. enough to haul them in anyway, but -- >> i was told that the story panned out. and that these were petty criminals, and the check was going to be taken separate from the missing person. >> what did you say to that? >> i just didn't think it was the right thing to do. we had to figure out who wrote and endorsed those checks, who signed and wrote the checks. >> sure. it was obvious the a-team would have to find the connection between ethan and heather and kate's disappearance without police help. >> sort of remained stealthy as much as possible. >> time to keep a careful, quiet eye on ethan mack and heather kamp. so gene frazier persuaded his church friend, ethan's landlord, to allow surveillance specialist bobby minter to tuck a hidden camera into the corner of the kitchen window. a camera trained right at ethan's front door. >> it was a motion detected just like the light that they've got over the door is. when they drove in, it would light up, and it would light up for our camera. >> the whole camera itself, keith, was about the size of this little flashlight. it was pointed directly at the apartments. >> that's pretty slick. >> no doubt about it. >> and that's enough illumination to illuminate to see what they would be carrying. and that would lead us to know that they had something to do with kate's disappearance. >> and when ethan and leather left the apartment, bobby had that covered, too. he'd already tracked ethan to his job at a local hotel and attached a gps locator on his car as it sat in the parking lot. now there was no minute of the day when the team didn't know where ethan and heather were and what they were doing. and almost immediately, they got a surprise. when ethan was at work, heather sneaked over to visit the man living next door. rode around town with him. >> they were going to the bank a lot. and i called one of the investigators of wachovia. as a result of that, they found that they were kiting checks. they were actually stealing money from the bank. >> despite what bobby told the bank, it never resulted in charges against anybody. but that wasn't all he discovered. the gps tracker on ethan's car led bobby to a couple of local pawnshops. >> pawning jewelry. the jewelry was a red flag to us. >> was it kate's jewelry? they couldn't be sure yet without more surveillance, that is. and then the landlord called gene again, another tip. this one bad. ethan and heather weren't paying rent. >> he says, "i'm going to evict these people." so after he said that -- >> this is not good news. >> i said, "hold on. if these people are evicted, we don't know where they're going." >> if the a-team didn't think of something and fast, heather and ethan might slip out of their sight and charleston for good. an enticing offer from the a-team. 10,000 reasons to start talking. >> 10s, 20s, 50s. everybody sees that and their eyes just jump. -and we welcome back gary, who's already won three cars, two motorcycles, a boat, and an r.v. i would not want to pay that insurance bill. [ ding ] -oh, i have progressive, so i just bundled everything with my home insurance. saved me a ton of money. -love you, gary! -you don't have to buzz in. it's not a question, gary. on march 1, 1810 -- [ ding ] -frédéric chopin. -collapsing in 226 -- [ ding ] -the colossus of rhodes. -[ sighs ] louise dustmann -- [ ding ] -brahms' "lullaby," or "wiegenlied." -when will it end? [ ding ] -not today, ron. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don't. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist. extra. returning to our story here again is keith morris son. the team of retired detectives searching for kate waring had a big problem. crime-solving 101 told them heather and ethan had to be serious suspects. the last people to see kate alive. one a known forger, the other on tape trying to take money from kate's bank account. but they were about to be evicted for lack of a rent payment. and if that happened, they would slip the invisible net the a-team had so carefully woven. >> mind you, we had the camera, we had the gps, we've been tracking every movement that they have. >> so they made a call here to the quiet office overlooking charleston where the team's money man, john rivers, decided he'd pay ethan's rent. secretly, of course. and it was a plan which after a little brainstorming offered a bonus, a built-in opportunity. here's how. the a-team wanted to know if heather or ethan forged kate's $4500 check, but they needed original handwriting samples. >> we determined what was on the check that we needed comparison samples to. and we had numbers, obviously, on the check. >> then the a-team helped ethan's landlord prepare ious that contained the numbers and letters. when ethan and heather signed the document, they provided the sample that could prove they forged kate's check. the team took the handwriting to mickey dawson, who set up the police handwriting lab. the question was simple -- did heather and/or ethan forge that check from kate, the one ethan tried to cash? >> immediately that day our handwriting document examiner said, "that's them. no question about it." >> so if ethan and heather forged a check from kate, what else did they do? someone on the team needed to get a look inside that apartment. if kate had been there, there still might be evidence of something. but how to get in? >> well, the landlord has a right to inspect a tenant's homes for health and safety and welfare. and the landlord decided that he needed to go in and spray for bugs. >> you can understand why that might be done in that little place. >> james thought it would be best if he went with him to make sure that the bugs were all taken care of. >> surveillance expert bobby minter's gps device showed ethan's car was out somewhere. >> well, when we opened the door to go inside, ethan mack's sitting on the couch smoking a joint. >> for god's sakes. >> i'm like, hell, with the exterminator, we're going to be using dangerous chemicals. you'll have to step out on the outside while we get this done. >> no idea who you were? >> no, no, no. >> you sure about that? >> absolutely. >> yeah. >> the exterminator and i went inside and closed the door behind us. just searched the apartment. and in one of the backpacks, in ethan mack's backpack, was some chinese money. chinese currency. >> chinese money? yes. just like the chinese bills james saw in kate's bedroom. janice waring had brought the bills to kate from hong kong, souvenirs. had ethan stolen them? time to stir things up. apply some pressure. bobby minter knew just how. >> bobby put on every telephone pole, every vacant house, every oak tree, every stop sign, "wanted: information, missing person, kate waring's" poster. >> where the people hung out. >> wherever they went, including on mack's windshield when he was working that day. we put posters to send a psychological message to them. >> but no response. at which point john rivers said -- >> perhaps what they do understand and on the street as it were is andrew jackson. and maybe benjamin franklin. and they would recognize their faces on a $20 or $50 bill. >> $10,000 worth of bills went into a grocery bag. >> 10s, 20s, 50s, and 100s. a bag with -- when you open it up, you know, two rolls and then everybody sees that. the eyes just jump. >> where better to leave that bag of money, they decided, than under the nose of the neighbor heather was going to see. the man named terry williams, the one who seemed to be kiting checks with her. >> we knocked on the door, and terry williams come to the door with no shirt on. >> uh-huh. >> no shirt on, short pants. terry, listen, we know you're great friends with these people, mack and kamp. you don't have to live in this condition. we know you're back on your rent. we know -- look at that bag of money. this could be all yours. >> now to close the sale with terry williams, they try to bluff. >> tell us what happened to kate and where we can find her. we know mack and kamp killed her. and this money could be yours. and at that point, that's when the side -- the bedroom door busts open, and there's a lot of yelling and screaming. >> to their other surprise, there came heather kamp. angrily and quickly pulling her clothes back together. didn't appear to be a business meeting the team interrupted. the detectives told her who they were and who they worked for. >> and then heather kamp gets on the cell phone and makes a call to ethan mack. and says, "ethan, investigators are here trying to get terry williams to roll on us." and when she said that, the three of us looked at one another and -- police terms, we knew that was definitely the case. we knew, hey, they had done it. >> yes, decades of investigating made it perfectly clear to the a-team whatever happened to kate waring, ethan mack and heather kamp were in it up to their eyeballs. coming up -- >> we knew something was up. >> a new direction. the search for kate waring takes the a-team to a wild and desolate place. what would they find there? when "strangers on a train" continues. your mornings were made for better things than psoriatic arthritis. as you and your rheumatologist consider treatments, ask if xeljanz xr is right for you. xeljanz xr is a once-daily pill for psoriatic arthritis. taken with methotrexate or similar medicines, it can reduce joint pain, swelling, and significantly improve physical function. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma, and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts, and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common, and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz xr can reduce the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't let another morning go by without talking to your rheumatologist about xeljanz xr. wimy dbut now, i take used rhtometamucil every day.sh it traps and removes the waste that weighs me down, so i feel lighter. try metamucil, and begin to feel what lighter feels like. >> that's when it hit home. kate was the latest of hundreds of people still lost in south carolina. and it seemed to janice and tom that police weren't taking cases like theirs seriously. so what about all those other families also desperate for help? the warings held a vigil to make common cause. >> somehow or another, somebody will be moved and want to come forward and tell us where katie is. >> that was the public waring family. at home the private tom waring couldn't help but be drawn back to the play-back button on the voicemail. just to hear her voice. >> dad, mom? if you're there, pick up the phone. if you're there, pick up the phone. call me back later. bye. >> i would look at photographs of her or play those voicemail messages, just keeping her voice current in my mind. >> meanwhile, andy savage's a-team of ex-detectives was making progress. when they flashed that fat grocery bag of cash around the neighborhood, they certainly got a rise out of ethan and heather. a furious ethan called andy. >> your investigators are out here. they're accusing me of being involved in this homicide. kate was my best friend in life. as he's on the phone, kamp calls. she starts out in this rage about, you know, what are you doing out here, accusing me of this, we had nothing to do with that. >> fascinating reaction, thought andy savage. and perhaps an opportunity. >> we had done a lot of background on kamp. and so we knew her and we knew her personality. we knew a little about what buttons to push. so the reaction we had toward heather was one of comfort. not one of angst. and during that time, we planted the seeds that as a mother she must know the feeling of janice waring missing her daughter and tried to apply to her empathy for a mother. >> the call from heather wasn't all that fat bag of money accomplished. before long, it reeled in a fish. that neighbor heather was sneaking off to see called, too. the a-team went to talk to him. >> and he said, "i know ethan and heather did something to kate." and terry went in the back room, came back out, and had this ipod. and terry said, "i believe this ipod is going to belong to kate." >> now that was huge. the last time kate was seen with that ipod it was at the gym the day she went missing. now a man kate never met said heather gave him the ipod days after kate disappeared. just to be sure this was, in fact, kate's ipod, tech expert bill capps got the serial number. and within minutes had the proof. >> i examined the registry files from all the computers that we had access to that kate had used in the past. we knew proof positive that that was kate's ipod. coming up -- >> she said, well, they didn't find her, did they? i knew they wouldn't find her? hi! how was your day? it was good. it was long. let's fix it. play "connection" by onerepublic. (beep) ♪these days, my waves get lost in the ocean♪ ♪seven billion swimmers man ♪i'm going through the motions ♪sent up a flare need love and devotion♪ ♪trade it for some faces that i'll never know notion♪ ♪can i get a connection? ♪can i get can i get a connection?♪ ♪can i get a connection? ♪can i get can i get a connection?♪ gives skin the moisture it needs and keeps it there longer with lock-in moisture technology skin is petal smooth after all, a cleanser's just a cleanser unless it's olay. >> the a-team told the police about the ipod and also handed over the handwriting expert's report showing that heather and ethan forged kate's check two days after she vanished. and now things started happening fast. after her heart-to-heart with andy savage, heather made a remarkable decision. she called the charleston police department and confessed. no, not to murder. instead, she said it was she who forged the bogus check supposedly signed by kate waring. and ethan who tried to cash it two days after kate disappeared. now surely the police would swoop in and arrest them both. but here's something you should know about the way it worked between the a-team and their former colleagues, the cops. the deal was entirely one way. that's to say the a-team told the cops everything they uncovered. the cops told the a-team nothing. so they kept their ears to the ground, waited for something to happen, but they didn't have to wait for long. >> we knew something was up. and so first thing we did was yanked the gps off the car because we didn't want the police to seize the car and have our gps. >> ethan was easy enough for the charleston police to find. they arrested him at his hotel job. but they didn't seem to know where to find heather. so -- >> we had to tell them where she was working. obviously, they didn't have a surveillance on her. so -- >> you could tell them that. >> we told them. >> we told them where heather kamp was working. i mean, we -- >> the gas station she's working at -- >> the sunoco gas station. >> i walked into the gas station, bought a pepsi and paid for it. and the police officer in uniform had pulled up. he was peeping around the corner of the building. i said, "that's her inside." >> ethan and heather were charged with forgery and obstruction of justice for the murder charge following shortly. >> we get a call from -- of course we do have friends still at the police department. we get a call that, hey, the police are searching the island for kate waring's body. >> the island, wild, beautiful, isolated and 20 miles from kate's home on charleston's battery. >> so i got in my car and drove out to the island. >> and there were the police. a serious search going on. >> so i sat there in the shade and watched them all afternoon. didn't attempt to interview. -- interfere. watched police officers and cadaver dogs. ton of folks. >> the cops brought heather here to lead them to kate waring's body. >> there were a couple of detectives knew. i asked them, any luck? they said no and continued driving on. >> police called off the search, drove heather back to jail. had she intentionally given them bad information? perhaps nobody would find kate, not the police, not the a-team, and then -- >> we got a terrific break by the criminal justice system. mack and kent both came to the bond hearing and it's done by video. at the bond hearing, mack shows up with his family. >> yeah. >> who were all there to support him. and not only a public defender but the chief public defender. >> wow. >> kent has no one. she has no family. she has no friends. she has no support to speak on her behalf. >> yeah. >> i immediately said, james and jean, go see her. treat her with kindness. treat her with caring. >> and within minutes, the same men who had so upset heather with their bag of money were face-to-face with her. >> what was the look on her face when she came out? >> she was surprised. >> stunned. >> stunned. very surprised. and i said, heather we need your help here. all we want is the body. and she said, well, they didn't find her, did they? she said, i put them through the test. they told me they were going to help them. they wouldn't arrest me. and the minute i told them the area which she was, the general area where she was, they got all abusive with me, you know? they berated me. so they failed the test. >> and just at that moment, what happened was, well, sheer luck. >> directly across the lobby on the male side of the visitation area, they brought -- to see his attorneys who happened to arrive the same time we did. >> just coincidentally? >> coincidental. >> also coincidentally, the jailers positioned ethan and heather across the hallway from each other separated by glass partitions. >> they could see each other? >> oh, yeah. there's the detective there with her. she's over there ratting you out. she's waving trying to get ethan's attention. so she snaps and she breaks. >> with a little more encouragement from andy savage, that is. his deal, if heather told him exactly where to find kate's body and if it turned out she had nothing to do with any murder, andy would help her with her forgery charges. and at that moment, heather kamp agreed to tell the a-team what they needed to know. her directions were precise. they drove out here right away. >> that's the large oak tree she described. then she says, if you look farther up to the left in the marsh, you'll see a dock that is running down to the water. and she says, "after you do that, you'll look to your left, over here on my right and left, and you'll see some underbrush growing." and she said, "that's kate's remains --" she didn't say the body, is 5 feet from this roadway. >> incredibly detailed. just the sort of place to leave a body. but, just like the police, the team found nothing. >> i was very disturbed. why are we not finding her? because we were -- we were convinced she was here. >> they searched until darkness finally forced them out of the marsh and then they called andy savage, who was out of town on business. >> they're on a cell phone from where they are. i'm in a hotel in boston. i punch up the address on google earth. i'm looking at the satellite imagery of where they are. i said, well, james, is there a dock off to your left? so i was pretty well able to identify where they were. i said, what you got to do is just print that off. >> isn't that amazing you can do that from thousands of miles away? >> you can also do it from the police station. >> the google map clearly showed the a-team exactly where and how they lost the trail. after investigating so much, savage wasn't ready to give up on heather. but he wasn't naive either. >> we knew that she was a sociopath liar. i wanted something specific from her. give me something that nobody else knows so that we can believe what you're saying is truthful. that's when she told us about the souvenirs from kate's body, the jewelry she was wearing and where it was located. >> they found kate's jewelry at a pawnshop. behind their dresser in the tiny apartment, kate's old dog key chain, the one she had gotten in moscow. ethan said heather took it from kate's purse as a memento. she was telling the truth. armed with andy's google map and more details from heather, they would return to the island. >> what we were believing was coming to fruition. all of our suspicions about her activity and mack's activity, at that point we knew we had the right people. >> one thing, they'd be going without the police. good idea? maybe not. coming up -- the a-team under arrest? >> what do you mean you were arrested? >> we were not free to leave. they made that clear. >> this was a twist even they didn't see coming when "strangers on a train" continues. year, i am sorry about that. [music playing] (vo) progress is in the pursuit. audi will cover your first month's lease payment on select models during summer of audi sales event. gene frazier shared a car from the city. they rode in silence most of the way, confident the precise directions heather kamp had given them were correct this time. so this was it. it was somehow fitting that bobby, the one they called "the human bloodhound," was the first to spot her. >> i saw what looked like an animal path. where animals or something had pretty much beat down the bush. so i walked up to the animal path and started walking parallel with the road. and walked up, and i saw what looked like bones. and i said, "i think i found her." i said, "hey? hey, y'all, come here. i think i found her." it was just like a ton of bricks came off me at that point. i said, "oh, my god. there she is." you know, wasn't much left. just bones. >> in the end it took only six minutes to find the earthly remains of kate waring. and thus, at last, fulfilled their promise to her parents. >> i saw where bobby was standing, and i took two shots with my camera just to document the scene the way it was when we saw it. then i just backed out of the woods, and bobby followed me out. we called 911. >> 911, what's the nature of your emergency? >> yes, ma'am, this is robert minter. >> okay, you need police, fire, or ems? >> police. >> what's the address? >> no address. it's in the woods. we found a body of kate waring. >> you believe you found the body of kate waring? >> yes. i know we did. >> in the woods? >> yes. >> listen to what happens after bobby hangs up. the 911 recording continues -- [ ringing ] >> you can hear the operator spreading the word around to other officers, a bit skeptical that the four-month-long mystery is finally solved. >> hello? >> hey, sarge. you ready for this? >> no. >> this guy is adamant that he found kate waring in the woods off of polly point road. >> off of where? >> polly point road. wadmalaw island. >> all right. why is he adamant? >> he says he knows it's her. >> out on the island off polly point road, the trio of former cops instinctively revert to the long practiced standard procedure. >> we said, okay, let's secure the crime scene, back out, wait for law enforcement to get here. >> so far, so good. but what happened next was quite a surprise. >> the first officer was a charleston county deputy. and i said, "we'll show you where the remains are." took him out there and said, "it's your crime scene now, and we're backing off." and that's what we did. >> but that wasn't the end of it, was it? >> no. >> no. we were detained, to put it mildly. >> detained? >> detained, placed in separate police cars. >> what do you mean -- you were arrested or -- >> well, very strictly i guess by the legal definition, we were not free to leave. they made that clear. and, one, we couldn't leave because they took my -- they seized my car. >> but wait a minute. you found the body and showed them where it was. >> that's correct. they wanted a statement from us as to everything that we had done from the very beginning. not just what we had done that day. >> the whole, long story? >> that's basically what they were asking for. and in fact, they had been given the story along and along as it occurred. >> hours later the ex-detectives were finally released. but not bill capps' car. didn't get that back until they filed motion papers for an injunction. even now, years later, the memory still rankles all of them. 34 years in the police department. to sit in the back of a police car and have some guy question you, get you to take a statement. >> that's right. like a criminal. that's what -- we were sitting in the back of a car like a criminal. let's call it like we see it. >> still, this was it. the news traveled to the house on the battery. the warings fell from their anxiety and into grief. >> mixed emotions. relief that she's been found, but at the same time, devastating grief that now you have conclusive evidence that your only daughter is dead and that you're never going to see her again. >> and then as soon as they were allowed after the crime scene tape came down, after all the evidence was taken away, the whole team assembled at the spot where kate lay hidden for so long. all except tom waring, who did not want the image burned in his brain, the dismal place the love of his life lay dead. but perhaps it was a mother thing. janice had to be here, she said. had to see it. >> it helped me to see for myself it was so remote. we wouldn't have found her in a million years. and not knowing where she is, i mean, it's just -- it would have been horrible. >> they formed a circle, held hands around the place they knew she had been. >> one of the investigators is a deacon in his church. and he said a prayer. >> this beautiful water, marsh, and docks. i think it might have given mrs. waring some peace thinking, you know, at least she wasn't in a garbage dump somewhere. it was a peaceful place, you know, god's place. >> now the a-team had done its job, and kate's killers could finally be brought to justice. or so you'd think. but the mystery, the web that was spun on that train down from washington was far stranger, more bizarre than you have so far heard. and justice? well, we shall see. coming up -- they thought they solved the case, but would it stick? >> actual evidence, it just wasn't there. >> and the close call that just might have saved kate waring's life. >> if i could have hung on one more month i could have helped them get her. when "strangers on a train" continues. new customers bundle and save big, but now it's time to find my dream abode. -right away, i could tell his priorities were a little unorthodox. -keep going. stop. a little bit down. stop. back up again. is this adequate sunlight for a komodo dragon? -yeah. -sure, i want that discount on car insurance just for owning a home, but i'm not compromising. -you're taking a shower? -water pressure's crucial, scott! it's like they say -- location, location, koi pond. -they don't say that. it's like they say -- location, location, koi pond. sfx: [cell phone dialing] no. no, no, no, no, no. cancel. cancel. please. aaagh! being in the know is a good thing. that's why discover will alert you if your social security number is found on any one of thousands of risky sites. moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis was intense. my mom's pain from i wondered if she could do the stuff she does for us which is kinda, a lot. and if that pain could mean something worse. joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop further damage enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, my mom's back to being my mom. visit enbrel.com... and use the joint damage simulator to see how joint damage could progress. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 18 years. need a change of scenery? the kayak price forecast tool tells you whether to wait or book your flight now. so you can be confident you're getting the best price. giddyup! kayak. search one and done. kamp practically leapt at a deal to turn state's evidence against ethan to plead guilty to murder in exchange, her krecredibilitys you'll soon seize, was not exactly aaa. and despite all the information the a-team uncovered, what could be used in court was thin. >> i mean, frankly, we didn't have a lot of evidence. we had a lot of opinions, and we had a lot of conjecture. but actual evidence, it just wasn't there. >> kate's skeletal remains gave the solicitor none of the forensic evidence that juries like to see. and the coroner was unable to establish even a cause of death. as for those personal items of kate's that they found in ethan's apartment, those could just have easily been gifts. the two were supposedly best friends after all. and to top it off, there was the amazing tale that came with the state's star witness, heather. it's true she helped the warings' investigators found kate's body and agreed to testify against a man she revealed she actually married soon after the crime. but heather was also, as ethan's lawyer was discovering, a gray grade-a, world-class liar. >> not only was she a drifter. this was a true con artist with just the most horrid background of anyone i'd ever seen. i mean, a true sociopath. >> david ada was certain that heather kamp back on that trail from charleston to palmetto took one look at kate waring and knew she'd found her ideal next mark. why was he so sure? his research, he said, had turned up enough kamp victims to fill a small bus to the poorhouse. >> we had 13 different names that we could use. we called all 13. >> whoa. >> these were men and women all over the country. she would say that, you know, she was pregnant, she would say that her children had died of leukemia, that men had beat her. >> her scam -- troll the internet for men, latch onto one, move in, fleece him, and leave him with a mountain of debt. all the while pretending to be a doctor, an heiress or the daughter of a mafia-style drug family. >> that was probably the worst whirlwind i've ever been through, seen, done in my entire life. >> there was chris beard, for example, in pennsylvania. >> just being around her made me feel better because that's what i wanted, you know? i wanted to be loved. >> he found her on the internet. in less than two months, they were engaged and she said she was pregnant. >> at the time that i had met her, i had no credit cards to my name whatsoever. >> she persuaded him, he said, to get 15 cards which she maxed out, leaving him $33,000 in debt. by the way, she told chris' sister-in-law, lori -- >> that she was a pediatric burn specialist and that she had worked with children. that was her specialty. and as lori had been having some behavior issue with her daughter, heather gave the girl a blood test. >> see if, you know, there was anything wrong with her. >> and -- >> she said, i want you to know that your daughter's bipolar. >> but it was odd. how would she know based on a quick blood test whether or not her daughter was bipolar? and why would heather use her own diabetes kit for the test? lori hit the internet just to check out the woman who was playing doctor with her child. >> and found that, you know, she actually was a wanted felon. >> so she called the cops who arrested heather in the act of spending more of chris' money. but somehow heather slipped off the hook. though lori pressed charges and pushed hard for a prosecution, nobody followed through and lori eventually gave up. lives with the guilt now. >> i think it was a month or so after i gave it up, that's when she came to d.c. and she had met kate. and i always feel if i could have hung on one more month, i could have have helped them get her. >> now as she prepared to defend ethan, david aler was feeling much better. his client's chief accuser, it appeared, was a practiced con artist. would any jury believe her? ethan might be naive, but his story, after all, had never changed. >> they had gone to dinner, he, kate and heather. after they went to dinner, he dropped kate back off at her parents' home here in downtown charleston and spoke with her a couple times via text message that night. and he didn't talk to her again after that. >> so it was all on heather. and with her as ethan's chief accuser, how could any jury convict him? but just days before the trial was to start, solicitor scarlett wilson finally uncovered something the case lacked. a clear motive. she found it, she said, in letters kate wrote to her friend just before she disappeared. >> she's talking about how someone has tried to extend her credit limit or has tried to assume her identity and mess with her money in her bank. and she was livid. and i think kate was threatening to get her father involved. that was a new dimension. >> sure. >> for heather kamp. i mean -- >> she didn't need katie as an enemy. >> and i have no doubt katie confronted heather kamp with that. >> and that, the prosecutor said, is when heather kamp and ethan mack decided they had to keep her from talking. kate waring had to die. >> he began to make the choice to join in the scam to rip off kate waring. >> finally, the prosecutor scarlett wilson felt ready. and almost a year to the day after kate was found she launched the trial of ethan mack. the sole defendant in the courtroom. heather having taken the plea agreement. the warings tried to prepare themselves, though what they saw defied preparation. >> we had to see images and see what it was like when they found her and then go through all the forensics. and we were seeing that for the first time along with the jurors and all those other spectators in the courtroom. >> one by one, the a-team took the stand, as did detectives and experts from the charleston police department, to present the evidence. >> over a stupid forgery. >> prosecutor wilson told the jury that ethan and heather killed kate to avoid getting caught for forging kate's checks and using her credit cards. then heather took the stand and told the jury it was ethan, not her, who lured kate to their tiny apartment, then smothered her, shocked her with a taser, drowned her in the bathtub, and dumped her body out on wadmala island because he thought no one would ever find her there. so, did you think that you convinced that jury? >> i thought that the trial went better than i ever could have hoped. >> except, that is, for two things -- one, would the jury believe ethan actually killed his best friend, kate? and two -- >> heather kamp's a liar. heather kamp's jealous of kate. heather kamp's the one stealing. >> but heather's testimony did seem to terrify one person. ethan mack himself. and it showed. >> when he was in the courtroom waiting for the jury to come back, we have that picture of him. what was happening with your client? >> at that point, you know, true fear. you know, true fear. i could really see it. >> what hold did heather have on this man? did the jury, did anybody have this crime figured out? coming up -- >> please raise your right hand. >> a surprise from the jury and another one from ethan mack's mom. >> he got very confrontation on. basically his mother said, "there's more to this story. and you need to tell it and you need to tell it right now." >> when "strangers on a train" continues. with chantix. i tried cold turkey, i tried the patch. they didn't work for me. i didn't think anything was going to work for me until i tried chantix. chantix, along with support, helps you quit smoking. chantix reduced my urge to smoke. i needed that to quit. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. some people had changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, agitation, depressed mood, or suicidal thoughts or actions with chantix. serious side effects may include seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking or allergic and skin reactions which can be life-threatening. stop chantix and get help right away if you have any of these. tell your healthcare provider if you've had depression or other mental health problems. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. the most common side effect is nausea. i can't tell you how good it feels to have smoking behind me. talk to your doctor about chantix. extra." i'm craig melvin. ethan mack awaited a jury verdict. would they find him guilty of murdering his best find kate waring or would they set him free? and what about the stranger kate waring met on a train, heather kamp? here again is keith morrison. >> you just never can tell how a jury will react to the fact of a complicated murder case or the accusations of a person like heather kamp. ethan mack cooled his heels while his jury tried to decide if he did or did not smother, beat, taser and drown his best friend, the woman he claimed was like a little sister to him. and then after 14 interminable hours, they trooped back into the courtroom and told the judge they could not decide whether or not ethan was guilty of murder. >> what i'm going to do is on the murder charge, i'm going to declare a mistrial on that. >> mistrial, a hung jury. >> huge letdown. >> right. >> it wasn't going to be over. it wasn't going to end. we were going to possibly have to relive that whole event again. >> as she packed up her file, solicitor scarlett wilson vowed to find justice somehow. and then quite unexpectedly, there was an intervention from a surprising source. it was ethan mack's own church-going, no-nonsense mother. she had testified during the trial for her son, of course. gave a hint then of what she was made of. >> corrine mack dean, d-e-a-n. >> ethan's sort of a mama's boy, isn't he? >> yes, he is. >> do you know anything about your son having any involvement with kate waring's murder? >> no. >> if you did, would you stand here today and support him? >> he'd know i'd turn him in. >> then as ethan's mother sat through the rest of the trial, she heard things. she knew her son. she knew when he was hiding something. so she went to see him in jane. ethan's attorney heard it all. so it did get loud in that cell when they were talking. >> it got very confrontational. basically his mother said, "there's more to the story, and you need tell it. you need to tell it right now." his mother wanted him to tell the truth and tell what happened. >> so it was decided. soon after ethan and his mother had their talk, he appeared before the judge and admitted he did participate in the murder of his good friend kate. he agreed to plead guilty to voluntary manslaughter in exchange for a 25-year prison sentence. >> you understand that the court still treats this as a guilty plea. >> yes, ma'am. >> and that your criminal record will reflect it as a guilty plea? >> yes, ma'am. >> of course, since heather pleaded guilty to murder and forgery and obstruction of justice, they didn't need a trial for her either. guilty but mentally ill, by the way. at her sentencing, her attorney her therapist told the judge that she developed after a deeply traumatic childhood psychological disorders. some of which rendered her incapable of separating truth from her elaborate fictions and led to her years of failed marriages, abandoned children, and constant drifting. if heather was hoping for a shorter prison term because of that, she didn't get it. instead, solicitor scarlett wilson noted she continued to lie about important details after she made her deal to testify. because she broke the deal, the sentence, 39 years. 14 more than ethan. >> this was heather kamp's kill. while certainly ethan mack was involved and certainly he laid his hands on kate, i do not believe that but for heather kamp we would be here. >> still, said andy savage after the fact, solicitor wilson could have had a much stronger case had the charleston police acted more aggressively. just one example, when police arrested ethan and heather -- >> because of their own incompetence, they released the property, the crime scene where the homicide took place, they turned it back over to the landlord without examining. the landlord went in and vacated the premises. he took all their furniture out and put it in storage. >> cleaned the place. >> cleaned the place. it wasn't until over two weeks later, knowing that the property had already been tainted, the crime scene was destroyed. >> no wonder scarlett wilson didn't have all the ammunition she'd have liked, said andy savage. the charleston police said they didn't see it quite that way. they did take the case of kate waring very seriously, they said, right from the beginning. and the second-guessing from the a-team was rather puzzling. at least according to captain thomas robertson. >> i'm surprised. i really am. i think we both did a fabulous job, and i think the team of detectives that i had working from this agency and the support that we had is -- it was fantastic. >> what may have looked like inaction, said detective david osborne, was actually a careful and thorough investigation. one that didn't leave out any possibility. was there some point at which you thought this girl has -- she's probably dead? she's come to some serious harm? >> early on. >> early on? how many days after would you say? >> i would say that -- i mean, within that first week for sure. >> yeah? so you knew it was a murder investigation at that stage. >> no. i mean, it could have been an overdose. it could have been an accidental death. i think we felt like we were probably dealing with a death investigation. >> right. but neither tom nor janice waring was the least bit satisfied. hadn't the police suggested early on that kate may simply have skipped town on her own? it didn't seem to the warings that they were trying very hard to find her. and what about all those other families of missing people, they asked? families without the resources to hire an a-team? >> unfortunately, missing people are low on the priority list nationwide. >> i feel like that a missing person or missing child should be just as important as a bank robbery because lots of people never find out what happened to their child. >> it was late, after midnight, when she came to the end of her story. ushered there by two people she believed to be good friends of hers. and nobody, not the warings, not the a-team, not the police, has heard the story you are about to hear. the competing stories of the last hours and minutes of kate waring's life. question is, whose story will you believe? her long-time friend, the uncle of her godson? or the charming grifter, the woman who played with fate on the train? coming up -- heather versus ethan. >> i had a big conscious and he doesn't. he doesn't have a conscience. >> who really was behind kate waring's death? two very different tales. wen "strangers on a train" continues. if you use some of these moves way too often... then you might have a common condition called dry mouth... which can be brought on by many things, like medication and medical conditions. biotène provides immediate, long lasting relief from dry mouth symptoms. it is clinically proven to soothe and moisturize a dry mouth. plus, it freshens breath. biotène. immediate and long lasting dry mouth symptom relief. returning to "strangers on a train." the trial was over. the killers in jail. but it was not the end of the story. in fact, there were two sharply different tales about the last hours and minutes of kate waring's life. you're about to hear the first. once again, keith morrison. >> they call it the "palmetto," the train that glides down the eastern seaboard. eight hours from washington to charleston. fine setting to meet a stranger. sat in the same seat? >> sat in the same seat. laughed. we were joking the whole way. started talking. >> heather kamp, freshly supplied with jewelry and cash from her last mark, just by chance found herself sitting with a young woman wearing jewelry and perhaps with access to such cash as heather had never seen before. what did you see in her? why did you like her? >> she was funny. very funny. >> now sitting here in jail, heather claimed she came to see kate not as her next victim but as a friend. and when in charleston she professed her love for kate's buddy, ethan mack, and then eventually married him, that love was true, too, so she says now. and when she told them both all those well-practiced lies about being a doctor, about her husband and child being killed in an accident, et cetera, et cetera, those stories, she says, were just part of the schtick of, she admits it, of a con artist. >> that's what i do. that's who i am. that's the way i've learned how to survive. >> but remember, in court, the prosecutor called heather the mastermind who lied to con kate, lied to manipulate ethan. lied about murder. you were the decisionmaker, you were the person who caused kate's death. >> i don't take it as that. >> stole from her, yes. but kill kate? no. heather kamp will not cop to that. instead, this was the story the grifter had for us. it was all ethan right from the start. >> my husband wanted to rip her off because she had money. >> but wait, why would ethan want any harm to come to his good friend kate? >> the trouble was is that ethan never considered her a friend. >> not a friend of hers at all? >> no. >> not like a sister or -- >> no. he was babysitting her and she became a problem for him. >> became a real problem, says heather, when kate found out that she and ethan were stealing from her. >> she was like, "i'm going to put you guys in jail." and that scared ethan. and the whole nightmare began that night because he was not going to go to jail. >> so you're saying ethan was the mastermind, not you? >> yes. yes. >> and so after dinner that last night, said heather, they took kate back to their apartment. ethan got her a little high. >> after a couple of drinks, she was in a very good mood. >> there was a big suitcase on the floor. ethan dared her, says heather, get in. she did. didn't see the taser he was holding. >> he starts tasing her and doesn't stop. and by the time he removed the taser, she's not moving inside the suitcase at all. he races into the bedroom, grabs a pillow off the bed, comes back in. pushes me away, unzips the suitcase, takes the pillow, compresses it over her mouth, grabs the wine bottle that is maybe four feet away, takes the wine bottle, crack, crack. i think maybe it's three times he hits her. he tells me to go inside the bathroom, start the water. >> she was terrified, she says. did you say, "ethan, stop?" >> i didn't say anything. >> didn't say anything at all? i didn't know what to do. i could hear him screaming, "help me!" and there was nothing i could do. of course she hides when she told ethan she was pregnant, but that was for her own safety. >> i thought if i'm carrying his kid, i'm okay. he's not going to try to hurt me. >> really? and so then a moment later when asked why she didn't just leave ethan, slip away like she always did, she reverses herself. >> i didn't want to. i really loved him. >> and eventually she says she just had to confess. >> conscious is a bitch and i had a big conscious. and he didn't. >> and that's the truth. every single word. (door bell rings) it's open! hey. this is amazing. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, are you okay? even when i was there, i never knew when my symptoms would keep us apart. so i talked to my doctor about humira. i learned humira can help get, and keep uc under control when other medications haven't worked well enough. and it helps people achieve control that lasts. so you can experience few or no symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. -we're in a small room. what?! -welcome. -[ gasps ] a bigger room?! -how many of you use car insurance? -oh. -well, what if i showed you this? -[ laughing ] ho-ho-ho! -wow. -it's a computer. -we compare rates to help you get the price and coverage that's right for you. -that's amazing! the only thing that would make this better is if my mom were here. what?! an unexpected ending! >> evil lying type of person that could do anything she can to basically get her way. >> of course, it was different when kate brought heather around to see him that first time. >> she talked -- >> talked, told him all kinds of things. >> she told me her son died from a disease that she was trying to help find -- >> the cure for? >> the cure for because she was supposed to be a doctor, and she told me that her daughter and her husband got killed in a bad car accident. >> ethan was entranced, he said. claimed he believed everything she told him. that's when they moved in together, and each day he'd go to his hotel job, and she'd head off to the hospital to her doctor work. >> she would be getting up, putting on make-up, putting on her scrubs, putting on her white jacket with her name that was sewed in it. >> but heather had another story, says ethan, one she had used on other marks. but he didn't knee that. that members of her family were violent and powerful drug dealers. and one day, he says she told him a terrifying story. her family members had learned that kate waring had sold out. she had ratted them out to police. kate was going to have to die. and those drug kingpins decided heather and ethan would be the executioners. >> she's saying her family basically telling her she better get rid of kate or they're going to get rid of us. and they're going to handle my family, too. they're going to kill my family. >> you believed this actually could happen? >> i done seen people get beat up over $5 and $10 and get shoot over for less than that. >> ethan's version of that awful night -- >> basically, zipped her up in the suitcase. that's when she came at me like, "ethan, we got to kill her." >> now right -- right then, ethan, she's lying in that suitcase, top is zipped up. what you do as her friend is -- you go and unzip the suitcase and say, ha, ha, okay, get up. right? >> no, it wasn't -- >> that's not how it worked. why not? >> it wasn't like that. because my mother, my sister, my daddy, too, and my life -- >> but says ethan, it was not he but heather who smothered kate with the pillow. >> i couldn't do it to her or kill her. she had to push me out of the way, and she jumped on top of her and started smothering her with the pillow. i went into the room, and i dropped down on my knees. and i be like, "help me, father, please. forgive me for what is going on and what i'm witnessing here and have happen in front of my face." >> yeah. you were praying, but you weren't pushing her off, you weren't stopping it. >> no, i couldn't stop her. i still was thinking those people were going to kill me. >> let me challenge you for a minute because i know you're a good friend to her. >> yes, sir. >> you were killing your sister, for god sakes. >> yes, it is. that's exactly what is right. >> the rest of it, the taser, the wine bottle bludgeoning, the drowning in the bathtub, all heather, says ethan, not him. and when he helped hide their crime, when he actually married heather, that, says ethan, is because she told him she was pregnant. she wasn't, of course. but ethan says he believed her as usual, and he wasn't about to abandon his child. yeah, but you're married to a killer. you got married to her after the murder. >> just for her to stop threatening me with the running off and taking my baby. >> god's honest truth, says ethan, every single word. and now at night in his jail cell -- how often do you think about that moment? >> i think about it a whole lot. i deceived her. i never meant anybody harm. now look at me. >> you getting exactly what you deserve? >> yes, sir. i'm getting exactly what i deserve. i know i got to do this time in jail, but still i can't bring her back. wherever all the powers that i ask for, and how much i ask the heavenly father to take my life away to bring hers back, it will not be done. >> no. it will not. not for him. not for the warings. it was in court that kate's father, tom, read one of the last things she ever wrote. they had gone to church together, he and the daughter who adored him, the girl about whom he worried so. and she scribbled something on a prayer note and stuffed it in a church pew just a couple of sundays before she boarded that fateful train. >> she wrote, "please pray for my father, tom waring, who worries himself sick and for nothing. i am and will be fine. if i die tomorrow, i have lived through almost everything and more, and i'm not afraid of anything. just know that i pray for god's forgiveness for bringing tears to my daddy's eyes."

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Transcripts For DW The Day - News In Review 20180821 00:02:00

where does he get this from it's significant that the pope calls abuse a crime and not just a sin because two thousand words it's just too much to really have started from a new continent. also coming up tonight a great city sort of those three years in that sixty two billion euro bailout for greece are over but the pain remain. static still to continue affecting the population and. so bit of a catch twenty two situation. or we begin the day with that letter from pope francis the pontiff sent a letter to all members of the catholic church to address the growing list of child abuse claims against priests of the pope's hand appearing to be forced after last week's unprecedented report from the u.s. state of pennsylvania. and investigation alleging some three hundred priests molested and raped at least a thousand boys and girls and while pope francis has made clear his condemnation of the sins and crimes he has left uncertain how or if he plans to use his authority to bring to justice those accused who are still serving in the clergy in his letter today the pope said that the church must acknowledge its past sins and mistakes and he admitted the pain of the abuse survivors was long ignored kept quiet or silenced by the church and he promised that no effort would be spared to prevent abuse and its cover up again no mention of sanctioning the clergy found to be guilty i for more on this now i'm joined by martin jacques he's our real live religious affairs correspondent martin screwed to have you back at the big table i want to share with our viewers a tweet posted today by marie collins as she was this two thousand and two on steroids i mean losing the magnitude of the off that you say sions it's not completely unthinkable that the pope will not actually put on the table precisely some sort of polices solution however it must be said that as of right now nothing actually has been said and other program he said there are very very powerful forces within the church that remain either mentally opposed to the church essentially having to. having to make itself accountable to you know terror and all to reno justice so you know what happens then when you got to kings like that i mean if you look at all the polls that have been conducted in the last week you've got confidence you've got faith in the catholic church as an institution plummeting so what can the pope do now i mean is it up to the pope himself to save the institution from the people inside it i think that there is there is there are two things to be said the first one is not just the people inside it so i mean you have the berm of clerical ie some of this is the middle management and the management of the church at different levels and these people some of them have to be saved from accusations that do not respond to them but some of them clearly should pay for what they have done but the church is much broader than that it has a lot of people that actually are the pendant on it so i think that it's very clear what he says that the pope can actually do and that he's bring justice into the game bring national justice systems into the game this is something that would actually make the process much more transparent about sanctioning bishops though i mean the pope is the only one who has the authority to do that certainly but then the question would be what kind of sanctions would we be talking about i mean for the civil society at bishop that loses his job or somebody that is too fast and too ben and is quite simply not enough and certainly not for the kind of crazy crimes that we're talking about so i think that the issue here is that. you know there is a very clear thing ahead and that is really bringing and for meeting crimes to be revolutionary theological positions and i think that this would just add to that you know mark you get the religious affairs correspondent as always martin fascinating talking with you thank you leisure. or greece has today emerged from the last of its three bailout programs athens is no longer dependent on aid from the european union european central bank and the international monetary fund the loans amounted to two hundred sixteen billion euro . finally no more aid packages and no more funding requirements but the last eight years have been tough for greece and brought drastic cost cutting measures many greeks lost their jobs and their homes income is fallen by a third on average the taxes however remain time for most people it will be a long time before the situation improves and some people don't even believe it's possible like this silversmith but i still think i am personally for me in the coming years i don't see any hope everything looks bleak to me. because he sees the middle of the great crisis brought down me and thousands of people in my position women weren't interested in buying our clothes anymore and as a result my manufacturing company closed we started this combined cafeteria and many market he hopes he'll soon gain a foothold again many people in greece are trying to fight their way through. it because like i pin my hopes on something better even if we've left the bailout program i believe we greeks will be paying for years to come but we all hope for something better hope dies last. and the government knows there's still plenty to do even with all the loans paid off. but as it will make more needs to be john starting with the tax system which is in business friendly right now the justice system must deliver decisions faster that will have a direct influence on attracting investments on the whole thing should become more structures that we have built in greece make this country capable to recover attractiveness to attract investors to be competitive and to create a lot of jobs and that's what i expect that did now the people in greece will really see that the efforts to have been taking bear fruit let's be mistaken it's not because there was austerity that there is a crisis in greece it's because there has been terrible crises that we need to have a more solid structures for economy and society in greece. that was there from the european commission talking about the end of this bailout for greece i want to ask now journalist. he's a freelance journalist who's based here in berlin is a familiar face to some of our viewers here. mr vargas what do you think i mean is it going to only get better now the way we just heard from the european commission well the bottom was something like two years ago so i don't expect it to get much worse but mostly depends on how the political personnel in greece is going to react after the next elections let's say. because one of the main problems in greece is. a very astute political and social pull our a zation ok the so-called left of the so-called center right see each other as enemies and they have shown no intention of trying to work willing to work together you know noted to solve big institutional problem for it still exist which these. programs that mr muskerry see. talked about didn't tackle if you don't see the needle see a risk in greece. something happening similar to what we've seen in italy for example that you have you have groups that are at different ends of the political spectrum coming together and looking at the european union and seeing that as a common. a common enemy in this iteration is a little bit different in greece because italy is whether we like it or not in the dust industrial country but also. also a polarized country north south left right and after years of pain because even a tad nearly run tellings felt it as well. they they will lose. this image of getting out and going our know our own way except their except i don't think greece is in this kind of a danger i mean it is august right now it's high season for tourism we know that greece lives from that what what are things going to look like in terms of employment if when we talk two months from now two three months from now i think it's going to go up. on employment unemployment is going to be more than twenty percent again and what's more in the last year is. most new jobs are jobs that pay well below subsistence level. the same problem that exists overthrowing italy sometimes in germany as well people work and cannot feed themselves or their kids but in germany you have a so with a social state there are social benefits nobody is going to die of hunger greece has a rude mental. social system cannot afford pain what is lacking. so what happens then moving forward there was talk about a great sit you know three years ago about about greece leaving the the eurozone and trying to rehabilitate its economy and its currency that way do you think that's off the table completely or do you think that can still be a possibility if d.p. doesn't bend on greece if there is a major crisis you need to leave or space well of everything's on the table but. get into account that greece should never have joined the euro the eurozone in the first place you know it needed another ten years noted to bring things properly a state where it would accept. minimal interest rates which existed right after joining the euro zone that's what pierre moscovici was talking about he said the crisis the the real problem existed before the euro piece right for once for once he's right right the problem existed. and it existed in the last forty fifty years we had political mismanagement we had corruption who had extreme polarization the right wing the left wing. the exile island emptied the only in one hundred seventy four it's quite recent right and there has never been a truth rikan see haitian. i cheated maybe we need a long time frame here to look at it i mean the debts they have to be paid back for example go all the way to the year twenty sixty that's a long time had a future but let's say that does happen can you foresee then greece in forty years and fifty years having all of this behind him being a healthy european economy people who get voted every four or five years don't tend to kick the can as far as they can and that's what they did now so nobody knows if the european union will still exist in ten years or in five years or in twenty and forty. it was a ridiculous. non solution to an actual problem. and this problem will come back. theodore kovach is fascinating having you on the show and getting your insights we appreciate it thank you welcome. but i spent all night at the border the authorities said wait be patient be expected an answer by the morning but there was no response they had meetings and nothing back to venezuela they said go home because we don't want to know where it is whelan's hear. all that was the voice of even its way the refugee desperate to escape the deepening economic crisis in her home country and the growing poverty and hunger which have gone hand in hand with the rule of president nicolas maduro now the u.n. says more than two point three million people have left in the last three years and that's more than seven percent of the country's population most head to colombia brazil ecuador you know there peru and chile ecuador tightened border controls at the weekend brazil has reinforced troops at its northern frontier on it trying to bring some stability. threat to the country even a toy as president nicolas maduro has launched a new currency to combat hyper inflation and soon expected to reach a million percent a year now a million percent five zero zero been knocked off the beleaguered bowl of our currency and they give you an idea of the daily hardship that people are facing the pile of old bowl of ours that you see here right now will buy you just one chicken like wives this is how much just a handful of tomatoes cost in downtown caracas and when it costs this much paper money will have that justify a roll of toilet paper some people are saying why bother buying the world at all in this kind of crisis for many it makes more sense to gamble it all on the chance that they'll be able to escape. i argue a lot has been dragging her suitcase along the highway she is fleeing desperation and economic hardship back home in venezuela crossing into ecuador on foot as an undocumented migrant. we spent all night by the border the authorities told us to be patient they said they would guess announcer in the morning but there was no response they just told us to head to venezuela especially that we don't want more venezuelans here. off to ecuador imposed new entry restrictions on saturday and have friends felt that they had no choice but to cross illegally while they press on thousands of obvious stranded at the checkpoints hungry and cold fearful assumes the emptying of an as well that completely would be a change of government because with this latest measures president has shown that he's simply not capable of of dealing with the underlying economic and financial problems what we understand that the opposition is calling for nation. wide strikes and protests to take place tomorrow on tuesday do you expect people to actually go out on the streets i mean it's hard to imagine that you're going to get protests when you've got people who are basically you know overnight becoming refugees. well that's right there's a number of problems one is that the opposition is deeply divided is divided into this lead so three major segments it's not the whole of the opposition that's calling for this strike a lot of people feel that it's poorly organized this badly timed because after rule the president has just announced a massive increase in the minimum wage for the maybe people who are thinking well you know let's see if that waging crease solves my my immediate problem is not the best day to do it i think is likely to be a failure and that say they would like to tease disillusion still for the opposition supporters and let's assume that there is no change in government and that mature road stays in power for the first seeable future and you see any talk of scenario taking place at that realistic that would bring in an end to this crisis. well my daughter's been in power now since two thousand and thirteen coming up for six years he's announced any number of economic plans on each occasion he told us that this was finally the solution that now at last he grasped have to deal with the crisis and every single one of these plans is worsen the situation i think is very little grounds for optimism the could be a scenario in which perhaps more more sensible elements within the the ruling group would to take over from him and try to seek some solid sort of solution but the problem is the event as well as under international sanctions and unless there's a political settlement the end for the for the case of the violations of democracy human rights then those sanctions are not going to be lifted in the car on the. solution ok pollution the crisis ok phil gramm some senior analyst for the andes of the international crisis group in caracas mr gross we appreciate your insights tonight thank you thank you the day is nearly done but the conversation continues online you see right there were to write to us and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day to see if. come across in greenhouses across spain and it's nice looking missions alexander said. despite the dangers politicians prefer to avoid the subject which is the motion and. gallstone how far can the exploitation. europe's toughest. cusa be. lehman brothers ten years on a story of ambition greed and megalomania. we're so clever the return trolling rate cuts with the. old investment bankers cultic ourselves with the first on. everything wrong the want you to ignore the reality

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Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20181214 16:00:00

i want to know their story. verify you were born from a former french. news live from berlin another victim of the. diocese of the french that inmates of subdued return to no money to a fourth person to comes to injuries suffered in choose to attack that's up to police gunned down the suspected culprit last night also coming up the british prime minister to resume a defense of bread strategy after a humbling summit in brussels european officials they had demands were unclear she thinks concessions to win over open ends of a breakfast do back home. and imagine finding yourself up against this the atlantic talent of germany's mixed martial arts one and. if you can keep up with a non can veto in the featherweight division. i'm. another victim of the straws book attack has died french prosecutors say the victim had been in critical condition since the shooting when choose day it's a tragic end to a frantic forty eight hours in the city last night police there found and killed twenty nine year old suspect. tipple from a member of the public what do you say he opened fire on them as they attempted to question him residents there received many questions remain. our correspondent helen humphrey has been following these events as they have unfolded. here in strasbourg a sense of normalcy is now starting to return off to a tense couple of days you can see here that the christmas markets have now been reopened albeit with heightened security last night the chief suspect sheerly schick out the man accused of opening fire in this very area was shot dead in the west of the city in an area called doff we traveled to that area following police vehicles which sped through the streets and it's there that we understand that police offices had come into contact with a man much in his description they try to apprehend him when they did he opened fire on them they returned in kind neutralizing him and shooting him dead local residents then started to emerge they told me of their relief after a tense couple of days some of them opening their houses to offices sharing refreshments nevertheless here in strasbourg questions remain over seven hundred offices were mobilized in this country to search for sure cats he ended up turning up in the very area he was last seen some fifty hours ago. for more let's bring in malta russian ski he is a security consultant and a managing director of planned forest in. some of the thank you for joining us to pick up where helena left off seven hundred police officers deployed to find one man and somehow he was able to evade capture how did that happen well that's a very very good question i think he was apprehended in a place that he actually grew up in place that he. belonged to his friends and family are so he has had the advantage of terrain he has had. intimate knowledge of this area plus you could maybe draw on the support networks investigated now and in fact some people have been arrested already and questioning but that doesn't explain you know. his knowledge of the area how he was able to go through the cracks it's understood that he was on a french list of possible security risks so how did this happen well he was listed as a possible threat to national security and he was amongst the more than twenty five thousand. other people who understood likewise the same category on top he was one of about ten thousand potential jihad is that france tries to keep track of the thing is that no state has the capacity of the of the staff the policeman that can actually follow a person like this the whole time and he was primarily a criminal though not necessarily is necessarily the hardest so it was difficult to kind of single him out as a potential target so given what you're saying ah the police then fighting a losing battle when it comes to suspected terrorists not necessarily losing battle of course there are mechanisms and place to collect data on these suspects and in many cases there are arrests and there are plots that are being disrupted so the police work is generally successful but there will always be the cases that slip through the through cracks. potential attacks that cannot be averted because there are so difficult to detect beforehand right now sheriff should katz former lawyer came to us today that he actually wasn't aware of his client's background when he represented him because she cat had somehow managed to cross country lines with his crimes what does that tell us about how europe. how about europe's information sharing when it comes to suspected terrorists that has indeed been an ongoing issue the security cooperation cooperation between different states between even within states the secure. actos the security or storage fees and that is a massive challenge because obviously in europe the different states within the different nation states run on different software systems for example the legal definitions of who is a potential jihad is for example differ from country to country so there are no common standards across the u. therefore it is very very difficult to exchange the information about such people and that hampers the collaboration between the states alter your at the head of planned for risk and as the name suggests you you know teaching people how to prepare for such situations but how can one of such a crisis as we saw in france well in general it is difficult for states of we just discussed to. prevent every single crime of course every single crime like this from a personal perspective if one is in a situation like in strasburg where you hear gunshots and there was attack obviously active an active shooter if you write this it is necessary to really run first to see distance and then try to hide if that's not possible this is what you can do on an individual level and of course tell the authorities as the taxi driver has done who was caught up in all this what you've seen and where the attacker has gone because that actually helps to track these suspects down security consultant thank you you thank. to brussels now and day two of the last year opinion summit of the year migration and eurozone reform are on the agenda but britain's departure from the block is still dominating conversation on thursday leaders rebuffed u.k. prime minister to these amazing leaves for changes to have read the deal they were united in saying the existing deal could not be. be renegotiated and to resume gave a statement a short time ago let's have a listen i know it's the it's been reporting that the e.u. is not willing to consider any further clarification the e.u. is clear as i am that if we are going to leave with a deal this is it but my discussions with colleagues today have shown that further clarification discussion following the council's conclusions is in fact possible there is work still to do and we will be holding talks in coming days about how to obtain the further assurances that the u.k. parliament needs in order to be able to approve the deal. as being in our correspondence max hoffman who is at the european council in brussels and shot a child some people in on its way in london welcome to you both max let's begin with you we just had to be as a man bashing still believes of there's room for clarification or reassurance is a view shared in brussels. exactly she's not saying the go she ation it if she's saying clarification and that's a big difference because had she said negotiation that would have meant opening up the withdrawal agreement again the divorce agreement something that i'm going to tackle the german chancellor and the manner in the call the french president completely excluded in their closing press conferences here the european summit and that means that withdrawal agreement will contain the backstop the now infamous backstop meaning the insurance that there won't be a hard border between northern ireland which is part of the u.k. and ireland which is part of the european union it also means that this backstop could possibly be permanent if they cannot negotiate their future relations so what can they give or what can they give or if they're not going to open up the withdrawal agreement well they can give or clarifications meaning that they really don't see the backstop as a trap that they want to keep it as short as possible if possible not trigger it at all meaning that they will negotiate future relations in earnest and as quickly as possible so to sum it up it is they're not talking about the christmas present here anymore that has been bought it's not on exchangeable they're talking about the wrapping to make it shine year and pretty year for the people back in london so shallum here in london if tourism a comes back with a shiny new package is it going to get the momentum is it going to give have it rather the momentum that she needs to move forward with the current abraxane deal. but he did to put it bluntly to critics or to reason may's deal at this summit in brussels has been. absolute disaster they wanted some concrete concessions from the union particularly on the irish border issue and as you just heard from max that doesn't look like they're going to get it series in may essentially is going to be coming back to the u.k. as far as that concerned empty handed what that means of course then that nothing has really changed since monday and that is when to reason may thought she might this breaks a deal to parliament they're the ones who need to approve it in order for it to go ahead but cooled it off simply because she knew it just wasn't popular enough now nothing has changed as far as the critics are concerned and she really faces an almost impossible task of selling not very same deal going forward but it's there are some minor changes that do need to be taken into account first of all there has been the vote of confidence in the prime minister this week what that means is that the euro skeptics within her in party cannot challenge to reason may for at least two years so she will be able to turn it around to them and say look this is my deal you either accept it or you don't and then going forward it looks like the vote in parliament is going to be put forward in january what that means is that it's just roughly two weeks before the u.k. is meant to be leaving the european union on march twenty ninth there will be some nerves here in the u.k. and in the about the u.k. crashing out of the e.u. without a deal if there is a maze deal isn't passed whether that's enough to convince parliaments that they have to accept to resume a c.e.o. well we'll have to see in january. some people in london and max hoffman in brussels thank you both. that's a look at some of the other stories making news around the world was parliament has voted to create a standing army the move comes to comes ten years after kosovo declared independence from serbia serbia does not recognize kosovo and strongly opposes the creation of an army last week serbia's prime. suggested the move could provoke military intervention. iran has welcomed the cease fire in yemen sports city of data agreed on by the two sides in yemen civil war yemen's foreign minister and a top rebel leader shook hands on the deal at u.s. sponsored talks in sweden but data is a vital entry point for the humanitarian aid needed by millions of yemenis. sri lanka's disputed prime minister raja rajapaksa is to step down it's hoped the move to end a political crisis that began seven weeks ago when his predecessor was abruptly sacked a court decision suspending rajapakse there and his cabinet has left the country without a functioning government for nearly two weeks. amid daya warnings from scientists delegates from almost two hundred countries are today due to the un talks in poland on stopping irreversible climate change but negotiators remain deadlocked on key issues including what to target to work towards and what science to agree on let's have a look at what's happening the stated goal for the talks was to agree on rules on how to implement the twenty fifteen paris climate accord that deal produced a commitment to limit global warming to below two degrees celsius but that target has since been declared insufficient a panel of leading u.n. scientists released a damning report in october stating a strict cap of one point five degrees is the only chance of getting disaster and they say the new target can only be achieved if countries drastically cut for so fuels and slash greenhouse gas emissions to a net zero by mid century the vast majority of countries want this science to inform the rule book but for don't the us saudi arabia russia and kuwait refused to even welcome the report they say the only take note of it and that has overshadowed the summit and distracted from working out other major sticking points these include. whether developing nations should have to follow the same rules as rich countries how they should be monitored and of course the question of funding. well in light of this deadlock at the summit our reporter maximilian asked in germany is environment minister savannah short whether conferences like this can really make a difference when it comes to combating climate change. there are a lot of members of states i think we have twelve thousand members of the states and the does really important that we have space to negotiate that we have space to have an exchange between the states and that is what the series of focused on the in this conference and we need this time there's nothing you could do on the world to way you need these direct contact and these direct negotiations to bring it to or really in a successful way. with you at the forefront germany's one of the most support no should negotiate just germany has always been considered a climate change pioneer at the same time there's some criticism that germany is not doing enough for example an exiting coal energies when will germany do that we are on the way and that a lot of people see that we do here early lot we are the only industrial country that get a hold of nuclear power that get out of coal it face a adult in a very social just way and that increased. renewable energy one third of our energy is now renewable and that in the industrialized that is so really a good way we are going here and we really alst as. experienced negotiator that it's important to we've building bridges between small island so the developing countries the developed ones. in the europa league german side transferred finished the group stage with a perfect record frankfurt beat two one in rome to become the first one to speak a team to win all six games in the europa league group stage but the match was overshadowed by fan violence inside and outside the stadium five front foot fans were arrested just like front foot by a live across and also top to their group thanks to a five one win against the aca dominic of course scored twice of life's ish meanwhile crashed out of the conceding a late tying goal against of norway that in turn allowed scottish club celtic to advance despite their defeat to group winners sol's bug seven time european champions ac milan exit to the competition after losing to olympiakos meanwhile last year's finalist must say finished at the bottom of frankfurt's group having picked up just a single point. rugby now and new zealand coaching legend steve hansen says he's stepping down after next year's world cup to eight he is in charge as unguided the all blacks to world cup glory in twenty fifteen years he might have dominated global rugby during his time in charge he has a win rate of nearly ninety percent and the all blacks have always been top of the world rankings. now to a sport of mixed martial arts male dominated sport where germany's yulia dorney has emerged as both an inspiration for young female athletes and a world champion in the featherweight division we caught up with dorney when she returned from a wildly successful season. it was everybody knows now yulia is a world champion. this is yulia dorney but a few weeks ago she became the featherweight world champion in mixed martial arts she's back at the spitfire gym and berlin for the first time since her victory usually she trains here every day boxing wrestling jujitsu judo they're all part of an m.m.a. fight his skill set. because of all of them told me it was the reigning european champion when she travelled to the world championships in bahrain. in the final she was the dominant fighter forcing her opponent to tap out in the second round crowning dormy as the world champion. it was a long journey from her beginnings as a judo fighter in germany's youth national team. was. this title means everything to me and i finally got it and that's been working for the so hard thanks to my team has been high gentoo the edinburgh's everybody on the way to both who supported me thanks guys i love you yeah here it is this is what you train so hard for. the gold medal has brought me fame and glory but as an amateur she doesn't receive any money for her success. i like her enthusiasm for the sport she's a great ambassador for m.m.a. . unfortunately as a female fighter she's still a rare breed. i hope she can inspire other girls to take up m.m.a. or other martial arts. she's not the only woman who trains at the spitfire gym but she's a class above the rest the head coach says she has a bright future. he's achieved everything there is to achieve as an amateur. we're looking ahead we're steadily preparing her for professional fights and i think there is still a lot to come from yulia. she already trains like a professional six times a week with up to four gym sessions on top of that it's what it takes to be a champion. and facilities here which means it's time for business it's a good day because there's deescalation in the u.s. china trade tensions beijing pulling the punches in this case backing down somewhat again it's suspending additional tariffs on american made cars and it's confirmed its first big purchase of u.s. soybeans since this whole trade war broke out the chinese finance ministry says it hopes to china and the united states can speed up negotiations to remove all additional tariffs on each other's goods. chinese consumers will soon be able to afford cars from the u.s. again. beijing is reducing current import duties on u.s. vehicles from forty to fifteen percent tariffs will also disappear for a number of other u.s. products the regulations apply to the first three months of twenty nine nine hundred ninety agricultural products energy automobiles except her are among the items that china in the u.s. have reached consensus on. the new regulations are music to the ears for u.s. soybean farmers storage facilities for the soybeans are bursting at the seams china's been one of the us is most important agricultural customers but during the recent trade dispute china stopped importing u.s. soil farmers held on to their crops now trade is blossoming again since china resumed importing soybeans chinese businesses as well as chinese consumers welcome the move that. soybeans are one of the most important products china imports from the u.s. . there's a big domestic demand. to trade dispute has weighed on china's growth as the latest figures show in november retail and industrial production fell well short of expectations the new economic ceasefire between the world's two largest economies gives both sides the opportunity to find additional win win solutions. richard branson spaceflight company virgin galactic has carried out. this time it reached an altitude of eighty two point seven kilometers which space begins the companies that make such flights for tina and economically viable. to space and back for upwards of two hundred fifty thousand dollars its latest test right from the mojave desert marks another step forward in opening up space travel to the paying public i think back to the early years of commercial aviation and you know a flight across the atlantic actually cost in adjusted dollars around one hundred thousand dollars at one point and now you can buy a ticket across the atlantic for about five hundred dollars so you know often these products will start off at a somewhat higher price point but those higher price points are really helped drive the market forward so that we can eventually reduce the cost over time and enable more and more people to experience the wonder of space. the fourth test flight of the space ship two passenger ship follows years of setbacks for the project including a fatal crash in twenty fourteen despite the accident british billionaire richard branson remains confident of being the first to send tourists into space we now have a space ship is capable of going to space we'll do more test flights and we'll learn something from each of those test flights then the whole program moves to new mexico to a beautiful spaceport we have there i will go up and then after i've been up. paying passengers who want to become astronauts will will follow branson says he's aiming to achieve his dream of being on board the first commercial spaceflight as soon as next march. flowers only hold their beauty for a limited time so getting them to market quickly is crucial in the capital of the world the dutch town of flower grows and trade is a worry that breaks it could with the way their business. starting at dawn every day a fleet of forklift trucks carries crates of phrases chewed lips and twenty two thousand other flower for righties through the world's largest flower markets and right. workers saw plants arriving from all over the world before sending them off to destination. across europe and north america. this well oiled operation efficiency meets natural beauty and color is facing a challenge that could make even the hardiest flower welt bricks it. it's not my sort of recollections to impress times on quality charts and the harbor authority because i love it is a free market right now and there will. have to stop its use along the way. disturbances the time consuming and speed is key in this business. but when britain breaks away from the european union things could slow down considerably and costs could increase. dutch flower exporters faith that fresh claims will spoil in shipment as they wait in line for customs clearance. we are working together on a solution where i sort of paper money i think clearance to get a customs and when you reach the harbor there. was little i like to get on the ball. so i was a big business and they play an important role in the dutch economy sales of flowers to the u.k. alone total around almost a billion euros a year it's the third largest markets off to germany and france. but the political chaos surrounding brics it has left many businesses him unsure what kind of arrangements if any will follow despite talks on so many different levels. flower growers in traders are worried that that business with the person will wither away . shares in starbucks fellow most four percent after the company lowered its long term growth or cost the company in the midst of slashing its global workforce and it hopes that teaming up with will help drive sales delivering coffees and brings true on to cross the united states starbucks has been struggling against the competition to get dinah's into their stores. and a reminder of the top stories we're following for you. french prosecutors say go for the person has died got attack on a christmas market stress spoke earlier this week obstructed the main suspect in the attack last night after a train on. the british prime minister to resign may has failed to persuade e.u. leaders to make changes to the brakes a deal the british prime minister was hoping to secure reassurances about plans opposed by skeptics in the u.k. to prevent a high. on the island of ireland the beatles say they're willing to renegotiate the deal. now watching the w. news from berlin or nextel. legislative. bodies. on. the back. kickoff like. football is a simple game football a simple game. not really cutting twenty two majors a ball for ninety minutes. mr mexico let's talk about what's going on there a lot of it. it's difficult to understand we will give you the answers every easter . that's why i just wish double wave. europe. what unites. what defines. the books trojan horse. what binds the continent together the bright answers and stories of plum trees the a. spotlight on people. sixty minutes on d w. earth. home to millions of species a home worth saving. those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world ideas that protect the climate used to clean energy solutions and

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Expanded Mod - OA 2.12.1 (For Extended Edition) file

Expanded Mod version 2.12.1 for Extended Edition refer to /docs/ folder contained in expanded mod core for complete list of changes from prev. versions.

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The biggest mistakes to avoid with your holiday money this summer

Travel is expensive enough at the moment without adding to the costs with bad financial decisions over your holiday money.

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Chinese cities spark outcry with ban on joss paper sales and 'feudal superstitions' for Ching Ming Festival

Local governments prohibit sale and production of joss paper, spirit money and other offerings used in ancestor worship during Tomb-Sweeping Day, sparking online debate and drawing rare dissent from state media over ‘crude and heavy-handed’ measures.

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Noteworthy Notes: 1914 $50 Federal Reserve Star Note, PCGS Very Fine 25

Noteworthy Notes: 1914 $50 Federal Reserve Star Note, PCGS Very Fine 25
coincommunity.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from coincommunity.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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