robinson and doug witney who worked for the county attorney. you took them seriously right off the top, the daughters? not really. but then they started to look at some of the evidence the amateur sleuths had gathered. not evidence of murder but still they started to challenge a lot of things that their father, who he was, what he was, what he was doing. and we thought, you know what, i d like to find out if he really is a doctor. yes. martin did have a medical degree but he fraudulently got into medical school. faking the results he obviously took somebody else s. there was a different date of entrance, different date of graduation and all of them were straight a s. then they dug deeper and found out before he faked his college transcripts, martin was convicted of forging checks. now to investigators the respected doctor was looking at anything but respectable. this tells me that this is not the guy that goes to church every sunday with this family. so there are tw
want to be found. in many cases the boats reach halfway across the channel and the people on board dial 999, say they re out in the channel and say they need to be rescued because they want to be found by the authorities because then they can enter the asylum system here. the vast majority of people end up creaming asylum here in the uk and thatis creaming asylum here in the uk and that is the goal. i don t think we are seeing hundreds of people arriving on detected and then running off and not being found. i think the vast majority are found because they want to be found. we are seeing some pictures of a boat the french coast area today and i think what s most striking and added to each picture is was the sheer number who are on board the boat and it reinforces what you are saying about 88 people in one boat in a recent case and how lucrative the straight a s and it underlines how dangerous it is. both ability are
month, we are telling the stories of people who make a difference in their communities. to start the series off, i talked to three young doctors from humble backgrounds who rose to the top and are hoping to pull others up with them. growing up was tough. both my parents were addicted to drugs. as a child, what was one of your earliest memories? i remember running down the street from my father. my father was high and i was running down the street like 83rd street in chicago from my father with my mom. i was like, is this what everybody s life is about? it was something in me that was like, i can t do this, my life isn t this, i want to be the smartest, i want to have straight a s. my parents were both immigrants from haiti. they divorced pretty early. my mom lived in a section of brooklyn, east new york, around brownsville, the height of the crack era.
she was smiling all the time. she was the life of the party. stacey grossman knew her from childhood she likes creating an atmosphere for everyone to have a good time she was a cheerleader in high school and a straight a s student. she had this book work besides her where she s studios and she s a great person to be around and fun and happy spirit. someone that i want to spend a lot of time with. a lot of people did and when she chose a college far from home, north carolina state, she was surrounded by an admiring group of women friends, best friends, buddiebuddies. fiona is her sorority sister. there is one picture that we