Watch CBS News

Tonight: While Innocents Slept

48 Hours Mystery
While Innocents Slept, June 6 at 10 p.m. ET/PT

Garrett Wilson was a charmer, a reliable provider and a magnet for women who believed he would be a perfect husband and father.

When Wilson's infant son dies in his crib, it's officially called a case of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. But his wife Missy suspects it's another kind of case -- murder. Her suspicion is bolstered when she learns about a second baby from Wilson's secret past who also met a tragic fate.

His story is so compelling that it attracted the attention of one of America's most insightful true-crime writers. Did this devoted father murder his two children? Correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.

Recap: 48 Hours Investigates
The Canal Street Brothel, June 4 at 10 p.m. ET/PT

Correspondent Harold Dow gets an exclusive look into the lives of three generations of women, from the same family, who worked in the same New Orleans brothel until the FBI arrested them using wiretaps from 5,000 calls that were recorded before, during and after 9/11.

At first, it was suspected that organized crime was connected with the brothel or that it was also part of an interstate drug ring, but no evidence of either connection was found.

The Canal Street Brothel, part of a nationwide ring of brothels, made national headlines when the FBI shut it down last year.

More than a dozen women were arrested across the country, most notably three women from the same family who worked together to run one of The Big Easy's most notorious and popular brothels: Tommie Taylor, the grandmother who worked the phones; her daughter, Jeanette Maier, the madam; and the granddaughter, Monica Montemayor, a working girl who is now fighting for custody of her young daughter and is determined to lead her to a brighter future.

It's a family portrait that is anything but pretty as these women reveal the tragic stories that led them into the business.

Recap: 48 Hours Mystery
Burden Of Proof, May 30 at 10 p.m. ET/PT

Jim Watson says he argued with his wife Beverly in their Fayetteville, Ga. home. She walked out the front door around midnight and never returned.

That was on Jan. 18, 1997, and Beverly Watson vanished without a trace.

Two years later, 12 of Beverly's bones were found about 20 miles from the Watson home. Jim Watson became the prime suspect in the case. However, his two children believe he is innocent.

Can a tough prosecutor prove, with dust and two scratches, that a loving father killed his wife? Correspondent Harold Dow reports.

Recap: 48 Hours Investigates
Where Is Mrs. March? May 28

On Aug. 15, 1996, Janet Levine March, a wife and mother of two young children, disappeared. She seemed to have it all -- a successful career as an artist, a loving husband and a beautiful home that she designed in Nashville, Tenn.

However, according to her husband, Perry, Janet said she needed some time alone. She packed her bags and left home, never to be heard from again.

Now, Perry March says he and the children are in danger. Correspondent Bill Lagattuta reports for 48 Hours Investigates.

Recap: 48 Hours Mystery
The Alibi, May 23 at 10 p.m. ET/PT

David Camm, a former Indiana state trooper, is accused of killing his wife and two young children.

Eleven witnesses say there is no way Camm could have possibly killed his family.

But the prosecution claims to have scientific evidence -- eight tiny drops of blood -- that could sink Camm's seemingly airtight alibi.

What will the jury decide? Richard Schlesinger reports on 48 Hours Mystery.

Recap: May 14 at 10 p.m. ET/PT

It's a rags to riches story, Texas style.

Celeste was a waitress who married a Texas millionaire named Steven Beard. Five years later, the fairy-tale was shattered when Steven was shot in his own bed.

Years passed before the full mystery of Steven Beard's murder would be unraveled. It would reveal intimate secrets between the best of friends. It would also split a family apart, mother against daughters.

In an exclusive interview, Celeste Beard claims her innocence in the murder of her multi-millionaire husband. Her former best friend, Tracey Tarlton, who made a plea bargain deal in the Beard murder case, also speaks out.

Recap: May 7, 10 p.m. ET/PT

Could a high school honor student, a trusted babysitter, be guilty of murder?

Chris Routh was a responsible and well-behaved 14-year-old honor student who played football and came from a tight-knit family near Atlanta.

Occasionally, he would baby-sit 23-month-old Emily Woodruff, the daughter of family friends. One day, Emily stopped breathing while Chris was caring for her. She was rushed to the hospital but died two days later.

When doctors found evidence that Emily was sexually assaulted and then shaken to death, police suspicions immediately turned to Chris, who was the last person with Emily.

Chris was arrested and charged with murder and child molestation. Denied bail, he was sent to juvenile detention for almost a year. He was charged as an adult and faced a life sentence.

Chris always claimed his innocence and took the stand at his trial to tell his side of the story. Would the jury believe his claims of innocence?

Correspondent Harold Dow reports for 48 Hours Investigates.

Recap: April 30, 10 p.m. ET/PT

"Extremely Perfect" takes an investigative look at the lengths women - and men - go to look perfect.

A new weight-loss treatment that melts fat? Anchor Lesley Stahl speaks to Grammy Award winner Roberta Flack, who has found what she claims to be the perfect way to lose weight.

Mesotherapy, an unconventional French weight loss treatment, has been used by Europe's rich and famous for 50 years. Liposuction without the surgery? Flack has lost 35 pounds so far. She'll share her secret on 48 Hours Investigates.

Plus, Stahl gets the inside scoop from former supermodel Christie Brinkley and actress Jamie Lee Curtis, who reveal they are far from perfect -- even if magazines are able to make celebrities look "perfect" for the cameras.

And, if you think it's only women who want to look perfect, think again. Men are getting in on the act, too. In fact, liposuction is the second most performed surgical procedure for men. Correspondent Maureen Maher follows a father and two sons as they make liposuction a family affair.

Recap: April 23, 10 p.m. ET/PT

He was the last person the family would have ever suspected of posing a threat to their daughter.

But 15-year-old Penny of Shaker Heights, Ohio, was stalked and then killed by her older brother's best friend, 21-year-old Scott.

He pled guilty and is now in prison, but Penny's parents think the doctors who treated Scott should also be responsible for her death. Correspondent Erin Moriarty reports on a story of misplaced trust that led to tragedy.

Also, stalking of "on-air" personalities is a growing concern for local television anchors and reporters. Correspondent Troy Roberts reports on local news anchors who have been stalked, and how they've handled their situations.

Recap: April 16, 10 p.m. ET/PT

In an exclusive interview with anchor Lesley Stahl, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Skakel family break their silence about the murder of Martha Moxley.

Kennedy, along with the Skakel family, says that Michael Skakel was wrongfully convicted of Moxley's murder. Though he's never publicly spoken about his cousin Michael's conviction, Kennedy, after a six-month reexamination of the case, recently wrote an article for The Atlantic Monthly, which outlines why he believes Skakel was wrongfully convicted of Moxley's murder.

"For me to come out publicly to defend somebody that basically everybody in the country feels is guilty of murder, is, from a personal strategy, it's probably not a good choice for me, but I know he's innocent," says Kennedy.

With no DNA, witnesses or fingerprints at the Moxley murder scene in October 1975, the Skakels and Kennedy wonder how Michael was convicted almost 30 years later.

Recap: April 11, 10 p.m. ET/PT

It was the week Baghdad shattered. The changes were seismic, and the mood kept shifting -- from unbridled joy to unmasked greed.

The city once ruled with an iron fist by Saddam Hussein plunged into anarchy. But where is Saddam? The hunt continues. Correspondent Lesley Stahl reports.

Plus, today's weapons are the most precise in the history of warfare. But that has not eliminated the number of accidents or attacks by friendly fire in the war with Iraq. Correspondent Richard Schlesinger reports.

And Correspondent Mika Brzezinski talks to a group of military wives whose husbands are serving in the same unit in the Persian Gulf -- and how personal tragedy has made them closer than most families.

Recap: April 9, 10 p.m. ET/PT

How worried should you be about SARS? The doctor who identified the deadly respiratory virus explains on 48 Hours Investigates.

You'll hear how one couple's adventure to China, to adopt a baby daughter, turned into a life-and-death struggle against SARS. Correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.

Plus, Hong Kong is Ground Zero for a worldwide SARS outbreak. Correspondent Barry Petersen reports on how SARS is changing almost every aspect of life in the busy city.

And, Correspondent Susan Spencer takes a look at the ravages of Gulf War Syndrome, an unexplained illness that has affected approximately 20,000 veterans. A higher percentage of soldiers became ill after the first Gulf War than any war in U.S. history. But remarkably, even after some 200 studies, no one knows exactly why.

With thousands of U.S. troops again in the Gulf, what causes this illness has now become an urgent question.

Recap: April 4, 10 p.m. ET/PT

On or about March 29, Marines along a treacherous road called "Ambush Alley" are approached by an Iraqi lawyer with stunning news. He says that an American soldier is being held in a hospital -- and doctors intend to amputate her leg.

The Iraqi lawyer risks his life to save hers.

Get the inside story on the dramatic rescue of U.S. Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, who was freed from Iraqi captivity by U.S. troops in a midnight military raid inside an Iraqi hospital.

Correspondent Jane Clayson is with the Lynch family in Palestine, West Virginia where relatives and friends had faith the 19-year-old supply clerk from the 507th Maintenance Unit would return safely after being captured on the battlefront.

Also, 48 Hours brings you the latest developments on the war with Iraq.

Recap: March 29, 9 p.m. ET/PT

A special edition of 48 Hours, "Missing On The Road To Baghdad," was part of CBS News' ongoing coverage of the war in Iraq.

The program focuses on Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, 19, of Palestine, W.Va., one of 16 Americans listed as missing in action in the war in Iraq.

Recap March 25, 10 p.m. ET/PT

A special edition of 48 Hours, "The Road To Baghdad," anchored by Dan Rather, was part of CBS News' ongoing coverage of the war in Iraq.

The hour-long program featured an exclusive interview by Lesley Stahl with Secretary of State Colin Powell, latest reports from correspondents on the front lines, and background by CBS analysts.

Recap, March 12, 10 p.m. ET/PT:

Long after most had given up hope, Elizabeth Smart, the 15-year-old girl who vanished from her bedroom nearly eight months ago, has been found alive in suburban Salt Lake City. A top investigator talked about the case and its outcome to Jane Clayson.

48 Hours Investigates has much more on this story as it unfolds tonight.

Recap, March 7, 10 p.m. ET/PT: "The Investigators"

Top detectives - famous cases: They see the clues others miss:

Actor Anthony Dwain Lee was shot by a Los Angeles police officer in the back while he attended a Halloween party. But was Lee shot without justification? Look at both sides of the story through the eyes of crime scene reconstructionists.

Meet Bobbi Bacha, the private detective who was working for Clara Harris when Harris used her car to repeatedly run over her cheating husband in Houston last year. Bacha talks about the videotape that was supposed to catch a cheating husband, but ended up convicting his scorned spouse.

Working in Moscow, U.S. Customs agents try to uproot an international child porn ring.

Recap, March 5, 10 p.m. ET/PT: "The Negotiators"

Take an unprecedented inside look at a hostage negotiation team at work. A disturbed man shoots three people and takes others hostage - one of them, his infant daughter. Angry and agitated, he barricades himself inside a house in Queens, New York. Can a crack team of New York Police Department hostage negotiators work to save the hostages - especially the baby? Find out.

Recap, Feb. 28, 10 p.m. ET/PT: "American Beauty"

A young husband winds up dead, with an unusual drug in his system. Was it suicide - or was he murdered by his wife? When they were married, 20-somethings Kristin Rossum and Greg De Villers seemed to have a wonderful future in front of them. But before the couple could celebrate their second wedding anniversary, Greg was dead, and Kristin behind bars. Police say she staged a suicide scene with rose petals, reminiscent of one of her favorite movies, "American Beauty." What happened?

Recap, Feb. 26, 10 p.m. ET/PT: "The Preppy Killer"

"I can never make up for the death of Jennifer Levin," says Robert Chambers , who has just served 15 years for the young girl's murder. "I can never make up for the pain it caused her family. I've been a bad person. Am I a monster? No. Because if I were a monster, I wouldn't care. But I do".

Rehearsed lines from a con artist? Or genuine repentance?

In his first interview since getting out of Auburn Correctional Facility near Syracuse, N.Y. last week, the man New York called the "Preppy Killer" talks about that Central Park sexual encounter with 48 Hours Investigates correspondent Troy Roberts. The interview airs Wednesday, Feb. 26, at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

In a four-hour Feb. 17 interview session in a hotel outside of Washington, D.C., Chambers gave his version of exactly what happened the night in 1986 that he strangled Jennifer Levin and the time he spent in prison, during which he was charged with 27 rules violations. He served every day of his sentence because the parole board kept saying that he showed a lack of remorse.

"Every day, I know that I'm in prison, I'm in prison because somebody died and I'm responsible for that," Chambers tells Roberts. "It's not an easy feeling. You don't get comfortable with it. And it's part of my life for the rest of my life."

Over and over again, he apologized for the way he lived his life and repeatedly denied that he was faking remorse and playing the role that he has perfected as a teen-age prep school student.

"People say, 'I don't believe he's changed; I don't believe he's grown up; I don't believe he's going to be any different,'" Chambers says. " I will. I really will. I mean it's a wake-up call. You know, you may not wake up immediately, like people want you to, but towards the end, there's something that clicks in your mind, and you realize, you have to change."

Chambers said he would prefer to spend time in solitary confinement than be interviewed . "I'd choose solitary in a second," he says. "It's a lot easier than this. I don't want to be here."

He repeatedly denied that he was playing a role. "Would I like to be forgiven? I wouldn't even think of asking for that," he said. "Would I like the opportunity to apologize for my actions? Yes. Am I acting? I don't know how to act. I'm too scared to act right now. You say I'm well mannered and everything. I'm here holding my hands. I'm scared."

48 Hours has been trying to contact Jennifer Levin's mother about the interview, Roberts says, but she has not responded to the program's inquiries.

Interview Excerpts

Roberts: After you killed Jennifer Levin, you walked home, you got undressed, and you went to bed.
Chambers: And laid there.
Roberts: And you slept.
Chambers: I think I slept. I don't know if I slept. I know I laid there.
Roberts: You know how callous and unfeeling that sounds?
Chambers: Do you know how callous and unfeeling it feels?
Roberts: No
Chambers: No, you don't. But I do. For the rest of my life.

-----

Roberts: You've done your time and this is the moment to set the record straight.
Chambers: Um-hm.
Roberts: And this is your story.
Chambers: Yes.
Roberts: This is the story you'll die with.
Chambers: Yes. My story has not changed. There is nothing to change. It's not a story that's pleasant. It's not a story people like. It's not a story that fits into people's perceptions. You know why? Because it's not a story. It's the truth. I'm not proud of it. No. I don't like the fact that I have to sit here and discuss it with you. Not at all. I would rather be anywhere. I'd rather be back in jail than have to do this. I'm ashamed. I'm humiliated. I'm disgusted with not only my actions that night, with so many things I've done in life. I've been a bad person. Am I a monster? No. 'Because if I were a monster I wouldn't care. But I do. I always have…

Recap: Feb. 19: "Lust, Lies & Videotape"

Andrew Luster, one of the heirs to the Max Factor fortune, is charged with date rape. During his trial, he disappeared. 48 Hours Investigates has the only interview done before he became a fugitive.

Recap, Feb. 12: "Mystery In Room 813"

On November 13, 1996, in a hotel outside Los Angeles, Sandra Orellana fell from the balcony of Room 813. There were no witnesses - except for one man: her boss, Robert Lee Salazar, who was with her at the time. Soon after, Salazar was arrested for murder. Police said he pushed her after she rebuffed his advances; he claimed that her death was a tragic accident following a night of heavy drinking. What really happened?

Plus: Here's a hint of some of the exclusives you'll see in upcoming broadcasts!

48 Hours Investigates reports from inside an intense hostage negotiation with the NYPD. Wednesday, Feb. 26 at 10 PM, ET/PT

Recap, Feb. 5: "Murder In Monaco"

In December 1999, billionaire banker Edmond Safra was killed in a fire that ravaged his penthouse in Monaco. Ted Maher, an American ex-Green Beret who was Safra's personal nurse, was arrested, charged and found guilty of setting the fire that led to Safra's death. But his wife Heidi says her husband was set up and that more powerful forces conspired in Safra's death. An international financier Safra was known to have powerful enemies. Did they play a role in his death?

Recap: January 31: "To Hell And Back"

A primetime exclusive with Jacque Marris, who survived a terrorizing kidnapping in August 2002 and reveals new details of her captivity, courage and will to survive.

Recap, January 29: "Reasonable Doubt"

When Judi Eftenoff died of a cocaine overdose in her Phoenix house, it seemed at first like a terrible accident. But then police arrested her fast-talking husband Brian and charged him with homicide. After a five-week trial, a jury reaches a verdict - but that's only the beginning of the story. Was her death a tragic overdose or a cunning murder? Erin Moriarty investigates.

Recap, January 15: "Invitation to a Murder"

At first, Mark Winger appeared to be a hero, who had tried valiantly to save his wife from being attacked by a crazed intruder. Winger killed the man, but not before his wife also died. Then, seven years later, another woman comes forward with a shocking revelation that would make the police look at the old evidence in a new light. Did someone get away with murder?

Tonight, January 10, 8 PM: "Searching For Elizabeth"

48 Hours Investigates has the first interviews with the brothers and sister of missing Salt Lake City, Utah teen, Elizabeth Smart. In addition, 48 Hours Investigates reports new details about the kidnapping, including new information that the abduction didn't happen the way everyone originally thought.

Jane Clayson is the first reporter to question 10-year-old Mary Katherine Smart, the only eyewitness to her sister's kidnapping. She also interviews Ed and Lois Smart, Elizabeth's parents, who reveal new details about their daughters' terror-filled night. Clayson talks to Salt Lake City Police investigator Commander Cory Lyman and the Smart's neighbor, Suann Adams, who has never spoken publicly about the case. Neth Moul, a mechanic, also shares critical information with Clayson that police believe could help solve the case.

Recap, January 8: "Kids For Sale"

Children trading sex for money or offering themselves to sexually suggestive websites are growing problems in the United States, but equally alarming are parents who embrace some of these troubling activities.

Correspondent Erin Moriarty investigates a disturbing Internet trend where anyone can look at children for a fee. Teens and pre-teens as young as seven years old are posing provocatively in revealing clothes hoping to find fortune and fame. The websites aren't free to viewers, but charge for access. Renee has her own live web cam and website making $2,000 a month. She even has a wish list where she asks for and receives expensive gifts from anonymous admirers. Cindy is 11 years old and hoping to become a model. Her website has hundreds of paying customers. The girls' parents say they're not exploiting their children, but welcome the extra money. Experts worry that these websites are exploiting the girls and may even expose them to sexual predators.

Why would an all-American 14-year-old participate in a pornographic video? "Patti," a Palm Beach County, Fla. teen, tells correspondent Bill Lagattuta that she thought it was "normal," because "Playboy makes millions and they don't get into trouble." Now, she is going to trial, accused by the state of distributing pornography. Her parents are outraged, as they see their daughter as the victim.

The oldest profession, prostitution, is attracting some of the youngest recruits. According to a 2001 study at the School of Social Work at the University of Pennsylvania, between 200,000 and 400,000 kids nationwide are at risk of being sexually exploited. The worst cases involve prostitution. One former teenage prostitute tells correspondent Peter Van Sant, "The younger you look, the more money you're gonna make." Surprisingly, more and more prostitutes aren't from dysfunctional families, but are still seduced by pimps who promise them love, security and money to turn tricks.

Recap: ONE NIGHT - TWO BROADCASTS!:

8 PM ET/PT, "Death In The Desert": Did a boot camp for teens go too far 48 Hours investigates a teen-ager's death at a military-style boot camp for youth. Anthony Haynes, 14, was a troubled kid. So his mother enrolled him in at an Arizona boot camp. Richard Schlesinger reports.

10 PM ET/PT, "The Colonel's Wife": A war hero is accused of brutally murdering his wife. Is he guilty?

Retired Colonel George Marecek is one of the most decorated Green Berets in the Army's history. At 70, he's still tough as nails. Over 36 years, he has fought in three wars.

"I stand for integrity," Marecek says. "Devotion to duty, love for your nation. And above it all, truth." But did he murder his wife? Susan Spencer reports on this strange case.

Recap, December 27: "Legends" - A look at four entertainment superstars, and their trials and triumphs.

Lauren Hutton changed the modeling business, but her life has not been easy. She has dealt with loss and betrayal, and come face-to-face with death. Troy Roberts reports.

Kirk Douglas: Now 86, he recently completed his 85th film, the first he did with both his son Michael and his grandson Cameron. Richard Schlesinger interviews both Kirk and Michael.

One of the greatest country singers ever, Loretta Lynn says that if
she had to do it all over again, she would not become a singer. Find out
why. Erin Moriarty reports.

With her singing voice stilled, Julie Andrews still finds challenge and contentment in non-singing roles, writing and being a doting mom. Peter Van Sant reports.

Recap: December 13, "Millionaire Boys' Club":

On the night of March 15, 2001, 21-year-old Danny Petrole, the son of a retired Secret Service agent, was brutally gunned down in an affluent suburb near Manassas, Va. A college student, Petrole was shot nine times as he sat in his car, just outside his townhouse.

Within days, police traced the murder weapon to a 21-year-old named Owen Barber. According to Barber's longtime girlfriend, Jennifer Pasquariello, Barber was a normal suburban kid.

Barber told police that another 20-year-old suburbanite, Justin Wolfe, had hired him to kill Petrole in exchange for money and drugs. Wolfe and Barber had been friends in high school. Wolfe was arrested and charged with capital murder.

Peter Van Sant reports on an unlikely tale of death and drugs in the suburbs.

Recap, December 11, 10 PM ET/PT, "TRACKING A KILLER": 48 Hours Investigates examines two incredible murder mysteries. Can detectives using science and smarts track down two killers?

A well-liked young research scientist gets very sick and dies, but it's not a virus, as doctors thought. It's murder. And, in another story, as police investigate, a picture-perfect marriage isn't quite what it appears. A beautiful young woman is ready to divorce her cheating husband and is murdered by a man delivering flowers to her. Is her ex-husband responsible, and if so, where in the world is he?

Correspondent Susan Spencer reports on the murder of Lita McClinton Sullivan, the attractive daughter of a well-to-do family in Atlanta, Ga. In 1975, 23-year-old Lita just finished college when she met and fell in love with 33-year-old Jim Sullivan, a charming businessman, who had inherited millions. Lita married Sullivan, but saw a very different side of him after the marriage: He was obsessed with money and unfaithful.

The marriage was falling apart, but Lita followed her husband to ritzy Palm Beach, Fla., where Sullivan planned to move up the social ladder, believing that would help the marriage, it didn't. Sullivan wasn't moving up the social ladder like he had hoped and many people say he blamed his wife because she was black and he wasn't. After nine years of marriage, Lita decided to move back to Atlanta and divorce Sullivan. On Jan. 16, 1987, the morning of an important ruling on the divorce, Lita was shot dead by a killer masquerading as a flower deliveryman.

Investigators found out that a collect call was made to Sullivan's Florida estate 30 minutes after Lita was shot. Police believe it was the hit man telling Sullivan that Lita was dead. The murder seemed to have little affect on Sullivan, who remarried just eight months after Lita's death. One thing Sullivan didn't count on was an eyewitness linking him to the alleged hit man. Eleven years after Lita was shot, prosecutors were able to indict Sullivan, but he fled the country.

Eric Miller, a 31-year-old devoted father and husband, was a promising young AIDS research scientist based in Raleigh, N.C. His wife, Ann, was a scientist, too. Eric became violently ill on the evening of Nov. 15, 2000 while bowling with his wife's friends and was hospitalized. After a dramatic recovery, he returned home only to fall ill again a few weeks later. This time, Miller's hospital stay is short and he soon dies. A chance blood test revealed something shocking: Arsenic in Miller's blood. Who could have wanted Eric dead and why? CBS News Correspondent Russ Mitchell reports.

Recap, Dec. 6: "Family Secrets," 8 p.m. ET/PT

48 Hours examines two incredible stories of families lost - and families found.

In a small town Wyoming hospital, someone made a terrible mistake. Two babies were switched at birth. Now, 43 years later, two grown women must try to reconnect with their biological families. Watch how this drama unfolds.

Plus: It was 30 years ago on a cold winter night that police found a baby girl abandoned in a suburban Chicago park. She was wrapped in a garbage bag. That baby is now grown up, and looking for her mother. Can she now find the woman who left her decades ago?

Recap: Nov. 29: "Cold Turkey"

What could be more appropriate for the day after Thanksgiving? Millions of Americans are overweight, and millions are trying to lose that weight. 48 HOURS takes a look at the great American obsession: dieting.

* It's the latest L.A. craze: stripping as exercise. Meet the actress who is leading the new trend. Can you pole-dance the pounds away?
* More than half those who live in Dubuque, Iowa are overweight. Some of them are trying to slim down with an innovative group program pitting teams of dieters against one another.
* After years of being obese, Drew Nieporent recently lost more than 100 pounds. It was an amazing achievement for anyone, but especially for him. He's a world-famous restaurateur.
* Rock star Ann Wilson of the band Heart battled her weight for years. Then she decided to have a new procedure, called lap band surgery, which shrinks her stomach. So far she's lost 60 pounds, and hopes to lose 40 more.

Recap: Nov. 22: "Burden Of Proof,"

When 33-year-old Beverly Watson vanished, police suspected her husband Jim of killing her. But without a body they could do little. He continued to raise their two children, who believe he's innocent. But two years later, her remains were found, and Jim was charged with murder. Can dogged prosecutor Sheila Ross turn some dust and a few scratches on Jim's face into a conviction? Find out.

Nov. 15: "Witness" 8 p.m. ET/PT

Charles Forshee was accused of killing his foster son Dillon Farrer, who was just shy of two years old. The prosecution's main witness against Forshee: Dillon's four-year-old brother, Lucas Farrer. But can a jury trust the testimony of such a young child?

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.