From September 2005, Scott Pelley’s report on conditions in New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Also from September 2005, Ed Bradley’s interview with Ed Compass, New Orleans Superintendent of Police, as his department tries to restore order in the city hit hardest by Hurricane Katrina. From December 2005, Bradley’s report on the incident in which hundreds of mostly black Hurricane Katrina evacuees were prevented from crossing the bridge from New Orleans into Gretna, La., by shotgun-firing police officers. From August 2006, Byron Pitts’ interview with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin about the year since Hurricane Katrina. And from September 2006, Morley Safer’s interview with Dr. Anna Pou, a New Orleans physician arrested, along with nurses Cheri Landry and Lori Budo, for the murder of four patients by lethal injection, at Memorial Medical Center, a hospital left isolated and without power in the days after Hurricane Katrina. #hurricane #weather #history 0:00 Intro 0:11 Katrina 17:05 Order Out of Chaos 30:42 Bridge to Gretna 44:16 One Year Later 56:48 Was it Murder? "60 Minutes" is the most successful television broadcast in history. Offering hard-hitting investigative reports, interviews, feature segments and profiles of people in the news, the broadcast began in 1968 and is still a hit, over 50 seasons later, regularly making Nielsen's Top 10. Subscribe to the “60 Minutes” YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/1S7CLRu Watch full episodes: http://cbsn.ws/1Qkjo1F Get more “60 Minutes” from “60 Minutes: Overtime”: http://cbsn.ws/1KG3sdr Follow “60 Minutes” on Instagram: http://bit.ly/23Xv8Ry Like “60 Minutes” on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1Xb1Dao Follow “60 Minutes” on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1KxUsqX Subscribe to our newsletter: http://cbsn.ws/1RqHw7T Download the CBS News app: http://cbsn.ws/1Xb1WC8 Try Paramount+ free: https://bit.ly/2OiW1kZ For video licensing inquiries, contact: licensing@veritone.com
From 60 Minutes