60 Minutes Covers Andrew Sadek's Suspicious Death on Show Airing Tonight
First covered by Reason TV last June, CBS's venerable newsmagazine probes the death of the college student turned confidential informant.
CBS's venerable newsmagazine, 60 Minutes, will air a piece on tonight's show (airing 7p ET/8p PT) covering the tragic case of Andrew Sadek, a North Dakota college student who became a confidential informant after being threatened with 40 years in prison over the sale of a small amount of marijuana.
After Sadek turned up dead, all the agencies involved with busting him washed their hands of the case, refusing to even investigate his death as a potential murder and insisting to his grieving parents that the young man committed suicide.
I went to North Dakota earlier this year to investigate the case, which you can read here or watch in documentary form.
Original intro writeup below:
On June 27, 2014, the body of 20-year-old Andrew Sadek, a promising electrical student at the North Dakota State College of Science (NDSCS) in Wahpeton, North Dakota, was pulled from the Red River bordering North Dakota and Minnesota.
Missing for two months, the young man was found shot in the head, wearing a backpack filled with rocks.
The grisly death of a college student in one of the safest towns in the state, where violent crime is extremely rare, did not lead to a sweeping investigation. In fact, police immediately said they did not suspect foul play.
Such a supposition strains credulity as it is, but what would be slowly revealed over the following months is that Andrew had been working as a confidential informant for the police, and that his school knew that authorities were busting its students and using them as bait to catch drug dealers.
This is a story of overzealous prosecution of minor drug offenses by a task force answerable only to itself, callous official indifference toward a grieving family, and a lack of transparency by authorities that raises more questions than it answers.
Paramount among these questions: Why are police using non-violent, first-time offenders in the very dangerous role of confidential informant?
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it is encouraging to see 60 Minutes commit actual journalism as opposed to advocacy or Team cheering/bashing.
police immediately said they did not suspect foul play.
Shot in the head with a rock-filled backpack. You have to give people who commit suicide credit for their ever-more ingenious methods.
You haven't seen what CBS News does with the story yet.
Maybe it will be like their Snowden piece, and they'll only interview the police who put him up to it.
I'm trying to be optimistic. Of course, I am also prepared to be disappointed.
Nor am I going to see it
"the young man was found shot in the head, wearing a backpack filled with rocks."
This happens all the time. People are ashamed of their own suicide so they want their body to never be found. So they fill their bags with rocks, shoot themselves in the head, then jump in a river. Case Closed.
TW: another mis-use of the word "tragic". OK, back to the post.
Completely OT: I'm headed back to the Tampa gunshow today. Look for the giant reptile. Yesterday ended up getting packed by the afternoon, my tail got stepped on quite often...it's probably about time for a new one.
And hopefully Florida Man is ok. I haven't seen him on the comments in a while.
.
I am jealous.
I have to go fix my mother's window. She lost her key and had to break in her own house last night. Dammit.
Thankfully the cops didn't shoot her
Lucky thing she wasn't gunned down by officious cops...
Ugh, I had forgotten about this truly horrific story. Glad it's getting national media attention, albeit on a show that only old people watch and are thus inclined to think that one less pot smoker is a good thing for society.
"Venerable" is code for 'shit only old people watch'.
I thought it meant "contagious"
It is hard to say which of the several evil aspects of this story are the most evil, but this is up there.
Donate to Reason so you can read the story 1/2 year before it is on 60 Minutes!
That's a good reason. Time for me to donate.
I'm in protest due to Reason's Small Donation Shaming.
Reason only publishes the names of donors who give $1,000 or more.
In the name of Small Donator Justice Warriors everywhere I choose to withhold my $2 in hopes that Reason will see reason and no longer amount shame small donators.
Dude, it's ok. Girls don't mind if you have a small "donation." Really.
I hear it's the motion of the donation, not the actual size.
: )
You win best comment, Austrian Anarchy.
Good, this nut-punch deserves wider coverage.
Stories like this (and woodchipper-gate, of course) are why I decided to donate for a fourth consecutive year, even though financially this hasn't been a great year.
How about if you want to use a different sexes locker room, you get get a sex change operation first? Show a little commitment.
http://hotair.com/archives/201.....ng-nobody/
Didn't I see this on South Park already?
Donate to HotAir.com so you can read about it after it has appeared on South Park.
This suicide was not as ingenious of Rasputin's.
The problem here is 60 Minutes' rep; ALAR!
"The sheepdog isn't loved by the flock." So we're sheep now. I'm glad to have this clarified.
It does put things in proper perspective for a country co-opted by parties whose mascots are bestial slaves of burden.
I have little trust in 60 Minutes.
Their smear job of Illinois Power's reactor project was countered by a second film crew filming the 60 Minutes documendacity. But this is an expos? of superstitious fanatics--murdering Jesus Freak police state conservatives--the kind of people whose lukewarm support made America hate nuclear energy just in time to justify attacking the Mohammedans in the 1990s to take their oil.
Ah, the beginning of my weekend.
Also, you know who else committed suicide?
Vince Foster?
The bees that stung me when I was harvesting their honey?
Abbie Hoffman, allegedly?
The same thing happened to Illinois grocer Dominic Tarro, who bought some of the boxcar-loads of corn sugar used to make moonshine and beer in 1930, when Herbert Hoover used the communist-Manifesto income tax to enforce alcohol prohibition. The US v. Dominic Tarro, Corn Products Refining and Fleichmann was probably THE major driver of the Great Depression, in which sugar money fled the banks to avoid asset-forfeiture confiscation imposed by christian Sharia law.