Nancy Pelosi speaks to 60 Minutes about the Capitol riot; Then, President Trump's phone call with Georgia's top election official; And, Angus King: The 60 Minutes Interview.
The security efforts being made to protect the presidential inauguration; the siege on the U.S. Capitol; professional football player Alex Smith's comeback after nearly losing his leg in a catastrophic on-field injury.
The Russian cyber attack on the digital files of the U.S. government and some of America's largest corporations; Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates; gymnast Simone Biles.
The rise in threats against federal judges; a prosecutor says he has strong evidence to convict Syrian President Bashar al-Assad of war crimes; the QAnon conspiracy movement.
Reasons more Americans have not received a COVID-19 vaccine; U.S. service members on the al-Asad airbase in Iraq describe being under the largest ballistic missile attack ever on Americans; author Colson Whitehead.
The low-wage earners who are bearing the brunt of the pandemic's economic impact; Fluvoxamine, an antidepressant being tested in a large clinical trial as a possible early treatment for COVID-19; NASA's efforts to return to the moon.
Coronavirus variants caused by mutation; Kim Gardner, the first Black woman to be top prosecutor in St. Louis; the history of the St. Augustine H.S. Marching Band.
Michael Sherwin, the lead prosecutor investigating the assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021; racism in America's armed forces; how COVID-19 is transmitted within schools.
The origins of the coronavirus; robots that can move like humans and animals; sportswriter Dave Kindred's retirement beat covering a local girls high school basketball team.
Allegations that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.) made decisions about COVID-19 vaccine distribution which favored wealthy and connected individuals; Ford Foundation President Darren Walker; six teens who were shipwrecked together for 15 months.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and special prosecutors Jerry Blackwell and Steve Schleicher discuss the conviction of Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd; Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny; actor Nathan Lane.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the threat posed by China; America's microchip problem; And, early pandemic spotters at the center of Michael Lewis' new book, "The Premonition.
The dramatic missions to Mars by the tiny helicopter Ingenuity and the rover Perseverance; Jews who escaped the Nazis and returned with the U.S. Army to fight Hitler during WWII.
Facial recognition used to identify criminal suspects; unidentified aerial phenomena, UAPs, are being formally addressed by the U.S. government; professional tennis player Rafael Nadal.
Judges say it's time for more security in the face of mounting violence; Checking in on the groundbreaking 90+ Study on aging; Igor Levit talks to 60 Minutes.
What makes the AR-15 style rifle the weapon of choice for mass shooters; Inside the wreck of the last ship known to have brought enslaved Africans to America; And, Simone Biles: The 60 Minutes Interview.
The prosecution team in the Derek Chauvin murder trial speaks to Scott Pelley; Sharyn Alfonsi reports on the Oath Keepers militia group's path to breaching the Capitol; And, our 2017 report on Shohei Ohtani.
Holding Syrian President Bashar Assad and his regime accountable for war crimes; Then, Robots come to the rescue after Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster; And, Colson Whitehead talks with 60 Minutes.
Families remember loved ones lost to COVID-19; Then, companies seeking out potential employees with autism; And, survivors recount being stranded on island as teens 50 years ago.
The case against Curtis Flowers, who was tried six times for a quadruple murder in which no fingerprints, DNA or weapon linked him to the crime; a Utah family includes nine professional cowboys; the music of Prince.
Cruise ship passengers infected with COVID-19 who were allowed to mix with the general population in a busy U.S. airport early in the pandemic; Kenya provides legal education and counsel to inmates; driverless truck technology.
Changing how the military handles racial bias in the ranks; Iceland's newest volcano offers rare opportunities; And, Dave Kindred goes back on the beat to cover high school girls basketball.
Firefighters, including Fire Department of New York Commissioner Dan Nigro, remember their brave comrades who died on 9/11 and discuss the lingering effects of the attack.
California firefighters have a new weapon to fight wildfires at night -- a fleet of hi-tech helicopters; Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.); Alexey Molchanov, 34, holds 24 world records in the extreme sport of free diving.
A Facebook whistleblower reveals her identity and speaks her mind; the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program; Tony Bennett's final performance, accompanied by Lady Gaga.
The use of artificial intelligence to create deepfakes; at least 1,000 children taken from their parents at the U.S. border three years ago remain separated; Deep Springs College, where students operate a ranch in lieu of tuition.
A former top intelligence official in the Saudi Arabian government, Saad Aljabri, claims the kingdom's ruler plotted to kill him and has taken his children hostage; dropping Colorado River water levels; actor Michael Keaton.
President of Nicaragua Daniel Ortega; a nonprofit architectural firm called Model of Architecture Serving Society; the possibility of the world's human data, delivered through AI, ending up in the hands of a powerful few.
Local law enforcement officials say Missouri's new 2nd Amendment Preservation Act impedes the fight against violent crime; containing the longest-running oil spill in US history; a foundation endowed by Andrew Carnegie rewards heroic acts.
Austin, Texas, experiments with a new way of policing that uses trained civilians to respond to calls once answered by armed officers; commercial supersonic flights; gardens of the Roman Emperor Caligula.
Former NSA linguist Reality Winner; President Xi Jinping rolls back some of the capitalist conventions that have made China's the only global economy to rival that of the U.S.; Gucci's creative director Alessandro Michele.
The efforts to negotiate with the Taliban in Afghanistan; NASA's James Webb Space Telescope; an island's population is decimated when its one and only industry, cod fishing, goes into steep decline.
What spawned one of the most devastating swarms of tornadoes ever to tear through the U.S.; an unseen public health epidemic involving raw sewage; comic Trevor Noah.