"60 Minutes" crew attacked by angry Chinese

Fri Nov 7, 2008 6:48am EST

NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - A "60 Minutes" crew including correspondent Scott Pelley were jumped by a group of Chinese men who were upset that cameras were investigating toxic waste at a recycling plant for computer and other electronic waste, CBS News disclosed Thursday.

While the incident happened in June, the report will appear on "60 Minutes" on Sunday, along with a video of the incident.

It happened when the crew followed a box of computer monitors from Denver to Tacoma, Wash., and then across the Pacific Ocean to Guiyu, China. Guiyu is where the electronic waste is dismantled. The workers, who are paid $8 a day, use chemicals to burn away the plastic to get at other metals and many of them -- lead, mercury, polyvinyl chloride -- are cancer causing.

The crew included Pelley, producer Solly Granastein, associate producer Nicole Young as well as two camera operators and a sound engineer. Batteries also rained down on the crew; Young received a bruise when the men pulled a tripod from her hands.

But CBS News said a dozen men at the work site didn't like having the cameras show what they were doing, and attacked the crew to try to take their equipment.

"After a few minutes of filming, we were jumped," Pelley said on the "60 Minutes" report, which is available on CBSNews.com. "Several men struggled for our cameras. They got a soil sample we had taken for testing. But we managed to wrestle the cameras back."

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

Entertainment News From the Wrap

Photo

Kal Penn Snags Lead in ABC's 'Prairie Dogs' Pilot 7:12pm EST

"Harold & Kumar" star will play an office drone who's victimized by identity theft

Photo

NBA Rules Limit Cablers, Networks on Jeremy Lin Telecasts 6:34pm EST

"The Legend of Lin" keeps growing, but NBA limits will keep networks from putting a full-court press on viewers

Photo

Jennifer Lopez-Marc Anthony Talent Show 'Q'Viva!' Lands at Fox 6:14pm EST

"Q'Viva!" will feature J.Lo, Anthony and Jamie King as they scour the globe for the best Latin performers

Photo

Judge Rules for Warner Bros. in 'Last Samurai' Lawsuit 6:29pm EST

Judge drops Warner Bros. and screenwriter John Logan from the lawsuit which claims story behind "The Last Samurai" was stolen. Producers Edward Zwick and Marshall Herskovitz remain on the hook

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.