http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0509/12/asb.01.html<snip>BROWN: Thank you. And we will keep track of that one, too. That's two tonight.
There's an ongoing dispute, as you're probably aware, over what reporters can and cannot videotape. FEMA originally said we'd be prohibited from shooting the recovery of bodies. Now, in truth, recovery of bodies is not exactly something any of us likes, but it's part of this story. And, in a free country, government can't make that sort of rule, at least according to a court who heard CNN's lawsuit the other day. Not everyone apparently got the word, which has a way of making everyone's nasty work down there a whole lot harder.
Here's CNN's Dan Lothian.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
DAN LOTHIAN, CNN BOSTON BUREAU CHIEF (voice-over): There is so much destruction in St. Bernard Parish, every street, every corner, almost too difficult to comprehend.
(on camera): Last week, you couldn't walk down this street in St. Bernard Parish. It was flooded. Now the water has receded and recovery teams are finding more bodies.
(voice-over): We came across three bodies, bodies officials did not want us to see.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Vacate the area, please. Sir, sir, you can't be here.
(CROSSTALK)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I won't. I'm not going to. Please don't.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (OFF-MIKE)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Sir, yes. I was told no one could be here.
LOTHIAN (on camera): Well, would you like to talk to our lawyer? You can talk to our lawyer here in Atlanta.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's OK.
LOTHIAN: Would you like to talk to our lawyer?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Sir, I was told you guys are not allowed to be here.
LOTHIAN: We have a lawsuit that says that we can be here. You're defying a federal -- a federal judge's order by trying to kick us out of here. It's right here.