CBS News
How one retired executive helped change a wounded Ukrainian soldier’s life
Retired businessman Gary Wasserson had never worked in the nonprofit world, but today he calls himself a humanitarian.
The 67-year-old former telecommunications industry executive from Philadelphia is in the midst of a full-fledged second act that began in 2022 after Russia launched an all-out attack on Ukraine. When Wasserson’s wife made him aware they had relatives in Ukraine, he didn’t miss a beat. In March 2022, he flew to Poland, where he assembled a network to help extract his relatives and other Ukrainians from their war-torn home country, in true grassroots fashion.
He has since relied on what he calls a “team of angels,” made up of professionals and volunteers to extract hundreds more Ukrainians. His efforts have also expanded beyond bringing relatives and strangers to safety to helping wounded Ukrainians receive prosthetics and more.
In Ukraine, through a videographer friend of his daughter’s documenting the war, he was also connected to Vladyslav Orlov, a special operations Ukrainian soldier who in October had been severely injured by a Russian explosive device.
“My experience was a very bad experience. I was blown up by Russians — something blew up in my car,” Orlov, 27, told CBS News. “I was stuck in the car and my teammates helped me out. I lost a little piece of my left foot and both of my legs were broken,” he explained.
Orlov received immediate care on the front lines and at two different hospitals in Ukraine that he credits with saving his life. But it quickly became clear that he would require extensive surgical and reconstructive work, plus skin grafts, to eventually regain full use of his limbs. That’s when Wasserson stepped in.
Finding a hospital
Wasserson called the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, ranked as the top orthopedic hospital in the U.S. and a leader in trauma care, where his wife had previously undergone back surgery. He asked if it would take on Orlov’s case.
“They didn’t even say, ‘Let me see.’ They said, ‘Absolutely, if his case is something we can treat, we want him here as soon as possible,'” Wasserson told CBS MoneyWatch.
A team of surgeons at HSS, including orthopedic trauma surgeon Dr. Duretti Fufa, reviewed Orlov’s x-rays and other medical records remotely to evaluate the scope of his complex bone and soft tissue injuries as well as open skin wounds.
“They reached out to me given the soft tissue injuries, and I agreed we’d be able to help in this case,” Dr. Fufa told CBS MoneyWatch.
She emphasized that the initial care Orlov received in Ukraine, including surgeries to the tibia and fibula bones in both of his legs, was critical to saving his life and limbs. “He had limb-saving surgeries in Ukraine, and had he not had surgery by their skilled surgeons there, he would not have been able to keep legs.”
Orlov’s girlfriend, Ashley Matkowsky, an American documentary filmmaker whom he met in Ukraine during the war, was also instrumental in helping ensure that he got the necessary care.
“She compiled his records from physicians who treated him at both a government and private hospital, and we liaised with her,” Dr. Fufa said.
Wasserson also reached out to a United Airlines board member, who arranged for the airline to cover the cost of Orlov’s flights to the U.S.
Funding 100% of the care
At HSS, Orlov has already undergone a number of procedures, from which he is currently healing. In Ukraine, it was unclear if he’d be able to keep his legs. Today, thanks to HSS, it looks increasingly like they will someday be fully functional again, according to Fufa. He is currently recovering from his surgeries; his medical team is monitoring him and will evaluate his condition once his bones heal.
HSS is covering the cost of all of Orlov’s medical care, while Wasserson is sponsoring him under the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ Uniting for Ukraine program. It allows Ukrainians to come to the U.S. for two years, provided that they have a supporter in the states to claim financial responsibility for them.
“I have agreed to take full responsibility for any financial issues related to his housing, health care, all of that,” Wasserson said of Orlov, who currently resides in an HSS-owned living unit in New York City.
His medical care and housing expenses are being paid for through HSS’s charity care program, according to Laura Robbins, head of global partnerships for the hospital.
“When these cases come to us, we evaluate them make a determination as to whether we can treat them,” she told CBS MoneyWatch. “And we commit to funding 100% of their care.”
“A key part of why people will seek out HSS is because of the clinical expertise to do the things they did with Orlov, which is take a shot at trying to save his legs,” Robbins said. “We’re known in the trauma world for really having the expertise and experience to say, ‘Wait a minute, maybe we can save this gentleman’s legs, which is what they’re trying to do.'”
“You can get almost anything done”
As Orlov recovers, Wasserson’s efforts to help Ukrainians escape the war continue. U.S. Rep. Susan Wild, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, recently honored Wasserson at the U.S. House of Representatives.
“He has helped build an entire support network coming to the aid of Ukrainians in need, assisting in the successful extractions of thousands of Ukrainians to safe havens in Poland, Slovakia, Moldova and across Western Europe,” she said.
Wasserson said he’s working more now as a retiree than when he was employed.
“I am busier now than when I was working full-time because then, it wasn’t lives — it was profits and losses, it was balance sheets. This is a whole different ball game,” he said. “In business, the urgency is always there to get the best results for your shareholders. But this is a stakeholder issue that is unparalleled to anything I have ever done in my life.”
Ultimately, he chocks up his ability to make a difference to the network he’s been building over the past 12 months.
“It’s like any other business. People ultimately make the difference, and if you know how to network properly you can get almost anything done in the world,” Wasserson said. “You need a lot of common sense. If you don’t have the ability to understand what buttons to push to make things happen, you’re going to go in circles.”
CBS News
Kash Patel, Trump’s pick for FBI director, targeted in possible Iran-backed cyberattack, sources say
Kash Patel, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead the FBI, was recently notified that he was the target of a potential Iran-backed cyberattack, two people familiar with the matter confirmed to CBS News.
The apparent hackers targeted his communications, but whether they succeeded and how much access they had to the data is still being investigated, the people said.
The FBI declined to comment. CBS News had also reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.
The news of Iran’s potential targeting of Patel was first reported by Semafor.
This comes after months of warnings from the FBI and other federal agencies of Iranian cyber activity targeting Trump campaign staff leading up the 2024 presidential election. In September, Justice Department prosecutors charged three members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps with launching a broad hacking campaign against U.S. officials, including those close to Trump.
In August, Microsoft said that Iran was increasing its efforts to influence the November election, and in one case had targeted a presidential campaign with an email phishing attack.
Trump and his allies, including members of his first administration, have been targets of Iran since the 2020 killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani in a U.S. airstrike in Baghdad, and U.S. officials continued to warn of those cyberattack campaigns in recent months.
The 44-year-old Patel served in intelligence and defense roles in Trump’s first term, including chief of staff to the secretary of defense. He was also designated by Trump to be a representative to the National Archives and Records Administration and fought a subpoena to testify before a federal grand jury in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case.
He is an attorney and staunch Trump loyalist who rose to prominence as an aide to former Republican Rep. Devin Nunes of California, fighting the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
He served on Trump’s National Security Council, then as a senior adviser to acting Director of National Intelligence Ric Grenell, and later as chief of staff to acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller.
CBS News
Trump considering replacing Hegseth with DeSantis for defense secretary post, sources say
President-elect Donald Trump is considering selecting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as his pick for defense secretary to potentially replace embattled Fox News host Pete Hegseth, two sources familiar with the transition told CBS News Tuesday night.
This comes after Trump and DeSantis attended a memorial for fallen law enforcement officers Tuesday in Florida.
The Wall Street Journal was first to report this story.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
CBS News
Defense for Nima Momeni claims Bob Lee did drugs with murder weapon in closing arguments
Attorneys for defendant Nima Momeni on Tuesday wrapped up their closing argument with a surprise video clip they claimed showed fatal stabbing victim and Cash App founder Bob Lee doing cocaine with the same knife used to kill him hours later.
Defense attorneys brought the case to a dramatic conclusion with their closing arguments in the defendant’s high-profile murder trial. The state has accused Momeni of fatally stabbing tech executive Lee in a remote part of San Francisco’s East Cut neighborhood on an early morning in April 2023.
Prosecutors have argued the deadly stabbing came after a heated discussion regarding his sister’s relationship with Lee and their ongoing drug use.
Video played for the first time inside the courtroom Tuesday showed Lee with his friend Borzu Mohazzebi appearing to consume cocaine outside the Battery club hours before the stabbing. But it was the object the pair used to consume the drugs that defense attorney Saam Zangeneh said is the same knife used in the murder.
“They buried it,” Zangeneh said of the video following Tuesday’s session. “I guarantee you, they didn’t know we found it. Because if they knew, they would have addressed it.”
The victim’s brother Timothy Oliver Lee said that’s impossible.
“Bob never carried a knife and Bob never did coke off of a knife. It’s just insane to me,” he said.
Using a cardboard version of the Joseph Joseph paring knife used in the fatal stabbing, defense Zangeneh highlighted black and white surveillance video at the end of his team’s closing argument, saying it was proof Lee had the knife all along.
The claim directly counters the evidence presented in the prosecution’s closing argument that Lee couldn’t have had the knife in his front jacket pocket. Surveillance footage from later that night showed nothing weighing that side of the garment down as it blew in the wind.
“He’s holding the same exact shape and size of the knife that was found outside the Caltrans parking lot. That’s the knife,” Zangeneh said outside the courtroom.
It wasn’t the first time the defense used theatrics during its closing arguments. Earlier, Zangeneh used a bag of sugar as a prop, assuring the judge and jury the plastic bag did not contain cocaine.
The moment sparked a tense exchange between the defense attorney and Lee’s former wife Krista, who let out a mocking laugh as he showed the video.
Zangeneh then turned to directly to address her, saying it wasn’t funny. Prosecutors quickly objected, with the judge intervening and restoring order.
“Outbursts during closing argument from a family member is such an unbelievably inappropriate, unprofessional and, candidly, rude thing to do,” said Zangeneh.
“He’s calling out Krista and people that are in the courtroom. That’s really painful for us,” said Timothy Oliver Lee. “Nima Momeni didn’t only kill Bob, but now he’s trying to kill his character; trying to kill his legacy. And that is something that we can’t abide. We can’t stand for that.”
Momeni’s defense attorneys made their final bid to prove their client’s innocence to jurors, saying that Momeni had no motive to stab Lee and trying to provide a lasting image reinforcing their claim that he acted in self-defense.
In criminal cases, prosecutors get the final word. During their rebuttal, the prosecution told jurors the odds for so many coincidences to fall into place to make Momeni’s story possible were like being struck by lightning 30 times.
They urged jurors to use common sense and return a guilty verdict. Their final words in court: “Do not let him get away with it.”
The case is expected to go to the jury for deliberation Wednesday. If convicted, Momeni faces 26 years to life in prison.
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings