Scott Pelley investigates the boldest assault ever on a facility containing weapons-grade uranium, a still-unsolved crime that could have had calamitous consequences.

The military heavily relied on unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAV's, like the Shadow and the Predator drones. Military officials say the drones have vastly improved since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

The FBI undercover agent who brought down high-level mobsters tells how he infiltrated the Gambino family and shows his face for the first time, undeterred by the Mafia's penchant for revenge. Armen Keteyian reports.

The officer who led the army's Delta Force mission to kill Osama bin Laden after 9/11 reveals what really happened in Tora Bora, Afghanistan, when the al-Qaeda leader narrowly escaped. Scott Pelley reports.

Kidnap victim Shawn Hornbeck speaks out for the first time with details about his incredible story of survival in an exclusive interview with 48 Hours' Troy Roberts.

Steve Kroft descends into the Large Hadron Collider some call it the "big bang machine" - that took billions of dollars and 9,000 physicists to build in the hope it will provide valuable insights.

Sex - Drugs - Then Muder, In Depth report on a plastic surgeon's risky affair with a patient turns deadly. Troy Roberts reports.

"In Full:" The cold truth in Alaska - a crime of money, power, greed and sex. Susan Spencer reports.

The president of Afghanistan demands that the U.S. military curtail its use of air strikes against insurgents in his country because they are killing too many civilians

Former Marine and writer Bing West has spent a total of 20 months with American forces in Iraq. West tells David Martin that military strategy is finally turning Iraq around because leaders are listening to U.S. troops.

Minimally conscious people (immobile but not in a vegetative state) are being re-evaluated for degrees of consciousness many thought they never had.

A Florida socialite is found strangled, unveiling a secret life of dangerous lovers and a bombshell no one was expecting.


Tony Blair's 'Peoples' Princess'