• Sunday, April 4: One year after being held hostage...

    It was on Easter Sunday, one year ago, that an American cargo ship captain, Richard Phillips, held hostage by Somali pirates, was freed in a dramatic rescue by Navy sharpshooters. At the time, Phillips was portrayed as a hero, who traded his life, to save those of his crew. The reality behind the news reports wasn't quite so simple.

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    On Sunday, Captain Phillips tells NBC's Matt Lauer the harrowing true story of those four grueling days on a tiny lifeboat: a tale of terror, despair and, ultimately, quiet courage.

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    Join us for a riveting story, "Rescue on the High Seas," on Dateline Sunday at 7 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. CT.

  • Friday, April 2: A family's secret, and a Hansen investigation

    In most investment scams, victims don't realize what's happened until it's too late. But when one woman became suspicious about a financial opportunity she'd heard about from her mother, she saw an opportunity to go from investor to investigator. The problem was, to help expose a mulit-million dollar fraud, this daughter would have to risk something far greater than money.


    Video: Members of the Flanigan family talk on TODAY

    Dateline NBC's Chris Hansen goes inside a shocking financial scheme that was simply "Too Good to be True."

    Also: Dateline NBC's Keith Morrison reports on a family bound together by a secret so traumatic that it eventually tore them apart 27 years later.


    Excerpt: 'First, she asked me to pull the trigger'

    See it Friday at 9 p.m. ET, 8 p.m. CT.

  • Sunday, March 28: Meet a town who came together

    A lot of towns have struggled over the last year or two, including the one we're going to take you to. What's different about the people of this community is that what some would see as adversity, they saw as opportunity. Everyone, from girl scouts to architects, bankers to bikers, rose above their own difficulties to rescue a family - and in the process, became one.

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    Ann Curry meets the folks who came together to form A Circle of Hands.

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    Join us for America Now, A Dateline special, on Sunday at 7 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. CT.

  • Friday, March 26: A recipe for murder, a Valentine's mystery

    It's a dramatic undercover operation to save a wife and mother - and on Friday, Dateline takes you inside. What's unusual about this mission is that it was all secretly recorded by the FBI. And more unusual still, the woman at the center had no idea she was in danger. NBC's Keith Morrison reports on a "Recipe for Murder."

    Also: If you're a fan of courtroom dramas on TV, you might think every criminal trial ends with a bombshell: Maybe it's a surprise witness, a curveball question, an eleventh-hour confession. Seems there's always some bolt from the blue. But the fact is that kind of thing almost never happens in a real trial. Yet it did in the case you'll see Friday night. One last unexpected twist in a story full of surprises... starting with a murder on Valentine's Day. NBC's Dennis Murphy reports on "The Valentine's Day Mystery."

    And on Sunday at 7 p.m ET/6 p.m. CT: A struggling town helps a family in need and finds purpose, inspiration and hope. Dateline NBC's Ann Curry has the story: America Now: A Circle of Hands, a Dateline special.

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    Join us Friday at 9 p.m. ET, 8 p.m. CT and Sunday at 7 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. CT for Dateline NBC.

  • Friday, March 19: Two shocking stories, from all corners of the U.S.

    Police believe a young widow is behind the deaths of two men, in two towns, hundreds of miles apart. But ten years later there are new questions, and a new ending. NBC's Hoda Kotb reports.

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    Also: Dennis Murphy reports on the brutal murder of aspiring Playboy model, Paula Sladewski, in Miami this past New Years. Included in the report are never seen before photos and home video, as well as in-depth interviews with her boyfriend, Kevin Klym, and bouncers from the club where Sladewski was last seen alive.

  • Kate Snow to join NBC News as a Dateline NBC correspondent

    Kate Snow will be joining NBC News as a correspondent for "Dateline." Beginning later this spring she will contribute to the newsmagazine and other NBC News properties. The announcement was made today by NBC News President Steve Capus.

    "This is a great day for NBC News," said Capus. "Kate is a tremendously talented and respected journalist. This signifies our commitment to growing 'Dateline' as it continues its ratings success in primetime, and our belief in investing in the future talent of NBC News."

    "'Dateline' has enjoyed a great period of success and we are now even more fortunate to be welcoming Kate to our team," said executive producer David Corvo. "She's the whole package. She can cover breaking news, she can interview, she can write, and I'm happy she'll be doing all that at 'Dateline.'"

    Previously, Snow was the anchor of the weekend edition of "Good Morning America" since the show launched in September 2004. Based at ABC News' headquarters in New York, she also contributed to various ABC News broadcasts as a correspondent, frequently reporting for "Good Morning America," "World News with Diane Sawyer" and "Nightline."

    A political junkie with a deep interest in world events, Snow covered a wide range of stories for ABC News. She was one of the first ABC News correspondents on the ground in Haiti after the devastating earthquake there and covered everything from search and rescue efforts to incredible stories of survival.

    Over the years, Snow has reported on stories from the economy to immigration, medical advances to Oscar fashions, energy policy to Katrina evacuees. She has traveled to remote Africa, covered conflict in Lebanon and hiked the Badlands for "Good Morning America's" "Seven Wonders" series. And Snow has conducted exclusive interviews with newsmakers from President Barack Obama to billionaire Richard Branson, from Senator Ted Kennedy to Beyonce and Bono.

    Snow has covered several presidential elections in her career. In 2008, she covered the campaign of Hillary Clinton from start to finish. For some eighteen months, Snow did double duty as a weekend anchor and the lead correspondent on that campaign during the week. She also covered the Democratic convention in Denver and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's bid for the vice presidency. In the summer of 2008, Snow landed the first interview with former President Bill Clinton in the wake of his wife's failed White House run. In 2004, she was the first network correspondent to travel with Sen. John Kerry during his campaign for the White House and she also covered President George W. Bush's re-election campaign that year.

    Snow joined ABC News in July 2003 as "Good Morning America's" White House correspondent. In the summer of 2004 she moved to New York to launch the weekend broadcast.

    Before joining ABC News, Snow was a correspondent with CNN. She covered the Sept. 11 attacks from the rooftop of a church near the U.S. Capitol, was the first television journalist on the scene of the anthrax attacks and spent weeks covering the 2000 recount in Florida. Prior to her Washington assignment, Snow was based in Atlanta with CNN Newsource. In that role, she covered the Kosovo conflict from Albania and Macedonia.

    Snow began her news career as a reporter with KOAT-TV in Albuquerque, N.M., where she also anchored the station's weekend morning show. She has also worked for National Public Radio and NBC Radio.

    Snow was part of the ABC News coverage team to be recognized with the distinguished duPont Columbia University Award for her coverage of the death of Pope John Paul II in April 2005. She is also the recipient of a Cornell University Alumni Achievement Award.

    Snow is a graduate of Cornell and holds a master's degree in foreign service from Georgetown University. She serves on the national board of Big Brothers Big Sisters of America. Snow and her husband, Chris Bro, have two children.

  • Friday, March 12: A woman with a questionable past

    It started with a divorced doctor calling a dating service. But his date wasn't quite what she appeared to be. And just over a year later, after their whirlwind romance and wedding, police would be saying the same thing about his death.

    It looked like a suicide, but detectives discovered that this new woman in the doctor's life had an interesting past: Not only had she been married four times before, but one of her ex-husbands believes she had tried to kill him. Had she finally succeeded with husband #5?

    NBC's Dennis Murphy traces Della's web Friday at 9 p.m. ET, 8 p.m. CT on Dateline.

  • Friday, March 5: Dateline returns with 'The Desperate Hours'

    Dateline returns this Friday, March 5, at 9:00 p.m. ET with "The Desperate Hours," the story of a woman's courageous efforts to free her husband from kidnappers. The two-hour report journeys into the murky world of kidnapping and corruption in Mexico in a way that's never been shown before and includes interviews with victims of a crime who are bravely speaking out for the first time.

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    "The Desperate Hours" takes viewers back to June 2007 when Eduardo and Jayne Valsecas' fairytale life turned into a nightmare that's becoming more and more common when Eduardo was taken hostage after dropping their children off at school. With the Valsecas' personal accounts, the report chronicles the months that followed intimately as she worked with a hostage negotiator in a race against the clock to free her husband. "Dateline's" Keith Morrison reports.