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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  August 28, 2011 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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reverse a lot of their blockage. >> heart disease could be as rare as malaria today if we put into practice what we already know. >> it's possible to keep everybody from having a heart attack with education, with knowledge, with information. now the question becomes are people going to do this? >> reporter: i hope i have given you food for thought today. if this makes you want to overhaul your diet, especially if you are a heart patient, talk to your doctor. look, we have a long way to go in this country. i hope you will join me. together we can work for the last heart attack. i'm dr. sanjay gupta. thanks for watching. irene is not done yet. today was some of the worst we have seen all weekend. in a word, it has been a deluge. all day heavy rains from
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tropical storm irene overwhelmed creeks and rivers across new england. quaint main streets became muddy torrents. this is a little village north of new york city in the catskills. just look at the force of this water at woodstock, vermont. those are propane tanks picked up and carried away. nothing can escape the current once it falls in. not even cars. trapped in the raging waters this sedan was batted around like driftwood. fortunately no one was in the vehicle. >> whoa! get out of here. grab the mic. >> that's a reporter with wcbs
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at asbury park, new jersey. she and the crew thought they were far enough away from the water, but they were wrong. on long island large sand berms were piled up to protect the lifeguard station. it worked for a while. but in the end the building smashed into the pier. hello. thanks for joining us. i'm martin savidge. don lemon is off tonight. irene may have lost hurricane status but as a tropical storm it's been just as menacing. it made landfall again this morning in new york city as a category 1 and in recent hours has been sweeping through new england with nonstop wind and rain. now the center of the storm is at the u.s./canada border near montpelier, vermont. irene's impact is deep and widespread and won't be forgotten. at least 18 people lost their lives from florida to new england. power is out to about 4 million homes and businesses. it might not come back for days.
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along the east coast, many people are thankful irene didn't live up to expectations. in vermont, it appeard it is opposite is happening. people were caught off guard by the onslaught of the flooding from irene. the state ordered no early mandatory evacuations. now rescue teams are scrambling to save people. it looks like the worst may have happened with the report of a woman missing. much of the action is happening in vermont where cnn's gary tuchman is in brattleboro. gary? [ no audio ] >> reporter: unfortunately, marty, throughout vermont there is a lot of chaos and confusion. there are hundreds of creeks and brooks like this. this is the wetstone brook but it is no longer a brook. it now resembles the colorado rapids. throughout the state there have been reports of people who have gone missing.
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at least one person is presumed dead after falling into a brook like this. what happened here is startling. i want you to see over here. this was a narrow brook. now the land has eroded. you can see this blue building is an art studio. there are yoga studios and offices inside. it is about to collapse. the ground underneath eroded because of the water that's gone into the brook. at any time this building could collapse. you may see lights flashing inside. there is an alarm going off. we were talking to someone who has an art studio inside the building. he is terribly sad. he said his office is the fourth window from the right on top. he wanted to go inside to recover his belongings. i advised him not to. this building could collapse at any time. the authorities have just arrived on the scene. this state is not used to hurricanes and tropical storms. last time they had a hurricane here was 1938, 73 years ago.
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that was a terrible hurricane that killed 60 people in southern new england. also -- actually it was 600 people killed and 1700 injured. they're not used to this type of thing. these brooks and creeks flood when nor'easters come but so much water fell in a short time in vermont. this is what they are dealing with. they expect more problems tonight in northern vermont including in the capitol of montpelier. you can see right now at any time. this building could be soon plunging into the wetstone brook which is now rapids. marty? >> thank you very much, gary. we asked vermont's governor why he ordered no mandatory evacuations as others did. he said nearly everyone in vermont lives near water. >> the problem with vermont is all of the downtowns are in the low lands. our population centers are near
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rivers and streams. you can't get away from it in a little state like vermont. we are a state of mountains with rivers flowing through them. it's not like a mid western state or some of the big southern states where you have huge areas of dry land. we don't have that here nor does new hampshire. >> more than 100 roads are closed in the state due to flooding. let's get the latest now on where irene is. for that we turn to chad myers at the cnn headquarters. >> it's a wide storm. like it hasn't been the whole time really. we have 40 miles per hour winds in boston. we have 30 miles per hour winds in new york city and we had winds in montreal, canada, tonight strong enough to blow windows out of a building downtown. it's the nightmare new york city was fearing. it happened 300 miles from where the storm made landfall.
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most of the convection is up into quebec right now. there is a little light rain around but not enough to cause flooding. the flooding is already happening. it's already running off. this will be a storm that we see tomorrow. we're going to see video of this all day tomorrow. you're going to say, wow, how did that happen? we have flood warnings from maine to delaware. nearly every county that did pick up rain has hit something flooding at this point in time. there are many dams that are very close to failure across parts of new york, vermont, new hampshire and maine. if at any time tonight you live in an area where you hear sirens or hear the police saying get out, it's time to get out now, something very bad happened up river or upstream. these dams are being over topped with water going down. some being eroded. this is the real threat tonight, especially now that it's dark.
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don't drive around in it. you can't tell how deep the water is. don't try to get around until tomorrow when daylight comes up. it's very dangerous out there. >> thank you for the update. when we come back, we'll go to new jersey where intense flooding is now the major concern after hurricane irene and later, we visit the man convicted of the 1988 pan am 103 bombing. ith vitamins and mineras balanced to support your energy and immune function. everyday benefits from advanced formulas. discover the complete benefits of centrum silver. everyday benefits from advanced formulas. discover customersl are getting five percent cashback bonus at the pump... and at many of the places their summer plans take them. it pays to switch, it pays to discover. whether it can be done safely and responsibly. at exxonmobil we know the answer is yes.
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we're going to show you the view of brattleboro, vermont. that's where gary tuchman was. new jersey has been hard hit by irene. the storm has moved on but intense flooding is a concern not just along the coast but inland. poppy harlow is standing by in millburn now. what do you see? >> reporter: it's died down in terms of the chaos on main street. what you still see behind me is workers around the clock trying to clean up their businesses that have been decimated by the flooding. we had massive flooding. look at this mexican restaurant. take a close look inside here. it is full of mud and dirt. it was flooded with water. the basement has ten feet of water in it. you've got all these small
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businesses on main street trying to recover. they went through this ten years ago in hurricane floyd. they know what it's like. we haven't talked about the residents today. we have steve and fran here. it's completely dark. what's upsetting you is it will be a long time before power goes back on. tell me your situation. >> the power went off last night. i called and they're telling me it will be seven days before power is turned back on. next sunday afternoon we'll have power. >> reporter: how does that make you feel? i know you work from home. how difficult is the situation for you and your neighbors? >> it's hard to live that way. the neighborhood is black. the street lights don't work. power lines are down. you will run over live power lines that are live. it's impossible to live like that.
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i have called psg & e, pleaded with them to repair the lines and they said, no, you have to wait your turn. >> reporter: they don't have the resources. >> they don't. >> reporter: your house is really damaged in the major warnings are we had in the new york/new jersey area this winter. you just got through fixing that. >> everything. >> reporter: now what? >> my back room, my family room that was repaired is down. a big tree branch hit it and the new roof is gone. on the other side of the house we had massive flooding. it was coming from the roof. it went all the way down right through the house down to the basement. no power. i have three dogs. my next door neighbors have two premature twins on apnea monitors and no power. >> reporter: just to explain what's going on here, the water has receded from the road and irene wasn't as bad as many people thought it would be.
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here in places like middleburn new jersey, people are feeling it. it will last for the next seven days unless something changes. this is what we are now feeling from the storm. it's here for a while. >> we hope that things improve faster than they are predicted to. thank you. in pennsylvania officials blame irene for the death of four people there. now that the winds and rains have passed, the water are rising. residents describe shoulder high water on the streets of philadelphia where the mayor lifted the state of emergency around noon. 50 miles to the northwest in the lehigh valley one of our ireporters came across a small lake at center valley parkway and route 309. farther north in the poconos another ireporter came across a stream that drastically broke its banks. heavy rains saturated the ground which made things worse. hurricane irene took a swipe at new york, but it could have been a lot worse. we will assess the damage when we come back.
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and we'll talk with general russell honore about what states did right and wrong in preparing for the storm. helping strengt. caltrate delivers 1200 milligrams of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d plus minerals. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. caltrate helps women keep moving [ bedistracted driving. ♪ [ disco ] it accounts for 25% of car crashes. and it's why the best agents help safe drivers get a lower rate. - exactly. - oh! [ announcer ] we are insurance. ♪ we are farmers bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ but it's not always easy. at regions, we have the tools and expertise to really help you find your balance. like the freedom to access and monitor your accounts anytime, anywhere with online and mobile banking. real guidance and solutions from a regions personal savings and debt review. plus, at regions, you'll get the award-winning service people are talking about. it's financial control - well, like you haven't had before.
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at this hour, all eyes are focusing on this small town of vermont, brattlesboro and the critical hours expected in the early morning hours of monday morning. we'll watch developments there. a building clearly in jeopardy. new york city is soggier tonight because of hurricane irene. most of the city is relieved it wasn't worse. carter evans is in manhattan with the latest. new york is beginning to get
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back to normal. this area where i am, battery park was under water. it flooded this morning. it was also under evacuation but now people are back in their apartments. you can see the lights on. how's this for a sign of resilience for new york city? that's the new world trade center under construction now. construction workers will be back on the tower tomorrow morning. >> i went by the world trade center site this morning. all the cranes, some were taken down. all was secured. back to work tomorrow, i hope. the memorial will be open for 9/11. >> reporter: getting back to work is a different story. the subway system isn't back up and running. in fact it won't be ready for tomorrow's commute according to mayor bloomberg. they have to inspect the tracks and run empty trains over them first. buses will be running tomorrow.
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it will be limited service. the staten island ferry is operating and all new york city airports open again tomorrow morning. for everyone else they have to drive into the city and imagine what the traffic would be like there or battle with 14 million other new yorkers here in the city for one of 30,000 taxis. it will be a difficult commute. carter evans, cnn, new york. >> that's not going to be pretty. it's been 40 hours since hurricane irene made landfall in cape lookout, north carolina. how did the states do in their preparation? could they have done more? what should they be focusing on right now? retired general russell honore joins us now. he led the efforts in hurricane katrina. what did they do right? >> the communication was excellent. governors, mayors throughout the threatened region came on television, put their reputation on the line and said evacuate. this is what it looked like
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based on science, based on the weather report. every time they brought in the national hurricane center to give their best estimate. that was excellent. for the people in the affected area. the other thing is all the government working together. that was a beautiful thing to see. hopefully it will work that way every day. in some of the disasters we are faced with. and the other piece is the evacuation. and taking it into consideration we have people in hospitals that could be flooded. get them out early. easy to get them out and you will save more lives if you get them out before the flood as opposed to taking a risk, hoping it doesn't happen. >> that's good news. where is the area that needs improvement? >> right now bev about 4 million people if i remember the count without electricity. many of those people will have claims because they have property damage from trees. i think before the major
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disasters the government might want to communicate more with people while they have power, while they have the internet up and say, hey, if you have damage, this is what you need to do, this is where you need to go. tomorrow will be chaos. people have roofs off, where do they go? what paperwork do they need? it's frustrating. the other thing we have to get at some point in time is a conversation with the american people about tree maintenance. >> that's true. trees bring down power lines and that's why everybody waits a week or more. >> everybody is into the green zones but we have to have a balance between how we manage the trees and many of them leaning over power lines. you can see them in atlanta, any major city. people love the trees, but they cause enormous disruption to the economy and the amount of money it takes to put them back up. we have to fix that. >> let's talk about going forward tomorrow. what's your major concern? >> getting the power back on.
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getting food distribution to people who live in isolated areas. in the back roads of virginia and throughout the midatlantic and even up in back country new york where people are isolated. they can't get out and the food and water supply will start to diminish. where will they go? another thing we could have done more is tell everybody in every county where the distribution center would be so they know where to try to get to tomorrow if they need food, water or medical care. >> general, thank you for your insight. >> thank you. >> the outer banks of north carolina took heavy damage. some 2,500 people are now cut off from the mainland. next, an aerial tour of the damage. we'll show it to you. then good news for air travelers and your monday commute. airports will be open. we'll have the details ahead.
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long island they caught the brunt of the storm. susan candiotti, how are things looking now? >> reporter: you know, this area was supposed to be in the crosshairs of irene. two things were predicted and came true. there was flooding. and there were power outages. from the east end of long island, montauk, boats sweeping away and some homes were flooded. others experienced localized flooding. power outages? more than 400,000 customers remain in the dark on long island. one million customers throughout new york. at this hour, as you can see, the cleanup work is continuing at this hotel which is a few feet below sea level. consequently the lobby was flooded with sand and muck. tonight they have been sweeping out the mud from the first floor
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lobby and are still using water to blast away the debris and try to shine thing up. they did not, however, lose power here. late in the afternoon, governor cuomo showed up and took a look around. congratulated new yorkers for being prepared. >> if we had to do it again we would. i'm sure there was an economic consequence to it. we couldn't afford that. we couldn't afford it more than a loss of life, significant property damage and i think because we acted the way we acted we sustained much less damage in the long term. >> reporter: certainly the damage isn't as bad as many worried it would be. everyone glad irene is over with. well, almost. there is still some cleanup that's continuing. back to you. >> we wish them good luck on
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that. appreciate it very much. hurricane irene cancelled thousands of flights, but we have good news for the monday airline commuters. your travel outlook is ahead. meanwhile, the news isn't so good tonight in brattleboro, vermont. there is a building in jeopardy and probably not the only one as flash flooding threatens most of the state. any questions? no. you know... ♪ we're not magicians ♪ we can't read your mind ♪ ♪ read your mind ♪ we need your questions ♪ each and every kind ♪ every kind
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union, new jersey, today after hurricane irene passed through town. the video sent in by ireporter michael ramas. irene just won't quit. right now it has weakened to a tropical storm and moving from the u.s. into canada. drenching rains flooded areas across the northeast. and the danger is far from over. at least 18 deaths now blamed on irene so far. floodwaters are rising in many areas. more than four million homes and businesses without power and it could take days to get electricity flowing to everyone again. president obama is warning many americans aren't out of harm's way. he's promising swift federal assistance to victims from the storm. irene is more of an inconvenience for major city areas like new york, laguardia and jfk airports will reopen monday morning.
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and new york city will restore subway service at 6:00 a.m. eastern time. it could be days before major cities like washington, philadelphia and new york running ton normal transit schedules. alexandra steel has a look at the commute. >> who's getting back on track and who's still off track? travel beginning to get its legs back. you may need a pen or pencil for this. if you're flying in or out of new york city, chicago is good. boston has flights in or out today. new york city did not but they will tomorrow. laguardia, the flight is taking you in or out tomorrow. both arrivals and departures tomorrow at 7:00 a.m. jfk and newark, arrivals at 6:00, but departures commence at noon tomorrow. that's the deal with airports. in terms of mass transit, 4 million people a day in and around new york city take the subway. ultimate shut down unprecedented
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to say the least. trains will re-open tomorrow. the one through seven open by noon tomorrow, the first to get online. after that the remainder, we'll see at the earliest at 3:00 in the afternoon. so you heard the governor of new jersey saying if you don't have to go to work tomorrow, don't. you can see why. this is the tip of the iceberg. in terms of bus service, 2 million every day. big numbers. limited service has begun. restoring service and they are doing the bus service in this arena and this manner. manhattan first, the bronx, queens and picking up brooklyn. also in terms of the staten island ferry, it's open today and will be tomorrow. holland tunnel as well. and the trains, number one thing off track is amtrak. really philadelphia is the dividing line. philadelphia north to boston, cancelled, no service tomorrow. philadelphia south to washington where there are a lot of
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commuters, you are up and running and good to go tomorrow. so that's just a little bit. a pencil or pen would have been a good idea. i'll do a cheat sheet online for you. >> thanks. much more on the damage caused by hurricane irene still ahead. first, our nic robertson tracks down the libyan man convicted of the pan am bombing in 1988. it's a cnn exclusive in two minutes. so i took my heartburn pill and some antacids. we're having mexican tonight, so another pill then? unless we eat later, then pill later? if i get a snack now, pill now? skip the snack, pill later... late dinner, pill now? aghh i've got heartburn in my head. [ male announcer ] stop the madness of treating frequent heartburn. it's simple with prilosec otc. one pill a day. twenty-four hours. zero heartburn. no heartburn in the first place. great. excuse me?
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we are staying on top of the news with hurricane irene but today the national council said it will not extradite al megrahi. the man convicted in pan am flight 93. jut minister insisted, quote, we will not give any libyan citizen to the west, unquote. megrahi may be the last man alive who knows precisely who in the libyan government authorized the bombing. nic robertson tracked him down and joins us with this exclusive report. nic? >> reporter: it was relatively easy to find him. we had a photograph of his house. we went to the neighborhood where we thought he was, asked
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store keepers and found it. we found his villa in an up market part of town. at least six security cameras and flood lights outside. this is where he's been living for the last couple of years. let's knock on the door, see if we can get an answer. hello? for 15 minutes or so, nothing. i'm not sure they have heard me so let's try the last ditch means. that's just shout into the wall. hello? then all of the sudden someone comes. nothing prepares me for what i see. megrahi apparently in a coma, his aging mother at his side. >> we just give him oxygen. nobody gives us advice. and some food by injection. >> reporter: mm-hmm.
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>> if you see, his body is weak. >> reporter: he'd been expected to die almost two years ago, the convicted pan am bomber lives. only just. this wasn't the way he looked when he was released from a scottish jail two years ago. he came home to a hero's welcome, freed on compassionate grounds because doctors said he would be dead in three months. almost immediately he began renovating this palatial house. money no object. it doesn't take long before you realize looking at the marble here on these expensive fittings that it appears megrahi was being paid off handsomely for all the years he spent in jail. in the two decades since the bomb exploded over lockerbie killing 270 passengers, crew and townspeople it seemed the secrets of the attack would die with the bombers.
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megrahi always maintained he was innocent. a month ago in a rare public sighting moammar gadhafi had him wheeled out for a pro government rally. i'm seeing him now tr for the first time in two years. he appears to be a shell of the man he was, far sicker than he appeared before. has he been able to see a doctor? >> no. there is no doctor. there is nobody to ask and we don't have any phone line to call anybody. >> reporter: what's his situation right now? >> he stop eating and he sometimes is come in coma. >> reporter: he goes unconscious? >> yeah. we just sit next to him. >> reporter: all that's keeping him alive, they say, oxygen and a fluid drip. i asked about demands he return to jail in scotland? >> my dad, he's still in the
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house. if you send him to scotland he will die by the way here or there. >> reporter: do you know how long he has left? >> nobody can know how long he will stay alive. nobody knows. >> reporter: it seems i have arrived too late. he's apparently in no state to talk. whatever secrets he has may soon be gone. there may be a few former government officials around who may know the details of what gadhafi's involvement was, who made the decisions, but megrahi has maintained his innocence. many people have seen him in libya as a fall guy for moammar gadhafi's enterprise in bringing down the aircraft. so potentially, he would be perhaps one of the only people who at this stage had nothing to lose. now that gadhafi is gone he doesn't have to fear him. nothing to lose by pointing his finger at those he believes were responsible. marty.
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>> why won't the national transition council extradite megrahi to the uk? >> reporter: the reason they are giving is they don't have an extradition treaty with any country. the fact is with britain they do. one was agreed in 2009. a special one. but there are perhaps bigger reasons here. the reason gadhafi had megrahi brought back to the country, to libya, is because megrahi is from an important and large tribe here. a tribe that gadhafi needed to have on site to support him. now it's a tribe that the national transitional council wants to win away from gadhafi and bring to their side. if they would have sent megrahi out of the country they could forget support from his tribe. they need it now to build the government. a lot of the country in the south is still tribes favorable to gadhafi. there is a lot to play for here
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by the national transitional council. >> a very powerful report. nic robertson, thank you very much. 270 people lost their lives on that day in 1988. many of the family members and loved ones felt betrayed when scotland freed al-megrahi. how will they feel knowing he's close to death? bert ammerman joins me on the phone with me a man who lost his brother in the bombing and led an organization. thank you very much for joining me this evening. you probably saw the report there. what did you think? >> i'm happy that megrahi, as far as i'm concerned can't die soon enough. whether he dies in libya or comes back to the united states or scotland, at this point is irrelevant. >> the fact that the ntc says they will not extradite him, does that bother you?
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>> no. this all changed, martin, a couple of weeks ago. as i have been saying over and over when people asked me, the big fish is gadhafi and his sons. as long as gadhafi and his sons are eliminated or arrested we could try gadhafi for the bombing of pan am 103. i would support that. we have to stay focused and have gadhafi and his sons eliminated. if we do, my brother and the other 269 people didn't die in vain. >> do you think there is a doubt that al-megrahi is as ill as he appears in nic robertson's report? >> yeah. i think when he was released two years ago i villified the obama administration, the scottish government. it was ludicrous to say he would be released on compassionate grounds, a man convicted of massacring 259 people at 31,000 feet. it was obvious he was released for oil. we were proven right on that. two years later here we are and
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i have to praise obama. he has stood by the nato process. without him gadhafi would not be almost out of power. i'm angered with the politicians, in particular the republicans who said we shouldn't be in libya. if there is anywhere we should be it's libya. not iraq, not afghanistan. we went into iraq with false pretenses. we are supporting a corrupt government in afghanistan. but in libya, the man who massacred americans at 31,000 feet that's where we should be. to have him eliminated. >> how important is it for you and other others to hear someone in the libyan government own up to this? >> it's critical. there was a foreign minister in the last month or so who said gadhafi did order this. i remember i as if it was
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yesterday. and the other man who was indicted. people in the scottish police told me again and again, if either of them are found guilty you have state sponsored terrorism. there is no question in our mind gadhafi was involved. >> do you think you are being cheated out of the death of al-megrahi if he dies soon? >> no. because at this particular point i remember when i met with president bush in april 3, 1989, i said to him then and i maintain it that this never should have been in the criminal arena. this was a political act, an attack on the american flag. we didn't have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. the british government, the german government never wanted to have the truth be told. here we are 23 years later and i think that we're going to finally see justification with gadhafi eliminated. >> bert ammerman lost a brother on that flight. thanks for joining us this evening. >> thank you.
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>> next hour, more on the end game in libya including a look at the flamboyant and sadistic lifestyle of moammar gadhafi's family including son hannibal and his wife in a mansion. a woman who worked as a nanny. hear how she was tortured for failing to keep a toddler quite. that's ahead on cnn. when we come back, we'll look at amazing images taken by you. first this programming note. he had the most powerful job in the country but his toughest job was saving his own life. tonight at midnight, dr. sanjay gupta and former president bill clinton look at the signs, tests and lifestyle changes that could result in the last heart attack at midnight eastern on cnn. and at many of the places their summer plans take them.
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all weekend we have been receiving incredible photos and videos from our ireporters. josh levs looked at them all and picked the best. >> our ireporters have been doing a tremendous job telling the story. this map shows we have been receiving ireports from throughout the path of irene when it was a hurricane and a tropical storm. let's look at the video right here.
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this powerful video comes from brattleboro, vermont and says this is usually a vermont brook that flows quietly through town. look how it changed today. now west haven, connecticut. that's a restaurant area, busy street with the tables outside. my goodness. look what happened when irene came gushing through. obviously the area was mostly evacuated aside from people around. he said some people were there out of pure curiosity who wanted to see what irene did. he was among them. you can see it there. some of what irene has done. now over to jersey city, new jersey. this was taken by adam rice at
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the waterfront. there were evacuations but not for him. only those on the first floor of his building. you can see the waters come gushing in early sunday morning as irene came barrelling through. look at this picture from north carolina. you can see the devastation in north carolina. that one's from chad stewart in nags head. to see any of the pictures yourself you can go to open story at cnn.com. click on any of them to see images. you can see pictures from all over the region. this is from bronxville, new york. a car poking out over the water, just a little bit above. one more picture here. south beach sea wall in connecticut. there was a sea wall here now you can see what happened. it's dissolved into giant crumbles of rock. join the story at ireport.com.
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send your photos, videos and story. we'll share them right here. back to you. >> vermont is the state that did not order mandatory evacuations but ended up feeling the fury of the storm. these are live images. we'll have a live report ahead. e '80's woman: hit it, mr. butters. ♪ ♪ take on me... ♪ ....take on me ♪ take me on... anncr: there's an easier way to save. get online. go to geico.com get a quote. 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance. two of the most important are energy security and economic growth. north america actually has one of the largest oil reserves in the world. a large part of that is oil sands.
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the view from my second floor. it is completely under water. probably five feet under water right now. it's everywhere. it's all the way back in the woods, as far as you can see. there's garbage in the yard in front. my truck is under water up to the hood. so that's ruined. we'll check back later. bye. >> that's irene in the backyard of nags head, north carolina sent by chad stewart. on hatteras island, the storm washed out the highway in several places. now some 2,500 people are cut off from the mainland. brian todd is with the national guard. he joins us from north carolina. brian? >> reporter: martin, we got the aerial tour and then landed on
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hatteras island. we got exclusive access. the only way to get there is by chopper. we went in with the national guard and saw highway 12. it runs north and south. this key section of the highway was destroyed. not only destroyed. it looked like an earthquake hit it with the hurricane. the road was chopped to pieces by the storm surge. it caved in. there are downed power lines and now the ocean is running over it. this is a key section of highway 12 which connects hatteras island to a northern island of the outer banks which can connect to the mainland through bridges. hatteras island is cut off. 2,500 people are stranded at least temporarily because of that. they decided not to leave. they ignored the mandatory evacuation order. we talked to some of them and we'll bring you some reports later. the devastation at least in the key section is significant. that leaves 2,500 people stranded at least temporarily. we saw a lot of flooded out
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roads, a home that was burned as well as being hit by the hurricane and is ashes now. people on hatteras island feeling the after effects now. now they have isolation to deal with. >> how long do you think the isolation could last. >> reporter: that's interesting. they will have an emergency ferry for food and supplies starting tomorrow. there may be a couple of ferry services but they are slow. they have a limited capacity to take in supplies. the governor and staff told people to have at least three days of supplies ready. people we talked to did have that much but we are almost two days since the hurricane hit them. they have another day and then have to rely on the ferried supplies which will be very slow. >> we'll check in with you again in about 20 minutes.
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lots of water and little power. those are the challenges rhode island is facing this hour. still the governor appreciates how well his state avoided major flooding. kate baldwin reports from providence. >> reporter: as irene heads north the focus is cleanup and recovery. the big problem continues to be power. lots of damage sunday and throughout the state. at its peak the national grid said half of the state was without power. state officials warn this could be, in their words a multi day event. it could be days before all of the power is back from the force

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