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tv   Justice With Judge Jeanine  FOX News  September 9, 2017 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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the people volunteering to help the thousands in shelters tonight. bill: they need it. julie: we'll see you, bill. "justice with judge jeanine" starts right now. judge jeanine: a live look at florida's residents who haven't left yet. welcome to a special edition of "justice." i'm jeanine pirro. the outer expands have moved in and tens of thousands are already out of power. with the brunt of irma a few hours away from lashing the florida keys and moving up the western part of the state. we have live team covering of what could be a history-making storm. we get a live update on irma's track in a few moments.
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but we begin with adam housley in key largo which is in irma's direct path. reporter: we moved from the oceanside to the bayside a few hours ago. we are in an area protected from the wind. the rain is starting to come down heavy. it picked up significantly since we moved to this side of the island. when we drove around earlier when there was still light you could see much of the keys is deserted. many of the people who normally stay for storms, many of those folks got out this time and said we are not going to challenge this, we are not going to test it. there are some here not by choice. folks trying to get a plane ticket and trying to find a place to go. here is what some of the reasons
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why they stayed. take a listen. >> we couldn't get out. our flights were canceled. we got stuck in fort lauderdale it wasn't worth it. and where can you go? you can't drive anywhere. so we are here. reporter: the power is out in parts of the keys. but not everywhere. our quadrant is still out. but there is widespread power out ands. the storm surge we started to see on the other side. you can see the water lapping over the docks. we saw four boat destroyed, blown up against the rock jetties. we are starting to see some of that same type of feel behind it. you are seeing those boats sway and move. anchors unwilling to hold them. you can tell, the rain is
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starting to come down. it depend on what the storm does. you can tell by the track, it changed a lot. people say it doesn't sounds like a lot. 10 miles this way or 10 miles that way means you are on the good side or the bad side. we are on the bad side and it will be a long 18-24 hours. judge jeanine: when you talk about a category 5 hotel, i'm sure a lot of people weren't able to get out or didn't expect it to be this bad. what is a category 5 hotel and how do you get into it. if it's full, then where do you go? reporter: some of the viewers have asked about it. when you come to these types of things is the last thing want to do is have authority worry about
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you. so you look for a hotel that mason brick built. and two stories up. our hotel on has windows on one side. only one window per room. and they have metal storm shutters that i closed down myself. they are locked so the wind can't pick them up. the roofs are generally cement. and we have a there are above us. a lot of the building codes were changed after andrew. if you look our. you don't want to go into a wood structure. you want something generally up and able to withstand the wind and water. here we could get depths of 9 feet. but this side maybe 3 feet of a storm surge. but we'll get a lot of rain and a lot of wind.
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judge jeanine: adam housley, thanks so much from dee key largo. our coverage moves north to the city of tampa which is readying for a hard hit from irma. mike tobin is there and joins us live. mike? reporter: the lights are still on here. but you have this familiar scene. board on the windows, sandbags by the doors. authorities say the time for making sandbags is over. they want people to get further north to higher ground. there are some people in the historic district, you have a lot of people still out enjoying the night life. i shouldn't say a lot of people. but you have people out defying the storm, wandering the
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streets. the mandatory evacuation zones are 15 feet above sea level and below. the barrier islands on the outside of pinellas county, a lot of people are not respecting the mandatory evacuation orders. they are not going to send sheriff's deputies to arrest anyone and they won't send deputies to rescue anybody when it gets bad and they put the deputies at risk. >> in the middle of this thing we are not going out there to get them. if you want to make the bad decisions, but you also batter consequences of those bad decisions. reporter: the sunshine state bridge going across the tampa bay will close when the winds
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reach 40 miles an hour. the other bridges, they will make a judgment call. if you are on the other side of the bridges in the mandatory evacuation zones and the bridges get closed. you are stuck. there is nobody coming to get you. at 2:00 p.m. is when local authorities expect the winds to hit this area. the old structured will get battered for 9 hours by hurricane-force winds. the following day monday 2:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. is when the storm surge moves in. that will take you through 6:00 p.m. which is roughly high tide. you will have a slot of water moving into -- have a slot of water moving -- have a lot of water moving in. they are asking people to respect the orders.
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get out of town now and don't come back until sheriff's deputies can make an assessment of the risk in the area. judge jeanine: when you are talking about people who are staying there who don't see it as dangerous. sheriff says he's not going to go get them and jeopardize his men and women on the force. do people think it gets better when the hurricane is over. i don't think people understand the next day is even worse, the storm surge. then the day after when you have got tour lines down. you don't have power and water and food. this is a long process. reporter: it doesn't seem to reach a lot of people. you have always seen the people who want to play in the waves. when it starts getting serious out there there is no one to come get them. you have people out drinking, they are in the bar, you can
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hear the music behind me right now. people who don't take it seriously. they are thinking they have been through this before, and they will make it through this one. one thing you heard from the governor on down saying you haven't seen a storm like this. 1921 is the last time tampa took a direct hit and it will last for a while. when the wind event is over, we haven't seen the worst yet. judge jeanine: mike tobin, stay safe. steve harrigan is in naples, florida also bracing for the worst from irma. >> it's pretty much a ghost town here. people are afraid of what they have seen from this storm already. they have largely gone the out of town. as far as the weather conditions go, we have seen gusts of winds in the high 40s. but basically a mild breeze and
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a light steady rain. it's so tough to imagine what we could be look at within the next 24 hours here in a city of 20,000 people. we could see sustained winds of 100-120 miles an hour. that sneens trees uprooted. outer walls of buildings flying. it all changes so quickly it could be deceptive. shelters have been filling up. you have got to feel for people on the road. especially people with families who tried to do the right thing. many vac situating coming west to get out of the storm. instead they have gone straight into it. we have seen the number of shelters increase. up to more than 30 shelt were including some stadiums. there were hours long waits to get into those stadiums. it's too late to run and they
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will right out with local officials. judge jeanine: president trump amoved emergency declarations for florida, south carolina, georgia, and the u.s. virgin islands. and he second co-ed governor scott's path for-mile-an-hour in the path to clear out. >> i ask anyone in the storms path to heed all instructions and get out of its way. government official who have been working so hard. i appreciate also your bravery. property is replaceable, but lives are not. safety has to come first. just get out of its way. my administration cities monitoring the situation around the clock and we are in constant communications with all of the governors with the state and local officials. we are doing everything possible to hef save lives and support those in need.
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we have never seen anything like this. together we'll restore, recover and rebuild and we'll do it quickly. judge jeanine: the big storm is moving. let's check its track with meteorologist adam klotz. adam: we begin to see a north movement. we are going to see a sharp turn and this will take southern florida in its cross-hairs. you are getting close enough seeing outer bands of rain, and some of the strong winds on the very edge beginning to move in. you get into the miami area and they have seen gusty winds up to 40 miles an hour, and you are looking at 20-30 miles an hour.
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we are going to wait for that storm to get closer through the overnight hours. the tornado threalt across the entire area. we have seen storms on the eastern side of the state. this typically happens when you get a big hurricane. on top of everything else, the threat will continue through the overnight hours as we continue to see a couple of those storms. it moves over warm water overnight, intensifies a bit. likely a category 4 storm tomorrow. landfall all 8:00 a.m. tomorrow morning. as it runs up the coast it will weaken slightly. tampa we are look at a category 3 storm. monday we are look at a cat 1 storm in southern georgia, and
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atlanta will see at least tropical force winds. let's time this out for you one more time. this is a future radar. you are seeing the outer bands beginning to hit areas of southwestern florida. it will be lifting into naples and fort myers running up into tampa by the afternoon into the evening hours. running overnight and continuing to lift. very heavy rain and strong winds that moves that entire direction. when you get the strong winds, that's when you start to talk about storm surge. areas along the florida keys with the wind pushing water up 5-10 feet. i have had questions, what is storm surge. that's not the wave, that's the base height of the water. waves will be cresting on top of that. it's a dangerous situation. from the florida keys, 10-15
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feet of storm surge. if i run you all the way up the coast, 5-10 feet with strong winds. again, that's the base level. waves crashing on top of that. storm surge will be a big part of this story. judge jeanine: we have been hearing about hurricanes, flooding, storm surge and major winds. now we are hearing about tornado warnings. how does this all play together? does one happen before the other? adam: the initial threat will be the wind. it's that wind that helps spark tornado warnings. tornadoes are typically short-lived when you talk about being associated with a hurricane event. but then you start to talk about the storm surge and you will see leftover flooding. but initially folks will be worried about the wind coming here in the next 24 hours.
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judge jeanine: things are getting serious in florida. i'm going to be joined live by the chief of police in the florida keys next as our special coverage of hurricane irma continues. endless shrimp is back at red lobster. and we went all out to bring you even more incredible shrimp and new flavors. like new nashville hot shrimp, drizzled with sweet amber honey, and new grilled mediterranean shrimp finished with a savory blend of green onions, tomatoes, and herbs. feeling hungry yet? good, 'cause there's plenty more where these came from. like garlic shrimp scampi, and other classics you love. as much as you want, however you want them. but hurry, endless shrimp won't be here long.
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judge jeanine: welcome back to our live coverage of hurricane irma. as we look live at miami, the big storm moving in overnight is expected to hit the florida keys first. bill reid knows a thing or two about hurricanes and the way they movant damage they can bring. i'm learning about the path of a hurricane and what it's followed by, first you have the winds, the rain, the hurricane, the storm surge, possible tornado, and then all of the inevitable things that happen, power lines and lack of food and clean water. what can we expect in the next few days in florida? >> well, given the track that it's forecast to go on now, it's bad for the west coast and inland wherever the eyewall of
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the storm goes. you will have considerable damage caused by the wind. a building code is pretty good on the newer structures. but on mobile home parks and older structures. but the storm surge will occur from san marco island all the way up to the fort myers area. judge jeanine: the storm surge when you talk about mobile home parks, it could overflow and cover the whole mobile home. judge jeanine: i was in a flood in hurricane agnes. when we got back we could see the water was on the second floor and everything in the house was traumatized. the water is almost violent as it goes through a home and goes through all the items in a home.
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>> that's correct. people underestimate the power of moving water. with the moving water and the storm surge it's very devastating. judge jeanine: the people who might not have gotten out, but then do -- is there an option for them right now or is it too late to move? do they stay where they are? >> they probably already made that decision. nighttime, the adverse with the is in the keys. so people are pretty much stuck where they are. further up the peninsula you have time to act. if your officials told you to leave and you still have that option i highly even courage to you do that. judge jeanine: what about the animals. how do they fare in all of that? i have nightmares of visions of
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horses during hurricane harvey in houston. they can't get out. people in tampa just hearing in the last 24 hours hearing they are going to get hit. what happens to the animals? >> unfortunately there will be some loss of life. we lost a lot of livestock down the coast when harvey came in. but there is no way to shelter them when they are free rank. with horses the barns aren't built with the standard of wind reduction like you have in a house. the horse might be safer to let out into the pasture and free to run. judge jeanine: joining me is the chief of police in key west. we preashate you taking the time to talk to us in what i'm sure is the beginning of a busy night for you. what's going on where you are?
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>> we are currently in the police department. hupg -- hunkered in, called in our police officers. we are not responding to any more calls for service. the conditions are too dangerous to expose our officers to the elements. we lost power and at the police department we are running on emergency power. we are starting to feel the impact of the storm. the worst is still to come. judge jeanine: the men and women in law enforcement. the public doesn't understand they face life and death situation everybody day. they have to understand right now you are the people who are pretty much trying to preserve life putting your own lives at risk when everyone else is man dated or required to flee.
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>> we have done everything possible to warn and urge and beg everybody to evacuate key west. so anyone who remains here now has done so at their own risk. there is no first responders that are going to be able to help anyone. the hospitals have been closed for two days. so anyone who did not evacuate, didn't make have very smart decision. and there could be unfortunately life and death consequences. judge jeanine: what about the inmates, your local jail. i don't know if there are prisons in the vicinity of where you are. what's going on with the criminal life? >> our sheriff evacuated the jail starting last night or early this morning. so the jail has been evacuated.
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so right now as i said, we are not responding to any calls for service it's too dangerous for us to do so. once the storm passes us and we'll just have to make those decisions at that time when the situations come up. judge jeanine: what about food and water for the officers and first responders? how are you handling that and sleeping arrangements? >> we have sufficient provisions to carry us for several days. once the storm passes of course we are going to need to have some help coming in here and help us out. so we do have provisions here for the police officers. we just -- it will be tense and uncomfortable for a while, but hopefully we'll survive this and make it through and be able to
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help people here again. judge jeanine: chief donald lee from the keys. thank you so much. god speed to you and all the men and women who so often put their lives on the line for the rest of us. thank you. next our covering moves to daytona peach. rick leventhal is there live and we'll check in with him in a moment. our live coverage on "justice" continues in a moment. (hard exhalation) honey? can we do this tomorrow? (grunts of effort) can we do this tomorrow? if you have heart failure symptoms, your risk of hospitalization could increase, making tomorrow uncertain. but entresto is a medicine that was proven, in the largest heart failure study ever, to help more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto.
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>> if you have been ordered to evacuate, you need to leave now. this your last chance to make a good decision. judge jeanine: florida governor rick scott pleading for residents in his state to heed the evacuation warnings ahead of hurricane irma.
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right now fox's rick leventhal is live in daytona beach with more on what's going on there. rick: we have a strong, steady wind off the atlantic. but tropical storm force wind aren't expected for another hour and hurricane-officers winds late sunday night. the boardwalk is virtually deserted. a lot of the stores have board up and closed the hurricane shutters in advance of this storm. it won't be as bad as it will be on the west side of this state. it could do some damage, particularly to power lines. earlier today we were out at daytona international speedway which is a staging area. and the resources will be brought in when the power gets knocked out. there are 16,000 men and women who are part of the restoration workforce for fp&l.
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they are being staged across the state. they serve 5 million customers across the state and they expect 3.4 million outages. >> in years past we were in the great northeast area for superstorm sandy. now it's our turn. we are pleads we have been able to assemble this workforce that continues to grow. reporter: the military vehicles being used by sheriff's departments and s.w.a.t. operation. but they are also being used for storm rescue and recovery operations. the paramedics can't go out in their ambulances when the winds top 40 miles per hour. but they can go out in these
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vehicles if they have to do rescues during the storms. >> everybody is focused how the storm shifted to the west. that does not might's any less dangerous for us, flooding, high winds, possible tornadic activity. we are asking that you heed the advice. we want to save lives. that's our ultimate goal. reporter: the sheriff's department will do that if necessary. they won't be answering typical 911 calls during the height of the storm. they will respond if it's a life-threatening situation using that mrad. judge jeanine: you talk about 3.4 million outages. the whole electrical grid which is something we on justice have
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been concerned about for years, can be impacted to the point where you don't just get it back up and working again. rick: that's absolutely corrected. i talked at length from that spokesperson from fpl about that. you are talking about 65-70% of the power customers in the state who could be knocked out. they may have to do major repair to the electrical system. when you look at the storm from the bottom to the top, you are talking about knock out millions of customers, it will take an extensive amount of time and material and resources to repair the grid and to repair the infrastructure you mentioned. this could be a monumental task like they have perhaps never seen.
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judge jeanine: it's also the issue of whether the parts they are going to need are readily available or whether they will even be made in this country which is another issue. but rick leventhal, thank you so much. judge jeanine: let's move to fort lauderdale. joining me is the mayor. thanks for calling in tonight. you were expecting the worst of this before the shift to the west coast. but you are still going to get hit hard. how are you convincing people it's still bad although people watching the news say it's not a 5 anymore, it's a 3 or 4 or it's going to the west coast. how do you convince people of the deadly danger of this storm? >> we have been doing it all week. and i'm actually extremely impressed.
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i was on our beach, and it's never ever quiet on a saturday night. i was the only person down there along with police officers and firefighters. people are taking this seriously. we had a couple tornadoes touch down in the outer bands. we had loss of power. so yes we are not getting hit with what we thought we were going to get hit with. but this enough going on that people understand this is one big bad storm. and we all need to stay inside and hunker down. judge jeanine: how many evacuees do you think there are in fort lauderdale? >> we had tens of thousands of people evacuate from the bare yerd island and to friends and family west of the low-lying barrier island. west of the low-lying areas.
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we have 200 miles of navigable waterways in fort lauderdale. we had great cooperation and i could not be more impressed with the at student of the neighbors and citizens. judge jeanine: i worry about senior citizens not just those in a senior citizen assisted center or home where there can be a decision made for all of the residents. i wonder about that one senior citizen living alone who doesn't have the ability to get out. how do we finds those people? or doesn't have family. doesn't have access. are you confident you found as many people as who hay not have the ability to even make contact? >> i think part of the issue was, this storm was so big for so long, we had three, four days
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notice. this wasn't one where this snung on other parts of the state as you are hearing. they didn't expect to see this storm take this wide turn. so we have had all week to prepare for it. i feel terrible for my colleagues upstate that thought by the time it got to them they were thinking this would be a washout. we have had all week. we worked the neighborhoods, we worked our networks. i even had some people emailing and calling me from up north and say could you visit my dad who wouldn't leave his condominium. they are not taking it seriously when we call. judge jeanine: are you finding that some of the resources that you have given the shift somewhat to the west coast to the north are being shifted to those areas that may be hit harder? and what about the jails and the
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inmates out of the jails? >> we were fortunate with that. our jails were not in the low-lying areas and the eastern portion. the eastern portion, some of it is the most of expensive properties in fort lauderdale. the jails were further west. so the evacuation of the east side and the low-lying areas went smoothly. we didn't have to do a lot with the jails. we did do a large homeless sweep in fort lauderdale. a lot of the homeless, even though the storm is coming, they are not on top of the issue. we did pick up a bunch and moved them to safer, drier places. even a few of the homeless refused assistance, not realizing the impact. you have been covering this. but this thing has been going on 5, 6, 7 hours. we mad a tornado touch down a
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mile and a half from where i am. even though we are not getting the brunt of the this, this one storm that people recognize it is a mess and it's intense, and you can't make light of it. judge jeanine: be safe, mayor, and thanks for joining us. next an update and look at irma's track. we'll head back to the florida keys for a live look, and i'll talk with a county official who is preparing for the worst. our live team coverage rolls on in a moment right here on justice.
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jean * welcome back -- judge jeanine: welcome back to this special edition of "justice" let's look at west palm beach. adam, how far out is the eye of the storm? adam: we have been track it as it's been work its way along the coast of cuba. that's a fairly general western movement. we have been waiting for to it make a sharp turn and head towards florida. that just happened the last 15, 20 minutes. there it is popping up to the north. that's going to start to be the trend. we'll watch this overnight running back over warmer water. currently the winds are at 120 miles an hour. but all the forecast data shows as this runs over that warm water, it will pick up intensity.
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the winds are going tomorrow get higher. we are look at wave heights as the category 3 storm spins 30-33 pete. the water is very warm at this point. you need 80 degree water too fuel a hurricane. you start to see some of these waters 86 and 87 degrees and knocking at the door of 90 degrees. that will be the energy this will need to get back up to a category 4 by early tomorrow morning. here is one of our tropical models, we like the european model. we are now at 10:00 a.m. for you tomorrow morning. some of this heaviest activity moving across the florida keys into southwestern florida. you will continue to climb up into naples and fort myers.
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later in the day you will start to see tampa affected and this will start to speed up a little bit more. we can be talking about the strong winds across those areas as well. here is our arrival of hurricane-force wind. category 4 storm picks up that energy. everything you are looking at is red. that's hurricane-force wind. everything you are looking at into the yellow or orange color. that's a tropical storm force wind. you are talking about a huge area. they will be stretching up into central georgia in the coming days, judge. judge jeanine: when you talk about hurricane-force wind and tropical storm force wind. how do you know when the worst of it is there. is there a howling? what are you talking about with
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these winds? adam: you will know when you get the wind into triple digits. people who have been through them say it sounds like a train coming count tracks. it's incredibly loud and you will feel the houses move, especially wooden structures. when you get to 100-mile-per-hour winds it can take down a home. you will know when you are in it, judge.
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judge jeanine: hurricane irma has already proven deadly. john nixon is a retired search and rescue aircraft commander. he's also a resident of florida and a mandated evacuee. he joins us from tampa. when does the search and rescue start? how do you know when it's over? because there are so many levels to this storm. >> the levels of search and rescue according to the risk. if there is no active calls, we'll wait until conditions mode
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rate so the aircraft can take off and land. if they have good visibility we can see what they are looking for. judge jeanine: how do you get the call? if i'm 8 years old and i didn't have any family and didn't evacuate. who do i get in touch with so they call you to save me or it doesn't work that way? >> always dial 911. in search and rescue or on the coast. dial 911, or radio channel 15. if you dial 911 the operators will get the information to the rescue operations center which is up in orlando because of the hurricane. they will give it to the rescue sources and the helicopters and aircraft or small boats.
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judge jeanine: john, you have been threw this before. this hurricane has been referred to as one of the biggest in history. a nuclear hurricane. what do you expect to see in the next 24 hours? >> the impact zone will be complete devastation. if there is any houses there or structures. going in from that, you will start to see the tornado. they are specifically on the northeast quadrant. you can almost follow the path of tornado following the hurricane, especially when they go iland. any time they spend time inland we can identify from the air the storm's track from the track of the tornado. they pretty much go in.
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judge jeanine: john nixon, thank you so much. god help all those people. our live coverage of the massive hurricane irma will be back in a moment. for my constipation, my doctor recommended i switch laxatives. stimulant laxatives make your body go by forcefully stimulating the nerves in your colon. miralax is different. it works with the water in your body to hydrate and soften. unblocking your system naturally. miralax.
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the six that is it for us
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tonight. thanks for watching. special things to law enforcement, personnel and other first responders in irma's path. godspeed to all of them and all of the residents in the danger zone tonight. we live in the greatest country on earth and we see all of the preparation that is being done. harris buckler takes over for live coverage of hurricane burma continues, right now. >> you need to listen to local evacuation orders. i am a dad and grandfather. i love my family more than anything and i cannot imagine life without them. do not put your life for your family life at risk. right now is the right time to do the right thing for your family. >> hearing from paul muller governor urging the state to stay safe is working irma nears landfall now. this is it. the time for making sandbags is over and driving miles and miles out of the hurricanes reach is over

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