tv NBC Nightly News With Lester Holt NBC January 9, 2025 4:00pm-4:31pm PST
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wildfires in southern california that have destroyed more than 9,000 structures. the historic fires burning out of control in the los angeles area. new images showing the scope of the destruction. at least five dead, including the first confirmed fatality from the palisades fire, the most destructive blaze in the city's history. officials warning the toll will likely rise. the flames burning tens of thousands of acres and now threatening critical communications towers. a staggering 180,000 people forced to evacuate. now families returning to find their homes burned to the ground. officials under scrutiny for their preparation and response. our team on the front lines as firefighters encounter yet another failing hydrant. also tonight, the major winter storm slamming the south from new mexico to virginia. and causing travel chaos, over 2,000 flights canceled across the country. the farewell to former president jimmy carter. the emotional state funeral at the national cathedral.
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bringing together all five living presidents. and then the late president's final journey to his hometown in georgia. and amid the utter devastation, the symbol of hope still standing in the ashes of southern california. >> good evening. and welcome. tonight in los angeles county, the smoke plumes parting long enough to reveal the heart-crushing extent of loss stretching across neighborhoods in the eye of those deadly fire storms. in altadena, two aerial images of a single neighborhood tell the story. one, a before photo of tree-lined streets and d most homes. the other, what is now left. block after block of utter devastation. tonight, multiple major wildfires still burning across more than 45 square miles of the sprawling county. from inland cities north and northeast of downtown los angeles, to the oceanfront enclave of pacific palisades to
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the west, where the first fatality from that fire was revealed today. and where this drone video captured a barely recognizable hellscape that was once a thriving community and tourist favorite. the fires continue to defy efforts to contain them. at one point, flames making a high-speed run at mt. wilson interfering with tv and communications towers. overall, calmer winds today aiding the fight against the most destructive fire in l.a.'s history. tom llamas is there to start us off tonight. tom, good evening. >> reporter: lester, good evening to you. what you see behind me here is a pile of misery, and it is not unique. there are several communities and neighborhoods and residential areas that look just like this. this was a shopping center and beyond that a school. and now you can't even figure out what it is. tonight, everyone in this area is praying that the winds don't pick up. a firefighter telling me that the smallest ember with those winds can turn into a
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blow torch. this is what the most destructive wildfire in los angeles history looks like. >> everything is gone. >> reporter: the toll of the devastation is staggering. thousands of structures already obliterated. more than authorities can even count. the burn area in the pacific palisades now bigger than manhattan. the fire killing five people. >> i think the death toll will rise. i hope i'm wrong, but i think it's going to rise. >> reporter: these apocalyptic conditions now in their thid day and the biggest infernos are still zero percent contained. this is one of the eeriest scenes we have seen so far, where the cars that were abandoned when people got stuck in gridlock and had to run for safety. a bulldozer came through to let fire crews out. those cars were spared but these cars right here were stuck in the inferno. you can see how hot it got. that's molten metal that was rolling down the bluff. and today, stunning video showing the threat to los angeles' infrastructure. as the eaton fire
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approached the transmission towers on mt. wilson, threatening radio, cellular, and broadcast signals citywide. roughly 2,000 firefighters are still stretched across the funt lines. but it's not enough. residents pitching in to save their own homes. >> this is a tragedy. >> you never think it's going to be you. and now that it is me, i can't tell you the amount of heaviness in this disaster. >> reporter: we met the champion family, who lost everything. >> what i would give to do dishes in our own house, which is like so basic, but things that you take for granted, all the life that we built here. >> reporter: and the threat is not over. last night, new fires ignited. near more heavily populated area. the sunset fire triggering rush hour evacuations in the heart of hollywood. miraculously, a break in the winds let crews attack the fire from the air, stopping the blaze before it could reach
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homes. these firefighters are going nonstop, 60 hours battling more than just the flames. >> how has your water pressure been? >> a big issue. we have dead hydrants so we have been having to go back to sunset boulevard to get water to come out here. >> reporter: the smoke hasn't cleared and anger is growing. many questions loom. what los angeles prepared? >> we will absolutely do an evaluation to look at what worked, what didn't work, and to correct or to hold accountable anybody, department, individual, et cetera. >> reporter: failing water pressure and hydrants leading to a heated moment. a fire victim challenging california's governor. >> why was there no water in the hydrants? governor. >> it's all literally -- >> is it going to be different next time? >> it has to be. >> reporter: while the cause of the fire is still unknown, the damage is incalculable. before and after satellite pictures show the story. on the malibu coast, a row of
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multi-million dollar mansions laid to waste. 40 miles away, this view from altadena. a middle-class neighborhood dotted with destructive fires. >> it's a wasteland. >> reporter: for those coming back, home looks like a hellscape. >> couldn't even recognize it on our way up here. we didn't even know where we were one block from our house. >> and tom, you mentioned there was a break in the weather. the winds were a bit more faveeral today, but the situation is growing more serious this evening. >> reporter: that's right. firefighters are still working around the clock. officials believe the death toll will likely grow as they check out more neighborhoods. and there's one more thing they're warning about tonight. that is looters. if you can believe it, people are coming to areas like this and stealing what little people have left. so far, there have been at least a dozen arrests. >> tom, thank you. the task of fighting such a massive area of fire is immense, and as morgan chesky reports, the struggle for water is complicating the fight on the front lines. >> reporter: tonight,
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a relentless firefight far from over. front line crews facing challenges that only start with the flames. >> what do we got going? >> what we have is the fire has already burned through here. >> what we're looking at right now could have been caused by a single ember? >> one ember could have caused this. >> reporter: we join los angeles fire captain in the pacific palisades. >> this hydrant has no water. >> reporter: where lack of water, critical to battling a still active wildfire, frustrated crews. this one from san francisco. >> what should the water pressure be right now, ideally? >> you want 50 to 80 is your ideal hydrant pressure. >> what have you got? >> i'm bouncing between zero, 50. it's not a consistent pressure. >> reporter: as nearby hydrants failed and water pressure fell, firefighters above switching from offense to defense. when you run out of water in that engine -- >> not much we can do then. >> this is our first job for the day. >> reporter: flames burning for precious minutes before any re-enforcements could arrive.
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>> had we had water earlier on in the firefight, we probably could have stopped it from getting this big. >> reporter: this is something we have not seen often, but when the hydrants are dry, crews have to rely on these tanker trucks because the fire waits for no one. the situation a familiar one for the captain, a 25-year veteran of the lafd. mere blocks away, another call coming in for another home up in flames. >> if we had any wind right now, completely different firefight? >> 100% different firefight. >> reporter: just feet away, a million dollar view burned beyond recognition. >> there's not even a single home from this entire viewpoint that we can see that has survived. >> if you had officials in front of you right now, what would you ask for to have had a proper firefight here? >> more firefighters, more fire hydrants, more air dropping capabilities. we need more of ask. >> reporter: tonight, these crews doing whatever they can with whatever they
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have. fighting a historic disaster head on. >> and morgan, this all coming out of a red flag warning. do those remain in effect? >> reporter: yeah, lester, they absolutely do. that's one of the big concerns ofthe crew we embedded with. one ember can travel up to two miles. that is why until the red flag warning expires on friday, everyone needs to stay on guard because a potential fire could pop up almost anywhere. lester. >> morgan chesky, thank you. >> the view from space shows the magnitude of the fire in altadena, just part of the fire zone. and for so many, returning home today, there was little left. gadi schwartz joins us. you spent the day in altadena. what did you find? >> reporter: lester, heartbreak. we found so much heartbreak. people coming back to nothing left at all. in fact, this building right here, this is the outlier because this building still has walls up. so many of the homes we visited today were down to the foundations. bunch of melted metal
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and piles of ash. in at dina today, desolation and eerie silence punctured by gas lines still spewing fire. in the destruction, a search for anything with meaning. this is everything you own. >> everything, and then, you know, now we're just trying to find something. i mean, i don't care. like my kid found a tea cup, half a tea cup. broke. she was thrilled. you know, i mean, what else can we get, man? it's gone, bro. >> reporter: as the flames descended at 4:00 in the morning, rupert garcia tried to fight back. >> this tree caught on fire. embers flying all over the place, onto the house. >> reporter: one ember even scorching his cheek. at what point did you realize, i'm not going to save the house? >> when my son-in-law grabbed me like this and said we have to go. i'm like, no, man. i turned around, i can't go, bro. 51 years i have been in this house. >> reporter: shortly after rupert was
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forced to flee the neighborhood, we arrived to find what felt like a hurricane of fire in the chaos, we spotted a horse alone and trapped in an inferno and ran to get help. this is firefighter garrett jumping into action. >> i was keeping him cool. >> reporter: today when we met up with him again, we learned the horse survived, but across the way, jose shows us what was the garage full of landscaping tools he just invested in. now his livelihood along with almost everything else gone in an instant. so often we hear they escaped only with the clothes on their back. >> i didn't get anything. look at my shoes. these are my house slippers. >> reporter: tonight, that is the shared and terrible reality. >> you work hard for your american dream. >> reporter: for so many in a community who came face-to-face with these flames. gotti schwartz, nbc news. >> earlier in the broadcast, we told you about the looting happening in some areas. now the sheriff announcing a curfew in the fire zones.
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steve patterson zoins us. what more do we know? >> reporter: the sheriff tonight saying there have been more reports of burglary, more reports of looting in fire zones like this. to combat that, more resources, more boots on the grou, including, we're hearing, the national guard expected to be active at both the eaton and pacific fire zones and yes, a curfew, if not implemented tonight, then tomorrow night starting at 6:00 p.m. every night to 6:00 a.m. with the goal being avoid further victimization of people offer suffering so much. lester. >> steve patterson, thank you. former president jimmy carter was remembered for his kindness, compassion, and character as four of his successors were among those who gathered for his funeral at the national cathedral. here's kelly o'donnell. >> reporter: the passing of a president offers a rare moment of national reflection. stirring traditions played out today to honor the life of jimmy carter. ♪ amazing grace ♪
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>> reporter: the 39th president brought together decades of his successors. their interactions appearing to set aside conflicts in politics and personalities. one handshake ended nearly four years of no contact between former vice president pence and the president he served. and mr. obama and mr. trump engaged in conversation. in his eulogy, president biden praised carter's example of leadership. >> strength of character is more than title and the power we hold. >> reporter: sons of the late republican president gerald ford and carter's vice president walter mondale read tributes their fathers had written. >> it was because of our shared values that jimmy and i respected each other as adversaries, even before we cherished one another as dear friends. >> we told the truth. we obeyed the law. and we kept the
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peace. >> reporter: remembered as a global humanitarian, to his family, a regular guy at home. >> my grand father was likely to show up at the door in some '70s short shorts and crocs. >> reporter: jimmy carter's long faithful journey ends tonight. forever a son of plains,o'donnell, nbc news. >> we'll take a break here. in 60 seconds, al roker and when conditions will calm down in california. plus, the major new winter storm hitting a big part of the country right after this. crohn's symptoms kept me out of the picture. with skyrizi, feel symptom relief at 4 weeks. many people were in remission at 12 weeks, at 1 year, and even at 2 years. don't use if allergic. serious allergic reactions, increased infections, or lower ability to fight them may occur. before treatment, get checked for infections and tb. tell your doctor about any flu-like symptoms or vaccines. liver problems leading to hospitalization may occur when treated for crohn's. ♪ control is everything to me. ♪
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ask your gastroenterologist about skyrizi. (vo) if you have graves' disease, your eye symptoms could mean something more. ask your gastroenterologist that gritty feeling can't be brushed away. even a little blurry vision can distort things. and something serious may be behind those itchy eyes. up to 50% of people with graves' could develop a different condition called thyroid eye disease, which should be treated by a different doctor. see an expert. find a t-e-d eye specialist at isitted.com welcome back. those on the front lines of the firefight in southern california are hoping for conditions to improve. al roker is here. any relief in sight, al? >> just a little bit, then it's going to get bad again unfortunately. the red flag warnings now still for 17 million people. wind gusts tonight 65-mile-per-hour,
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plus single digit relative humidity. the gusts redevelop tonight, especially over the hills and the mountains. they die down a bit and then latter part of the weekend into next week, they increase again, unfortunately. thanks to a warmer climate and persistent drought, more than half of the top 20 largest fires have happened in california in the last five years. right now, 86 million people looking at winter weather advisories, storm warnings from the southwest to the coast. big storm system now getting itself together, bringing snow to oklahoma, northern texas, 1 to 3 inches of a sloppy icy mix in dallas. 6 to 9 in little rock. 2 to 5 in charleston, and lester, we're looking for norfaulk to dallas, anywhere from a tenth of an inch of ice to even less going to cause some major problems on roads. >> all right, al, thanks very much. and coming up, the next struggle for many in los angeles. navigating insurance after the fires. what to know, after the break. disease... ...gritty eyes could be more than a rough p patch. disease... people with graves' could also get thyroid eye disease,
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even even before the wildfires raging through southern california, the state was facing a major crisis. thousands of homeowners dropped from their insurance. now, as liz krauts reports, many who lost everything could struggle to be made whole again. >> reporter: as wildfires continue to rage in california, one estimate says the insured losses are already at least $20 billion. for brianna navarro, the loss is incalculable. >> she loved her
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famably. >> reporter: she believed her grandmother perished at their home in the eaton fire. >> i thought she would be like 99, walking around. >> reporter: their house of more than 40 years burned to the ground. are you worried as you rebuild that you won't be able to get insurance anymore? >> possibly, yeah. it's difficult. where do you even start? >> reporter: seven of california's top 12 home insurers either policies over the d past two years. state farm which has 21% of the market share in the state, announced in march it was making the difficult but necessary decisions that would mean not renewing 30,000 home policies in the state. ending 69% of its policies in the now devastated pacific palisades. >> insurance in california is horrifying. >> reporter: in altadena, dustin and erin say they were dropped from another insurance company last year. dewas only last month they finally found a company thatat would give them coverage.
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>> i wonder how many other people weren't able to get that policy because you worked very hard to get it. >> reporter: more and more, californians are sterning to the state created insurance provider of last resort called fair plan. a temporary safety net offering basic coverage when people can't get insured through private companies with enrollment surging 123%. ricardo is california's insurance commissioner. >> reporter: when should people expect to see the money. >> it all depends. i know it's difficult. i want to make sure we get it as quickly as possible. weeks if not a month. >> reporter: experts say those who have suffered a loss from the wildfires should keep track of all expenditures, start going through photos and videos that can be used as evidence to show what was in the home, and document everything. something many here are doing right now. and the governor here in california telling me he expects these fires to be among the most costly disasters of our lifetime. so many losing everything in the process of being made whole just getting
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started. >> liz, thank you for that. up next, signs of hope amid the ruins. what our jacob soboroff found still standing in his old neighborhood. stay with us. i'm not waiting. if it's covid, paxlovid. paxlovid is an oral treatment for adults... with mild-to- moderate covid-19 and a high-risk factor for it becoming severe. it does not prevent covid-19. my symptoms are mild now, but i'm not risking it. if it's covid, paxlovid. paxlovid must be taken within the first 5 days of symptoms... and helps stop the virus from multiplying in your body. tang paxlovid with certain medicines can lead... to serious or life- threatening side effects or affect how it... or other medicines work, including hormonal birth control. tell your doctor about all medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements you take as certain tests or dosage changes of your other medicines may be needed. tell them if you have kidney or liver problems, hiv-1, are or plan to be pregnant or breastfeed. don't take paxlovid if allergic to its ingredients. stop taking and call your doctor right away if you have allergic reaction symptoms. serious side effects can include allergic reactions, some severe like anaphylaxis, and liver problems. these are not all the possible side effects, so talk to your doctor.
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constipation, and sleepiness. learn how abbvie could help you save. qulipta, the forget-you-get migraine medicine. finally tonight, the palisades fire destroyed so many how's of worship, but one is still standing tonight. and our jacob soboroff is there. >> reporter: everything across the street from the synagogue burned down.
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but the synagogue is still here. what's it like to see it? >> surreal. >> unbelievable. >> reporter: for rabbis amy and daniel, and the canter, seeing the synagogue standing amid so much devastation is staggering. look at this. this is the ash that came through the door. >> i can't believe it's still here. i'm so glad it's here. >> reporter: knowing what happened outside of these walls and seeing just this piece is -- >> the remnants of the palisades is right here. >> reporter: wow. this is the community in which i went to preschool. >> yes. >> reporter: my siblings had their
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bar zvahs here. >> this is now a refuge for the entire community, not just the jewish community. >> you could fill the sanctuary with your congregants who have lost their homes. >> at least this home is standing for so many people. so many of us. this is our home. >> when tragedy strikes and disaster strikes, we turn to our faith. that's what this represents. i sing this lovingly for our community to heal. ♪♪ >> and that is nightly news for this thursday. thank you for watching. i'm lester holt. please take care of
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