wikileaks raising blood pressure once again. this is a gush of battle details from the frontlines from a reported assassination attempt on hamid karzai to raids gone wrong. we are talking six years, 92,000 documents of blow-by-blow pictures of what our troops are up against on the ground in afghanistan. and here's more. "the new york times" reports suspicions that pakistan's military spy service is helping the taliban. the taliban is using portable heat-seeking missiles against u.s. aircraft. secret commando units are working off a capture kill list of 70 insurgent commanders. julian is defending the move. >> the material doesn't reveal just cases by the u.s. military. of course, as the u.s. military is reporting on all the abuses by the taliban and suicide bombers and ieds going off and so on, so it does describe the abuses by both sides in this war. and that's how people can really understand what is actually going on and whether they choose to support it or not. >> joining me now from london, our senior national correspondent nick robertson and rezla sayid. nick, we'll start with you. does this compromise the security of our allies as members of the white house have clearly said? >> it certainly is going to have some sources looking at what they are saying, who they are saying it to and what are the consequences if they get caught as a result of these types of leaks in the future. if you are compromising your sources, then you are compromising your source. is anyone going to die as a result of this? well, the site that has leaked it said this never happened before. this brought about changes in government, changes in leadership and policy, but never the death of anyone. but as far as a read, an initial read goes so far. it doesn't appear to sort of put anyone's life in immediate danger, but it is going to cause some compromises, that is for sure. >> okay. so, nick, you and i well know there are levels of classification, so how classified were these documents? >> secret, not top secret, and they go out of their way to say that. there's a lot about the special forces that only comes sort of into these reports because there were other army units on the ground with the special forces when they were doing the operations. there are documents there that are not for foreign eyes. that is not to be shared. it would seem coalition forces despite the fact that we are told there's good intelligent sharing cooperation in afghanistan and pakistan by the units states and all the allied nations fighting there. so it doesn't seem to go right to the top, but what it does is this huge broad stratus of understanding and the tiny details it gives you across the whole spectrum, it may not go to the most detailed stuff, but you get insight into what's going on there. >> rezla, there are all times of journalists and newspapers pouring over the documents. "the new york times" reports that with a hidden hand, pakistan's military spy service guided afghan insurgency, but then the guardian reports there's no smoking gun. so what's your take? you are there in islamabad. >> reporter: it will be verified, but you can argue there's no smoking gun, but it's the sheer volume of the reports that make them compelling. it is important pakistan has heard the allegations before, the allegations that the spy agency is playing a double gham. game. on one hand, helping nato militants across the border in afghanistan, and on the other hand, secretly working with the afghan taliban to fuel the insurgency. some of our viewers may be asking why, why in the world would pakistan help the afghan taliban? it is important to know here in pakistan, there's state and foreign policy based on india. they are obsessed with india. they fear end yay may be trying to surround them with their growing influence across the border in afghanistan. and many officials in washington and analysts are worried they are maintaining relations with the afghan taliban to counter the growing influence in afghanistan and to secure ultimately an allie in kabul once u.s. forces pull out. when you read these wikileaks reports, some are going to say, yes, the leaks are still there. the pakistani officials all day aggressively rejecting them, but the reports are going to add suspicion to the spy agency here or the isi. >> we give pakistan a billion dollars a year in aid. how is this going to affect u.s./pakistan relations already tense? >> reporter: it certainly doesn't bode well for already fragile relations, but in talking to analysts, they don't think in the immediate run it is going to impact them significantly. they point to recent events that include a lot of praise from washington going to the pakistani military. just last week the u.s. endorsed the pakistan giving extensions to the pakistani chief's ten your. if these suspicions about the isi were deal breakers, you wouldn't hear the praise coming from washington. are they concerned about the suspected links with the isi and the afghan taliban? certainly. are they a deal breaker? no, is this relationship going to be continuing to be a fragile one, an uncertain one, definitely. >> nick robertson, thank you so much. the leaks compromise our security. jim jones says the united states strongly condemns the disclosure of classified information by individuals and organizations which could put the lives of americans and our partners at risk, and threaten our national security. he continues to say this will impact our ongoing commitment to deepen our partnerships with afghanistan and pakistan. this websites the rememberation as a clearing web information site. a dozen civilians were killed in iraq, including two unarmed journalists. that is one of the big controversies for the nonprofit site run by a loose band of tech-savvy volunteers. wikileaks operates in several countries, including swede enand iceland, specifically because the nations offer legal protection to the disclosures made on that site. one of two missing soldiers mising in afghanistan has reportedly died. local afghan officials say he was killed in a firefight with taliban insurgents at the logar province. the other sailor is being held captive. the u.s. military is offering a $20,000 reward for any information. it is day 98 of the gulf oil disaster, and bp's ceo tony hayward is on his way out. there are report that is the company has decided to replace him sometime today. hayward has been under fire over his handling of the crisis and the self-pitying comment that he wanted his life back. he may soon get it. bp says no final decision has been meat yet. crews and vessels returned to the site of the spill after tropical storm bonnie chased them away. the storm evacuated and it cost valuable time. it will take several times before the time resumes on the relief well. how are you doing, d.c.? it has been a rough 24 hours, that's for sure. brutal thunderstorms killed at at least two people in the area on sunday and knocked out power for hundreds of thousands of people in d.c., maryland and virginia. the race is on to get everyone back on the grid. it is supposed to be over 90 degrees in d.c. today. getting to work this morning won't be a picnic, either. lots of traffic and a lot of lights not working. metro d.c. is part of the severe weather pattern this morning. heavy rains in the midwest, flooded roads in chicago, a big hole punched in a dam in iowa. jacqui jeras, what a busy morning. what a weekend. i was trying to think of the one weather phenomenon that didn't occur this weekend, and the only thing i could come up with was blizzard. pretty extreme, but we have serious moments. i want to talk more about the dam fall your in northeast iowa. we had incredible amounts of rainfall that caused record flo flooding on the river here. it is a nine-mile lake called lake delhi. it etchtied in a matter of hours flooding hundreds of homes and cabins. it is primarily a recreational lake. so people like to use this for boating and fissioning. amazingly, nobody was injured when this happened. and the sirens did go off to warn people that they needed to get out of their homes. a couple things i want to show you to put this in perspective for you. we'll kind of show you where this is in northeast iowa. you can see it is a river and a reservoir in that area. there are a couple small towns nearby including monticello, which was evacuated. here, the river gauge is from this area here. there are flood warnings still in effect across parts of iowa as well as into the chicagoland areas. most of the rivers have crested now and are beginning to recede, so we should see improvements. and the weather is looking so much better across the midwest and the northeast with cooler conditions, but one part of the country, kyra, still looking terrible is the southeast. we'll have details on what to expect there coming up in just a few minutes. thank you, jacqui. here's the eyewitness talking about a tug bar slamming a boatload of tourists with deadly results. >> hey! ferry! ferry! whoa! whoa! >> we'll have more on this in a moment. the authentic, the rare, the hard to define. to those who'd climb mountains or sail across seas... for the perfect vanilla or honey from bees. to the lovers of orchards where simple is grown, who treat every bite as a world of its own. to those always searching for what's pure and what's real... from we who believe... we know just how you feel. häagen-dazs. great. well, with every laptop, you get a geek. so, take your pick. 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[ male announcer ] buy any laptop and get geek squad support for six months. online, on the phone, or in-store. we are going cross country now. getting a better idea of the moments just before and after that deadly collision between a tug barge and a tourist duck boat earlier this month in philly. saturday the u.s. coast guard released dramatic audiotapes from the cash that hurled 37 people into the water and killed two passengers. >> hey! ferry! ferry! ferry! whoa. whoa! whoa! >> this is freedom. >> yes, sir. one of the duck boats off penn's isla island, looks like they got run over by a barnl, one of the duck boats. i'm going in to pick them up. >> roger, captain. how many persons are in the water? >> i don't know. i'm going to get the people. >> the bodice of two hungarian tourists were found days later. in suburban atlanta, pretty compelling surveillance video from a commuter train platform. this 47-year-old who is visually impaired didn't see the edge of the platform. she walked off it and onto the tracks as a train rolled into the station. a good samaritan leapt into action, got her off the tracks and out of danger just in the nick of time. the woman and her family are appreciative to all who lent a helping hand. >> that's because i was walking. >> had it not been for god's grace and mercy in that young man, we would be doing a whole different story. >> i really just want to meet him and show appreciation. for him to get that done -- >> the good samaritan has yet to be identified. former illinois governor rog blagojevich had testimony come to an unexpected halt last week when blagojevich didn't take the stand as promised. he says that he made the decision on advice of his attorneys. he was impeached earlier last year amid accusations he tried to raffle the u.s. senate seat previously held by president obama. major clean up in chicago today after a weekend of serious flash flooding. meteorologist jacqui jeras has more on this in the cnn weather center. >> what a mess, kyra. the midwest has been hit so hard with flooding, and not just in the last weekend, but this the last month or so. check out these pictures that we have out of chicago for you. what happened is we had an incredible amount of rain friday night and into saturday morning. there you can see many small rivers and creeks rose. a lot of flash flooding. people were forced from their homes. lots of basements were flooded. we also had flooding not just here in the suburbs, but downtown chicago. and several of the interstates, at least parts of them, had to shut down as a result of that. a huge mess in the chicagoland area. still many warnings in effect across the area, but many of the rivers are receding at this hour. now, that storm system is finally on the move. our weather pattern has finally changed just a little bit, and that's going to allow chicago, milwaukee, iowa to begin to dry out now. we don't think we'll see much for rain in the area. probably not at least until wednesday, so that gives you a good three days here to dry out. the frontal system dropped southward now, so the big focus will be into the tennessee river valley as well as into the deep south. now, the good news is we are not really expecting any severe weather with this. just pop-up showers and thunderstorms. but we could see flash flooding. and mostly urban flooding heading into heavy downpours. as much as an inch or two per hour with the thunderstorms. high pressure then building in across the upper midwest. and the high pressure is bringing in breezy conditions into the northeast. and it is really providing so much relief from all the heat. but south of the front, that heat is going to continue. take a look at what the heat index is already across the southeast. it already feels like 92 degrees there in little rock, arkansas. we had a plethora of record highs in the southeast and east yesterday. look at that, charlotte, 101. we had 98 degrees at washington dulles. and heat advisories are in effect today across parts of the carolinas and the deep south. the worst of it in this area including charleston will feel like 115. maybe a smidge more than that this afternoon. still really, really dangerous, kyra. we think the southeast is still going to be dripped in the heat throughout much of the week ahead. >> wow, jack kentucky, thanks. secret war documents from the fields of afghanistan. more than 90,000 reports now posted online. coming up, we are talking to one of the first reporters to get his hands on them for a closer look at what's inside. this is our pool. ♪ our fireworks. ♪ and our slip and slide. you have your idea of summer fun, and we have ours. now during the summer event get an exceptionally engineered e-class for 1.9 percent apr or lease one for $689 a month. checking top stories. six years, 92,000 classified military documents leaked. the website wikileaks does it again much to the chagrin of the white house saying this puts the allies at risk and jeopardizes national security. day 98 of the oil gulf disaster, and bp ceo tony hayward may soon be out of a job. they are on their way back to the spill area after tropical storm bonnie chased them away. two u.s. sailors believed to have been abducted from militants is reportedly now dead. the second sailor possibly wounded and being held prisoner. we'll be back in a moment. wikileaks does it again. it is a gush of battle details from the front lines. from a reported assassination attempt on hamid karzai to rates gone wrong. 92,000 documents of blow-by-blow pictures of what our troops are up against in afghanistan. here's more. "the new york times" reports suspicious that the pakistan militants are helping the taliban. they are reportedly using heat-seeking missiles to shoot down u.s. aircraft. and they have secret commando units working from the capture list. >> the suicide bombers and ieds are going off and so on. so it does describe the abuses by both sides in this war. and that's how people can understand what is actually going on and whether they choose to support it or not. >> now, that's one view, but senator john kerry say that is the documents came to light illegally. the white house says a disclosure of classified information threatens our national security. eric schmidt is a terrorism corp spon accident with "the new york times," one of the first organizations to get their hands on the leak material. he is joining us from d.c. eric, did you and the editors consider not publishing the documents and why did you feel comfortable running with it. >> no, kyra, we felt we could publish the documents if they went through the careful process we normally so. we sifted through the thousands of documents, and in many cases we redepartmented the names of informants on the ground, afghans on the ground who were cooperating with the united states as well as certain sources and methods and other sensitive information that could jeopardize our ongoing operations in afghanistan. so we took great care to ensure there would not be, at least through "the new york times," a disclosure of sensitive information. in fact, the white house has praised our efforts for doing so. >> so, eric, what we know about the war publicly, and now seeing these documents, and let me ask you as a correspondent that covers issues of terrorism and national security, has your perception of the war changed? do you think it is worse than what we thought now that you've seen these documents? >> well, i think what you come to the conclusion of after looking at these documents is that a war always known to be a difficult struggle for the soldiers on the ground as well as for afghan civilians is more difficult. when you get into the fine-grain detail sorries of individual missions, individual confrontations on the ground, you get a sense of just how challenging it really is. and it is a grimmer picture. i think what we all have seen as you referred to in your lead-in is the reports of complicity by pakistan's spy agency, the isi, or more voluminous than we thought. we see reports of meetings between the isi and various militant groups that are conducting attacks in afghanistan as well as other details suggesting that this involvement continues to this day. and in the administration, they are aware of that. >> that's an interesting point, because we have give millions and millions of dollars to pakistan in aid. we support its military. so with that information, and many critics have come forward saying, where does that money go? what exactly are they doing to fight terrorism? now the documents are revealed, what's your take? >> this is going to provide policymakers and members of congress with a tough decision. the united states reimburses pakistan over a billion dollars a year for pakistan's efforts along the border supplying some 150,000 troops there for counter terrorism efforts, but here these new documents that sport the report that we and other organizations have done over the last couple of years to show the very country we are helping to pay reimburse those operations for their spy services is actually supporting the militants we are fighting in afghanistan. >> i look forward to more reports. eric schmidt, "the new york times." eric, thanks. >> thank you. bp's oil disaster and the pr catastrophe of its boss tony hayward could be the last day for him behind the helm as hayward's fate is decided. concierge claim centers. so i can just drop off my car and you'll take care of everything? yep, even the rental. what if i'm stuck at the office? if you can't come to us, we'll come to you in one of our immediate response vehicles! what if mother won't let me drive? then you probably wouldn't have had an accident in the first place. and we're walkin'! and we're walkin'... making it all a bit easier -- now that's progressive! call or click today. the dow went down 300 points last week, but can the positive mo pen tim momentum continue? >> it was a pretty good week last week. the market is likely to get off to a slow start this morning. you hear the opening bell mind me. the blue chips jumped triple digits three sessions in a row. now, two of them were to the up side, but after last week's rally the dow is unchanged from where it started the year. fedex is poosting its forecast for the year. they are one of the bell weather companies, so that's good news for the economy, but the focus this week remains on corporate earnings. more than 150 companies are slated to post their results over the next couple of days. that includes industry leaders like exxonmobil, boeing, dupont and merck. they are expected to show a 34% better showing than a year ago. also, forecasts are calling for a modest increase in home steals in june after the figure plunged a whopping 33% in may after the expiration of the home buyer tax credit. so let's go ahead and take a look at the early numbers. the dow currently with a gain up 12.5%. the nasdaq is up three points. bp shares ahead of the announcement from bp later tonight, the shares are up 1%. back to you. carter, thanks. day 98 of the gulf oil disaster, and it looks like tony hayward is on his way out. there are reports now that the company has decided to replace him possibly some time today. hayward has been under fire over his handling of the crisis and his self-pitying comment he wanted his life back. well he may soon get it. bp says no final decision has been made. residents in the gulf calling for hayward's dismissal can take comfort in one thing. he won't leave without a big payout. the bonuses of stock awards are not uncommon at u.s. companies. here are bosses who actually watched their companies tank and their personal fortunes soar. remember bank of america's ceo? he fared much better than his stockholders. ken louis walked away with $53 million in pension benefits. and carly fiorina saw $40 million before walking out the door. h and here's a shoutout for richard monestat. he took over aig as it was in a death spiral. after three months at the helm, he was offered a $22 million severance package, and that's not the extraordinary part of the story. he turned the money down. so what will bp do? and what will happen today at the meeting of its board as they talk about tony hayward and the money he'll get? onroberts spoke to the former president of she will oil. john is joining us from "american morning." it will be interest dog see how this goes down, john. >> it will be as we watch the board meeting going on in london and whether tony hayward will be ousted, but the parachute hayward will get if the board decides to take command and say, we want to turn the company in a direction and exercise our authority as the board and change leaders is what that parachute will be lined with. will it be gold? will it be silver? will it be something less than that. the massive payout that is we see here in the united states according to john hoff meister who knows the industry very well because he worked in the u.k. as well, are very different in the u.k. than here in the united states. where someone who led a company, even if the company was led to failure, could get away with tens of millions of dollars in payouts. it is likely to be a very different situation for tony hayward. here's what hoffmeister told me this morning. >> these packages are really carefully scrutinized in the u.k. you know, i worked there for about eight years as part of shell's organization, and the british people, the british press, they really carefully scrutinized, and i think boards in the u.k. as well as the rest of europe are pretty straight forward on the separation packages. tease are not as generous as people might see in the u.s. the numbers are large, but remember tony's running one of the major companies in the whole world. and so there is a recognition of his contributions of many, many decades. and i think, you know, because of the balance that boards take these things, the numbers i've seen and the numbers i've read about don't surprise me at all. they are kind of in the ballpark of what's happened in other british companies. >> so what might those numbers be? well, we do know in 2009 tony hayward's total compensation including salary, bonuses, et cetera, was $4.8 million. compare that to salaries of ceo's here of american companies, and it is about a fraction of what they might get. in terms of a payout, we are hearing, this would be on the low end, kyra, $1.5 million as a lump sum payment. a garden see the of a pension when he returns age 60 of $900,000 a year, but we also know he's probably coming away with an awful lot of bp stock because he's been there for 28 years. his stock by some estimates may be worth more than $325 million. >> can you imagine a pension of $00, $900,000 a year? >> wouldn't you look forward to retirement if you have smd like that? >> i would retire tomorrow. what did hoffmeister say about hayward's gaps, and did bp have to get rid of him because of that? >> well, bp may have to make a decision one way or another. even if he wasn't to say some of the things he did, but remember when he came out and said, this is not our fault and we were contracting with someone else. then he came out to say the environment impact is likely to be very small. then the one that really got him in a lot of trouble was when after 11 people died in the deepwater horizon and so many people's lives across the gulf of mexico were affected, he said, i want my life back. that is according to hoffmeister a very common phrase in the u.k. people say, oh, god, i want my life back. but in this particular case, it was deemed to be so insensitive and just an indication that maybe this guy is really out of touch. and it did a lot of harm to the company. but hoffmeister said, well, it is likely hayward will go. and will probably have to go after being insensitive to what was going on here. this is the sort of disaster that could take down any ceo depending on how the response was. i mean, if the person came out, was absolutely still in their response, maybe they could stay there, but this would chip away at any ceo's credibility. bob dudley, because he's an american, really can put a difference face on bp because 40% of their asset base is here. you have an american running the company for a first time. they may recover from the terrible tragedy in the gulf, kyra. >> we'll see what happens to tone any hayward today. most likely we'll get an announcement. as of now, no bite from north korea threatening a nuclear response to joint military drills between the u.s. and south korea. that's next. there's a better way to run your business. try intuit quickbooks online for free. it easily organizes your entire business in one place. it's easy to set up, learn, and use. you can start creating invoices in just minutes, then print them, e-mail them, and track them so you can make sure you're getting paid on time. intuit quickbooks online helps you keep an eye on every dollar coming in and going out. see which activities make you the most money, and see where you can trim expenses. plus, at tax time, all the information you need is right there at your fingertips. with quickbooks online, you can even manage your business with a mobile device. try it right now and get 90 full days of quickbooks for free. go to freequickbooks.com-- that's freequickbooks.com-- and see how intuit quickbooks online can make running your business easier. wow. mm-hm. your 90-day free trial is only available when you go to freequickbooks.com. since years, 92,000 military documents are leaked again on wikileaks. the disclosure puts the lives of american allies at risk and jeopardizes national security. the verdict? guilty. they sentenced the cam bode an man in a torture prison for years. his time served reduces that time to just 19. critics call this a sham. an insult to the 14,000 cambodians who died in the prison. the show of force follows last year's sincing of a south korean warship blamed on the north. and anti-incumbent fever. harry reid is not the most popular incumbent up for re-election. he talks about his controversial challenger for the very first time. the spokesman and former chairman mark williams quit friday after the tea party federation kicked out his group. a fake letter williams wrote to president lincoln from naacp president ben jealous. quote, we color people have take an vote and decided we don't cotton to that whole emancipation thing. freedom means having to work for real, think for ourselves and take consequences along with the rewards. that is just far too much to ask of us colored people and we demand that it stop. don lemon talked to williams about why he left his own group. >> to take the spotlight off of me, it is a movement, it is not about me, it is not about my ego or my fat head. i did succeed in getting the naacp to the table. by the way, the tea party federation recommends 40 groups out of 5,000. i was never a member of -- i have no idea who they are, but they threw me out. >> williams said he's sorry for some of the language that he was using in the post, but that he stands by the overall message. one of the tea party's biggest test this november is in nevada. sharon angle is taking on harry reid. he has been racking up the miles a couple weeks ago interviewing angle. now it is time to talk reid. >> frequent flyer miles are good, kyra. >> it does add up. harry reid is not popular in nevada, below 50% approval. he tried to explain that to you, right? >> reporter: yeah, he did. it was interesting, he had kind of a new tact here. one of the things you would think is he would talk about the economy, which he did. the economy is bad and he started to blame the bush administration for the poll sips of the past. that was somewhat to be expected, but he talked more in depth of a lot of the new voters coming to nevada. in the last 10 to 12 years, he has to rezbrus himself. it was quite interesting. >> what about a number, i'm curious about this because the media, especially inside the beltway, you see it all the time, they love to talk about your low approval numbers and you have the ceiling and for an incumbent they are low, when you hear all that talk, what goes through your mind, a, and b, do you chalk it up totally to the economy or are there other factors involved? >> i understand how people feel. as i've said, it doesn't give them comfort to tell them things would be worse but for me. they are here and now, and i understand how they feel. unemployment numbers are significant. in the construction industry, 50% of the construction workers don't have jobs, so we have entities that are laying people off, we have teachers, and we are struggling to get a lot of that done. but i also say this, i don't grin, but i do smile just a little bit because you can't go any place in america today that people's approval rating is very high. we have an economic situation that's not only in nevada, it is all over the country. and also, we have a unique situation in nevada. i haven't had a difficult election for 12 jeers years. during the 12-year period of time, we have had 600,000 new people move to the state of nevada. they don't know me, but they have seen me doing a lot of this last number of years is me trying to fight with george bush because he's trying to privatize social security or argue about the war in iraq and other policies of his that i thought already was bad. i complained about that, so people are going to have to get to know me, the 600,000 people who are not here, i'm a moderate kind of guy. i'm comfortable where i am. i have a campaign moving along just fine. i am comfortable where we are today. >> david, he mentioned jobs right there, and nevada's jobless rate is 14%, above the national average. but he's -- it seems like he's taking this personally, taking a personal responsibility to deal with that. >> well, i think he feels it personally, kyra. there's no doubt about it. it troubles him where his state, the state he's been in in whole life is at. the problem for reid here is that the numbers are not going away any time soon. and that the question then becomes, and he's making the case that health care reform and wall street reform and all this is going to create in the case of health care reform, thousands of jobs and the like, but the problem is, are the jobs, if they even come to too fruition, are they coming here by 2010. he knows the answer, the answer is know. he has to deal with the numbers and that's why the recount campaign wants to talk more about sharron angle. if you think the economy is bad now, wait until you see her policies because they are going to lump her back in with president bush. >> david brody, good talking to you this morning. >> all the best. people in bell, california, are furious their servants are making ten to 20 times what they are making and they want resignations. well, looks like the wheels are coming off theography train in bell, california. more now on the jaw-dropper of the government abuse story that we first exposed, and it just keeps on giving. bell, one of los angeles county's poorest income, about $40,000, a place where the city manager was making nearly 800 grand a year. yeah, that's more than president obama. keep in mind, we're talking about a state where the pink slip has become the state flower, we they are laying off teachers and cops and chargesing people for emergency calls. it was good for robert rizzo. he doesn't live i bell or l.a. county and has a sweet place in huntington beach. could be a candidate for cribs. a picture from his mug shot from his arrest last spring. police say he was legally drunk types three. then there's the assistant who was making nearly $400,000, and the bleach making more than 450 grand. they all resigned but the people of bell want more resignations. they want the mayor and three city council members to quit, too. seems some of the city council members are making about 100 grand for their part-time jobs. should be one hell. a city council meeting tonight. this story is far from over. we will tell you about big new developments in this story. california's attorney general is involved now and that can't be good news for those fat cats. a busy morning in the newsroom. let's start with rob marciano in gulfport, mississippi. >> hi. what's left of bonnie has come and gone. most of the vessels are back on site. we'll give you an update of the time line, new time line, for plugging that well in the next hour. more than 1,000 devout christians ripped off in a more than $100 million ponzi scheme. what an extreme weekend it was. we had nearly every type of weather from tornados to flooding to record heat. what does the forecast hold for today? we'll let you know where the worst of the weather is coming up. it's been 20 years since the americans with disabilities act was signed. coming up in our next hour, we're going to look at what's changed and what needs to change in the eyes of someone who really knows. [ mom ] look at all these fabulous geeks! there are so many! ♪ look at this one! it helps you video chat with mom! ♪ bingo! look at this one. you can video chat with me, honey. mom, go get the car! he's in such a hurry to learn. [ male announcer ] buy any laptop and get geek squad support for six months. online, on the phone, or in-store. arizona might be the focal point of the big immigration debate. the state's controversial law is set to take effect thursday, but there's a smaller, lesser known battleground. fremont, nebraska. tomorrow the city council will vote whether to delay it's voter immigration law that bans hiring or representing pront to illegal immigrants. >> reporter: surrounding by cattle and cornfields, fremont, nebraska feels insulated from the nation's big problems, es especially illegal immigration. look on a map. mexico is a long ways away from nebraska, about 1 tourks miles but the immigration battle has reached the heartland and this town outside of omaha of only 25,000 people. >> you look at the flooding situation. are you going to walt for fema or start sandbagging your own house? that's what we're trying to do. >> reporter: jerry hart and john weigart led a measure on the town's ballot that bans hiring or renting property to illegal immigrants. it it passed last month by 57% of the vote. >> reporter: why does a city like fremont need an anti-immigration law? >> we're for immigration. we're just against illegal aliens coming in bringing drugs, gangs, crime and economic byrd than will grow for years if we don't do something in our town. >> reporter: yep. it's the identical argument used by anti-illegal immigration hawks around the country even though police dispute that crime here is on the rise, but like many american cities, fremont's hispanic population has risen from 300 in 1990 to 2,000 now. their hispanic population has surged with the promise of a steady job at the area's meat packing plants. they have a low unemployment rate but the primary reason for the measure is they are taking away jobs from american citizens. nothing makes this woman's blood boil more. >> you're not going to see any anglo-americans working the lines. >> reporter: you are saying they don't want the jobs? >> they don't want the jobs. we want them. >> reporter: this woman, an american citizen has worked in those plants which she says are filled mainly by hispanics. she cannot understand why fremont has obama an immigration battle front. >> fremont has grown because of the illegal immigrants. we spend our money here. we don't go nowhere else. i don't see the problem with that. >> reporter: miriam says the byproduct is growing illegal tension. they fought to fight the law. >> the hispanic community feels like the people voted for them to leave, and we have people telling us day after day they are just waiting for the police to come and escort them out of fremont. >> reporter: that's not going to happen. >> that's absolutely not going to happen but the hispanic community feels like they are not welcome. >> reporter: ordinance support, deny that race played a role. what is clear, the battle is headed to the courts with opponents like those critical of arizona's controversial bill claiming immigration enforcement is strictly a federal matter. dan simon, cnn, fremont, nebraska. tens of thousands of secret afghanistan war documents posted on line by a whistle-blower website. wikileaks raising blood pressure once again. this isn't an information leaks. it's a flood of battle details from the front line from a record assassination attempt on hamid karzai. we are talking about a blow by blow picture of what our troops are up against on the ground in afghanistan. here's more. the new york sometimes reports suspicions that pakistan's military spy service is actually helping the taliban. the taliban is using portable heat-seeking missiles against u.s. aircraft. secret commando units are working off a capture kill list. wikileak's editor is defending the move. >> this material doesn't just reveal occasional abuses by the u.s. military. of course it has u.s. military reporting on all sorts of abuses by the taliban. so it does describe the abuses by both sides in this war, and it's how people can really understand what is actually going on and whether they choose to support it or not. >> joining me again from london, nick robertson. wikileaks founder said he discovered evidence of war crimes in these documents. what you can tell us about that? >> he asked us during the press conference, does it show it. he's also said he's only looked in detail at about 1 tourks or 2 tourks of these 91,000 documents that he has got his hands on. what he's saying is there's a possibility when you dig into these documents and when you look at what the "new york times" has written, they had the documents for a few weeks or the guardian newspaper in britain who had the documents for a few weeks as well. you can see all of these inconsistencies and then what emerges in the coming weeks later. he's say essentially that in some of these reports it is possible that in some of these axes there may have been war crimes committed but he's not putting his finger on anything and saying, yes, i can say that's the case or we have specifics there. he's saying it could be a possibility, kyra. >> here's what we want to know. does this compromise, does the leak of these documents compromise our security and the security of our allies? >> reporter: it's going to have an impact. it has to have an impact because you have sources out there that are going to say, am i going to pass on information, potentially get my name leaked out there in a document in the future? they're not going to sign up to be informers. they're going to avoid that. of course some people will still continue to do it. the information that you take on that protects your national interest from sources in the field is, perhaps, going to be thinner. you could make that argument there. is this really going to change the course of the war on what we can see today? probably not. is it going to raise a lot of detailed questions down the line? probably yes. will that change some people's opinion of the war? probably yes. will that have an impact on national security because it may change policy? well, potentially yes. what everybody is saying this is a massive amount of documents, a huge amount of detail and this is really only the kbing of it but you have to say, yes, some people are not going to provide information for fear of being named or coming out in these reports later. >> thank. the white house says these leaks compromise our security. national security adviser jim jones says that the united states strongly con democrats the disclosure of classified information by individuals or organizes that could put the lives of americans and partners at risk and threaten our national security. he continues, these irresponsibility leaks will not impact our ongoing commitment to deepen our partnerships with afghanistan and pakistan. we know you have thoughts on this story. go to cnn.com/kyra, and i'll read your comments later. two u.s. navy sailors disappeared south of kabul. there are reports that the two were captured by insurgents and one of them killed but the u.s. won't confirm it. the u.s. military is offering $20,000 in reward money for any information about their location. day 98 of the gulf oil disaster, and it looks like bp ceo tony hayward is on his way out. there are reports that the company has decided to replace him possibly sometime today. he has been under fire over the handling of the crisis and the self-pitying comment that he wanted his life back. he may soon get it. bp says no final decision has been made. crews and vessels have returned to the site of the spill. they're discovering a somewhat surprising scene this morning. there doesn't seem to be much oil to clean up. rob marciano following the latest developments from gulfport, mississippi. did bonnie have any effect on the oil moving ashore? >> reporter: possible effects, one, churning up the water that helps to disperse it. can't say whether that happened positively or negatively. there were some pretty strong onshore wents. even though the system fell apart, it still had winds of 25, 30 miles per hour, and pushing all of that oil closer to shoreline and there was some interaction of the shoreline near grand aisle but no significant infiltration since bonnie came through. that's the good news with bonnie. any time a weather systems come through and the-thare you get t churng, having the well capped has been a main factor that the amount of oil we've been sablt see is greatly diminished. >> where is the time line for completely sealing the well? >> reporter: the drill ship was pulled off site and it only goes about three or four knots. it's on site and they are hooked down to the bottom. they have unlooked the bottom, and the next thing they are going to do is run some conditioning fluid through the wellbore they already drilled and run the liner and cement it. that process takes five to seven days. that's the window we were looking for last week before bonnie came through. now that starts again today, which means that the entire process, the entire deadline is shifted to the right or into august by about a week. that's the end of all this is that we've delayed the process about a week because of bonnie. things could have been worse if bonnie was stronger and hung around longer. that's the good news. it's a good exercise into why they capped that well to begin with. they wanted to be able to detach and leave if a tropical system came through. they were able to do it when bonnie came through. hopefully they won't have to do it but it's a distinct possibly with hurricane season and a deadline of mid to late august. >> one word describes the weather around the country, and that's crazy. a catastrophic dam collapse in iowa that washed out 255 structures. ten kinchs of rain fell in a one-hour period. chicago has seen some of its worst flooding in 33 years. floodwaters starting to recede. ten county declared themselves in an emergency state. trees came through houses and power lines were down in washington. people still don't have electricity as the city braces for another sweltering day. what else do you have, if that's not enough? >> i don't have a blizzard. >> the only thing we don't have. >> it was a crazy weekend. the good news is that the weather pattern has changed a little bit today. we made progress with that cold front and it's made its way down toward the south. so the showers and thundershowers will be in the tennessee valley and deep south. the winds are not favorable for anything to become severe. it will be popup shower sbrs thundershowers but we could see some flash flooding. whether also see the extreme heat on the south side of this system here. we do have a number of advisories in effect across the southeast. there you can see all of the records that we had yesterday. over 101 in charlotte and last but not least, a system across parts of the west bringing relief. very dry conditions. fires ignited in northern california due to dry thunderstorms. we have to keep our eyes open for that. people were struggling to pay their rent or mortgage. the city manager? he was more worried about his floors or lawn. this whole government story about abuse in bell, californias, has really snowb l snowballed. 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[ male announcer ] right now, get 0% apr on 2010 models, excluding tdi. or get a great price on a certified pre-owned volkswagen. top stories now. six years, 92,000 classified military documents leaked. whistle blowing website wikileaks does it again much to the chagrin of the u.s. defense department and the white house who says the disclosure puts the lives of americans and allies at risk. day 98 of the gulf oil disaster and tony hayward may soon be out of a job. meanwhile, oil skipping ships and containment crews are on their way back to the spill after tropical storm bonnie chased them away. one of two u.s. sailors missing in avenue has reportedly died. it's believeded other sailor is being held captive. the u.s. military is offering a reward, $20,000 for more information. minutes from now in times square, two u.s. senators will gather with families of those killed on pan am 103. there are new questions about the recent release of that convicted bomber. people are questioning whether bp helped to arrange his freedom over a huge contract with libya. we have been staying on top of the story. we have the senator with us. nice to have you with us again. >> good to be with you, kyra. >> what do you hope this hearing will accomplish. lay out the goals and the plan for this hearing. >> our ultimate goal is to get to the truth, wherever that leads, and there's two fundamental questions. how could it have been that all these doctors under the scottish government made the wrong conclusion that al megrahi was going to live three months and therefore was eligible for a compassionate release when now we hear reports that not only is he alive way past the three months but may live as long as ten years. two, what was the interaction between the british-scottish government and bp as it relates to bp weighing in for the release of al megrahi because of a pending oil deal with libya to the tune of about $900 million. we want to get to the truth of what this is because at the end of the day for the 189 american families, 38 from my home state of new jersey, and for our greater message and fight on terrorism torque have a terrorist bomber who is convicted and ultimately killed 189 americans be able to live in the lap of luxury instead of behind a prison jail cell is something that's fundamentally unacceptable. >> senator, i don't think anybody's going to disagree that this man does not deserve freedom. that is for sure and especially now that we hear he could live ten years or more. it's outrageous to see that he's living a life of luxury at this point, if you can seen say that being that six is luxurious, but he's got his freedom, and what more could he want? but three people that we all want to hear from, including you. let me start with the first person. tony hayward. we're getting word that he will be ousted possibly today. will you be able to get him to come to this hearing? will we hear from him? will you be able to question him directly about this allegation that he was or his company was involved in the release of the lockerbie bomber? >> well, you know, i on behalf of the committee have put out a request for bp, particularly tony hayward, to appear. inning, we have not had a response. we want him to appear, and the former mi-6, which the british intelligence who contacted the former justice minister on behalf of releasing al megrahi, we would like them both to come before the committee. hayward may not survive as the ceo of bp, but his participation is important to us whether he is the continuing ceo of bp or not. >> you can force him to appear or is it up to him? >> well, he may be the one entity because there is jurisdiction in the united states of the company, we'd have to get the committee chair, senator kerry, to agree to a subpoena being issued. at this point, we have asked voluntarily for them to appear as we have asked others in the british and scottish government to appear. unfortunately, we don't have jurisdiction over them and so far they've denied any willingness to participate. >> that's my next question. the scottish government representatives, who made the decision. also, the other man we want to flare is dr. andrew frazier who gave the prognosis that led to the release of al megrahi. i'm hearing from you that they're saying they are not going cooperate and there is nothing you can do to bring them before the mikes in the states. so where exactly can you take this hearing because those are the three individuals that everyone wants to hear from and is demanding answers from? >> well, again, we don't have the ability to compel them, but we are trying to create an environment in which they understand it is in their interest to come forth at a hearing and share the process, the information and the facts that drove them to the conclusion that they did. we strongly disagree with that conclusion but we need to hear the facts. now, so far they have rejected. i just got a letter from the scottish government saying they will not appear. they're happy to send other information, but that is not what we want. written information and documents can be helpful to a degree but ultimately it's the testimony of individuals that helps us to understand. we will continue to press for it but if ultimately we don't have the british or scottish government sending the relevant people to testify, we will press in the public court of opinion and it will make for a pressing case. for those of us who met with the prime minister of great britain, prime minister cameron, where we asked him for an independent inquiry into this whole process because they would have the power to compel those individuals to testify. >> well, i know you're going to do whatever you can do to get the angsts. senator robert menendez, a story that's important to us as well. we appreciate your time today. >> thank you. this is the week that arizona's immigration law is set to kick in, and other states could very well follow arizona's example. looks like the wheels are coming off the gravy train in bell, california. more on the jaw dropper of a government abuse story we first exposed last week. bem, one -- bell, the city manager was making 800 grand per year. that's more than president obama. now, keep in mind, we're talking about a state where they're laying off teachers and cops and raising tuition and charging people for emergency calls but it would be good to be robert riz rizzo. he doesn't live in bell or l.a. county and has a sweet $900,000 place on the beach. could be a candidate for cribs. a mug shot from his arrest last spring. police say he was legally drunk times three. his assistant was making nearly 400 grand and the police chief making more than 450 grand. they all resigned but the people of bell want more resignations. they want the mayor and three city council members to quit, too. seems some of those council members are making about 100 grand for their part-time jobs. should be one hell. a city council meeting tonight. if they all quit and bell starts over, this story isn't over. california's attorney general now looking into the bloated salaries. krirk hawkins has been the go-to guy on this story. any luck while you've been staking these guys out? >> no luck so far. we tried to get in touch with the city manager. no show there. his neighbors said they wished they could have used their next-door neighbor tat tus to apply for a job. no luck tracking down rizzo. we tried to track down the mayor and vice mayor and other members of the city council. they were no-shows. over the weekend, 200 people in the small town participated in a march where they went by each of these houses and had no luck at all. no one knows where the city council members are. they are all expected to be here tonight at 6:00. this is the first major meeting where residents are expected to speak out since details of the salary scandal has broken. they are irate and fired up. the mayor put out a statement last friday afternoon when he told us he basically defended the city manager and said that his salary was similar to other city managers in this same area in this same county. he's not going down without a fight. >> i can imagine what the city council meeting will be like. i am sure the issue of pensions will come up? >> that's right. rizzo gets a $600,000 pension. he is 65 and if he lives to be 75, we're talking $14 million. residents and taxpayers of the state of california could be on the hook because of city of bell as well as 140 other towns and cities across the state contribute to the california public employment system. so not only are bell's citizens irate but taxpayers across the state should be as well. he had a five-year contract. he has about three years left. so he was paid throughout about two years of that contract and right now it's unclear if he will be paid the rest of his contract, that $800,000 a year contract. that's one of the questions we will ask. >> we look forward to your follow-up. kirk hawkins, it's an outrageous story. we'll talk to you tomorrow, kirk. well, the americans with disabilities act turns 20 today, and it means a different world for millions of americans young and old. we're talking about the landmark act and what's changed. i switched to a complete tomultivitamin with more.50, only one a day women's 50+ advantage has gingko for memory and concentration plus support for bone and breast health. a great addition to my routine. [ female announcer ] one a day women's. basic.? preferred. okay. at meineke i have options, and 50% off brake pads and shoes. my money. my choice. my meineke. ouch! ow! oops! it's neo to go!® ready. aim. protect. neosporin® gives you infection-protection, and pain relief. neo to go!® plus pain relief. every cut. every time. everywhere. the american with disabilities act turns 20 today, and for the fwhun five americans who are disabled, the world is a much different, much more inclusive place today. they'll tell you we've come a long way in two decades, but there's stale very long way to go. >> reporter: with the stroke of a pen, it was done. the passage of the americans with disabilities act. you've seen the results. curb cuts and ramps, wider doors, parking spaces and braille on elevators and atms for the blind. enoughy former attorney general richard thornburgh who helped push the ada through says no. >> well, igratified but impatient. gratified that we've expressed in a formal way through legislative action the importance of the civil rights of people with disabilities and their rights to participate in the mainstream of our lives without being discriminated against and disappointed because we haven't reached the promised land. >> reporter: he means economic opportunity for the disabled so people like ryan cole can compete on a level playing field. ryan represents the second generation of the ada. >> ryan was diagnosed when i was about 18 weeks pregnant with dandy walker malformation, which is a brain malformation, which affects the cerebellum and he in his case is missing a portion of he is cerebellum. >> let's go to your room. he's had two brain surgeries. he's had an abdomen surgery to place a g-tube, hernia surgeries. he's had seizures that were brought under control. we've had some mobility issues. >> reporter: ryan's parents want their son to grow up to be self-sufficient and scientists say society can do their part to make it happen. >> i think one of the challenges is how can we create nor economic opportunities so more people with disabilities are working, in the middle class, own their own homes and are able to participate fully in the mainstream of the economy. >> i think individuals with disabilities, they want a hand up, not a handout. >> reporter: for ryan's father and many others, it's about common decency. >> there are many stereotypes we battle today, derogatory terms out there that are used for individuals with cognitive and disabilities, and understand that individuals like ryan have hopes and dreams and aspirations just like the rest of us. we want to give out a special shout out to that family. they knocked out their power and are watching from the tv section of a department store. so we want to send our love and a big hello. mark johnson is a long time advocate for the disabled. the director of advocacy for the shepherd center. so glad to have you with us. >> i appreciate the opportunity. >> there are so many amazing things about your life, which is why i wanted to talk to you in particular. but just to give a little background to our viewers. let's go back to when you were in college and it was a dive into a pond that changed your life forever. tell us what happened, and did you ever think what you were doing was dangerous? >> you know, i was a water safety instructor, lifeguard, swim team coach and i went out to rock quarries and stone quarries and dived off the cliffs. i had been out there my entire freshman year, but the day before my sophomore year was to end, i took one more swim, one more dive. i was about 15 feet to the left of where i was diving for over a year. i hit the bottom and injured my spinal cord. >> and that definitely took you on a completely different journey than what you expected. the first reality check was, oh, my gosh, transportation, access, how i get around. we were looking back at these old pictures of how you jerry rigged your van. have we come a long way? >> pieces of wood. >> tell me, what did do you? >> it was before i started learning how to drive. it also was cost. there wasn't much technology. those are my brothers. i had two boards and people would push me up into the van. we tied down with bungee cords and they would drive me off and i'd come down. a year later i was able to locate a lift, and my dad put hand controls on and took me to an abandoned airport and if i learned thou drive there, they would put them on permanently. >> that was your dad? >> yeah. >> you're grateful to him. they told you life doesn't stop here? >> they are driving to schools. >> there's another picture i want to know the background behind. you're in front of an outhouse. i hope we have this because you're trying to keep a sense of humor. >> i would go to a lot of festivals, and for years, you know, if you needed to use the bathroom, the port-a-potties weren't accessible. i'm kind of making a joke when all. a sudden, port-a-potties are accessible. >> a little bit of a ramp. they are still not easy things. >> i try to avoid them in general but, if necessary, they're there. >> you have become quite the activist. in the early 80s, you were putting yourself out in front of buses. take me back to that time. why did you want to become an activist and tell me why you used that specific method? >> i got married in '81 and moved to colorado and met a man who was involved in the civil rights movement. he became my mentor, and what happened is i lost use of my private vehicle through an accident, so i had to use public transit, and public transit at that time, even in denver, which was one of the leaders, was not that accessible. i got involved in an campaign to put lifts on buses, actually express buses there in denver, and that kind of just led mao into kind of a whole other form of activism. what i learned from wade was you can do your research and write your letters and do your testimony and have your meetings but sometimes you just have to get in people's faces. >> absolutely. it's like if it hasn't affected you, people aren't going to be moved to do anything unless you hound them. >> and one of wade's favorite things was until there is an emotional change no intellectual persuasion will work. until you come face to face, it's very emotional. i could give people information about how much a lift costs amortized over the life of a vehicle, what type of vehicle, bottom line, took them down to a bus stop. you said, that bus, you can get on and i can't get on. that's a whole different conversation that occurs. >> i want to ask you a question. for a number of disabilities, beam say that's not a disability. my mom's a teacher for the deaf. don't tell the deaf they're disabled. it's a culture and they're proud about their culture and proud to be deaf. i talked to blind individuals. if i could go back, i would no choose my sight. i'm proud to be blind. it's nigh culture. it's my life. what about you? >> i'm glad you tapped into this? >> good. >> people say, what's one of the most significant things that's happened sin the passage of the ada? it's an amount of power and pride. after the celebration tonight, there will be a power and pride celebration. people are saying, it's okay to be disabled. i'm proud of it. maybe you have have a problem with it but i don't. we have a long way to go. >> that's what i want to ask you just before we go. two things that are on the top of your mind that when we say we still have a long way to go. what would you love to see happen in the neck year, five year, ten years, two things? >> i'd like to see people take a chance to have a relationship with people with disables because that changes attitudes. through that relationship attitudes will change, policies will change and people will work. that's one of the lacking things, just social opportunities, personal relationships and employment opportunities. those are the two things ahead of us. >> makes me think about a recent commercial that's been airing about peoples with disabilities. i should have aired that today. >> yes, you can. >> that's the campaign. >> mark, what a pleasure talking to you. you're such an incredible example for all of us. >> appreciate the opportunity. a story of faith, trust and betrayal. poppy harlow will tell us how two men used religion to rob church goers of their live savings. sarge: that's interesting. you know what makes me sad? you do! maybe we should chug on over to mambie pambie land where maybe we can find some self-confidence for you. ya jackwagon! tissue? crybaby. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. have you heard of affinity fraud, a scheme that targets a specific ethnic or religious group. bernie madoff made it a famous, targeting high prefile jewish people. poppy harlow has the story of two men who preyed on christians in minnesota. >> reporter: this is a story about huge financial fraud. the feds say trevor cook took in $190 million. it's about trust. it's about faith and it's about the people that abused them. a lot of the people that invested were bible believing christians. they didn't want wall street or washington. they trusted people here at home. ♪ once upon a time in minneapolis ♪ ♪ i nearly had to steal the show ♪ >> he went after and targeted a group of people, their faith in the lord is what they're all about. >> everything is gone. i've lost everything, and now i will be 62 in july. >> it's been rough. really rough. >> there's no risk. riskless transaction. >> reporter: cook ran the operation telling investors he had a system to cash in on movinging in the foreign currency market. cook talked a good game but it was just an illusion. behind his high tech office and glossy brochures were a host of shell companies that sounded like global powerhouse us but were nothing of the sort. pat kylie was his business partner. he pedalled on his show and broadcast over hundreds of christian radio stations. >> i'm probably the only senior economists, senior analyst in the united states that is also using the good book. >> reporter: were christians targeted in this case? >> i think any good fraudster is going to leverage whatever means they can to get that trust connection there. >> reporter: cook pled guilty to one count of mail fraud and one count of tax evasion, and it seems he spent plenty of his investor's money in ways that were decided unchristian. you said there were strippers there, hookers? yeah? >> they would call up ladies of the evening or prostitutes or whatever you want to call them. >> reporter: this was another side of trevor cook, the heavy drinking, frequenting strip clubs and even several arrests. one for assaulting an escort at this minnesota hotel. kyra, over about six months of looking at this story, we found a different man than those investors knew. we have about ten minutes of the story on cnnmoney. he struck a plea deal. the max he gets in prison is 25 years. investors are furious saying that's not enough. as for kylie, we called him time and time again. he wasn't call us back and filed a lawsuit and said, look, i didn't participate in the criminal wrongdoing. i thought their accounts were segregated. we'll see if he attorney says anything. he says he never suspected anything was wrong with the investments. he continued to think he was doing good for his clients. the investors don't believe that. the question remaining, where was the scc and raeg laters. we flew to chicago to see what the regulators have to see on cnnmoney. >> good stuff. thanks. my sunglasses. ♪ people say i'm forgetful. maybe that's why we go to so many memorable places. love the road you're on. the subaru outback. motor trend's 2010 sport/utility of the year. thursday's the big day in arizona, the day the state's tough new immigration law sb 1070 is supposed to kick in. a judge is deciding whether the law should be carried out.the law requires immigrants to carry their papers at all times. arizona might be the focal point of the big immigration debate but it's not the only place where the issue is coming to a head. tomorrow, city leaders in fremont, nebraska, will think about putting off the immigration law that the voters approved. the guy that wrote it co-wrote arizona's law. here's dan simon. >> reporter: surrounded by cattle and cornfields, fremont nebraska is the kind of place that feels insulated from the nation's big problems, especially illegal immigration. just look on a map. mexico is a long ways away from nebraska, about 1,000 tiles but the immigration battle reached the heart land and this town outside omaha of only 25,000 people. >> you look at the flooding situation. are you going to sandbag your own home? that's what we're trying to do. >> reporter: jerry hart and john weigart, led an effort to put a measure on the town's ballot that bans hiring or renting property to illegal immigrants. it passed last month by a decisive 57% of the boat. why does a city like fremont need an anti-immigration law? >> we're for immigration. we're against illegal aliens bringing in guns, gangs, crime and a byrd than will grow for years if we don't do something in our town. >> reporter: yep, it's the identical argument used by anti-illegal immigration hawks around the country even know police dispute that crime here is on the rise. like many american cities, their hispanic population has risen significantly from 200 to about 2,000 now. the population has surged with a promise of a steady job at the area's meat-packing plants. the city has a low unemployment rate but according to supporters one of the primary arguments is that illegal immigrants are taking away jobs from the american citizens. >> you're not going to see any anglo-americans working the lines. you're not. >> reporter: you're saying they don't want the jobs? >> they don't want those jobs. >> we want them. >> reporter: miriam, an american citizen, has worked in those plants which are filled mainly by hispanics. she cannot understand why fremont is an immigration battle front. >> fremont has grown because of the illegal immigrants. we spend our money here. we don't go nowhere else. we spend it here. i don't see the problem with it. >> reporter: miriam says the byproduct is growing racial tension and a feeling. being unwanted. this woman tried to fight the measure. >> the hispanic community feels like people vote ford them to leave, and we have people telling us day after day they're just waiting for the police to come and escort them out of fremont. >> reporter: that's not going to happen. >> that's absolutely not going to happen but the hispanic community feels like they are not welcome. >> reporter: ordinance supporters deny race played a role. it's not clear how many illegal immigrants live in fremont but the battle is headed to the courts with opponents like those credit wall of arizona's controversial bill claiming immigration enforcement is strictly a federal matter. dan simon, cnn, fremont, nebraska. we're just 100 days away from the mid-term elections but this race is about more than just candidates. starting wednesday night, you can join john king usa on the road in arizona for a look at all of the issues voters there are facing. wednesday night, 7 ook eastern on cnn. with yoplait delights, now you can finally have both. two indulgently rich layers of chocolate and raspberry yogurt... and only 100 calories. you struggle to control your blood sugar. you exercise and eat right, but your blood sugar may still be high, and you need extra help. ask your doctor about onglyza, a once daily medicine used with diet and exercise to control high blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. adding onglyza to your current oral medicine may help reduce after meal blood sugar spikes and may help reduce high morning blood sugar. 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[ high male ] fizz, fizz. ♪ i never thought that this would be the way you'd come back home ♪ time for home and wa i, our daily tribute to fallen heroes in iraq and afghanistan. right now, in our spotlight, corporate james london of bell fort new york. james was with the second brigade combat team when he was killed in baghdad in 2007. he was one of three soldiers who died after their week was hit by a roadside bomb. he was only 20 years pole. his mother says her son was the light of her life. she had so much respect for the way he lived his life, his courage and determination. mom says james accomplished more in his 20 short years than many men ever do in 70 years. today we honor and remember james lundin. we want to hear your stories. go to our website, put your service member's name in the upper right search field, pull up the profile, add your memories and send us pictures, too, and we'll add them to our hall of heroes. ? yes, i hear progressive has lots of discounts on car insurance. can i get in on that? are you a safe driver? yes. discount! do you own a home? yes. discount! are you going to buy online? yes! discount! isn't getting discounts great? yes! there's no discount for agreeing with me. yeah, i got carried away. happens to me all the time. helping you save money -- now, that's progressive. call or click today.