0 apple juice. the fda announces new guidelines on how much arsenic is allowed in apple juice. we are going to tell you what it all means. jury deliberations are expected to begin this morning the defense will give arguments answering the prosecution. the judge allowed a new charge in the case. let's get to george howell in sanford, florida, with the latest, good morning, george. >> reporter: that new charge manslaughter and it will be up to defense attorney mark o'mara for three hours to convince jurors george zimmerman is not guilty of manslaughter and not guilty of second-degree murder and then the prosecution gets one hour for rebuttal. >> the attorneys will now present their final arguments. >> reporter: closing arguments the final stage in the trial against george zimmerman for the fatal shooting of 17-year-old trayvon martin. >> a teenager is dead. he is dead through no fault of his own. he is dead because another man made assumptions. >> reporter: prosecutor bernie de la rionda went into great detail pointing out inconsistencies in zimmerman's story from the national television interview he did to the video re-enactment conducted with police. the prosecution picked apart zimmerman's account of what happened. >> why is he able to yell if the defendant claims the victim was -- how he's going to talk or is he lying about that? look at the gun. look at the size of this gun. how did the victim see that in the darkness? >> reporter: in closing, de la rionda even elicited a reaction from george zimmerman. >> unfortunately the only photographs left of trayvon martin are those photographs, they have other football from the younger days but they can't take any more photos and that's true because of the actions of one person, the man before you. the man who is guilty of second-degree murder. >> reporter: before closing arguments even began -- >> just when i thought this case couldn't get any more bizarre, the state is seeking third-degree murder based on child abuse? >> reporter: defense attorney don west didn't mince words during the hearing on the state's request to include a lesser charge of third-degree felony murder as one of the options for jurors to consider. west called the state's strategy a trick. >> this is outrageous. it's outrageous that the state would seek to do this at this time. >> reporter: in the end, judge debra nelson ruled against that option, but will allow jurors to consider manslaughter as a possible alternative to second-degree murder. so we saw prosecutors the other day go point by point with a slide show, powerpoint slide show also using those videos of george zimmerman making statements. we expect that defense attorney mark o'mara may turn to that video re-enactment, the computer re-enactment of the crime scene that was evidence that he wanted to get into the trial. remember, judge debra nelson said it couldn't be evidence for the jury to take back into the jury room but instead could be used as a demonstrative tool. that's what we expect him to do today as he makes those closing remarks. >> george the advantage for the defense will be the jury never had to hear that animated recreation questioned by the prosecution. we'll see which way it plays out and what the defense will tee up to counter the prosecution. an all-star panel, jeffrey toobin, danny cevallos and sunny hostin. the terrifying final minute of flight 214. as an in-depth review of the cockpit and data recorder reveals the two pilots called to abort the landing and there was no problem until 50 seconds before impact. miguel marquez is joining us live with continuing coverage in san francisco international airport. talk to me about the newest details emerging in this ongoing investigation, miguel. >> reporter: good morning there, kate. we now know it was within nine seconds despite all of this, within nine seconds the reality that they were going too slow didn't sink in despite the fact that within the last minute they had done a prelanding check, and we now know the pilot had actually looked at the speed indicator. this morning, new pictures, the remnants of a charred flight 214 after it slammed into the seawall. the debris, giant rocks, pieces of the tail section and the landing gear littering the runway and now we have the fullest picture yet of the flight's final moments. around 50 seconds out the first officer sitting in the jump seat comments about the sink rate, that's the speed at which the plane is descending. at about 35 seconds out and 500 feet up the pilot told investigators he saw a bright light and in response looked at the controls in the cockpit, including the speed indicator. >> at about 500 feet the air speed was approximately 134 knots. >> reporter: the 350-ton plane was already below the 137-knot speed to which the pilot believed he had set the auto throttle and for the first time we are hearing nine seconds before impact 100 feet above the ground one of the pilots expressed concern about the aircraft's speed. >> and almost immediately after that is the first comment regarding speed since we started sharing information on starting at 500 feet. >> reporter: and we are now learning there were two call-outs for a go around seconds before this. >> oh, my god. oh, it's an accident! >> you're filming it, too. >> oh my god! >> reporter: a plane crash so significant ntsb says it will put everything it can into finding out what caused this crash. now, ntsb typically says it takes about 18 months to finish these investigations. it wants to get that under 12 months, it finds this one so concerning and also reserves the right to issue recommendations if it finds it needs to along the way during this investigation. kate back to you. >> miguel, some of the attention is obviously on asiana airlines it sel itself. talk about asiana's reputation prior to the crash. >> reporter: despite it's a foreign carrier the faa keeps tabs on it. they've watched this airline over the last 18 months. they have a team that looks at each and every airline, that team reported back to ntsb they call it a quiet airline with no significant concerns for it. so it looks to be in good order where airlines are concerned, kate. >> and why there are so many questions of what happened this time and we know it will be a long investigation to find that question -- to find that answer. miguel great to see you, thank you so much, in san francisco this morning. this morning we are watching gas prices for you with oil hovering just under $105 a barrel experts predict gas prices will spike within days. christine romans is here to explain all of this for us. this is an important story for every household. let's start with oil prices, why are they going up? >> couple of reasons, unrest in egypt, and unrest tends to cause concern about the suez canal br some where some of the oil comes through. and reduced oil inventory and less supply out of libya. >> a lot happening overseas. how do high oil prices compute to price at the pump? >> this is what we're paying now $3.55, that's the average across the country. we're lower than we were a months ago. you put together a 10 to 20 cent increase, some say 30 cents and each penny increase how it feels to you each penny increase is $4 million a day that is out of your pocket in this country so that's like a tax on consumers, quite frankly, less money to spend. >> everyone is going to wonder yes prices go up in the summer traditionally but is this a long-term trend or a spike? >> you could see it tends to spike in the summers so maybe we hope maybe that in september it will go down. lot of people watching this level right before the financial crisis you had the record highs in gas prices. look at what happened, nothing helped gas prices more than a global recession. we don't want that. no question. but you can see the peaks tend to happen in the summers, hopefully that means prices go down in the fall. >> you see a slow trend upward. this is so important because this affects every family. >> absolutely. >> not everyone flies, maybe not everyone's buying a home but everyone's driving. >> gas prices it is your personal economic indicator, every week you fill up the tank so you feel that more than any other single thing other than a job you feel gas prices. >> we're watching this and following this trend. $3.55 christine says is the average price. >> another 20 cents. >> hopefully not 30. thanks so much. chris? a lot of news developing at this hour, let's get to michaela with the latest. >> speaking about something a lot of people care about, what we put in our kids' tummies. breaking news overnight the fda proposing a new limit of arsenic in apple juice, this comes after more than a year of pressure from consumer groups about the cancer causing agent and how it affects children's health. we'll have more in our next hour, dr. sanjay gupta will join us. more bodies have been recovered in the runaway train disaster in canada, that number now up to 24. the railway chairman says he will not go back to lac-magantic until he is welcome. he did not expect the seething anger he received wednesday. in an exclusive interview with cnn he said he genuinely cared and tried to get peel to listen. >> i talkhey talked about i havo empathy or sympathy and i would have plenty in that situation and i'd be grieving and very unhappy, i'd be very mad about the whole thing. >> 26 others remain missing and are presumed dead, likely incinerated in that inferno. deadly flooding in southwestern china reportedly killed at least 31 people, most of the dead trapped in a landslide the size of a small town in sichuan province. rescuers digging through 53 fubic feet of dirt. less rain is in the forecast which should make the search easier. edward snowden suggesting the u.s. is on a witch hunt in a facebook post. he says the government is denying him the right to seek asylum. snowden is expected to speak about that in a meeting with human rights advocates in three hours' time. it will take place at the moscow airport. "the washington post" is reporting there are new concerns snowden may have stolen sensitive files that detail u.s. spying against chinese leaders. a stunning admission from the mayor of san diego as he faces a swirling sexual harassment scandal. bob filner says he needs help. >> as someone fighting for equality i am embarrassed that i have failed to fully respect the women who work for and with me and at times i may have intimidated them. >> several long time supporters suggest he step down. the women he accused of harassing might press charges if he does not resign. a south florida woman thought she had a secret enemy, was vandalizing her suv. turns out it was a squirrel with an appetite for destruction. nora zeigler saw the chunk of her wheel well missing. they've now nicknamed him munchy. critter removal service suggests munchy was trying to burrow for rest. metal not good on the chompers. >> maybe it's like an iron thing, he needs some fiber. >> in his squirrel diet? >> i don't know. i tried, i don't know. >> i like it. >> i'm a car guy. i'm not happy about it. >> i noticed you were sitting there seething. >> we know what chris would do if he found a squirrel munching on his car. let's go from our little friend the squirrel to the real problems, flooding, mudslides across the entire country, communities are cleaning up with some wild weather. this morning we're hearing from a man who survived getting swept away from a colorado mudslide from inside his car, had the presence of mind to shoot it so he could report what happened to him. meteorologist chad everett myers joins us with the latest. >> what's with the formal, not chad myers? >> making chad everett myers really happy. i loved the pictures of that driver going down the mudslide trying to drive when he had no control over the car. people just this weekend are going to try to pick up the pieces. >> oh my god. >> this morning, we're in the driver's seat during a raging mudslide trapped in mother nature's grasp. watch as cars are swept off the road floating down the highway caught in the swift manatu springs mudslide. >> oh my god i just got turned around by a whole flash mud. i can't even see out my windows now. i don't know what the [ muted ] is happening. >> reporter: stuck on the mountainside for four hours. josh had to crawl out of his driver's side window to think. >> didn't have time to think. the water hit my car, started floating and i was desperately trying to steer. >> reporter: from the north to the south the story is flooding. pittsburgh is recovering from an entire water logged city. >> going through the jungle. >> reporter: residents boat a mime to get to their homes floating above nearly 13 feet of floodwaters. >> it came up so fast i didn't have time to do anything. one day i had land around the house and the next day i was just in the water. >> reporter: and while the east is soaking, the west hoping for rain as wildfires rage, the carpenter one fire singeing nearly 30,000 acres after lightning ignited the games that brightened the sky to the famous las vegas strip. firefighters hoping for some rain. 10% chance is what they don't want, yesterday the wind was 30 miles per hour fanning those flames. some rainfall into d.c. and flash flood running toward annapolis, some heavy rainfall overnight. that rain sneekds into philadelphia and new york city later on this weekend. 80 tomorrow in new york city and 87 on sunday. the big story for the rest of this week and into tomorrow, the next week we're going to be back up into the middle 90s again up here in new york city, boston, philadelphia, back into that heat wave we had earlier this week. lot of people don't like the heat. i was one of them. 101-degree heat index in new york city, exercising not a good time to do that. only in the morning. >> enjoy this little break we'll see now because it's all coming back. >> three days. >> it's a nice break we'll take it. when we come back, a bitter battle pitting one of the biggest corporate machines, walmart against the biggest political machine, washington, d.c.. why the retail giant is now killing plans to build three job creating stores in our nation's capital. and also coming up you'll meet a 5-year-old girl, take a look at her, so cute, who knew exactly what to do when her mom started choking on a tortilla chip. you'll have to hear the 911 call. you wait all year for sum. ♪ this summer was definitely worth the wait. ♪ summer's best event from cadillac. let summer try and pass you by. lease this cadillac srx for around $369 per month or purchase for 0% apr for 60 months. come in now for the best offers of the model year. vietnam in 1972. 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