comparemela.com

Card image cap



and all eyes now on the phrase "one nation" in the gop race to the white house. just ahead, new signs those words could be sarah palin is running for president. i'm wolf blitzer. you're in "the situation room." but first, a heartbreaking development in joplin, missouri. all week we've been bringing you wrenching stories of those missing in the tornado's wake, while at the same time holding out hope they might still be found alive. one of them, 16-year-old lance who was in his car when the twister hit has become a symbol of the desperation felt by so many families. i spoke to his mother, michelle, on tuesday right here in "the situation room". >> oh, my gosh, he is amazing. he is a straight a student. always has been. everything comes so naturally. he has amazing friends. he rides bmx. he is involved in the bridge ministries here in joplin. very active once again, respectful. cares about his family so much. >> sadly, we've just learned that lantz hare has now been found dead. our own brian todd is in joplin. brian? >> reporter: wolf, we spoke to michelle hare a short time ago. she seems to be doing remarkably well given the news she just got. she is caught up in the controversy over the names of the missing and the people they're trying to locate who have gone missing from this tornado. as an effort to scream line that process, officials today put out this list of 232 people who have definitely been reported missing by their loved ones. but in some cases, this list has led to more questions than answers. for those searching for missing loved ones, accounts of heartbreak and frustration. it started with people like michelle hare, who couldn't find her 16-year-old son lantz for days after the tornado. >> proper information is not being given to the public. >> reporter: complaints like that led officials to try to streamline the process. the missouri department of public safety is now in charge of locating those unaccounted for. >> and we will provide today a list of 232 individuals that we have actual reports that individuals have come in and said that they were missing and unaccounted for. >> reporter: no sooner did we get that list than we noticed a problem in the case of lantz hare. this is the car lantz was driving. his mother tells me it was on the other side of the train tracks, was picked up and thrown over here where it landed. he was reported by his mother as missing and was on this list of 232 people. however, there is a problem. it appears that his name is on the list twice. he goes by the name calye hare. humphrey is calye. on the next page, caley lantz. same age. we didn't get an immediate answer to why his name appears twice. since we got this list we were told by his mother she has had a positive identification of lantz and he is deceased. other families are complaining they're not allowed to go to a secret mortgage set up where the federal government has a team of forensic specialists trying to identify bodies. >> why not let people into the morgue to look at bodies under your supervision? >> the team has several mechanisms to positively identify individuals. that is the most important thing. in a catastrophic event, we want to make sure that we don't make mistakes. so fingerprints, dna, medical records so that the family members can get some solace. a federal official told me a short time ago that another key reason why they're not letting people go into that morgue is often in these situations, an accurate visual id is not possible. he says sometimes family members do make an incorrect identification, and that leads to more problems. wolf? >> and our deepest condolences to michelle hare and the entire family. what a horrible, horrible, terrible loss. brian, we'll check back with you. thank you. amidst all that is missing or destroyed in joplin, it's hard to imagine anything still in place. but as jeanne meserve reports, there have been some rather surprising finds. >> reporter: with a pickax and their bare hands, the ferguson family extricates a file cabinet from the rubble of what was their insurance company office. >> oh, wow! whoa. >> reporter: inside unscathe ready all their clients' records. but something even more remarkable came out of this wreckage, another insurance agent who had been in the office working on a children's book. >> i was just typing away and photocopying when the sirens went off. it just got stronger and stronger and stronger. it seemed like it went on forever. and finally, the wall that i was leaning against began to collapse. >> reporter: bonnie survived, protected by a desk chair. when rescuers freed her and she surveyed the landscape, she had trouble recognizing the neighborhood where she had worked for 20 years. >> i knew where i was, but it didn't look like anything i had ever seen before. >> reporter: in her pocket now something she put in her pocket just as the tornado hit. >> all was not lost indeed. i saved everything to my flash drive. my whole book. it was almost finished. the deadline was monday. so i can upload it, and just shoot it right off to my publisher as soon as i get time. >> reporter: bonnie's daughter tells her she must have been saved for a reason. bonnie may have found it. she and her husband have reopened their insurance business in a temporary office so they can help their neighbors rebuild their lives. there is so much to rebuild. jeanne meserve, cnn, joplin, missouri. >> and we'll take you back to joplin in a few minutes. but there is other stories we're following. in joplin, by the way, we're going to speak with a frustrated widower. military husband was killed inside the home depot during an act of heroism. he is fighting for closure. we're going to go back there shortly. stand by for that. in new york, meanwhile, there are other dramatic new developments in the case of the former imf chief charged with attempted sexual assault against a hotel maid. lawyers for dominique strauss-kahn have just delivered a letter to the judge slamming the new york police department for, quote, feeding the media frenzy, and arguing his right to a fair trial is being compromised. all of this just one day after strauss-kahn's house arrest was moved to a right city luxury town house. cnn's debra feyerick is in new york. what do you have, deb? >> reporter: it was a very public war of letters today. the defense started with the first shot. prosecutors fired back. but it started with defense lawyers basically taking aim at the nypd, blaming a high-ranking official and unnamed police sources for either leaking or publicly releasing information, which lawyers believe could prejudice a jury against their client. now they say police were feeding the media frenzy, and they site descriptions that appeared in the press of alleged sexual assault of a housekeeper inside the sofitel hotel that includes statements she is said to have made. it also includes scientific forensic tests that allegedly place strauss-kahn's dna on the housekeeper's clothing. that's allegedly. they have asked for early access to all the reports and tests. the defense lawyers say they too could have fed the media frenzy by releasing information that both undermines the credibility of the housekeeper but also the prosecution's case. now a senior prosecutor replied saying the district attorney shares the concern about leaks, and if defense lawyers in fact do have important information, they should bring it forward, sooner than later. what you're looking at right there, well, dominique strauss-kahn's spent his day in a 6800-square-foot town house in trendy tribeca. it rents usually for $60,000 a month. the sun-filled home boasts a huge living room with skylight, a rooftop deck with a grill, a gym, a spa, a state-of-the-art home theater, and a wet bar in the master bedroom. plus, there are lots of great restaurants in the area, most of which deliver. now strauss-kahn was rejected by one luxury building. he was kicked out of another. so this is really one of the few places that would take him. but if you add in the cost of security, strauss-kahn is now paying a quarter million a month to live. and that's not including food or the cost of his lawyers. you see him there. he was surrounded by the kind of police and security normally reserved for a presidential candidate. ironic since he was france's leading contender before all this happen. wolf? >> deb feyerick, thank you. deb feyerick is in new york. an american journalist comes under attack in libya. just ahead, the harrowing 44 days he spent jailed and being interrogated by gadhafi forces. plus, one of the world's most notorious fugitives captured after more than 15 years in hiding. the former cnn journalist christiane amanpour covered him for years for us. she is standing by to join us live for an interview. and is there a way to control tornadoes, or keep them from even happening? some meteorologists say it's possible. we'll have the theories and the consequences, and a lot more, coming up right here on "the situation." naomi pryce: i am. i'm in the name your own price division. i find empty hotel rooms and help people save - >> - up to 60% off. i am familiar. your name? > naomi pryce. >> what other "negotiating" skills do you have? > i'm a fifth-degree black belt. >> as am i. > i'm fluent in 37 languages. >> (indistinct clicking) > and i'm a master of disguise >> as am i. > as am i. >> as am i. > as am i. >> well played naomi pryce. you could get arrested for that you know. it's not what you think. look. there was a time when a company like that would envy us. little outfit. it's almost quaint. all these years we had something they could never have. something only the biggest operations could ever afford. it was our strategic advantage. now they have it. what exactly is "it" that they have? logistics. a level playing field. it's not fair. professional driver on a closed course. ♪ do not attempt at home. always wear your seat belt. ♪ and please drive responsibly. [ male announcer ] it's the most fun you can legally have. see your authorized mercedes-benz dealer for exceptional offers on the c-class. jack cafferty is here. jack? >> several members of the house of representatives are accusing president obama of violating the war powers act by continuing to allow u.s. participation in allied attacks on libya. congressman dan burton, republican from indiana, accused the president of playing king. democratic congressman brad sherman of california said the whole ordeal is shredding the u.s. constitution. this past friday was the 60th day since the president told congress that this country was joining allied forces in attacks against moammar gadhafi in libya. told congress as opposed to asking for their approval. the 60-day mark is significant because under the war powers resolution, congressional authorization is required in significant military activity by that date, or the operation has to be stopped. well, neither has happened. instead, as the deadline approached, the president sent a letter to congressional leaders asking for a resolution of support. the president didn't mention the war powers act, or ask explicitly for authorization in his letter. he just asked for support. he may get the resolution from the senate. john kerry and john mccain have introduced a bipartisan resolution that expresses congress's support for u.s. military involvement in libya. but senate majority leader harry reid said a vote on that won't happen before the long memorial day weekend recess. and over in the house, a much different story. neither party has any plans to bring a resolution of support to the floor there. the war powers act dates to 1973. it came out of the vietnam war. it was passed as an effort to restore the role of congress in deciding whether or not the u.s. military becomes involved in significant conflicts. president nixon at the time vetoed the act, and congress overrode him. and it's pretty much been ignored by presidents ever since. nobody pays much attention to it, it seems. anyway, here is the question. is president obama breaking the law with the united states' role in libya? go to cnn.com/caffertyfile. >> jack cafferty, thank you very much. thank you very much. now to one american's dramatic close call with death in libya. the journalist james foley has been released after being held by gadhafi forces for more than a month. our own lisa sylvester is in new york now. she had a chance to speak with mr. foley. i'm glad he is back home, lisa. >> yeah, we are all very glad. goebel posts correspond that james foley has been in afghanistan, in libya, in a lot of different hot spots. he believes it is important to be right on the front lines to be able to report back exactly what is happening. but on april 5th, that almost cost him his life. >> but for the grace of god, he wouldn't be here to tell his story. he was on the front lines in brega, libya with three other journalists when forces loyal to gadhafi began shooting at them. >> this was soldiers getting out of the trucks, walking towards you, and shooting directly at you. bullets stream overhead. >> reporter: foley's friend, south african photographer anton hammerill was hit and lay dying. >> he said help, help. i said anton, are you okay? he said no. and more bullets came in. and i called out to him again. and there was no response. it's unreal, you know. why -- why him and not me? i was maybe 20 meter away from him. and, you know, he had a family, three kids. beloved photographer for many years in johannesburg. and he wanted to do a two-week story on the battle of brega. >> reporter: foley, fellow american claire gillis, and spanish photographer manu bravo were taken by gadhafi troops and held in a cell, interrogated repeatedly as bombs fell around them in tripoli. >> especially towards the end, we started to hear the bombs coming closer and more frequently. >> reporter: he was allowed only one five-minute phone call back home, and he spoke to his mom. >> first thing i said when i called her, i'm sorry, mom, yes. but also i'm strong. i feel okay. i feel good. i'm praying as much as i can. and she said don't you feel us all praying for you? and i was -- i took that back to set with me. >> reporter: after 44 days, they were released and brought to this hotel, where other western journalists were staying. their ordeal finally over. looking back, foley now has a larger perspective on life. >> i have to understand that the grace that is -- that has happened. and, you know, there is a reason for me to be here there is a reason all these people reached out, and what can i give. what can i do here and now. >> and i asked foley if he wants to return to libya. he said he recognizes that he put his family through a lot of trauma. so for now he is going to be stateside. but he said it is really an amazing story covering what is happening in north africa. he hopes to go back. just not right away. wolf? >> i hope when he goes back, it will be a free and democratic and peaceful libya as opposed to what it is right now. so glad he is back home. so glad that you had a chance, lisa, to speak with him. you did some excellent work telling his story over the past few weeks. now he is back home safe and sound. thank you very much, lisa sylvester. what was it like for you to finally speak with him after having done so much work about his case and the case of his fellow journalists who were being held in captivity? >> it was amazing to see him right face-to-face in person, because, you know, the last time that i was reporting, we saw the pictures. well saw the still photos. but to actually see him in the flesh, to see that he was well and okay. and it is a tremendous story, too, of all of the love and the support that he and claire gillis, that they had from their family and friends, really putting the pressure on to bring them back home. so it was thrill. and he is an excellent journalist. i got to tell you, wolf. he really does put his life on the line because he feels it's important to tell people what is going on, to tell people not to sugarcoat it in any way, but to show them the pictures. and that means oftentimes putting himself in danger, wolf. >> it looks like he is a great young guy. thank you so much, lisa. thanks for the good work too. the supreme court passes judgment on a law that sparked fury and boycotts aimed at arizona. these marchers won't be happy with the outcome, and it may give them reason to worry about another law they hate. and three years ago sarah palin was relatively unknown governor of alaska. today she is a huge media celebrity and a conservative force of nature. is she ready to add another line to her resume? president of the united states? building up our wireless network all across america. we're adding new cell sites... increasing network capacity, and investing billions of dollars to improve your wireless network experience. from a single phone call to the most advanced data download, we're covering more people in more places than ever before in an effort to give you the best network possible. at&t. rethink possible. in an effort to give you the best network possible. host: could switching to geico 15% or more on car insurance? host: does the buck stop here? sfx: buck's blustery exhale. host: could switching to geico 15% or more on car insurance? host: does it take two to tango? ♪ ♪ well, you know i love it too ♪ ♪ you love money ♪ well, you know i love it too ♪ ♪ i work so hard at my job ♪ and then i bring it home to you ♪ ♪ i love money in my pocket monitoring some of the other top stories in "the situation room" right now, including a summit pour the global powers in france. what is the latest, lisa? >> hi there, wolf. president obama is huddling with world leaders today and tomorrow at the g8 meeting in france. at the summit, he told japan's minister that americans are heartbroken by the devastation caused by the tsunami. he also found time to sit down with russia's president and discuss economic and security issues. in a 5-3 decision, the supreme court has upheld an arizona immigration law that set off a wave of protest. the law punishes businesses who hire illegal immigrants. the white house argues the law steps on federal oversight of immigration. this could be just a warm-up. a more controversial law allowing police officers a greater role in arresting illegal immigrants is still in the lower courts. and the census bureau says the rate of population growth in the united states is slowing down. in the last decade, the country grew at a rate of 9.7%. that's way down from the baby boom of the 1950s when the rate was about twice that. officials also note that the global growth rate is about three percentage points higher than the u.s., but the u.s. is rate is still more than other developed nations. wolf? thank you. growing, growing outrage in missouri as families struggle to get answers about missing loved ones. just ahead we're going back to joplin for a live report. a notorious international fugitive captured after a decade on the run. the former cnn journalist christiane amanpour is here, and she is weighing in. the firemen are waging their war with very few weapons. there aren't enough trucks -- the u.n. has authorized. membership rewards points from american express. they're a social currency with endless possibilities. women have discovered the secret to a great day because they've discovered the power of aveeno daily moisturizing lotion. the only one that nourishes with active naturals oats, it's clinically proven to seal in moisture for a full 24 hours. so skin looks and feels beautiful all day. for a better day everyday. discover the power... [ female announcer ] ...of america's #1 daily moisturizing lotion, only from aveeno. and discover the power of active naturals. one of the most notorious fugitives of the past two decades has finally been captured in serbia. ratko mladic is the former bosnian serb military commander accused of crimes against humanity of the yugoslav wars of the 1990s. cnn's hala gorani has more on the arrest. >> reporter: after almost 16 years on the run, one of the world's most wanted alleged war criminals is finally captured. serbian authorities arrested ratko mladic thursday. they reportedly caught up with him in lazarevo, a village near the northern down of zrenjanin. mladic was a bosnian serb general during the balkan wars of the 1990s and the highest ranking yugoslav war crimes suspect still at large. he is wanted for genocide, extermination, and murder, and is accused of masterminding the 1995 massacre at srebrenica. >> general mladic has a very heavy responsibility for what was a tragedy in bosnia-herzegovina for many years, but particularly for the massacre of over 8,000 muslim males, which is already being judged to be a genocide. >> reporter: the capture was praised internationally as a victory for the rule of law in serbia. >> the arrest of ratko mladic is a very important step towards full integration of the entire region in our euro-atlantic community. >> reporter: mladic now faces extradition to the netherlands and will eventually be tried by an international war crimes tribunal. hala gorani reporting. >> the balkan wars certainly one of the darker chapters of europe's history. no journalists who ever covered the conflict ever forgot the horrors of sarajevo and srebrenica. christiane amanpour extensively covered the war. there she is. you see the pictures from her back in the '90s. she now work as all of you know for abc news, hosts this week on sunday morning. and christiane amanpour, i'm glad you're back on cnn, at least right here in "the situation room." and i wanted to try to recreate what you felt earlier today when you learned that ratko mladic had finally been caught. >> well, wolf it's good to be back on this day because it's a great day for international justice. just think of this month. first osama bin laden on the lam for nearly ten years and now ratko mladic for 16 years after perpetrating the worst war crimes in europe. we all grew up saying never again. we heard never again. yet you remember, i remember covering that war for the entire '90s, crippled the activity of europe and the united states. it was the worst failure of international security after world war ii. and finally this man is going the face his day of reckoning after killing and perpetrating such atrocities for so many years. it's very emotional. it's very, as i say, a good day for international justice. and the families of those victims will finally be able to know that they will get justice, and that he will face his moment in court, wolf. >> we all remember your reports from bosnia during those years, christiane. is there a moment or two you remember specifically that moved you so much? that reporting history? >> yes. of course. being in sarajevo, which you'll remember the world covered when it hosted the winter olympics. and all of the sudden it turned into this slaughterhouse, this slaughterhouse where neither men nor women nor innocent children were spared. and of course journalists were part of that coverage. we were in the city. we were amongst the civilians as well, and so many journalists got killed and wounld ds includ at cnn and abc and all the other brotherhood if you like. but the moments where we confronted mladic, when we were able to interview him and saw the steely gaze of a killer, wolf. there is no other word to describe it. he had that smile. he talked to dignitaries who had come from all over the world to try to get an end to this war. and he would just sit there and smile and deny that anything other than a terrible civil war was happening. and he always denied it. i remember being in the room when president carter came the try and broke area ceasefire, an end to the war. mladic just sat there and looked him in the eye and said "it is not as you think, mr. president. the press has been telling you lies." i remember being furious at that moment, furious at that moment because we had covered, you know, in graphic detail what was going on. and he was able to do that to all his interlocutors for so long. finally it caught up with him. >> serbia, think about this, christiane, on the verge of becoming a member of the european union. >> well, look, wolf, precisely. and it was the outstanding evasion of justice by ratko mladic that was stopping them from joining as a full member the european union. you remember that. >> had to hand over slobodan milosevic. that happened in 2000. then they had to make sure that ratko mladic's cohort, radovan karadzic, he was finally arrested, again, in serbia several years ago. and then the last outstanding hurdle to them fully joining the european union and the community of civilized nations if you like was the outstanding arrest of ratko mladic. finally they have done it, and finally this puts to bed this last obstacle towards them joining the european union. and it's a very important day, and the serbian president has said for a long time that he was committed to this. and finally it's happened. >> so what do you think happens next? the people who live there, have you been back there at all any time in recent years? >> yes, i have. and in fact it was very emotional and very moving several years ago. i went back with the now late but very great american diplomat richard holbrooke. you remember it was after srebrenica, after what mladic and milosevic and milosevic did in srebrenica that the united states finally intervened. it got its nato coalition together. it bombarded military targets and finally put holbrooke in charge of leading the dayton peace accords. and came the a peace agreement that leads to this day. i went back with holbrooke, and i remember him so clearly being greeted by people in the streets of sarajevo who just wanted to thank him for bringing peace and ending that war. so it was very emotional. and i think right now what holbrooke must be thinking. >> i was thinking about that, holbrooke was a mutual friend of both of ours. tragically he died suddenly a few months ago. if he were alive right now, it would have been a moment i would like to have shared with him as well. it would have been a special moment. >> absolutely. absolutely. it is special. and all this work that went into crafting that piece and finally catching this man, who don't forget has been indicted on the most serious crimes under international law, genocide and crimes against humanity. >> all right. we'll watch the trial. christiane amanpour, thanks for coming back to cnn. >> thank you. >> we'll have you back. a popular television news personality suspended for using an ugly slur against a conservative talk show host has the political rhetoric become way overheated? we'll talk about it in our strategy session. and for sarah palin it's all about one nation. just ahead, new signs she could soon be running for president. (announcer) everything you need to stay balanced on long trips. residence inn. ooh, the price sure doesn't. i'm tired of shopping around. [ sigh ] too bad you're not buying car insurance. like that's easy. oh, it is. progressive direct showed me their rates and the rates of their competitors. i saved hundreds when switching. we could use hundreds. yeah. wake up and smell the savings. out there with a better way. now, that's progressive. and my dog bailey and i love to hang out in the kitchen. you love the aroma of beef tenderloin, don't you? you inspired a very special dog food. [ female announcer ] chef michael's canine creations. chef inspired. dog desired. the lowest of low. that's how msnbc's ed schultz apologized for his choice of words describing conservative commentator laura ingraham. here is the comment that got him into trouble and the apology that swiftly followed. >> what are the republicans thinking about? they're not thinking about their next-door neighbor. they're just thinking about how much this is going to cost. president obama is going to be visiting joplin, missouri on sunday. but you know what they're talking about? like this right-wing slut, what's her name, laura ingraham? yeah, she is a talk slut. >> i want to apologize to laura ingraham. i want to apologize to my family, my wife. i have embarrassed my family. i have embarrassed this company. and i have been in this business since 1978, and i have made a lot of mistakes. this is the lowest of low for me. >> msnbc suspended him for one week without pay. let's talk about that and more in our strategy session. joining us donna brazile, our cnn political contributor. also joined by republican strategist tony blankley. he served as press secretary to the former house speaker newt gingrich. he is now with eddleman p.r. here in washington. it's clear the political discourse out there has returned to becoming so poisonous, only a few months after we thought it was going to die down after the whole gabby giffords shooting in tucson. >> it was extremely demeaning, sexist, and ed was absolutely right to apologize. laura has accepted his apology. i know them both. i've been on both radio shows. they are very passionate individuals. individuals at the same time, wolf, we can disagree with without demonizing people with who we have policy differences like. i like tony blankley. he is a classy man. if i disagree with him, i'll take it up with his wife. >> look, this was pretty repulsive. i mean, as defamatory, it was misogynistic. and also, i mean i've known laura for 25 years. it was completely inapplicable. everything was wrong about what he said. he should have apologized. it was gracious of her to accept his apology. to an extent, all of us who talk in public we define our place in the hierarchy about how we talk. we have all said stupid things. >> i have. >> we don't want to have our entire career judged by one stupid thing. you hear yourself saying afterwards and i don't even believe that. things come out sometimes. nonetheless, we have to live with the consequences of our words, and we define ourselves. he has to some extent, i've done ed's tv show, and he has always been perfectly fair to me. he has defined himself downward by this language. and msnbc has to decide what to do. >> i hope it doesn't really take away from a person who has devoted his life to not just being a talk show host, but he is a very passionate progressive who stands up for public worker. he has been out there on the front lines each and every day of his life. this is a guy with tremendous value. >> you don't think it's a career-ender for him? >> and it's someone who really believes in equality and justice for all. he is a fair man. it was a bad choice of words. it was wrong, and he was right to apologize. >> i don't like to see anybody have their career ended because they say something damn foolish. but the sincerity or the fineness of our apology doesn't excuse our conduct. so he is sort of in that zone. and i've gone without a job, and i don't want to see anybody go without a job. >> same here. but he is not alone. trust me. >> let's talk some other political stuff that is out there, including all of this talk now, sarah palin, you're a republican, tony. what do you think? is she going to run for the republican presidential nomination? >> i don't know. and she has run a very individual career. i mean nothing in her career could have been predicted. when she quit the governorship, i was one of the few people out there saying i didn't think she was hurting herself. i thought it made sense to move down to the lower 48 and she wouldn't pay too much of a price. she has not paid too much of a price for that. is she going to run? she has a lot to lose if she doesn't win the nomination because she has developed a tremendous persona. >> could she win the nomination? >> she could. i think she would be very hard to win the general. but depending on a four or five-way split, could she get 20, 25% consistently? possibly. >> because there has been a lot of suggestions she could win in iowa, right? >> of course. >> she probably would not have a chance in new hampshire because romney is basically native son. >> south carolina. >> but she could go on and win south carolina and then michigan, right? >> and then look, wolf. you have these rules on the republican side where it's winner take all. because they want to spread the contests out. this is a woman that has tremendous name recognition, and she is also very popular with social conservatives. so go, sarah, go. >> you want her to run? >> i need to talk about every day. this woman gave me a tweet every morning. i want her to run. michele bachmann, the more the better. >> i don't have a lot of confidence in my hunch. my hunch is she will not run. but if she does, she will be competitive. on the other hand, the republican primary voters really want to win the general election. >> if she runs, for all practical purposes a race between her and romney? >> no, i don't think so. >> her former boss newt? >> i think newt is going to be in it. i think he is going to be in it well into the next spring. he's got a mountain to climb. he has climbed mountains like that before. we have to -- i think there are other candidates who could rise. we don't know we have the whole field yet. so i think she is very competitive. but it's hardly just her or romney. >> if she does run. that's the huge if. and if she gets the republican nomination, would there be a third party candidate, a michael bloomberg who would then throw his hat in the ring, and who knows what that would do? >> that's a democratic fantasy to have a three-way party. i don't think we're going to have -- >> let me have fantasies at my age. >> before you get too excited there. >> yes. >> i want to remind you, and i'm old enough to remember this. tony is old enough. you were probably a baby girl. you don't remember it. they were high-fiving in the white house when a movie star, ronald reagan got the nomination. >> i worked on that campaign. >> and the jimmy carter folks were say how can we possibly an incumbent president losing to a movie star. >> this is not about her. she is a serious candidate. i think she has tremendous staying power. look, she turned a four-card funeral into an exciting convention, and then she is a vice presidential candidate that we're still talking about. everybody is talking about my old vice presidential candidate al gore. >> all right, guys. thanks for coming in. frustrations are mounting in missouri right now. military man killed inside this home depot as he tried to save someone else. why his widow is now fighting to see him again. but first, will u.s. troops end up protecting the peace between israel and a new palestinian state? the prime minister of israel, benjamin netanyahu gives me his answer. that's next right here on "the situation." [ male announcer ] edmunds.com says that lexus holds its value better than any other luxury brand. ♪ intellichoice proclaims that lexus has the best overall value of any brand. ♪ and j.d. power and associates ranks lexus the highest in customer satisfaction. no wonder more people have chosen lexus over any other luxury brand 11 years in a row. see your lexus dealer. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu brought congress to its feet more than two dozen teams in a speech on tuesday as he described his vision of peace between israel and the palestinians. during his visit to washington, he also found some time for an interview with the blair house across the street for the white house. i asked him about his demand for a military presence along the p along the jordan river. >> you know, one of the things i said is that -- our experience having withdrawn from lebanon is that we left and there was a beefed up force and was supposed to prevent hezbollah from rearming and now they have four times, four times, the weapons they had before we withdrew. so that didn't work out. >> answer is up wouldn't accept u.s. troops. >> no. i said we need a long-term israeli military presence along the jordan river for a simple reason. we don't ask for american troops to deep fend us. i said this in congress. >> there is a precedent, though. american troops. they are still there to this very day. >> what are they doing there? >> want them to leave? >> what are they doing there? >> do you want them to stay? >> yes but what are they doing there? >> they are reassuring you, i assume. egyptians won't launch troops and move towards israel. >> i will tell what you they are doing there. what they are doing there -- multinational force and a monitoring force. they are not enforcing -- >> would you accept that in the west bank? >> not enfor instancing -- >> you accept -- >> i think what's critical is what actually blocks the infiltration of weapons into a potential palestinian state and that will have to be the task of the israeli military in the foreseeable future. that's what i said. we left gaza. you know, there was a european force and the minute hamas took over, that force just evaporated and disappeared. you know, when you talk about a country so tiny, i said to -- vice president biden today, bigger than delaware and even bigger than rhode island. but that's about it. it is a tiny country. half the width of the washington beltway. i think we have to make sure that israel has depth and that means israeli troops presence. >> no nato troops, no u.s. troops. you will -- maintain -- >> israeli, military. >> presence along the jordan river. >> that's right. by the way, the president -- if you listen to what he said, he said that the security arrangements have to be mutually agreed with israel. israel has to agree on any kind of phasing of the arrangements based on the actual security conditions on the ground. >> white house officials told me the president raised all of these issues now. he is so concerned and wants to protect israel, united nations general assembly in september where there could be a resolution which would effectively declare a new state of palestine. do you buy that? >> well, i think that the president said that you are not going to get a state by fear or u.n. resolution. and i think the -- the real technical way of doing this is through the security council and i -- i believe that that's not going to happen. i don't think that that's going to happen. in the general assembly, they can pass -- >> you know your own history. >> i was -- >> 1947 there was a general assembly resolution. >> yes. >> 82 states. >> yeah. it is a -- different situation now. security -- >> israel and state of palestine. >> you know what happened, we agreed to it. the palestinians and arabs -- >> palestinians, history of the general assembly declaring a state. >> in -- practical point of fact, you need to pass it through the -- not the general assembly but through the security council and then have it approved by the general assembly. i think that sequence is important because the united states has a veto in the security council. let me tell new the general assembly, go there directly, yeah, they could pass something like that. they could pass anything. they could pass a resolution saying that the -- sun revolves around the earth and both are flat discs. they pass these flat earth resolutions any time. the crucial thing is the president said any attempt to impose this kind of dash to israel and the u.n. which means security counsel shrill fail. i hope also that the united states coalesces a minority but an important minority of responsible nations that will oppose this kind of dictum. >> egypt the new regime, will they maintain the peace treaty with israel? >> i believe that that is an anchor of peace and stability in the middle east. and -- i think that we expect, obviously, any future egyptian government to honor the peace treaty. not only important for us but also important for egypt and it is important for peace. i think that's the expectation of the united states and any responsible power in the international community. >> prime minister of israel binyamin netanyahu. speaking with me at the blair house earlier in the week. we are taking you back live to joplin month, month, in a few minutes. just ahead, controlling tornadoes and hurricanes. is it possible why some u.s. government meteorologists think it is. plus, a woman's desperate search for her missing grandmother comes to an end. thanks to a few phone calls by a cnn crew. nationwide insurance. talk to me. should i bundle all my policies with nationwide insurance ? watch this. on one hand, you have your home insurance with one company. and on another hand, you have your auto with another. and on another hand, you have your life with another. huh... but when you bundle them all together with nationwide insurance... ... they all work together perfectly-- and you could save 25%. wow... it's all in the wrists. ♪ nationwide is on your side personal pricing now on brakes. tell us what you want to pay. we do our best to make that work. deal! my money. my choice. my meineke. the question this hour, is president obama breaking the law when it comes to the u.s. military activity in libya? of course he is breaking the law in libya. there is a question about whether the war powers act is constitutional. the president should not be ignoring it just because asking congress to approve war is inconvenient to his image. no, he's not. the action was supported by large numbers much people all over the globe. the war power's act is paperwork that's hindering the appropriate use of force. t. writes at first pass here in minnesota i would have to agree obama's side stepping the war powers act. more importantly constitution. the reaction to his overall foreign policy agenda by our allies during his european visit is a reality barometer. at least he's consistent and didn't have a solid plan for libya that generated support he needs before he left and he won't have one when he returns. the law has been interpreted by every president as declaring war. not military action. he is not breaking the law and as long as he doesn't declare a war on libya. i think only congress can declare a war. jason writes -- president obama like recent presidents of both parties is fixate order becoming a world hero any way he can. presidents for some reason figure military force is the path to that goal. murphy says if george bush didn't break the law by invading iraq, then most certainly president obama's decisions in libya are legal. james writes -- i know constitutional scholar but from what i know about the act it has never been fully accepted as constitutional itself. while it is concerning that congress hasn't yet weighed in officially on this, they certainly have the power to send the president a strong message against an intervention in libya if they convene and draft a resolution or action to that effect. and john in louisiana says obama and every other politician in washington are breaking my heart. you want to read more on this, go to my blog. >> thanks, jack. to our viewers, you are in the situation room. happening now, joplin residents begin to learn the fate of loved ones who vanished when the killer tornado struck. there's heartbreak for some. relief for others. there's also outrage at the slow reese of information. iran and hezbollah collided and worked together with al qaeda to in a sill tate the 9/11 attacks. we are taking a closer look out behind these stunning allegations. is there any truth to them? and sarah palin's star has faded since the last presidential election. but this weekend she kicks off a national tour. is that the start of a run for the white house in 2012? we are trying to sift through all the clues. breaking news. political headlines and jeanne moos straight ahead. i'm wolf blitzer. you are in "the situation room." slowly, too slowly, for many residents of joplin missouri. they are learning more, though about the loved ones who vanished during this week's devastating tornado. state officials released a list of 232 missing people far below earlier estimates at 1,500. officials concede some on the list are dead. the current toll is 125. they say that number will rise. the process by identifying the deceased can be very, very difficult, relying on medical records and dna. some families are very angry that they can't even visit the morgue to search for relatives. let's go straight to casey. >> reporter: it is bureaucratic mess. according to these families. we spoke with one family that's in pain after losing a husband and a father in and a pain that's made even worse bus they can't even bury their loved one. hours after the tornado struck joplin, missouri, we met a december traut 17-year-old andrea osborne outside of a demolished home depot. >> dad and uncle in there. i just -- i'm hoping and praying to god they are okay. >> reporter: when was the last time you heard from them? >> before the tornado hit. >> reporter: her dad, iraq war veteran, dennis osborne, was shopping with a close family friend and apparently took refuge in the home depot when the tornado approached. osborne and his wife stephanie had just celebrated their 11th anniversary. she waited outside of home depot all day. i can't imagine what that wait must have been like. >> torturous and then leaving with nothing was -- really disappointing. really devastating. >> reporter: dennis and his friend's bodies were found inside the store rubble tuesday. >> i had people telling me that he was helping people to the back of the storm shelter. that -- when he was found, he was found covering a body to protect him from debris. he was being a soldier. that's what he does. i just want him back. >> reporter: dennis was preparing to leave for germany for army reserve training next month. >> god didn't take him in iraq. why did he take him now? >> reporter: adding to her trauma stephanie's home in the town of seneca was flooded by a storm monday night. her car destroyed. and now she can't even plan a funeral for her husband. >> they are not releasing any bodies. they are telling us that they are having to do some investigation, possible autopsies. let us have our spouses, our children, we need closure. and they need to be laid to peace. this needs to be over. >> far from over for these families. now according to officials and according to people in the funeral industry who have dealt with tornado victims before, part of the problem is the condition of these bodies. this tornado was so devastating, any of these bodies in such bad condition, it is difficult to make 100% sure of the identities. also, officials are said to be trying to determine the causes of death. that many cases takes some time, wolf. >> certainly does. what a heartbreaking situation it is for so many families. casey, thank you. anger and frustration mount among the families they are looking for answers of closure on the fate of loved ones. let's bring in john king. john, you spent the last few days out in joplin. you specifically got an opportunity to spend time with one family looking for confirmation. >> wolf, that was tony and tammy. literally as i was walking up the stairs here they called to say they had brought -- finally brought to the morgue and the morgue has identified the body of their 12-year-old son zack. they have incredibly frustrated and that's incredibly sad to say that. these parents now have confirmation that 12-year-old son is dead. for them, it is a step towards closure. they saw a body being put in the sxwlans told them sadly their son was dead then. they spent to the past five day, trying to get to this moment. it is a horrible moment a parent should never have to go through. their frustration has been for five days they got in line and asked the questions, five days they filled out more paperwork and kept being told come back tomorrow and it could be a week. we tried to go into the meeting you are showing now on the screen with them. tammy wanted us to come in and see if the attention of cnn could help this family crack through the bureaucratic process. >> did it help? >> we don't knowient. we know the attention that cnn and others have given to this issue convinced to governor to add 20 troopers. change the chain of command. everybody on the scene concedes and some cases just bliifiably . the families understand that but don't understand why 72 now, 96, 100 hours later, they can't go to the morgue and look. for one family tonight, the first steps towards closure and what tammy told us was she said finally they are doing something and maybe the same thing will happen for everyone. there are hundreds of frustrated families. >> i have known you a long time and work together. i can sense the frustration and anger in your voice. >> as a parent, as a parent you see these parents and -- it is the most horrible thought you can think of as a parent. bury your own child. to be told your child is dead and then to have to spend five days just trying to find your child to say good-bye. to prepare for a burial. to -- begin to try to -- i can't comprehend it but to try to move on and rebuild your life. and to be told and sometimes treated rudely, that was the hard part. sometimes treated rudely by people saying get in line and be quiet. we are in charge of this process and we will tell you when you can go to the morgue. the families found that quite offensive. now their emotions are raw and people on the other end trying to do the best when we were at the brief encounter, the other day, with it, makeshift office where instrument to fill out the paperwork, sometime it is people were compassionate and other times frustrated. maybe it is because they are working 14, 16 hours a day. maybe because a lot of the families are coming with raw emotions. there was not a coherent consistent compassionate process for the families. on top of the grief, if they are suffering with missing relatives or relatives they i believe are presumed to be dead, on top of the fact many of them lost everything. many of them lost everything. it is remarkable to walk by these homes and see the level of destruction. you see plywood and you see the carpet, carpet gone. this storm not only took the roof off and walls out, it rip state department floors and carpets and everything and possessions are in pieces. that's -- stuff. to try to find their children, especially the parents with young children, it is incredibly hard. >> much more on this coming up at the top of the hour. john, thanks very much. our deepest condolences to that wonderful family. president obama's in france. for the next leg of his european tour meeting with leaders of the world's eight top economic powers. so-called g-8. this meeting comes at a time of upheaval in the arab world with libya looming very large over the talks. our white house correspondent brianna keilar is traveling with the president. brianna? >> we are not far from the beaches of normandy but now the world is focused on a struggle for freedom in a different place. in the middle east and north africa. >> nice to see you. >> reporter: the g-8 summit, president obama's first time meeting with world leaders since the so-called arab spring uprisings in the impasse in libya. the u.s. is stuck in the middle. on one side, allies like france that have hinted they would like to see more u.s. involvement in the nato-led mission. on the other, russia which has a relationship with libya and abstained from a u.n. vote on sanctions. obama met one object one with russian president medvedev. he's concerned attacks on libya will con. the white house said the u.s. will keep russia in the loop and obama did not mention the disagreement. >> a process that's taking place throughout the region. >> reporter: obama meets with french president sarkozy friday as france looks for assurances it won't carry the burden of the military operation largely on its own. >> had we not stepped in benghazi would have been wiped off the map. the message to the allies who want a stronger intervention as he said in london wednesday. the u.s. is committed to seeing moammar gadhafi ousted from power. >> i absolutely agree that given the progress that's been made over the last several weeks, that gadhafi and his regime need to understand that there will not be a letup in the pressure we are applying. >> reporter: the president is also looking for economic support in his plan to help democracy take hold where there have been uprisings. tunisia and egypt for starters. and tomorrow leaders from tunisia, egypt, and the arab league will join g-8 members for discussions, wolf. this just coming in. we learned a cia team of forensic specialists has received permission from the pakistani government to visit the compound where osama bin laden was killed in order to search for documents which may be hidden there. the u.s. official tells cnn that the team will gather up any additional information that can be found. during the raid the navy s.e.a.l. team was able to gather intelligence from the compound and the official says the cia team wanted to see what else it could learn about bin laden's stay there. the agreement was reached several days ago. the official won't say when the visit will happen. we will have more on this story coming up. chairman of the joint chiefs just arrived in pakistan for talks with the pakistani leaders. hundreds of people still missing in the tornado disaster zone. now there's one person left thanks to a phone call by one of our cnn crews. we have details of an emotional reunion you will want to see. is there a way to control tornadoes or even keep them from happening? we will show you why some meteorologists say it is possible. and years of investigation lead one attorney to connect the dots between a longtime u.s. foe and 9/11. the federal government is broken, maybe beyond repair. nothing has been done about the debt ceiling. i wonder now when we approach default in august if anything will be done then. another election campaign is starting. more empty promises and mudslinging. the belief that this time somehow it is going to be better. it isn't. and it probably won't be. when you look around, this is still the last best chance on earth. at least for a while longer. here is the question. as memorial day weekend approaches, how do you feel about your country? go to cnn.com/caffertyfile. post your comment on my blog. >> jack, thanks very much. i always feel good about that. a stunning new federal lawsuit claims iran helped plan and facilitate the 9/11 attacks on the united states. our own mary snow has been looking into this claim for us digging deeper. mary, what are you finding out about this? so many years later. >> wolf, this lawsuit cites s.e.a.l. testimony from defectors of iran's intelligence agency. who claim iran had prior knowledge of the september 11 attacks. and lawyers who filed the case are asking a federal judge in new york to now hold iran liable. on a seven-year path. a path that resulted in a federal lawsuit alleging iran is linked to the cityth attacks. >> 240, 241. >> reporter: under the title assistance from hezbollah and iran to al qaeda, the report concludes that we believe that this topic requires further investigation by the u.s. government. and that's what prompted him to dig further. >> we took onever view to the next, one bit of evidence to the next step and taken us since july of '04 to firmly establish the truth indeed it was iran, assisted al qaeda. >> reporter: 9/11 commission report found several of the 9/11 hijackers traveled through iran into or out of afghanistan. without ever getting their passport stamped. the commission found no evidence that iran or hezbollah, state department sanction terror group that supported by iran were ever aware of the planning for the attacks. in the lawsuit filed in new york, the attorneys allege iran and hezbollah were involved in the planning. what's your strongest evidence? >> my strongest evidence is the fact the people that wrote the two pages on the 9/11 commission report calling for further investigation and now giving us very long and detailed affidavits. >> reporter: melon says three defectors from iran provided evidence in 25 hours of sworn videotaped testimony. but that testimony is currently sealed to protect their identities. one person who is interested in monitoring the case is thomas cain. former co-chairman of the 9/11 commission. he says he's unaware of anyone in the u.s. government following up on the commission's recommendation to investigate iran further. >> there are a couple of examples of that. we pointed to leads we didn't have the staff or the time to investigate. and nobody followed through. yes. the -- annoying, serious, and people should have followed through. >> reporter: at this point ellen says all she wants is an answer. her victim was a pilot for flight 175 that was hijacked and flown into the world trade center. she and other families named in the suit are seeking damages. she says she knows no damages will be paid. >> it will fulfill a lot of feelings of my need to have the perpetrators of such evil found accountable. but it still doesn't bring my girls' daddy back at the end of the night. >> our calls to the iranian mission to tongues were not returned. iran has not responded to the lawsuit. the state-run media quotes a senior lawmaker refutding the allegations saying in his words washington is playing a blame game in the middle east. >> what about these three iranian deeg effectors? what do we know about them? >> the lawyer we talked to said they were high enough that they had access to sensitive information. saying they were with -- iran's ministry of information and security. again, their testimony is sealed but the attorney says he does expect at some point that that testimony will be public. >> you will stay on top of the story for us. a check of the day's other top stories coming up next. amid the tragedy of the tornado disaster, a happy ending and emotional reunion. will she or won't she? we are deciphering new clues about sarah palin's possible, yes, possible presidential run. ♪ things are gonna get easier ♪ ooh-oo, child, things will get brighter ♪ ♪ ♪ someday, yeah [ male announcer ] wherever you are, whatever it takes, like a good neighbor, state farm is there. ♪ yet an instant classic." with sports car styling and power, plus the refinement and space of a luxury sedan, the jaguar xf is a timeless blend of performance and craftsmanship. see how jaguar outperforms the competition at jaguarperforms.com or visit your local jaguar dealer. it means getting everything you need to invest for yourself, not by yourself. it means choosing from stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and every etf sold. plus 5-star service and research designed to increase your intelligence, not insult it. so you can wave good riddance to some high-priced joker churning out cookie cutter portfolios. price is one thing. value is another. don't confuse the two. e-trade. investing unleashed. twin bombs killed at least seven nato soldiers in afghanistan. lisa sylvester is monitoring that and other top stories in the situation room now. what's going on? >> hi, wolf. officials say the improvised explosive devices went off one after the other in a remote part of the southeastern kandahar province. it is the same region where taliban forces unleash multiple attacks earlier this month in their so-called spring offensive. officials have not revealed the nationals of the soldiers who died. the pakistan's taliban are claiming responsibility for another deadly attack. they say it was revenge for the killing of osama bin laden and a suicide car bomber set off an explosion outside of a law enforcement and court complex in northwest pakistan today. killing at least 25 people and more than twice that number were injured. and controversial law sparked weeks of massive protests in wisconsin has been struck down by a state judge. statute sharply limits collective bargaining rights of most state employees. the ruling says the republican lawmakers failed to provide enough public notice before passing the measure. wisconsin supreme court will decide next month whether it will hear that case. it continues on. >> all right. thank you. desperate hundred for missing loved ones. >> yes. i'm looking for a possible patient. ellen freeman. >> reporter: we are going to show thank you dramatic ending to one search in joplin, missouri. is sarah palin getting ready to throw her hat in the ring? there are a number of clues, including this weekend's start of a national tour. come on, boys! let's go! let's get up! this is a fishing trip, not a sleeping trip. all right. that's what you ask for, you're gonna get this, huh? [ air horn blares ] aah! yeah, you're up now. [ male announcer ] only walmart has low prices every day on everything you need. backed by our ad match guarantee. save money. live better. walmart. [ female announcer ] wake up to sweetness with honey nut cheerios cereal. kissed with real honey. and the 100% natural whole grain oats can help lower your cholesterol. you are so sweet to me. bee happy. bee healthy. two of the most important are energy security and economic growth. north america actually has one of the largest oil reserves in the world. a large part of that is oil sands. this resource has the ability to create hundreds of thousands of jobs. at our kearl project in canada, we'll be able to produce these oil sands with the same emissions as many other oils and that's a huge breakthrough. that's good for our country's energy security and our economy. 232 people still missing in joplin month, month. in our days after a monster tornado leveled entire sections of the town. for some the search for loved ones ended in heartbreak but for others, there are emotional reunions. meteorologist jacqui jeras is in joplin, missouri, with one very, very happy emotional reunion. tell the story. >> reporter: well, not knowing, wolf, has been the hardest part for so many people here. they say wondering whether or not their loved one is alive and well. or if they didn't make it through the storm. it has been four days now without answers. today i was privileged to help find an answer for one family. >> i was told there was no body found in the sxrubl had seen an elderly woman digging through the rubble but don't know where she went. you know. i can't locate her. >> reporter: she has been trying for days to locate her 67-year-old grandmother, ellen. she lived here on pitcher street where the homes are so demolished they have to be oyfred with spray paint on the sidewalk. >> that's the bath room. they say stay in the bathroom. it is just -- even if she would have been in there she wouldn't have made it. because it is crushed. >> reporter: she drove from oklahoma hoping to get answers after not being able to contact nearby relatives. >> i still have a lot of friends and family in joplin. the not knowing, you know. i mean, i know a lot of people are missing loved ones. >> reporter: earlier i met neighbor aaron cole and says he knows almost everyone on the block. >> she is alive. miss cook, she got stuck in her basement door entry. she's all right, too. i didn't know that miss premfre, she is in the hospital somewhere. >> that will make it's easier. >> reporter: we kuld the hospital in joplin to see if he was. there she wasn't there. the confusion following the tornado the records shows she was transferred to three different hospitals. we were ready to try them all. i'm looking for a possible patient. ellen freeman. i do. thank you very much. she's in room 612 in arkansas. grandma ellen freeman was found okay and resting in an arkansas hospital. >> is ellen freeman in this room? okay. well, this is her granddaughter. i just now figured out where she's at. okay. no. that's fine. as long as i know where she is at now. >> reporter: she plans to get to know her grandmother better now. >> sad to say it takes this to make you realize you don't really have all that long. you never know when it will end, you know. i mean, for all i know she could have been crushed or, you know, died or something. >> reporter: a happy ending here. but that story tells us how confusing things have been for so many people trying to communicate with each other. and trying to find their missing loved ones. she will take a drive to arkansas and go visit her grandmother now. >> a smile on your face. you must feel pretty good about this. >> reporter: yeah. it is good to hear positive stories out of so much devastation, wolf. unfortunately not every story ends this way. >> unfortunately you are right. thanks for bringing us this very, very good story, jacqui jeras. thank you. as we say for every happy ending in joplin, missouri, there are others that are filled with grief and tears. and desperate searches yielding the crushing news that a loved one did not survive. they are so, so many sad stories out there. as of this afternoon, at least 125 people in joplin are confirmed dead. that number likely to go up. this dates this tornado, joplin, missouri, alone. the single deadliest tornado to touchdown in any u.s. city since the modern record keeping system began back in 1950. 232 people are still missing. brian todd is following what's going on for us and has been since -- since the early days since this tornado struck. first reporters to get there. brian, we are looking at a lot of positive stories. but -- there's some sad stories as well. >> reporter: there are. too many sad stories really. we have one to report about a family we have been featuring on the situation room for the last four days. we have been reporting on a lady from here named michelle who was looking for her 16-year-old son, lance, since the tornado struck. we did learn this afternoon from michelle she got a positive identification from a law enforcement official this afternoon and she has been told that lance is deceased. thoughts and prayers go out to her and her family and handled this with great dignity and led the charge as -- for a lot of the families around here to try to get more information about their missing loved ones. she has been taking the point for that and we really feel the frustration and devastation of their loss right now. lance in this situation have played into this in several ways. this is one of them. this is the list released today that officials gave us 232 people now who they say are confirmed missing. these are people reported missing formally of -- form filed and formal report of them missing. and he was on this list. no sooner did we get this list this afternoon we found a problem with it. lance is on the list twice. and our photographer may be able to zoom in here. you see him here. his full name is caley lance. 1601 jefferson. age 16. flip the page. and here it is again. haley lance. same address. same age. we have not been able to get any kind of response from the state and local officials as to why he's on the list twice. again, illustrates the problem of this list that no sooner was it issued in an effort to streamline the process, it was a problem with it. then later on we found of course lance had been deceased. the list in and of itself has some issues and are trying to work to streamline the process. it is not easy. another big part of the problem is that families are being denied access to a temporary morgue set up outside of the town where a federal forensics experts are going through and -- you know, confirming the identities and working to confirm the identities of the bodies. family members cannot go in there and identify the bodies. i asked lady named andrea spiller from the missouri department of public safety earlier about that. what do you say to the families that are so frustrated and complaining they are just not getting their there fast enough to be able to identify their loved ones? >> we are expediteding this process as of yesterday when the governor placed us in charge. we are spending all of our time, 24 hours a day. resources dedicated to this to make sure we expedite this process because we definitely want to connect family members with their loved ones. it is a top priority. >> reporter: one of the officials from the federal mortuary response team here, one of the forensic officials told me a short time ago there is another reason why they don't let the families go into the morgue. he says that often relatives in these cases go in and a visual accurate i.d. is very difficult to get. sometimes they go in there and make an incorrect identification that causes a lot more problems. that's another reason why they just don't feel like they can let family members in there to identify bodies. >> there is another case you have been following specifically as well. right? >> reporter: that's right. there was another man who was on this morning we got. james williamson. we spoke to his daughter yesterday. she was looking for him and thought he was deceased. we got this list this morning and i talked to her a short time later. he is alive. he was out volunteering with local relief groups. trying to help people. they didn't know where he was and may have lost his cell phone. he is alive. that's another person on this list where the information is not accurate. we, i think, you know, when they release the list, they may have to go back and reavis and it maybe they are doing that now. >> looks like the whole accounting system is really confused. as of yesterday, 1,500 people were officially listed as missing. local authorities now 232. of that -- 1,200 or so, what happened? >> well, what they are saying is that -- that 1,500 figure was based a lot on many anecdotal information and loose information that people would call in and report. for example one of the officials said today we got a lot of calls from people saying well, my uncle calls me on sunday. he didn't call sunday. they would take that zpogs cross reference it and with all of those kinds of reports coming in, somebody at some point floated a figure out of 1,500 and since that was floated out, they have been trying to dial us back on that. that was a very loose figure to begin with, wolf. >> brian todd on the scene for news joplin. thank you. one meteorologist called it a taboo. he says with the right technology the government could easily change the weather and possibly prevent tornadoes disaster. stand by. sarah palin is reportedly buying a new house in arizona. could it be the base of a possible presidential campaign? just one of several new clues about her plans for 2012. pants. and anyone, anywhere who would hide our precious coins. we're coming for what's ours. maybe you didn't hear. but dimes, nickels, even pennies have power now. because the volt charges for about a buck fifty a day. making most commutes gas-free for just a handful of change. so we're taking it back. all of it. we have some driving to do. the 2011 chevrolet volt. it's more car than electric. sarah palin has been written up by some republicans insiders. but sarah palin is showing signs of gearing up for a run for the white house in 2012. she is quietly laying groundwork for cross-country tour beginning this weekend right here in washington, d.c. cnn's joe johns has been piecing together the clues. joe, do they all add up? if they do to what? >> don't know quite yet, wolf. this has been an obsession ever since the last presidential race. will palin make a run important the white house? now there is actually news. a documentary about palin being a released in iowa of all places. she's also planning to travel to historic sites on the east coast. the question is -- whether she's putting on her running shoes. what's up with sarah palin? getting ready to start a nationwide tour. launching a movie that gives her positive light. reportedly buying a place in sunny arizona that could serve as a base for a national campaign or maybe just home away from home in the lower 48. just enough stuff to stir up buzz or is she getting ready to judgment inner loop the race for president. one when fox news where she gets paid big bucks to be a contributor, her comments have only added to the speculation. >> i think my problem is that i do have the fire in my belly. i am so -- adamantly supportive of the good traditional things about america and our free enterprise system and i want to make sure america is put back on the right track and only do that by defeating obama in 2012. i have that fire in my belly. >> reporter: if you look at the latest poll, were she to run she is not in bad shape. tied with mitt romney. moneywise her political action committee was busy through the end ever december. we do know that just this month, she sent out an e-mail solicitation to 400,000 people nationwide. her people say all she was doing is raising money for sarahpac. if she gets in, she will have no problem finding the donors. >> sarah palin can do it like a holy roller on a sunday morning. >> reporter: she is not exactly a shoo-in. for one thing congresswoman michele bachmann is also likely to get into the race and social conservatives like her a lot. one of the founders of the modern conservative movements says palin has not surrounded herself with the kind of crowd that tells him what she stands for. >> views on judges, you know. who does she look to for guidance and leadership and advice and counsel? so -- she's kind of a blank slate to most all conservatives. >> reporter: palin supporter told me she has plenty of time to define herself. we will be watching that bus tour to see what kind of reception she gets. it is supposed to start this weekend when the annual rolling thunder motorcycle rally comes to d.c. for memorial day. >> huge reception. she always does when she is on the campaign trail if this is part after campaign trail. joe, thank you. could it be possible to stop deadly tornadoes like those we saw in missouri and oklahoma? taking a closer look at what some scientists are saying. plus, if you want to gain fame on the internet, and gain c contempt from members of congress, try putting a shrimp on a treadmill. building up our wireless network all across america. we're adding new cell sites... increasing network capacity, and investing billions of dollars to improve your wireless network experience. from a single phone call to the most advanced data download, we're covering more people in more places than ever before in an effort to give you the best network possible. at&t. rethink possible. but when she got asthma, all i could do was worry ! specialists, lots of doctors, lots of advice... and my hands were full. i couldn't sort through it all. with unitedhealthcare, it's different. we have access to great specialists, and our pediatrician gets all the information. everyone works as a team. and i only need to talk to one person about her care. we're more than 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. some met meets say there are ways to stop killer twisters before they happen. barbara starr is joining us with the story. >> technically it is called weather modification. can you really modify mother nature? amid the tragedy of recent tornadoes, the timeless question -- is there anything that can be done about the weather? >> we are talking about in terms of tornado modification is taboo in meteorology. a lot of my scientific colleagues are very reluctant to even talk about it. >> reporter: joe goldman worked for 40 years as a government meteorologist. taboo maybe. but golden says it is feasible. >> if you can shorten the life span of a tornado before it hits the city, you can save hundreds, hundreds of lives. >> reporter: meteorologist steve has more than 30 years of government experience. have you heard in your profession some pretty wacky ideas. he has heard about beaming microwaves in storms and even blowing jet engine air. golden says stopping tornado is serious business. >> in order to do that, you have to be able to produce a very strong downdraft and close to the tornado and earlier than it normally would occur. >> he says think again. >> that's one of the key hang-ups in hitting the modification program. being able to demonstrate convincingly convincingly, both statistically and scientifically that what you intend would not have occurred naturally. >> reporter: what would have to be done to dissipate this? >> there is so much energy here it was thought the only approach would be to effectively drop a nuclear bomb inside it. that was actually given serious consideration in the early '50s. >> reporter: that never happened but there was project storm cherry, a government effort to divert hurricanes, on one occasion it appeared to have worked. >> but they later learned that change in track occurred well before they ever did the cloud seeker. >> reporter: the chinese claim to have shot rocket into the sky to divert rain and the russians tried to make the snow stay outside of central moscow. so can the government change the weather? >> i would say five years at a minimum, we can come up with good technology. >> now golden is an advocate for weather modification, in fact he did some research for the federal government for the department of homeland security, but others say beware that once you start modifying the weather, you could send bad weather in a different direction, to another city, it's the law of unintended consequences. you get started and you may not be able to control the outcome. wolf? >> barbara starr, thank you, fascinating stuff. let's go back to jack for "the cafferty file." >> the question this hour is as memorial day weekend approaches, how do you feel about your country? carl writes from flint, michigan, i remember growing up in a small town here, we had a parade. there were blue star mothers and sheriff's deputies on horseback, we started on the train station at one end of town and marched to the cemetery at the other end with packed crowds all along the way. there we remembered our fallen. david writes it's like my house has been burglared by -- the speech given in england by president obama summed up my feelings for this country. he said that we are a good and decent people who always try to do the right thing, that's the perfect definition of america. sp in kansas city, missouri, i look at america as i would look at a relative in a hospital bed suffering from what is probably a terminal disease. the illness is disturbing, the doctors appear to be incompetent yet the patient keeps chugging along. i'm not pessimist tick, but this is a relative i love and know, as long as he's breathing he has my support. and richard says memorial day has become the come over to my place and barbecue and let's get drunk day. the politicians have done their best to suck the american spirit out of all of us. they are the problem. i am proud to be an american, i salute the flag, i served this country in the military. my only desire is that americans take care of americans first and then worry about others. doing that will instill pride in us once again. you want to read more on the subject, you'll find it on my blog. we got some great e-mail on this, cnn.com/caffertyfile. john king usa begins right at the top of the hour. thing under the gas cap, thing... do you even have a name? well, it doesn't matter. because it's about to change. there's a cheaper, cleaner way to fuel up now. the volt plugs into any socket, and fuels up at home. sure it could use gas, but for most commutes you won't need much, if any. so from now on, fuel tube... we'll just call you...plan b. the 2011 chevrolet volt. it's more car than electric. >> announcer: this past year alone there's been a 67% spike in companies embracing the cloud-- big clouds, small ones, public, private, even hybrid. your data and apps must move easily and securely to reach many clouds, not just one. that's why the network that connects, protects, and lets your data move fearlessly through the clouds means more than ever. [ female announcer ] you use the healing power of touch every day. ♪ now the healing power of touch just got more powerful. introducing precise from the makers of tylenol. precise pain relieving heat patch activates sensory receptors. it helps block pain signals for deep penetrating relief you can feel precisely where you need it most. precise. only from the makers of tylenol. let's take a look at this hour's hot shots. in india, a young fella pops fruit at a road side stamp. in monty carlo, the monaco grand prix. and in london, white flowers, they're on display for the annual chelsey flower show. hot shots, pictures coming from around the world. a tiny krus traceon -- >> if you think a shrimp on a treadmill doesn't get very far, well this slump became world famous, youtube fans put it to music. all kinds of music. and the shrimp on a treadmill became trendy. shrimp scampying along, song after song. ♪ eye of the tiger >> reporter: but now just a few years later, he's become a poster boy, of poster cru crustation. the funding refund project such as shrimp on a treadmill with a half million dollar grant. the media began cracking jokes about obese shrimp. >> you know what you would call a shrimp that's overweight? >> what? >> jumbo. >> reporter: this is my idea of shrimp on a treadmill. but you won't find this guy working out at equinox. this shrimp is in charleston, south carolina where they're using that $500,000 grant to do what doctors do to people. this is like a stress test for shrimp? >> exactly. >> reporter: how long would they run on it. >> they would run for hours, at least for five hours in some cases. >> reporter: lab director lou barnett say they subject the shrimp to environmental stresses like low oxygen or pollution and then they run blood tests and checking respiration. actually treadmills for crabs and even lobsters were the next step. professor burnett sounded a little fried of -- >> it's serious science and it's good science. >> reporter: even if the media don't take it too seriously. >> look at this shrimp on a treadmill, i'm sorry. >> that's the worst intro i have ever had. take a look at this shrimp on a treadmill. really? really. really, george. george, is this it? >> reporter: after a workout like this, even a shrimp needs a cocktail. jeanne moos, cnn, new york. that'

Related Keywords

Situation Room , Wolf Blitzer , Outrage , Brooke Baldwin , Families , Tornado , Information , Joplin Missouri , Joplin , Loved Ones , Scene , Chief , Lawyers , Town House , Sexual Assault , Trial , Hotel Maid , New York , House Arrest , Imf , Sarah Palin , President , Race , Words , White House , One Nation , Phrase , Eyes , Gop , One , Stories , Development , Lance , Michelle Hare , Car , Twister Hit , Holding , Hope , Wake , Symbol , 16 , Everything , Friends , Student , Gosh , Bmx , On Tuesday , Family , Cares , Ministries , Reporter , Brian Todd , Lantz Hare , People , List , Process , Effort , Line , Officials , News , Missing , Names , Controversy , 232 , Frustration , Cases , Questions , Searching , Heartbreak , Led , Charge , Public , Who Couldn T , Complaints , Missouri Department Of Public Safety , Son Lantz , Reports , Individuals , Unaccounted , Those Unaccounted For , Problem , Case , Mother , Car Lantz , Side , Train Tracks , Calye Hare , Humphrey , Answer , Name , Age , Page , Caley Lantz , Government , Team , Identification , Bodies , Deceased , Specialists , Mortgage , Lantz , Morgue , Thing , Supervision , Mechanisms , Event , Family Members , Records , Official , Dna , Mistakes , Solace , Fingerprints , Reason , Problems , Situations , Condolences , Kid , Anything , Place , Loss , Horrible , Insurance Company Office , Meserve Reports , Hands , Rubble , Finds , File Cabinet , Pickax , Ferguson Family Extricates , Something , Office , Insurance Agent , Working On A Children S Book , Remarkable , Clients , Wreckage , Unscathe , Wall , Stronger , Photocopying , Sirens , Doesn T , Neighborhood , Trouble , Desk Chair , Landscape , Rescuers , Bonnie , 20 , Pocket , Flash Drive , Book , Tornado Hit , It , Daughter , Insurance , Husband , Publisher , Business , Cnn , Neighbors , Lives , Jeanne Meserve , Way , Military Husband , Act Of Heroism , Closure , Home Depot , Fighting , Widower , Dominique Strauss Kahn , Letter , Judge , Developments , Stand By , Media Frenzy , Quote , New York Police Department , Right To A Fair Trial , Defense Lawyers , War , Defense , Letters , Shot , Prosecutors , Debra Feyerick , Police , Site , Aim , Client , Leaking , Jury , Sources , Housekeeper , Hotel , Tests , Press , Statements , Descriptions , Sofitel , Access , Clothing , Credibility , Fact , Concern , District Attorney , Prosecution , Prosecutor , Leaks , Home , The Sun , Living Room , Grill , Spa , Rooftop Deck , Gym , Trendy Tribeca , State Of The Art Home Theater , Skylight , 6800 , 60000 , 0000 , Places , Most , Another , Area , Cost , Lots , Restaurants , Master Bedroom , Bar , Building , Security , Kind , Food , Michael Bloomberg , Journalist , War On Libya , Great American , Attack , Contender , France , 44 , Arab World , Christiane Amanpour , Interview , Fugitives , Gadhafi Forces , Plus , Hiding , 15 , Tornadoes , Consequences , More , Theories , Meteorologists , Situation , Price , Hotel Rooms , Division , Naomi Pryce , Black Belt , Negotiating , Languages , Master Of Disguise , 37 , 60 , Company , Outfit , Operations , Level Playing Field , Advantage , Logistics , Course , Driver , Announcer , Seat Belt , Fun , Dealer , Offers , C Class , Mercedes Benz , Jack Cafferty , President Obama , Attacks , Congressman , War Powers Act , Members , Participation , House Of Representatives , Jack , Playing King , Indiana , Dan Burton , Country , Congress , Ordeal , Democratic , 60th Day , U S Constitution , Allied Forces , Brad Sherman , California , Military Activity , Operation , Approval , Congressional Authorization , Moammar Gadhafi , Support , Leaders , Resolution , Authorization , Didn T Mention The War Powers Act , Fear Or U N Resolution , Won T , Harry Reid , U S Military , Vote , Involvement , Memorial Day Weekend Recess , Senate , John Mccain , John Kerry , Story , Role , Plans , Party , Vietnam War , Floor , 1973 , Presidents , Attention , Military , Nixon , Conflicts , Nobody , Congress Overrode Him , Question , Law , Death , Call , James Foley , Lisa Sylvester , Chance , Mr , Lisa , Lot , Life , Lines , Posts , Spots , Afghanistan , Goebel , April 5th , 5 , Journalists , God Didn T , Grace , Soldiers , Wouldn T , Shooting , Brega , Three , Anton Hammerill , Bullets , Help , Trucks , Foley S , South African , Response , Photographer , Kids , Johannesburg , Troops , Manu Bravo , Cell , Fellow American Claire Gillis , Spanish , Battle Of Brega , Two , Phone Call , Yes , Bombs , Mom , I M Sorry , Frequently , Tripoli , Five , Don T , Perspective , Here And Now , Trauma , North Africa , Work , Peaceful , Captivity , Safe And Sound , Person , Reporting , Pictures , In The Flesh , Love , Photos , Face To , Pressure , Thanks , Guy , Supreme Court , Judgment , Danger , Force , Marchers , Governor , Outcome , Nature , Media Celebrity , Fury , Boycotts , Arizona , Alaska , Cell Sites , President Of The United States , Network , Best , Experience , Dollars , Data Download , Network Capacity , Billions , At T , Car Insurance , Host , Buck , Geico , Sfx , Buck S Blustery Exhale , Money Well , Job , Money , Meeting , Some , Summit , Powers , Latest , Huddling , World Leaders Today And Tomorrow , G8 , Issues , Russia , Devastation , Decision , Minister , Tsunami , Japan , 3 , Immigrants , Police Officers , Businesses , Oversight , Immigration , Warm Up , Arizona Immigration Law , Protest , Wave , Rate , Courts , Population Growth , Baby Boom , Census Bureau , 9 7 , Nations , Points , Growth Rate , 1950 , Report , On The Run , Growing , Fugitive , World War Ii , Weapons , Firemen , U N , There Aren T Enough Trucks , Membership , Possibilities , Currency , American Express , Power , Women , Naturals Oats , Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Lotion , Secret , Moisture , Seal , Skin , 1 , 24 , Naturals , Aveeno , Ratko Mladic , Bosnian Serb , Serbia , Arrest , Crimes , War Criminals , Wars , Humanity , Hala Gorani , 1990 , Authorities , Lazarevo , Northern Down , Zrenjanin , Genocide , War Crimes , General , Extermination , Ranking , Murder , Balkan Wars , Tragedy , Srebrenica , Massacre , Responsibility , Masterminding , Bosnia Herzegovina , 1995 , Victory , Capture , Rule Of Law , 8000 , Region , Step , Integration , Atlantic Community , History , Hala Gorani Reporting , Extradition , Europe , Chapters , International War Crimes Tribunal , Netherlands , Back , Conflict , Sarajevo , Abc News , Horrors , 90 , Sunday Morning , Justice , Osama Bin Laden , Lam , Ten , Activity , Oman , Face , Killing , Failure , Perpetrating , Reckoning , Atrocities , Court , Victims , Being , Winter Olympics , Part , Children , Slaughterhouse , In The City , Coverage , Civilians , Men , Killer , At Cnn , Brotherhood , Gaze , Wounld Ds Includ , Word , Dignitaries , Terrible Civil War , Smile , All Over The World , End , Room , The Press , Jimmy Carter , Eye , Try , Ceasefire , Interlocutors , Detail , Member , Evasion , On The Verge , European Union , Cohort , Slobodan Milosevic , Radovan Karadzic , 2000 , Community , Hurdle , Bed , Obstacle , Richard Holbrooke , Nato , Milosevic , What Mladic , Targets , Coalition , Peace Agreement , Streets , Dayton Peace Accords , Peace , Thinking , Both , Piece , Crafting , Crimes Against Humanity , Crimes Under International Law , Who , Talk Show Host , Strategy Session , Television News Personality , Slur , Rhetoric , Signs , Running , Trips , The Price Sure Doesn T , Shopping , Ooh , Residence Inn , Progressive , Hundreds , Rates , Competitors , Savings , Chef , Aroma , Dog Food , Kitchen , Beef Tenderloin , Don T You , Dog Bailey , Michael S Canine Creations , Ed Schultz , Lowest , Low , Msnbc , Comment , Apology , Choice , Republicans , Laura Ingraham , Conservative Commentator , Neighbor , Visiting Joplin , Slut , On Sunday , Talk Slut , 1978 , Tony Blankley , Talk , Pay , Our Cnn Political Contributor , Let , Donna Brazile , Washington , Discourse , Press Secretary , House Speaker , Newt Gingrich , Eddleman P R , Gabby Giffords Shooting In Tucson , Wolf , Radio Shows , Demonizing , Policy Differences , Wife , Misogynistic , 25 , Things , Career , Extent , All Of Us , Hierarchy , Talk In Public , Tv Show , Worker , Language , Value , Someone , Career Ender , Equality , Conduct , Anybody , Zone , Sincerity , Fineness , Stuff , Anybody Go Without A Job , Nothing , Nomination , Governorship , I Don T Know , Pay , Persona , Sense , 48 , Split , Consistently , Suggestions , The General , Iowa , Four , Romney , Son , Rules , Winner , South Carolina , New Hampshire , Michigan , Woman , Conservatives , Let S Go , Contests , Name Recognition , So Go , Hand , Hunch , Confidence , Voters , Tweet , Better , Michele Bachmann , Election , Boss Newt , Spring , Purposes , Candidates , Mountain , Field , Mountains , Hat , The Ring , Huge , Third Party , Enough , Fantasy , Baby Girl , Fantasies , High Fiving , Ronald Reagan , Campaign , Folks , Everybody , Al Gore , Funeral , Staying Power , Right , Advice , Convention , Guys , Military Man , Israel , Frustrations , Palestinian State , Widow , Someone Else , Benjamin Netanyahu , Edmunds Com , Brand , Intellichoice , Lexus , J D , Customer Satisfaction , Associates , Wonder , Row , 11 , Visit , Vision , Teams , Blair House , Speech , Feet , Palestinians , The Street , Military Presence , Demand , P , Jordan River , Hezbollah , Times , Rearming , Lebanon , Israeli Military , Didn T Work Out , Precedent , Monitoring Force , Egyptians , Won T Launch , West Bank , Estate , What , Infiltration , Task , Enfor Instancing , Dover , Hamas , Gaza , Vice President Biden Today , Delaware , Width , Washington Beltway , Rhode Island , Presence , Depth , Arrangements , Security Arrangements , Phasing , Security Conditions , Ground , United Nations General Assembly , Security Council , Assembly , States , Yes , 1947 , 82 , Point Of Fact , Arabs , Sequence , Veto , The General Assembly , Saying , Attempt , Flat Earth , Discs , Minority , Security Counsel , Fail , Dash , Peace Treaty , Egypt , Regime , Anchor , Dictum , Stability , Expectation , Middle East , Prime Minister , Joplin Month , Grandmother , Hurricanes , Phone Calls , Talk To Me , Crew , Nationwide Insurance , Policies , Home Insurance , Auto , Huh , Nationwide , Wrists , Pricing , Deal , Brakes , My Meineke , Action , Numbers , Image , Globe , War Power S Act , Paperwork , Foreign Policy , Agenda , Reaction , Use , T , Minnesota , Allies , Plan , Least , Reality Barometer , Parties , Fixate Order , Jason , Path , Figure , Military Force , Decisions , Goal , Invading Iraq , James Williamson , George Bush , Murphy , Message , Congress Hasn T , Scholar , John , Blog , Intervention , Politician , Heart , Effect , Louisiana , Others , Fate , Relief , Viewers , Iran , Look , Al Qaeda , 9 11 , Run , Tour , Truth , Allegations , Start , Star , 2012 , Clues , Headlines , Jeanne Moos , Residents , State Officials , Estimates , 1500 Officials , 1500 , Number , Toll , 125 , Relatives , Casey , Mess , Spain , Loved One , Bus , Father , Uncle , There , Dad , Andrea Osborne , December Traut , 17 , Dennis Osborne , Family Friend , Refuge , 11th Anniversary , Osborne , Iraq War Veteran , Wait , Torturous , Dennis , Storm Shelter , Rubble Tuesday , Body , Soldier , Debris , Town , Of Seneca , Training , Army Reserve , Storm Monday Night , Germany , Investigation , Needs , Autopsies , Many , Condition , Tornado Victims , Funeral Industry , Identities , Causes , 100 , Answers , Mount , John King , Confirmation , Stairs , Tammy , Opportunity , Son Zack , 12 , Parents , Step Towards Closure , Parent , Body Being Put , Sxwlans , Screen , Wanted , We Don T Knowient , Family Crack , Troopers , Issue , Chain Of Command , 72 , 96 , Everyone , Steps , Voice , Child , Thought , Rudely , Burial , Emotions , Instrument , Encounter , Top , Grief , 14 , Homes , Level , Plywood , Destruction , Suffering , Storm , Carpet , Pieces , Carpets , Roof , Walls , Possessions , State Department Floors , Leg , European Tour , Eight , Talks , Upheaval , Brianna Keilar , 8 , Freedom , Beaches , Struggle , Mission , World Leaders , Impasse , Middle , Arab Spring Uprisings , Relationship , Sanctions , Medvedev , Object , Russian , Will Con , Disagreement , Loop , Sarkozy , Military Operation , Burden , Assurances , London , Map , Benghazi , Progress , Letup , Hold , Starters , Democracy , Uprisings , Tunisia , Arab League , Compound , Discussions , Permission , Pakistani , Cia , Order , Intelligence , Documents , Raid , Navy Seal , Stay , Agreement , Chairman , Chiefs , Tornado Disaster Zone , Reunion , Crews , Details , Attorney , Investigation Lead , Dots , Foe , Election Campaign , Default , Repair , Debt Ceiling , It Isn T , Belief , Mudslinging , Promises , Memorial Day Weekend , Lawsuit , Claim , Digging , Mary Snow , Defectors , Seal Testimony , Knowledge , Intelligence Agency , Mary , Cites , September 11 , Cityth Attacks , 241 , Seven , 240 , Topic , Title Assistance , Onever , Evidence , Several , Next , Hijackers , 04 , July Of 04 , Commission , Planning , Passport , State Department Sanction Terror Group , Attorneys , Pages , Testimony , Affidavits , Melon , Anyone , Recommendation , Co Chairman , Couple , Thomas Cain , Examples , Staff , Serious , Damages , Victim , Flight , Pilot , Suit , World Trade Center , 175 , Feelings , Perpetrators , Need , Girls , Evil , The End , Daddy , Calls , Lawmaker , Tongues , State Run Media , Blame Game , Lawyer , Ministry Of Information , Deeg Effectors , Point , Tornado Disaster , Check , Ending , She , Yeah , Ooh Oo , State Farm , Instant Classic , Blend , Craftsmanship , Sports Car , Refinement , Sedan , Performance , Styling , Space , Jaguar Xf , Jaguar Dealer , Competition , Jaguar , Research , Funds , Stocks , Etf , Bonds , Service , Joker Churning , Plus 5 , Cookie Cutter Portfolios , E Trade , Investing Unleashed , What S Going On , Monitoring , Hi , Taliban , Devices , Spring Offensive , Southeastern Kandahar Province , Nationals , Law Enforcement , Car Bomber Set , Explosion , Suicide , Revenge , Court Complex In Northwest Pakistan , Statute , State Judge , Protests , Wisconsin , Wisconsin Supreme Court , Lawmakers , Collective Bargaining Rights , Measure , State Employees , Ruling , Notice , Patient , Grandma Ellen Freeman , Hundred , Weekend , Ring , Fishing Trip , Come On , Boys , Aah , Let S Go , Sleeping Trip , Air Horn Blares , Prices , Save Money , Ad Match Guarantee , Walmart , Sweetness , Honey Nut Cheerios , Goats , Honey , Bee , Cholesterol , Grain , Bee Healthy , Energy Security , Resource , Growth , Oil Reserves , Thousands , Project , Jobs , Ability , Oil Sands , Canada , Kearl , Breakthrough , Emissions , Oils , Economy , Sections , Search , Reunions , Meteorologist Jacqui Jeras , Sxrubl , Don T Know , Pitcher Street , Spray Paint , Oyfred , Ellen , 67 , Bath Room , Sidewalk , Bathroom , Oklahoma , Premfre , Miss , Neighbor Aaron Cole , The Block , Basement Door Entry , Hospital , Somewhere , Confusion , Hospitals , Granddaughter , Resting , Arkansas , Is Ellen Freeman , 612 , Sad , Fine , Each Other , Drive , Searches , Tears , City , Touchdown , Record Keeping System , Single , Reporters , Lady , Haley Lance , Michelle , Law Enforcement Official , Thoughts , Dignity , Prayers , Ways , Caley Lance 1601 Jefferson , Address , 1601 , Course Lance , Experts , Forensics , Andrea Spiller , Resources , Priority , Mortuary , I D , That S Right , Relief Groups , Cell Phone , Looks , Accounting System , 1200 , Example , Kinds , Somebody , He Didn T Call Sunday , Zpogs , Weather , Taboo , Meteorologist , Technology , News Joplin , House , Base , Disaster , 2012 Pants And , Volt , Coins , Anywhere , Pennies , Dimes , Nickels , Fifty , Commutes , Change , Handful , Driving , Chevrolet Volt , 2011 , Insiders , Joe Johns , Laying Groundwork , Piecing , Gearing , Add , Will Palin , Documentary , Obsession , Movie , Sites , Running Shoes , Nationwide Tour , East Coast , Sunny Arizona , Buzz , Fox , Fire , Belly , Comments , Contributor , Speculation , Big Bucks , Judgment Inner Loop , Track , Free Enterprise System , E Mail , Committee , Poll , Shape , Solicitation , Donors , Doing , Sarahpac , 400000 , Shoo In , Holy Roller , Crowd , Judges , Movements , Founders , Views , Counsel , Leadership , Supporter , Guidance , Slate , Reception , Bus Tour , Motorcycle Rally , Rolling Thunder , Campaign Trail , Scientists , Internet , C Contempt , Gain , Fame , We Saw , Shrimp , Treadmill , Doctors , Asthma , Care , Unitedhealthcare , Pediatrician , 78000 , 70 Million , Health , Weather Modification , Killer Twisters , Barbara Starr , Meets , Mother Nature , Terms , Timeless Question , Meteorology , Government Meteorologist , Tornado Modification , Colleagues , Joe Goldman , 40 , Government Experience , Meteorologist Steve , Life Span , 30 , Storms , Profession , Ideas , Jet Engine Air , Serious Business , Microwaves , Golden , Downdraft , Modification Program , Hang Ups , Energy , Project Storm Cherry , Consideration , Approach , Bomb , 50 , Occasion , Cloud Seeker , Snow Stay , Rain , Sky , Shot Rocket , Chinese , Central Moscow , Advocate , Minimum , Department Of Homeland Security , Unintended Consequences , Direction , Thank You , Carl , Cafferty File , Flint , Train Station , Sheriff , Parade , Deputies , Horseback , Blue Star Mothers , Crowds , Cemetery , David , Burglared , England , Relative , Terminal Disease , Illness , Hospital Bed Suffering , Definition , Kansas City , Sp , Know , Breathing , Stick , Chugging , Politicians , Barbecue , Richard , American Spirit , Desire , Pride , Flag , Subject , Gas Cap , Cheaper , Doesn T Matter , Gas , Fuels , Socket , Fuel Tube , Plan B , Clouds , Ones , Companies , The Cloud , Spike , Data , Apps , Precise , The Makers Of Tylenol , Sensory Receptors , Pain Signals , Heat Patch , Shots , Fella , Pops , India , Side Stamp , Fruit , Monty Carlo , Monaco Grand Prix , Display , Chelsey Flower Show , Hot Shots , Krus Traceon , Around The World , White Flowers , Music , Fans , Slump , Youtube , Song , Shrimp Scampying , Eye Of The Tiger , Funding Refund , Poster Boy , Poster Cru Crustation , Media , Dollar Grant , Jokes , Half , Jumbo , Idea , Charleston , Equinox , Grant , Stress Test , 500000 , 00000 , Stresses , Lou Barnett , Respiration , Pollution , Oxygen , Crabs , Blood Tests , Treadmills , Lobsters , Fried , Professor Burnett , Science , Intro , Contributors , Whatever , Contracts , Noises , Sign , Colleague , Watching , Workout , Cocktail , George ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.