but, first from fox at 3:00, brand new details about the tragedy in tucson and what may have happened before the deadly shooting. all the details coming. first, we have a first look at the representative gabrielle giffords after the incident. you can see her husband sitting at her hospital bed holding her happened. the university of arizona medical center saying she is among six still hospitalized. and a few hours ago the members of the family of the other victims spoke including the daughters of a man twice shot. >> my dad is healing from his wounds remarkably well. and we really think that is because we have so much love and prayer coming our way right now. throughout this ordeal dad's focus has been on the well-being of gabbie and asks we continue to pray for her recovery and her family. >>shepard: we have a clearer picture of a timeline leading up to the shooting. and what appears to be incredibly hectic morning for the suspect. and now coverage on all of this with our correspondent in tucson with more on the parents and the victims but, first, catherine with the timeline. could we get a start with the night before the shooting. what do we know? >>reporter: the investigation is fluid, two law enforcement officers say they are building the timeline of the shooting. here is what they believe, the night best shooting, loughner did not stay at his parents' home but stayed at a mow hell and on the way from the motel to his parents' home he was stopped at 7:30 for running a red light. he argued with his father that morning and they also say he did have the mysterious black bag which they are trying to locate. >>shepard: after the argument, where did the suspect, loughner, go then? >>reporter: we reported that loughner bought the ammunition on the morning of the shooting and now they say he went to a wal-mart that morning and denied ammunition before he went to a second wal-mart where he was able to buy it. and you remember this surveillance video from the safeway, sources say the man in the picture is the cab driver who drove loughner to the safeway and he went into the supermarket while the driver got change. the cab driver as you know had no connection to the shooting. and it is believed based open the eyewitness account that investigators have been able to gather from the supermarket that loughner was there less than ten minutes before he started shooting. >>shepard: before he got to the safeway with the cab driver, loughner made one more stop, right? >>reporter: well, this is part of the mystery. loughner's hours were described as busy and he made another stop before taking the cab to the safeway and at one point, during that morning, he decided to the to drive his vehicle or his truck any longer and he either walked or took a cab to get everything done before the shooting. >>shepard: thank you, catherine from washington, dc. now word that the suspect's parents have left their long time home. our correspondent is there outside the home of the shooter's parents in tucson. what is the story there? >>reporter: well, the neighborhood is very quiet. and we know from members of our fox team who have ben taubing out the house here, that the loughners left yesterday and have not returned leaving with the public defender's office with an investigator who was here yesterday and a woman would looks like judy clark, his court-a.ed attorney. we have learned a lot in the last 24 hours how the sheriff has visited the loughner house before, for one we do not know. and in the meantime, some residents want people to know that two people who live in this house are suffering, too. remember his family, too. and i am sure they are suffering, too, and remember each individual, not just gabrielle giffords affected but everyone has been affected and keep the love going, keep the peace, and let something good come out of this. >>reporter: the next time we are going to see the suspect in court is january 24th for a preliminary hearing. back to you. >>shepard: we have updates from the hospital today. would you fill everyone in on that. >>reporter: yes, we got good news from the doctors this morning at a press conference on congresswoman giffords. her condition is stable, and has taken no dip. we heard emotional statements from the family members of some of the other victims, and the son of a giffords staffer read a statement from his mother. listen. >> i am grateful to the outpouring of love and support for my family, friends, co-workers and community. the wounds inflicted or healing, thanks to the care of the doctors and staff here at the university medical center. and i would especially like to thank dr. freeze. the deeper wounds and needless loss of life and severe injury of co-workers and community members and sadness over the violence will take longer to heal. >>reporter: as the victims recover this week, we also know that funerals for the dead are also taking place and tomorrow we are expecting a funeral for nine-year-old christina taylor green. >>shepard: thank you. fox news weather alert. big winter storm pounding much of the northeast overnight and, still, for some parts of new england just getting started. forecasters say it appears connecticut and massachusetts got the worst of it all and parts of each state expected to get up to 2' of snow and actually more in some places. spots on long island got up to that. connecticut's governor is asking nonessential state employees to stay home today. and in massachusetts, the governor declares a state of emergency, storm knocked out power to 100,000 homes and businesses. so right to our new england corporate, who is streaming live right now. molly, hello. >>reporter: that's right, the governor has declared a state of emergency and the national guard is caused -- called. you mentioned 100,000 with out power, those households are south of boston, where they are not getting as much snow but it is mixed with the rain and it is heavy. so that is causing trees to fall and power lines to snap and they have a real mess getting the power on. other parts of the state, the western part and the northern part of the state could get up to 2' of snow. but there is a little bit of a bright light. at logan airport, they say they are hopeful by the end of the evening they will be able to get a few flights out. they have a runway they have kept clear and a couple of flight could get out tonight and they are working on getting planes in so that tomorrow morning they can deal with the backlog of travelers wanting to get to their destinations. school has been canceled. nonessential employees are asked to stay home today. and, fortunately, it will be a beautiful sunny day tomorrow and the next couple of days to deal with the cleanup as we still have winds and high drifting. tomorrow is clean up. >>shepard: middle of january, plenty more to come. our new england correspondent, live from boston, molly line. we got 9" in central park. at 1:00 o'clock there were two plows on the street, two plows on the avenue and the snow was cleared when seconds. the mayor not letting anything go wrong in the big city. the schools and government offices opened and all the airports up and back to normal. 9" cannot beat up not after what happened a couple of weeks ago with more on the airs shooting ahead. and right now, president obama is on the way to tucson for memorial service there on when, so that means wednesday's with juan williams about rising above the politics. a year after the earthquake in haiti killed more than 200,000 people we will look at conditions. and they are sadly not much better. a live report on the orphans who are still waiting to find a home at "studio b" continues on fox news channel. are you receiving a payout from a legal settlement or annuity over 10 or even 20 years? call imperial structured settlements. the experts at imperial can convert your long-term payout into a lump sum of cash today. >>shepard: president obama will address the nation tonight in the wake of the mass shootings that killed six and wounded 14 others. not the first time he has dealt with a national tragedy since taking office. there was the ft. hood matser and more recently, the west virginia mine explosion that killed 29 men and tonight we are told president obama will focus on uniting and healing. some have made this a political issue. people on the left and the right suggesting extreme partisan rhetoric may have played a role. there is no way to know but there is no indication. analysts say president obama's challenge is to stay above it all. to appear as a leader, first. not as a politician first. it is wednesday which means wednesday's with juan. if the snow was not still falling he would be in new york but instead in washington, dc, and seconds ago you were on espn. that was interesting to see. what is the president's goal tonight? >>juan: he has to rise above all of the political static and the political static is out there in a junior way with everyone either saying that there was a connection or the denial of a link to the rhetoric around the country. i think the president has to stay away from that political sand trap. he has to be very clear here that we do live in more politically polarized times but this is not about that. this is about us as an american people and an american family and we have to speak if those family terms about how a family goes through grief together, no one is alone, no one side is grieving, all of us are grieving and we can all have different points of view. i am reminded of the successful speeches we have heard from presidents on occasions like this. i think of ronald reagan after the "challenger" explosion in which he directed his comments specifically at schoolchildren. he spoke as if he was speaking to a schoolroom class and was successful in talking about the idea we were not giving up on space exploration and those astronauts include the lovely teacher who flipped the bonds of earth. it was poetic and bill clinton and it was tricky after oklahoma city in 1995 he, too, spoke about the men family. but, subsequently went on to catty gate right wing talk radio but the fact that he spoke to the idea of the american family and feeling pain and gravy but not directly into hate boosts his standing. some opt left think he could boast his standing by taking on right wing talk radio and i think that would be a huge, huge mistake. >>shepard: we have in indication he will do anything like that. one of the observations on this president, the observations for a reason, has come from all quarters whether he feels the empathy or not he does not give it off. and the way that bill clinton could on a dime and ronald reagan could on a dime, and this president has not gotten there according to most people who have observed him and here is the question: he is up six points. he is way up in the opinion polls. he is as high as a year and part of his job here, is just not mess things up. >>juan: well, that is kind of a negative way to view it, but the fact is, he can be too cool. and he is not an emotional person but a person would looktures and that is not attractive in a moment when the whole family is grieving. i don't need anyone to tell me how to feel but i want to be clear you have blood in your veins, too, and that is what the president has to do tonight. he has to not say he is the master of all the facts in this situation and all the points of view, but you have to share in the sense that this is a moment that could define us going forward in terms of how we do politics and how we think about each other and would we are as an american people. this is what he has to do. talk about what he feels in here and the fact that the congresswoman and a child were shot and that a judge, a man who upholds the law and who demonstrated courage in doing so is dead. he has to say he is impassioned and feeling, you know, upset and he has to be clear. i don't want him to weep and manufacturing tears but i want to know that he is a real human being in there and he is the leader of our family at this critical ment. >>shepard: juan williams, good to see you. we will have full coverage tonight uninterrupted of the president and the memorial service in tucson, tonight. crops destroyed. houses ruined. two dozen dead. many more missing. but the flooding just keeps getting worse. and now the country of australia's third largest city is underwater. and said to be a ghost town. we will get the details in a live report. a live report from down under ahead. what super fruit is taking sunsweet ones.orm? prunes? they're a delicious source of nutrients. wow! it's packaged by itself... that's fantastic! that is so juicy. this is delicious. sunsweet ones. over 400 million enjoyed, and counting. to london starts with arthritis pain... and a choice. take tylenol now, and maybe up to 8 in a day. or...choose aleve and 2 pills for a day free of pain. enjoy the flight. >>shepard: emergency sirens across one of australia's largest cities as muddy floodwater threatens to submerge 20,000 homes and literally wash away neighborhoods. breaking recently, the local river has piqued and lower than the worst case scenario. but little comfort to those already under. incredible, right? gas station underwater. so far, 22 people have died. more than 40 are said to be missing since the rains began in november. and look at this, horses and cows swim through the muddy waters looking for higher ground. rescuers tried to get them to safety but it is not clear if they succeeded. the floods affected enormous portion of australia. we are talking the size of germany and france combined. and you can see the comparison, the same size, really, as the states of texas and new mexico combined. our chief fox correspondent jonathan hunt with the news down in our newsroom. i thought he was down under, he is downstairs in his basement. this is incredible. than extraordinary images coming from australia and the northeast section known as queensland. look at this. ripped off the moorings and smashing into the bridge and pulled under. you can feel how strongly the waters are running. that boat sank. cars across a huge area of australia have been going, seen submergeed and we saw the pictures of vehicles swept away on the very powerful waters yesterday. and they are just dreadful scenes to watch. for everyone if the effected areas it is nothing less than a terrifying time. >> this is absolutely in believable. i have never seen anything like this. >> all the cars, what can we do about it? devastating. >> they are now saying that the waters have reached their height at 13 feet not as bad as they thought it might be but, still, very, very bad and they will not recede for three our four days. so a lot of trouble still ahead. >>shepard: and desperate attempts to rescue people and animals. >>jonathan: everyone is trying to get out and get what they can, including their pets. we have seen people, the military leading the rescue efforts. obviously, targeting the old and in firm, first, trying to do what they can to help them and everyone trying to get their animals. we saw these people walking away with a dog and a backpack of a parrot in a cage and you see the pictures of the mores and cows and everyone doing what they can to rescue those. people loading their possessions on the boat and trying to get to higher ground for as quickly as they can and for as long as they can but a desperately difficult time. >>shepard: tough times economically. anyone talking dollars and cents >>jonathan: no one can put a dollar cost on the cleanup but it is expected to run into billions of dollars. another problem is part of, if you like australia's bread basket, a lot of crops grown there and they believe the damage done to the farmlands in that area could mean that australia's gross domestic product is hit by something like $13 billion so the economic impact is going to be felt for a long, long time. >>shepard: thank you reporting from new york. and our chief correspondent chatting about the stop stories at the website. look at the fancy area today, foxnews.com/shep on the "on the hunt," icon. one year ago today, a massive magnitude 7 earthquake struck just off the coast of haiti. and the quake devastated that nation killing more than 230,000 people. and it is far from over. many of the tent cities that served as emergency shelters remain to this day housing more than a million people including hundreds of thousands of little children of the one survivor says that the help the government promised hasn't come. >> we wait. we wait. we wait. nothing. but we wait. many people prefer to wait and wait. nothing, nothing, nothing. >>shepard: the u.n. predicts 50,000 haitians will still be living in the camps at the end of the year. our reporter is live at port-au-prince. >>reporter: because the earthquake struck before 5:00 a lot of parents were at work and a lot of orphans were created. and now a new category of orphans has developed in haiti. 10:00 a.m. snack at open hands orphanage is a cup of corn washed down with a cup of water. a year ago, most of these children had homes and families. after the earthquake, they were found without parents, documents, sometimes even names. many of the children don't have names but each has a story. some were injured by falling cinder blocks in the earthquake. she is quiet. others like ashley, next to me, act up quite a bit. they were buried for three days next to the earthquake buried by his dead mother before being pulled out. in the year since the earthquake the number of children in haitian orphanages has grown to 380,000 and many of the new arrivals are so called economic orphans. >> it is an auction for -- an option for parents to drop the children off hoping they get a better life. when think orphan, they think this child has no parents or no living relative and that is not the case. >>reporter: 85 percent of orphans in haiti have one living parent which cop applicants any effort at placing the children with families outside of the country. we can visit the children in the orphanage but they have a lot of skepticism that they will ever be able to take their children back home again. >>shepard: thank you, steve, from port-au-prince. thank you very much. continuing coverage on the deadly shooting in tucson and a day of emotion on capitol hill as lawmakers mourn the victims. and the suspected shooter himself had quite a troubleed past including problems with the cops and college campus security. but officials refuse to release anything on that. our legal panel looks at why ahead. [ male announcer ] this is lara. her morng begins with arthritis pain. that's a coffee and two pills. the afternoon to begins with more pain and more pills. thevening guests arrive. back to sore knees. back to more pills. the day is done but hang on... her doctor recommended aleve. just 2 pills can keep arthritis pain away all day with fewer pills than tylenol. this is lara who chose 2 aleve and fewer pills for a day free of pain. >>shepard: this is "studio b" and the bottom of the hour time for the to which the news. a day of prayer in congress as one of its own remains in critical condition with a wound to the head. the house speaker boehner holding back tears on the house floor in an emotional tribute to congresswoman gabrielle giffords and the other victims of the bloody rampage. >> our hearts are broken. but our spirit is not. this is a time for the house to lock arms in prayer for the fallen and the wounds and a resolve to carry on a dialogue of democracy. >>shepard: the house of representatives voted on a resolution condemning saturday's attack and honoring those would lost their lives. and zimmerman, an aide to the congresswoman, and nine-year-old christina green. carl is live on hill. a rough day. >>reporter: rough day where the tone of political rhetoric came up. the number two house democrat, highway year of maryland, suggests it is time to look at what all politicians say. >> it is time for us to reflect on heightened anger being projected on our public debate. and the daily denigration of those with whom we disagree. and it is appropriate, therefore, that the wrenching, shocking senseless violence compel us to reflect on our own responsibility to temper our words and respect those with whom we disagree. >>reporter: many democrats, many on the left, have suggested that right-wing rhetoric has set a time that created an environment for this to take place, a democrat from new york, who directly disputed that today some are suggesting that violence deemed political rhetoric contributed to this tragedy. it would be wise to reflect on how we characterize our political opponents and how we conduct our debate. undoubtedly we could benefit from more life and less heat and more humility, but this attack was carried out by a man who appears to have been severely mentally ill. >>reporter: there were prayer services today and members have signed the book in the capitol hill rotunda and a security briefing and discussions about what type of legislative fixes could be involved regarding weapons, guns, and no plan to take up that, this week, and limited time next week for big legislative action that could remain on hold remembering this for several more days. >>shepard: thank you, carl. the suspect has had run ins with the sheriff and campus police at the community college but each will refuse to release records. campus cops were involved in five separate incidents including classroom and library disruptions involving loughner as we reported. he was suspended. and arizona's public records law requires records to be open to inspection by any person at all times. that is, unless officials can prove releasing the information could violate their privacy or harm the interests of the state. that could be the case. and now to our legal panel with us former federal prosecutor and criminal defense attorney. good to see you both. all right, down in florida, most open laws in all the country, and i think those records would already be in the hands of the media, is it the state exception that makes the difference? >>guest: i see two different situation. with respect to law enforcement if they are in the midst of an investigation, they should hold out but why is the community college stonewalling? does it make everything look worse when they are doing so? you wonder if they are concerned about the controversies that were raised at virginia tech about the way the administration may have had opportunities before that horrible atrocity in 2007 to be aware of the mental illness. whatever is causing the community college to stonewall, they should stop it because you take the already important questions of why did it happen? and how it could have been prevented. and you go to the next question, what are they hiding? >>shepard: does that make sense, david? >>guest: no, it is federal law that is causing the stonewall. there is no question. this request has to be denied because it violates the right of privative the man and it does. and that includes grade or transcripts but discipline issues, as well, and the college cannot release this information if it jeopardizes the interests of the state. now, what that could mean is trial rights if the information is disseminated in the media that could prejudice his right to a fair trial, information that would not be admitted in trial by a judge, that could cause a change of venue and cause damage to the prosecution in this case and, also, if it turned out that people did not take the incident seriously, at the college, those people who did not take it seriously could be in grave jeopardy because of the amount of anger and emotion involved in this. >>shepard: that is true. the arguments are neither new or unique. and in this country, and actually, state by state, we have been trying to balance this for as long as i have been alive and probably long before the people's right to know versus the people's right to privacy. and hasn't the state of arizona spoken, sir, if maybe not as clearly as necessary here but it wants the records like this open? >>guest: absolutely. and there is a disagreements between your panelist. i don't think the federal student privacy laws apply where state public records law and you are looking at reports including campus police and discipline actions that are relevant and the people's right to know is never at a greater level than when they want to know what happened, could it be prevented? and it raised difficult and troubling questions at virginia tech we were called to report president bush from three cabinet members the same questions may have not been properly looked at and whether or not there were lessons from virginia tech that were ignored by this community college, that is a question that ought to be answered. >>shepard: quickly. >>guest: queen -- kendall is brilliant lawyer but this rises to the legal of crime and were prosecuted and they were grievous, no doubt, but they were not filed on and prosecuted so the exception does not apply. >>shepard: lawyers, thank you both. now to lebanon, a hit of instability and unstable region and, now, the government has just collapsed. new problems today can be traced to the assassination of a prime minister five years ago and more importantly the investigation into who caused the assassination. and is the spot where the government collapsed today, what made that assassination happened? it is a little twisted. we will sort it out and see how the united states is responding next. [ male announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends totay at rest... while a body in motion tendso stay in motion. stayingctive can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if y have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain aninflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is pron to improve daily physical function so moving is easier. and celebrex is not a narcoc. when it ces to lieving your arthritis pain, you and your doctor need to balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, including celebrex, may increase the chance of heart attack or stroke, which can leato death. this chance increases if you have heart disease or risk factors such asigh blood pressu or when nsaids are taken for long periods. nsaids, including celebrex, increase the chance of serious skin or allergic reactions or stomach and intestine prblems, such as bleeding and ulcers, whiccan cur without warning and may cause death. patients al taking aspirin and the elderly are at increased risk for stomach bleeding and ulcers. do not take celebrex if you've hadn asthma attack, hives, or other allergies to aspirin, nsaids or sulfonamides. get help right away if you have swelling of the face or throat, ortrouble breathing. tell your doctor abut your medical history and find an arthritis treatment that works for you. ask your doctor about celebrex. and, go to celebrex.com to learn more about how you can move toward relief. celebrex. for a body in motion. >>shepard: and word from port-au-prince from the prime minister that the previous estimates of the death toll are low, announcing 316,000 people died as a result of the earthquake a year ago today. well, vice president biden returned to pakistan today to reaffirm the partnership between the two nations in fighting al qaeda and the taliban. the vice president making a one day visit after a trip to afghanistan early this week after meeting with the prime minister there, vice president biden denies the united states is being soft on pakistan. many experts say the pakistani army needs to step up its fight against the militants. the long and unsecured border of the country shares with neighboring afghanistan, and vice president biden reminded the audience the u.s. is spending $7 billion on aid to pakistan. 11 senior ministers from hezbollah and the allies resigned today collapsing the government of lebanon. the united states government considers hezbollah a terrorist organization, the group controls sizable portions of lebanon's leadership and they represent a third of the cabinet. tensions have remained high overu.n. investigation over the 2005 killing of the former leave prime minister and many believe today's move could trigger years of future political turmoil. the news came as the current prime minister who is the son of the former prime minister met in washington with president obama. so the leader comes to washington, members of parliament resign, the whole thing collapses as we are about to learn that members of hezbollah may have been, in part, responsible, for the assassination. so they just fowl the government. and now to the white house with our reporter. mike, not entirely unexpected, i suppose, that this could be the way things turned but not good at all. >>reporter: no question. we have heard from u.s. officials that they are disappointed, they are concerned. secretary of state hillary clinton is traveling in the middle east and made these comments. we view what happened today as a trance parentest by those -- transparent effort by those forces in lebanon and interests outside lebanon to subvert justice and undermine leave's stability and progress. the u.s. government's view is that the leave people should not have to choose between justice and stability so the push is on for the investigation to continue. >>shepard: and syria and iran are aligned with hezbollah where many have been aligned with the united states. what does the government do now? >>reporter: the u.s. is hoping that a government will be form by the leave people that represents the leave people without the outside influences including iran, and u.s. officials are not surprised that the hezbollah coalition pulled the plug as the prime minister was meeting in the oval office with the president of the united states to humiliate him, it should be noted he cut the visit to washington short and headed to paris to meet with the french president, a country pushing forward to try to get justice with the investigation into the assassination. >>shepard: thank you from the north lawn of the white house. thank you. lawmakers in illinois have voted to abolish the death penalty in that state but there is another hurdle before capital punishment in illinois is illegal. in the meantime, the debate rages. that's next. ♪ [ male announcer ] you're at the age where you don't get thrown by curve balls. ♪ this is the age of knowing how to get things done. ♪ so why would you let something le erectile dysfunction get in your way? isn't it time you talked to your doctor about viagra? 20 million men already have. ♪ with every age comes responsibility. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy ough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects may include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. this is the age of taking action. viagra. talk to your doctor. see if america's most prescribed ed treatme is right for you. >>shepard: and "studio b," the illinois governor now must decide whether to repeal the state's death penalty after lawmakers voted to abolish it. the bill passed in the state senate yesterday. and now it waits for the governor's signature. but the governor has not said which way he is leaning. the governor supports capital punishment but he also has upheld the state's 11 year moratorium on executions. the state's former governor ryan imposed the ban in 2000 other wrongful convictions. and george ryan is now in jail. with us is the washington bureau chief for the "chicago "sun times"." do we have any indication from springfield how this may go? >>reporter: not yet. i checked before coming on and it is a question mark on what the governor quinn is going to do. this is a bit of a tough one because it has been very easy for quinn and his predecessor, governor blagojevich and he was convicted of other criminal corruption and it was easy to continue the moratorium because of the flawed criminal justice system in illinois that created the wrongful convictions. so, no one is making any bets. i think i will take a guess and i think he will sign it because there is, he said he would take into serious consideration the will of the state legislature in both chambers where it passed. >>shepard: when do we expect him to act? >>guest: he has 60 days. he said in talking about this he wants to hear from everyone. and as you can guess, this is one topic where most everyone has an opinion. many of them want to be heard. >>shepard: thank you, lynn sweet cutting you short because there is breaking news that just entered the fox newsroom and weapon talking about this, the local sheriff in tucson, arizona, has released document on the shooting suspect, jared loughner. we reported moments ago how the department was delaying the release of information that the community college is a separate matter but trace has the documents at his post in tucson. what do we know, trace? >>trace: a bunch of them. one by one, the sheriff sent us these and we are going through them one at a time. we were sent 13 files. we know, now, that ten of these, at least, happened prior to the shooting. so i am trying to say between the years of 2002 before the shooting the sheriff went out to the loughner household. so, the sheriff's department is very familiar with the loughner family. in at least four of those cases, they had contact with jared loughner. once back in 2006 he was arrested as a juvenile for alcohol consumption and then, again, two careers later -- two years later as an adult for drugs. and another time a neighbor reported there was a fire at house and it was a barbecue and another time the father called the police and said that somebody wasn't keeping up their yard and was parking the wrong way. and another time the mother says one of her license tags was stolen and another time a window was crushed out of a back and another time the father said he was being harassed. so we are trying to compile all of these. there are 13 different files. we asked the question of the pima county sheriff: did you have contact? they would not say. and, today, we asked, did you have contact prior to this shooting with jared loughner and they said today, yes, we will get you the detail of the different times. and now we have learned that at least continue times between the years of 2010 and 2011 the sheriff was called out to the loughner household. four of those involved jared loughner. >>shepard: but nothing on violence or mental conditions. we will wait to see what we get from the community college. first, though, a quick commercial break. [ rge ] psst. constated? phillips' caplet use gnesium, an ingredient that works more naturally wityour colon than stimulant xatives, for fective reli of constipation without cramps. thanks. [ professor ] good morning students. today, we're gonna... >>shepard: another check on the big storm moving up to the northeast. dixie got it. mid-atlantic. now, new england. giant ice falling from the sky in jackson, mississippi. you can see people if this parking lot trying to dodge the frozen daggers. good grief! look at that! man! our news service says warm weather caused the ice to break off and fall from the station tv tower. and now the weather machine, what are the snow totals? >> amazing numbers. >>shepard: i hear they got a couple feet on long i'll -- long island. >> the bull's eye is connecticut some at 30". we will update you and i am sure we will see over 30" in a lot of places. new york city, 9.1", nothing compared to a couple weeks ago and someone say a sign in massachusetts "the roads are wicked slippery." i can't do that accent. and now we will want the two storm systems come together, one across the south and one across the midwest bringing us the blockbuster storm for new england. that keeps on spinning. so well get updated snow totals through the evening and we will have the latest for you on fox with more snow on the way. >>shepard: airports are open in new york city and flight attendants give out peanuts, but why not get a draft beer while flying the friendly skies? well, may be able to soon. we will explain. but first a star of the classic t show "adventures of ozzie," has died if his los angeles home. he battled complications from cancer and nelson was the last living member of the nelson t family including ozzie and his wife, and his teen idol brother, rick, and david nelson directed and produced self episodes of the show. dead today at 74. seafood lunches starting at just $6.99 at red lobster. toi switched to a complete0, multivitamin with more.9 only one a day women's 50+ advantage has gingko for memory and concentration plus support for bone and breast health. a great addition to my routine. [ female announcer ] one a day women's. >>shepard: before we call it a day in stub, wonder why you cannot get a draft beer on an airplane? the pressure, of course, causing too much foam. well, leave it up to the japanese to solve the problem, there is now a new space age kind of keg and foam is no longer an issue. so far, only the japanese carrier uses it but there is catch. for one beer, more than $11 each. like yankee stadium.