hit orchestrated by her husbana. and the alleged shooter, this woman. weweave the details on this twisted plot. and the big day, when your entire life is filmed, imagine what your wedding day is like. how much will kim kardashian's nuptials cost. who's invited? and what's up with those last-minute cuts to the guest list? they're calling it the u.s. royal wedding, of course, kim kardashian getting married. i'm sure it's going to be the dinner party du jour tonight. dan, i'm going to catch you up to speed on a few little highlights. >> okay. i have to admit i've not been following this. i'm kind of proud. >> the wedding is expected to cost between $5 million and $10 million. >> what? >> two wedding dresses each at $25,000. she's commissioned -- she's a businesswoman, she's commissioned a perfume of her own called love selling for $100. >> a real business. they're filming the whole thing, right? >> yes, they're filming the whole think, there's going to be two episodes. i mentioned royal wedding, ladies, brace yourself, prince harry, he is coming to america. and not just for a few days like this brother william did last month. no, no, no, he'll be here for months. we'll tell you where he'll be and what he'll be doing coming up. and we do have an incredibly sweet and very cool story this morning. they're calling this woman the real-life nancy drew. this 12-year-old may be bolder than fiction. she not only cracked the case that the cops could not but then she went to the home of the alleged thief and confronted him herself. she isisoing to be live this morning, and we are looking forward to that. >> she's not to be messed with. we're going to begin with the deadly storms that swept through the northeast. at least three people are killed and one person is missing after the flash flooding in pittsburgh. paul deanno from our affiliate seattle komo is here. good morning to you at home. we had big problems throughout the northeast. but the biggest problem was in western pennsylvania. these storms came through and didn't move very much. they brought torrential rains and they wreaked serious havoc. across the northeast, the storms came in fast and hard. in pittsburgh, torrential rains caused flash flooding that inundated neighborhoods. submerging cars. a mother and daughter were killed after being trapped in their flooded car. an elderly woman is still missing. >> water started coming in my doors that's when i knew i was in trouble. 911 said try to swim, that's when i got out of my car it was well over my head. >> reporter: the aine came so quickly. the mighty allegheny river rose nine feet in just a few hours. >> i was s standing on the roofo climb out the window. >> the next thing you knew, the water was up to the middle of my door and you just see a red dump truck floating. >> reporter: and in new york and new jersey, the storm left people running for cover and stranded. >> cars came out on the street, jutted into the water. they can't see it. it's getting dark out. >> there was such a lot of rain in such a short amount of time, we had a river in our backyard. >> reporter: there were a lot of problems in the northeast. it wasn't just there. it was the midwest as well. we take you to this video of northeastete wisconsin where we also had big problems there. an apparent tornado now confirmed. another likely will be today. and a mobile home park, a man lost his life. a deadlylyornado hitting northeastern wisconsin yesterday afternoon. coming up in full weather, we'll talk about who gets the severe threat and perhaps the first hurricane of the atlantic season. that's coming up. >> all right, paul. we do have more breaking news. we'll turn to ron claiborne. good morning do you, ron. good morning, everyone. that breaking news is out of libya where moammar gadhafi more than 40-year grip on hour appears to be slipping. rebels are reportedly advancing on the capital of tririli from three directions and they appear to have b bught troops out of zawia just 30 files out of tripoli. in syria, little evidence that the government is easing its crackdown on the five-month-old uprising in that country. despite a pledge for president bashar assad to stop the violence. as thousandsdsf people poured in the streets across that country. and the death toll has climbed from last week's stage collapse at the indiana state fair. a 22-year-old college student has died. she's now the sixth person killed by that stage accident also on friday. there will likely be many lawsuits filed on behalf of the victims. and arizona congresswoman gabby giffords now knows the full extent of the shooting. rampage that left her severely wounded. an aide says in late july, she was told the names of the six people who died in the attack nearly seven months after it happened. giffords was intentionally kept in the dark until she reached a point in the recovery where she could process that grim news. and finally, sometimes kids can be so impatient, take a look at this 911 call. dan's smiling over there. as impatient father to-be andy marsh raced his pregnant wife to the hospital. dan, check it out. >> i don't know if i'll be able to make it in time. she's having the baby in the car. >> you need to stop the car. >> the baby is out! >> got a little boy? >> yes. >> congratulations. >> okay. that's a heck of a way to come into the world. >> and the mother, father and the baby are doing fine. i think it's the part about you need to stop the car. >> yeah. the timing there. the baby is out. you stop the car. >> and can i just make one observation, did you notice, it was the father screaming, not a peep from the mother. resilient, strong woman. all right. >> yeah. >> have to point that out. >> thank you, ron. now, we want to move on to extraordinary developments in one of america's most infamous cases. this is a murder case nearly three decades old. these three men were accused of killing three 8-year-old boys in a grisly fashion but then a group of rock stars and movie actors came rushing to their defense and this morning, those accused killers are free. but should they be? abc's t.j. winick is here with the details. t.j., good morning to you. good morning. the three's purpose for black clothing and heavy metal music was presented to prosecutors back in 1993 as part of an argument that they were were engaged on occult murder. >> reporter: the so-called west memphis three accused of the gruesome slayings of three 8-year-olds are now free men. >> it's been a living hell. >> reporter: damien echols, jesse misskelley and jason ball win were all accused of killing the 8-year-old boys left in a ditch to die. it was the case that shocked the nation. >> they had to find somebody innocent. >> reporter: the big break for police came when misskelley confessed to the kills during questioning and implicated echols and baldwin as accomplices. but soon after he recanted and refused to testify claiming his confession was coerced by police. prosecutors proceeded with no physical evidence, no weapon and no motive. >> we're innocent. and we had to prove it the rest of our lives. >> reporter: the notorious case inspired a 1996 hbo o cumentary "paradise lost, the child murders at robin hood hill." and then a sequel. the tv special caught the attention of several celebrities including johnny depp, eddie vedder and natalie maines of the dixie chicks. >> i am also here to show my support for the west memphis 3. >> reporter: in 2007, new evidence cast even more doubt on their guilt. modern dna testing revealed that none of the dna matched that of the three men. in the end, the west memphis three may never actually see their names cleared. the only way they walked free yesterday was to plead guilty as part of a plea agreement. >> how do you plead today? >> i am pleading guilty. >> reporter: relying on time served for their release. >> at least it's bringing closure to some areas and some aspects. >> the prosecutors said as far as the state is concerned the case is over. but said he would consider compelling new information if it surfaces. the west memphis three said they will continue to fight to get their names cleared. and now they can do it from the outside. >> let's bring into this case with "gma" legal analyst dan abrams. dan, good morning. >> if the prosecutors are saying as they have that they believe they got the right guys initially, why did they let them out? >> well, that makes you question whether they still are as firm in that conviction. >> do you feel they have to say that? >> you know, it's hard to believe that prosecutors would let three guys walk out. one of them was on death row a couple weeks ago, if they actually believed that they could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that they did. it was almost certain there was going to be a new trial here. and they would have then had to go back with witnesses who recanted their testimony. dna evidence which pointed to someone else. i think the prosecutors knew it was going to be a very, very tough road for them if there was a new trial. and as a result, they said, you know what, we don't wantnto admit we got it wrong. we're not saying we got it wrong, but we also don't want a new trial. >> so what's next? is there any evidence pointing to anybody else? >> yeah, look. there's dna evidence which may point to a relative of one of the three boys. a hair found that is consistent with the hair of a stepfather. but, again, the prosecutors are saying we don't think that that's proof. in connection with this case. we still think that we have the right people. and as a result, we're not going to continue investigating. that's the part about it, i think for most people, the hardest to accept, the fact that they're saying, not only in this case, they're going to investigate. >> but it's a recipe for a stalemate for nothing to happen? >> that's right. because these guys have pled guilty. it's almost hard to understand in the sense they're saying, yes, we're guilty, but, no, we didn't do it. >> why did this case become such a big case? what about it made it resonate with so many people including rock stars and movie actors? >> well, look, it's movies. when you make movies, movie stars get interested. i think it was the hbo movies. i think that led a lot more people to follow the case. and they started to question the evidence. you then kick in the dna that comes in 2007, and you have the recipe for what we ultimately found here. >> such a fascinating case. dan abrams, always interesting to have you on. to bianna golodryga. with new consumer news, bianna, good morning. >> all right, dan. parents across the country will be hitting the malls today to take their kids back-to-school shopping. it's the second busiest school shopping season of the year, but you should be prepared for some serious sticker shock. prices on many back-to-school products are up on average 10%. wendy y unds is here with more. as you see the stock market plummet, we see commodity prices skyrocket, why is that? >> and it's been painful. i mean, we're looking at a couple things. one, despite the economic slowdown, we've seen rising demands in countries like china and india with commodities that go into making clothing, corn, oil. that in turn, compiled with supply reductions, bad weather that can hurt crop production. all of those sending prices higher. higher fuel costs, production costs, transportation costs. the retailers then have to decide do we pass that along to consumers? and we're seeing them do that this year. >> and they're saying they're forced to. where are we seeing the more dramatic increases now? is it cotton? >> cotton prices have come down. but you're not going to see that until next year. retailers placed their orders earlier this year when cotton prices weren't as high. let's talk about things like jeans. everybody's looking at jeans when you go back to school. a lot of cotton goes into making jeans. you will see retailers sort of advertise that they redesigned their jeans. the perfect stitching, the perfect stretch. >> less is more. >> less is more. people should be aware of that that would be, ding, ding, ding sticker shock. maybe $10 higher. jeans are one i'd look at. corduroys another one, shirts, dresses. >> i heard one analyst say this isn't inflation or deflation. this is conflation. how do consumers know they're not paying more for less? >> i think consumers have to be smart. you're not going to walk into a retailer and a sign that says, guess what we jacked up the price. i think if you see something, a sign that says big discounts, that's sort of a warning flag, righgh they're going to have promotions in addition to raising prices. but your garment, pick it up. does it feel flimsy. is it fraying. do you see extra stitching or redesign. but basically, you have to be very smart. you know what you typically buy when you go back to school. know that garment. if it doesn't feels good of quality, i'd pass on if right now. >> do your homework. should they wait and see prices go down? >> that is my advice. i'd buy the bare necessities. the things that you need. but look for january and early spring next year to do your big shopping. >> wendy, thank you very much. time for the weather and meteorologist paul deanno from our seattle station komo. thank you, bianna, good morning to you at home. the severe threat for our saturday is not in pittsburgh and not in new york, where it is, portions of missouri, portions of illinois and also indiana. severe thunderstorms with small hail is possible in those lolotions. the tropics heating up now, we could have the first hurricane of the season. its name is harvey, and likely to make landfall in belize today. before moving inland and dissipatatg. that's not the only thing. in the eastern caribbean, we're watching a tropical wave which may become our next named storm in the next 24 to 48 hours. >> more triple-digit heat in tetes. dallas today, 107. houston, 31 days in the triple digits this year. 101 for the high today, dan. >> paul, great to have you. as we said earlier, lock up your daughters, america. prince harry is planning a visit to this country and it's going to be an extended one. and reportedly, he's single again. i hear that from bianna golodryga. abc's miguel marquez is in london with more on the big trip. miguel, good morning. >> good morning to you, dan. all i can say, the southwestern, western united states prepare yourself for the rural invasion >> reporter: first the duke and duchess of cambridge will and kate came to america. and america swooned. but their trip was done in a flash. now, harry, prince of wales, third in line to the british throne is coming to america and he's going to pull up a chair and stay awhile. >> he will be going to arizona but not for pleasure. this is for work. >> reporter: prince harry will refine his skills on the apache doing life flight military training. life fire and tactical exercises. he'll spend at least two months in the arizona and california desert, preparing himself for what he reportedly hopes is the return for the fight in afghanistan. >> you train -- you train for war. it's as simple as that. to know we could be at peace, then fantastic. but if we're at war, you want to be with your brothers in arms. >> reporter: in 2008, he had to be pulled from the field when it became public he was there. >> hopefully, you've retrained to be an apache helicopter pilot. he wanted to fly but most importantly, he enjoyed an anonymity in the air. >> reporter: oh, by the way, ladies, the playboy prince is apparently just that. once again, just one of the boys. arizona as a single boy.o of course, he's britain's favorite bachelor. >> reporter: for harry, the prince of the party won't have time for extracurricular activities. it wililbe a lot of flying, studying but maybe, who knows just maybe, he wililfind time for a little fun. i think he will have time for fun out there. when will this happen, his spokesman says not exactly yet but in a month or two, prince harry will be another in arizona and california dude. >> ladies, marking the calendars. all right, miguel, thank you. well, from british royalty to reality tv royalty, the big events in hollywood this weekend is kim kardashian's wedding. the reality star is marrying nba star kris humphries in a lavish and star-studded ceremony that all, of course, will be cast on camera for an upcoming special. abc has all of the details. >> reporter: it's the day reality watchers have waited for. their version of royalty. kim kardashian's and kris humphries' wedding. a multimillion-dollar over-the-top extravaganza. with dazzling details. two dresses. four pairs of shoes. 500 gueses and a ten-tier cake. "life and style weekly" says kim will wear two creations. each with a price tag of $25,000. >> her ceremony dress will be a little more conservative and more traditional than the dress she'll end up wearing for the reception. >> reporter: not one but four pairs of shoes. >> four pairs of christian louboutin shoes. every woman's dream. >> reporter: an amazing guest list, including justin bieber, christina aguilera, the williams sisters kelly osbourne and kris' new jersey nets' team mates. there is drama to the list. >> basically, she invited too many people. the space couldn't fit it. the fire marshal came in and said narrow your numbers or the place can't handle it. >> reporter: ten layers and decadent frosting. it all takes place at this multimillion-dollar los angeles mansion where kim's stepfather bruce jenner will give her away. an emotional aspect for kim who spoke on the ryan seacrest radio show friday to talk about more than just the glitz and glamour. >> you'll feel, i think, the presence of my dad. you'll feel the love in this room, which is going to be the best part of this whole night. >> reporter: a night that will be reported for e network for a prime time schedule in november. but no other cameras are allowed. a lavish wedding expected to live up to all the hype of a true kardashian fashion. for "good morning america," meg oliver, abc news, new york. >> and rumor has it that shee hs agreed to sell the photos and rights to "people" magazine for a cool 1 million bucks. from the important geopopitical news to the card yash kardashians to an incredibly cool story of this young girl. she's 12. she broke into a case, a case that the cops couldn't solve. but what happens when she confronted the suspect. this preteen is going to be with us live. plus a new mom's as seen on tv products. which ones will pass her tests and which ones won't? can we talk about toilet paper? when it comes to toilet paper, there's no such thing as too soft. as long as it still gets the j j done. i know what i like. i like feeling both clcln and papmered. why should i compromise? not only is quilted northern ultra plush® the only bath tissue with plush-quilts®. it has three soft layers that work together for the gentle clean you've been looking for. clean comes first. and really soft is really important. quilted northern ultra plush® for a comfortable, confident clean or your money back. with less chronic low back pain. imagine living your life with less chronic osteoarthritis pain. imagine you, with less pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is a non-narcotic treatment that's fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one pill a day, every day, can help reduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing of the skin or eyes. talk with your doctor about your medicines, including those for migraine, or if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles, to address a possible life-threatening condition. tell your doctor about alcohol use, liver disease, and before you reduce or stop taking cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. side effects include nausea, dry mouth, and constipation. [ male announcer ] ask your doctor about cymbalta. imagine you, with less pain. cymbalta can help. go to cymbalta.com to learn about a free trial offer. cymbalta can help. hello parents, it's going to be your kids are going to climb rope. they're going to have a year long tug war with the ceiling. and by the time they get out of 8th grade, they're going to do it with sweat on their brow and achievement in their hearts. so, this is what they're gonna need: running shoes, t-shirts, tube socks, fruit cups, cheese sticks, energy bars, rope climbing gloves, rope burn ointment, and a jump drive. not sure what that is, but they're gonna be jumpin'. school takes a lot. target has it all. [ woman ] we didn't know where to go next with eric's adhd. his stimulant medicine was helping, but some symptoms were still in his way. so the e ctor kept eric on his current medicine and added nonstimulant intuniv to his treatment plan. [ male announcer ] for some children like eric, adding once-daily nonstimulant intuniv to their stimulant has been shown to provide additional adhd symptom improvement. don't take if allergic to intuniv, its ingredients, or taking other medicines with guanfacine, like tenex. intuniv may cause serious side effects, such as low blood pressure, low heart rate, fainting, and sleepiness. intuniv may affect the ability to drive or use machinerer other side effects include nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, stomach pain, and dizziness. tell the doctor about your child's medicines and medical conditions, including heart, liver, or kidney problems. [ woman ] adding intuniv helped eric. [ male announcer ] ask the doctor about once-daily nonstimulant intuniv. helping strengthen our bones. caltrate delivers 1200 milligrams of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d plus minerals. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. all right. we're going to take you on a trip down memory lane. only mildly embarrassing for bianna golodryga. these are some pictures of a road trip we took a couple months ago. >> that's not embarrassing. >> well, wait a second. ron carried just a little baggage, so did i. >> bianna with eight suitcases. >> i needed my newspaper. >> by the way, the new study that came out, a survey of 2,000 women by travel insurance website found that 77% of women admit they pack extra things in case they cannot decide what to wear. 65% said it's hard to close their suitcase. >> so shoot us for trying to look good. i mean, come on, you gang up on a woman with a couch of four men. >> how does your wife pack? >> agree. that's not what it says. >> i'm the one who actually has to close the suitcase. >> i object. good-bye. >> we'll be right back. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. son. her husband was also shot but now he's under arrest, accused of orchestrating it all. dan is here with it all. >> good morning to you. prosecutors do believe that this massachusetts husband concocted a detailed plan to kill his wife that involved putting himself and putting himself in the crosshairs of a hit woman. 26-year-old kashif parvais is recovering this morning from being shot four times. >> these are the two suspects. >> reporter: but it's the shooting that police now allege he set up himself. an elaborate plot to kill his wife nashish noorani. >> with the crime, it was obvious to investigators that this was apparently the alleged handiwork of the victim's husband who did the unthinkable. >> reporter: tuesday night, kashif, his wife and one of their young sons walked through a new jersey neighborhood. that's when prosecutors say parvais allegedly arranged for this woman, 26-year-old antoinette stephen to drive by and shoot the couple. shots were fired. noorani died instantly. parvais only wounded. parvais first told police the couple had been the target of three men, shouting racial epithets. but then his story changed. parvais admitted to having contracted miss stephen to kill his wife. and days before parvais and the alleged gunwoman shared these text messages. you hang in there, freedom is just around the wonder. in the hours before the first shot was fired, this exchange, details a closely scripted plan. i'm driving to the nearest precinct to judge their driving distance. you'll have a ten-minute head start, you'll need to stall for time along the road, call me when you can. delete all messages from phone. i won't message from here on. both parvais and stephen are charged with the murder. just recently, the victim sent a text to her brother saying, he abuses me, i don't want him to scare the kids. if you should find me dead some day, it was kashif, he wants to kill me. >> stephen, the alleged hitwoman is being held now on $5 million bail in massachusetts. she is now fighting extradition to new jersey. >> it's such cold. >> this information was a bombshell. >> fortunate the child wasn't injured. dan, we appreciate it. we turn to ron claiborne with the other headlines. >> hi again. >> hello again. >> dan, dan, and dan. good morning, everyone, in the news, they're cleaning up from severe storms in parts of the northeast and the midwest. at least three people were killed in pittsburgh when their car was submerged by flash flooding and in wisconsin, one man killed by apparent tornado. investigators in nevada will search for evidence of missing mom susan powell for a second day today. they spent hours in the ruggege mountains on friday looking for the signs of a woman who disappeared nearly two years ago. and the white pontiac sunfire used as evidence in the case against casey anthony was destroyed. her father took the car to a junkyard and had it crushed for scrap metal. and the casey anthony trial may an impact on the upcoming trial of the doctor charged in the death of michael jackson. conrad murray has asked the judge to sequester the jury. concerned about the potential impact of the media and social input. >> you missed the headlines -- >> i did? >> today's your birthday. america needs to know that this is ron claiborne's birthday. >> yea! >> happy birthday! >> thank you, sir. appreciate it. >> do i get a handshake? happy birthday. >> thank you. you got me on that one. >> it is still time for the weather though and meteorologist paul deanno from our seattle affiliate komo. komo. we're talking about more heat in texas, 107, a new daily record. and houston 31 days in triple digits. your high today, 101 degrees. how about wichita falls? more high temperatures in triple digits this summer than phoenix, arizona. it's not going to be hot but warm in the midwest, 80s for see yags seattle and nientzs possible for >> and this weather report has been brought to you by volkswagen. dan and bianna? thank you. coming up on "good morning america," this saturday, these moms are tough. thth are the mom testers. they're going to take products from infomercials and put them through the paces. we'll see if they got the mom seal of approval. plus, cracking the case. what a 12-year-old does that the police can't do. we'll tell you where she learned her sleuthing skills. -old does that the police can't do. we'll tell where you she learned her sleuthing skills. 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save on home repairs. >> reporter: that claim to m me moms' lives easier. >> if you think at impressive -- >> reporter: will these products be mom approved or mom disappointed? our testers from norfolk, virginia, amy martin, mom of two boys and one girl. from kennesaw, georgia, tia ardu with a teenage son and 6-year-old daughter. and from florida, lisette shields. the first product, industrial strength adhesive. it's called uglu. >> press and wrap. >> it be rubbed, pressed. >> reporter: amy tried it on her scrapbook and around the house. >> and voila, not going anywhere! >> reporter: and lisette found a seasonal use. >> i'm going to try and uglu our christmas tree to the front door. >> reporter: for tia, the uglu worked to hold the rug down. >> it looked like it worked. >> reporter: and to hold up family artwork. >> it's easier than putting nails in the wall. >> reporter: it maybe worked a little too well. >> they work great. >> reporter: our other moms agree and were off to a great start with the first product getting a unanimous "mom approved." >> moving furniture? >> reporter: next up, ez moves. >> the do-it-yourself furniture moving system. now, that's easy. >> reporter: ez moves helped amy become a one-woman moving machine. but for tia and lisette, it was easier said than done. >> you actually need to have somebody lift the table up. >> reporter: the final rating on ez moves -- one mom approved. two moms disappointed. now, we couldn't test the as seen on tv products without the newest out there invention. the amazing pocket chair. >> it folds up and fits in your pocket. >> reporter: tia's daughter kaitlyn likes using it. the son -- >> that's it. >> reporter: amy also had concerns. >> i just don't see how it can hold. >> reporter: for lisette, the chair fit her family's needs for a quick lift. especially at the baseball game. but for all three moms, the convenience of the pocket chair wins out. and the pocket chair gets a unanimous "mom approved." finally it is summer, so what better product to test than the big squirt water toy. >> everyone gets totally wet with the supercool water wet fun. >> my kids could not wait to try this out. >> reporter: but before the moms could test the big squirt, they have to fill them. >> whoo! oh, no, did it pop? it popped! >> reporter: eventually, the moms got their water guns loaded. >> this is a messy, messy undertaking. >> reporter: and it was the kids' turn to test. >> go! >> reporter: for lisette and tia, the big squirt was a big disappointment. >> it did not shoot the 30 feet that it said it would. and our first product popped. >> i think they liked the pop more than the squirt gun. >> reporter: amy and her boys give it a big thumbs up. >> no problem. filled it up. and it did squirt 30 feet. >> reporter: the final tally, two moms disappointed. one mom approved. but in this case, it's the kids' opinion that mattered and it's unanimous. >> what y'all think of the water gun? >> awesome. >> reporter: b b squirt, kid approved. for the products that got a mom disapproved rating we reached out to the manufacturers. first, the makers of big squirt said "our tests have shown that 30 feet is the consistent average. and that's for early breakage." the says says "every package has a no questions asked replacement guarantee." it comes with a small shipping and handling piece. and ez moves people said the ability to get the lifters under the products depends. if it was a heavy piece of furniture on a wood floor, you'd need to tilt it. hey, special thanks to our mom tests. i love this series. >> they were great. and you did great, becky. by the way, i've got one of the squirt things. let's see if this works. >> he's going to squirt you, becky! oh! okay. >> all right. that pretty much broke the camera. but, becky, thank you very much for doing this. and we'll be right back. >> the inner child in dan. >> that's not too hard to find. the new mascara with a conditioning formula that helps strengthen and plump lashes up to 200%... instantly. for maximum volume... and a killer look. new revlon growluscious plumping mascara. my name is lacey calvert and i'm a yoga instructor. if i have any soreness, i'm not going to be able to do my job. but once i take advil, i'm able to finish out strong. it really works! 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"your week in three words." the music is by the postelles called "stella." the pictures are yours. ♪ ♪ if the sun forgets to shine can you just deal with candlelight for two ♪ ♪ oh i hope that will do ♪ so if you're mockingbird don't sing can you just love it for its wings please do ♪ oh stella what could i do ♪ so when you ask me on the phone can i just help myself ♪ ♪ i say stella i lost my way ♪ ♪ and if you need me you know i'll run run run ♪ stella you're on your own ♪ and you know i'm leaving baby you know i'm gone gone gone ♪ stella you're on your own stella you're on your own ♪ ♪ and in the evening you're going to think i'm home but no you're alone oh ♪ ♪ so when you ask me on the phone say i just have myself at home ♪ i say stella i've lost my way ♪ ♪ stella you're on your own stella you're on your own ♪ grandpa go. >> a cool grandpa. if you'd like a chance to appear in "in your three words" go do abcnews.com/"gma" and up or be one of the mom testers sign up on the page. load your video there. coming up, we'll tell you how a young woman got involved with solving a crime that police could not. there she is. we'll talk to her live after the break. the break. 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[ laughs ] ♪ before we go, we want to introduce you to 12-year-old jessica maple. she was participating in a junior district attorney program last month, when she found out that her late great grandmother's house in southern georgia had been robbed. police couldn't solve the crime but jessica did. and she's joining us live from atlanta. jessica, we're so impressed with you. good morning. let me quickly ask you, when you went to your great grandmother's house, what did you see that the cops missed? >> well, at first, the cops thought that somebody broke in because they had a key and they couldn't find any forceable entry. so then my mother and i, we went to the house in south georgia. and i went over by the garage. and by the garage there was a broken glass in the garage door window. and there was a shopping cart. so i thought to myself, they probably got through in the shopping cart and they were probably really, really scared. >> so compared with yourur evidence, jessica, i'm dieing to know what happened when you called the police, you told them what you found. what did they say when they came over and you showed them the evidence you found? >> i told them you're obviously missing something. there are fingerprints by the little glass. the broken glass on the garage. and i could see the fingerprints really well because it was a light garage. >> i'm sorry, jessica, i just want to say, then you went to the pawn shop and you found what had been stolen then you confronted the guy who did. very quickly because we have a second or two, what did the guy who did it say when you confronted him? >> at first, he denied that he did it. then i asked him more questions and it finally got out of him. >> wow, jessica, great job. thank you. thank you for everyone for watching. we'll see you tomorrow. om nratocar.u toecnivoidotaluiay got thesedll got to fwatoget omsi my decision to graduate early came after my mother gosic. i needed a way to takecare of my going to college, i knew that i could fther my my guidance coselor told me about the federal student aid program, and i don't ha to continue to look for a wayto go to school. my name is jennifer,and this is.