he s gonna comey in a couple of days, he never called. his family in agony. america s most wanted. a rookie detective finally broke the case. i said oh my god. a strange phone call revealed a secret. david needed to be gotten rid of. a bombshell revelation. was she really a bereaved acts? i always loved him. or just maybe a black widow? she is in the middle. hello and welcome to dateline. for years judy carlson lived in a most painful kind of limbo, her son david had disappeared without a trace. the case went unsolved, setting cold for more than a decade before a detective was assigned to investigate. she uncovered a twisted tale of love gone bad and a grizzly family secret. the detective still needed to know what motive was at the heart of the crime. here s keith morrison with buried secrets. it s a strange thing that happens among the here in coastal florida. things have a way of coming up. things buried in the ground in the past. or both. it was
and welcome to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada and all around the world. very latest with israel at war. it is 7 a.m. sunday morning in gaza the start of another day filled with dread and uncertainty with 2 million palestinians in gaza. all around them israel s war planes and artillery continue to pound the landscape. israel says it has been hitting hamas tunnels and ground spaces, the idea is urging people to head south as it expands operations inside gaza. in response to the hamas massacres ever october 7th. here is prime minister benjamin netanyahu on saturday. our heroic fight verse one supreme goal to destroy this murderous enemy. we always said never again, never again is now. gaza reports indicates cellular and internet communications have been partially restored but hospitals are at capacity if they are functioning at all. there isn t enough food water medicine or energy to go around. our people in the gaza strip are facing a war
temperatures as what s called a heat dome is causing the dangerous conditions to expand. in south eastern europe temperatures of a0 degrees celsius have caused power cuts in tourist hotspots like croatia, impacting all sorts such as traffic lights failing. and as you ve just been hearing, in saudi arabia at least 1,301 people died during this year s hajj pilgrimage to mecca the most devastating example of the impact of extreme heat. no surprise, then, that this is changing the way we choose to travel something that is particularly important for those countries who rely on tourism to support their economies. joining me now is andrew holden professor of environment and tourism at goldsmiths university of london. good morning to you. no good morning. so this issue of extreme heat is not new to us. we saw last summer many parts of europe experiencing very high temperatures, wildfires impacting tourism. to what extent are we changing our choices when it comes to where we h
live now to professor tim benton, research director, environment and society centre. thank you very much forjoining us today, tim. lots of things of course influence the price we end up paying for ourfood, things like transport, wages and supermarkets. are the increases that we are seeing in the costs of food commodities being passed on to consumers in foal, orare being passed on to consumers in foal, or are they being absorbed, at least in some parts, in the supply chain? to a parts, in the supply chain? trr a certain extent, both. if you think back to our current period of inflation, where we ve had, post ukraine, post pandemic, a global cost of living crisis. sorry, i m getting a lot of feedback, i m getting a lot of feedback, i can t hear myself. thank you. global cost of living crisis, some of that is being driven by environmental effects, some of it being driven by politics, but as climate change increasingly bites, we are going to get a lot more pressure on everyday co
scandal involving not just toyota but toyota, honda, mazda, suzuki, yamaha motor, whole number of companies there. so i imagine this will be the main topic of the meeting. there may be some questions about keeping costs under control, the effect of the weak yen, perhaps the decline in demand for electric vehicles, but really they are going to be tackling this problem head on. i just wanted to say on that point, how do you feel that controversy is likely to impact the company, short and long term? i think, short term, we can t deny the news of what has happened here, but i think it needs to be put into context. we don t actually have any cheating going on here. this is really somewhere between the bureaucratic way the japanese test cars, and actually being driven by one of the ministries, excuse the pun, and the way the press reported this. so what we re talking about here is actuallyjust the difference in a way between the way the domestic cars are tested, because in japan, d