from the only road into edisto island. and overnight in camden county, georgia. it s utter chaos over here right now. reporter: elsa spawning an ef-2 tornado. flipping trailers at the east coast hub for the navy s fleet of nuclear submarines. debris everywhere. i come out and there s guys pushing his kids out the top door over here. reporter: nine people, including a pregnant woman, were hurt. and the tornado that touched down in jacksonville caught on surveillance camera. 1 110-mile-per-hour winds destroying everything. this power line came down and hit right on this fence and went bah-boom and then that porch came down. reporter: one person in jacksonville killed by a falling tree. as the northeast prepares for elsa, for the third day in a row, powerful severe thunderstorms slammed the region. rainwater pouring into this subway station in new york city. and david, here in new york city, we re already under a flash flood warning because of those storms. but here s the ot
we could encourage and many judges do and of course it s part of the legal instructions to say hey, do you guys have questions about anything? come back and speak to us not only about factual issues, but about the law too and they did ask for reasonable doubt, but now we come to find it wasn t only reasonable doubt they wanted answers to but they wanted answers to all the other issues that gene talked about and i think we need to do that. the legislature defines the law and it is what it is but in terms of explaining it i think we need to do that. what do you think the prosecution learned in this case that it may do differently the second time around? the facts are what the facts are but there s something in the law and it means that you start out with a bang and you end with a bah boom. so i think what the prosecution will do is they might restructure the manner in which