hits the streets of new york to talk and sing. what else? obama care good morning, everyone. i m randi kaye. it s 8:00 on the east coast. 5:00 a.m. out west. thanks for waking up with us. all eyes are on one of the most important u.s. allies in the middle east. that is egypt. more than a year ago egypt filled cairo s tahrir square and told hosni mubarak time to give up power. now they are saying the same thing to the military. but will the army listen? you re looking at live pictures from tahrir square. thousands of people have been there four days and nights. election results from last week s presidential runoff due thursday. now there s speculation they may come out tomorrow. two rivals each claiming victory. u.s. has a warning for americans. stay out of kenya s coastal city of mombasa. u.s. embassy nairobi says there s an eminent threat of terror attack in the destination. it is suspending all travel and ordering all u.s. personnel to get out. back in the u.s. floo
the grand jury he was not the first victim. he started the landslide that brought down sandusky, brought down head coach joe paterno, brought down penn state s president, the senior vice president for finance and business, and the school s athletic director. he s a brave kid, his mother says, but tonight he is afraid. afraid, she says, that people might find out who he is. afraid he might run into jerry sandusky, who is out on bail. afraid that sandusky might find might ultimately go free. but that s not all she s saying tonight. she s also describing to us the pressures she faced from people who tried to get her not to go to police. pressure from community members, from teachers she says, from people she trusted to put kids first and not defend jerry sandusky. you re going to hear more of her story in just a moment from her own mouth. also tonight, john walsh joins us from america s most wanted. first, though, the shifting account of this man, penn state s wide receivers