adrienne broaddus reports. reporter: from drones to airplanes, even satellites, your insurance company may be watching from above. did this cause some sleepless nights? in san francisco instead of going house by house reporter: jeremy was stunned after he received a notice safe go insurance, his carrier for more than a decade, wasn t renewing his policy. i couldn t believe this is how they decided based on a tiny drone image that we weren t worth insuring anymore. reporter: when he pushed for why, they sent him this grainy image. they re trying to show that the presence of dirt indicates that water has pooled and dried out. reporter: and he s not alone. consumer advocates say across the country insurance companies are dropping some customers based primarily on aerial photographs. in virginia, elizabeth davis was sent this photo that her insurance company said showed discoloration and streaking on her roof. i was floored. i had a bit of a panic attack.
Car wash owner submits new rezoning request near Kalamazoo nature preserve mlive.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mlive.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
drone image of what it looks like on the ground, and you can see that the lines are a lot shorter, and fewer people on the other side of the border wall. according to the chief yesterday afternoon, there was 1,000 migrants waiting, and you can see from the line, that is fewer than 1,000 migrants, and his point was, and according to secretary mayorkas this morning on cnn this morning, what they are doing, and focusing on is processing, and transporting the migrants as quickly as possible. you can see behind me that there is a bus back there, and those buses have been going in and out of the area. they load the migrants on to the buses, and they take them over to processing facilities. john, one point that i want to make, and the mayor of this city made this point, and these migrants are here, and this is the gateway and they are really going to cities and states around this country.
Over 100 people are missing or proven dead in Brazil, according to the authorities, after mudslides and massive floods caused by torrential rains ripped through many metropolitan districts in the country's northeastern region