husband s been in jail in japan for six month, has a three-year sentence. here s what she said about what s happening to him and what s happening still. listen. we went hiking as a family up mount few iffy, and as fuji, and as we were driving down the mountain, he was mid-conversation with my daughter and he just blacked out. and my daughter tried to wake him. it did not work. we were many a car accident. that did not wake him at all. he was convicted of negligent driving resulting in death or injury, but a medical emergency like a heart attack, a stroke, a seizure, that is not a crime in america, and it is also not a crime in japan. it s unimaginable. you dedicate a decade of your life to serving your country, and they ve abandoned my husband. pete: joey, it was a tragic accident. he s still in jail. they feel like the dod turned their backs on him. japan s an ally. what should be done here?
were worried he was going to try and come back and look for us. as the authorities searched for rob taglianetti, keith reed s family up in new york state gathered to say their goodbyes. the church in his hometown was too small for the hundreds of mourners, all the people whose lives the educator had touched. brother kevin was a pallbearer. did you speak that day? i couldn t. my son had to hold me up. you were a wreck at that point? yeah, completely. keith three daughters, though, did find the strength to speak. years before they had almost lost their father and a motorcycle accident. he persevered. now they were determined to make him proud. i knew that he wouldn t want us to be sad and depressed. i know he would want to be a celebration of his life. it was the same afternoon that taglianetti s gold buick was spotted speeding down a road near a national park in virginia. make the play, it pulled
hadn t made sense to her. i didn t understand why he didn t want to take us, you know? if he s going to take a couple of weeks off, for a vacation. why wouldn t he take his family? but now, everything added up. the authorities issued a be b.o.l.o., a b on the lookout for anthony taglianetti, a manhunt was underway. we are actively looking for this individual, pick him up for questioning, and we consider him to be armed and dangerous. where were you? where were the children? we were at a hotel. they were worried he was gonna try and come back and look for us. as the authorities searched for rob taglianetti, keith reed s family up in new york state gathered to say their goodbyes. the church in his hometown was too small for the hundreds of mourners, all the people whose lives the educator had touched. brother kevin was a pallbearer. did you speak that day? i couldn t. my son had to hold me up. you were a wreck at that point? yeah, completely. keith three daughters,
cleanup operations are under way in kentucky after massive flooding. at least 37 people have died but the governor expects that number to rise. now rescue workers are trying to reach those who are still trapped due to the collapsed roads and bridges. evan mcmorris-santoro reports. reporter: people who escaped to safety during last thursday s flood or were rescued already are seeing situationsi improve. power is coming back, cell service is coming back, potable water is still a problem, but there are a lot of state and federal resources here to make sure people can get water if they need it. but the challenge is there a lot of people still trapped in their houses. when the waters came through, they took out small bridges and roads that connect neighborhoods to main thoroughfares meaning people have not been able to get out since the floodwaters rose. that is a big problem especially considering many of them are older people. one local resident who talked about his family up in one of
comes to the next phase of this recovery. the governor saying they re still actively searching for people and trying to get under these hollers. zack hall lives in one of the hardest hi counties in this area, and he has family up in one of these hollers and went on cnn this morn to go describe what it s like to deal with this and why this heat is so damaging. every night this week, it s supposed to rain. we go to sleep hoping we re not going to wake up to another flood wa shing the work we ve done away. and with the heat, when it dries up through the day, it s muggy and humid. people will suffocate, a lot of people with oxygen that don t have power are already suffering. i think the worst is still to come if we aren t able to clear paths and get to these people. reporter: so we are seeing some improvement in this area over the past few days. you can see behind me utility