going there. people here are already lacking the basics. what are people afraid of? it s the flooding and mud slide that is come afterwards. le you re already perched on the side of a ill h. and all of a sudden this storm comes barrelling through, you think the worst is over. the wind has died down. the guess what? you have a wall of water and mud just rushing down the side of the hill. these are the kinds of things that are very terrifying to people. they have seen it before just last year hurricane matthew really devastated the southern part of haiti. right now i m on the northern coast here. people are just bracing for it right now, and as i ve been saying, praying is passing for preparation here because there s very little else that can be done. exactly. paula newton for us. every nation faces a different challenge. it does not take a direct hit to cause a sea of problems there. florida. now. millions of people in florida bracing for the possibility of a
we seernsed before. is that how you felt? obviously you don t live there, but was it sort of surreal? actually, when we had to evacuate the hotel lobby yesterdayeei yesterdayeeing, they had planned activities that the noise wz really loud, so therefore, we did not hear any of the winds. we could not see out so they had like the different things to make it really loud where people would remain calm. so during the height of the storm we were actually inside with planned activities. so that really did help with the children that are in the hotel, and it really keeping us calm. because we really didn t know. that s very refl specially with children to keep them focused because being scared with make the situation more dangerous. the i think it s notable you were apparently doing the sal is
can to get you out. the big thing is, you can t wait. this is you can t just think, whether it s fuel, whether it s traffic, whatever the issue is, the longer you wait, it s harder to provide the resources. take this seriously. the truth is, which ever coast you are on. this could change. in andrew, i had hospitals, i evacuated hospitals to a hospital in the southern part of the city. these things can change, a small change can change which coast it s going down. if you look at the cone, the cone hits the entire state. this is bigger than our entire state right now. take this seriously. have a plan. listen to what the locals are telling you. look, we are going do everything we can to keep everybody safe. we have to do this together. thanks everybody for all your hard work. [ inaudible question ]
make sure it is ready to reopen. we have to survive this storm. i went through this back in andrew. we are ready. we are going to prepare. we are going to try to keep everybody safe. we are going to recover everybody, then we are going get everybody back to work as quickly as we can. [ inaudible question ] they will have enough power. think about it, the usage is going down as people are leaving. they are comfortable they will have enough power. as you know, it s going to be a typical storm. we are going to have downed power lines, debris and deal with all those things. that s why we have all these
10-4. the sound of flushing toilets leads officers to a stash of inmate-made wine or pruno. you made pruno. they grab apples and they let it ferment for a couple days, mash them up and put them in the bag and just put some heat over it, a bunch of covers. they use a lot of blankets. it was under a lot of blankets in the corner. they just let it stay until it becomes sort of like wine. usually typically what will happen is if it s found in the cell in the common area where both inmates have access to it, which is obviously anywhere in the cell, they will both be charged for possession of inmate manufactured alcohol. no weapons are found, but the search does turn up an important