by running toward gunfire for the singular purpose of trying to save lives. i was the texas governor, turned out to be falsely said that he was misled. so did this. the shooting began, we had uvalde police officers arrived on scene along with the consolidated independent school officers. immediately breached. long forsman was there. they did engage immediately. again, not true. as the body and security cameras clearly show that nobody immediately breached the classroom. nobody engaged the shooter. was there for 77 minutes before he was killed. and during that time dozens of please coming and going. hundreds outside of the school and not one of them are routinely and had been trained for years. in these situations to. do another misleading statement repeatedly made by texas officials was that the shooter was somehow barricaded inside of the classroom. he was not and in fact the classroom door might not have even been locked. but according to reports from the texas stat
united states, i would never admit this to anyone, but i missed war, i didn t miss fighting, i missed the camaraderie, i missed the brotherhood, i missed the sense of purpose, and i haven t found that since i ve been back. but when i saw your film, it was the first time that i saw that, and it was really shocking to me because these were the people i was sent to kill. and he said to me, like, i realize that i had more in common with the men that i was fighting than the men that sent me to war. wow. and i thought that was really profound to hear. that s why i think this film is so important, especially when i get messages like that, messages from the yemeni community who are saying we see the news talk about syria and ukraine but yemen is continually ignored and seeing our people and some of the issues we ve had to deal with in your film has meant a lot. it s rally interesting to have those two groups respond to this film. that s why for me it s so important it gets out th
country are waiting for a court decision that could change their lives and put them at risk of deportation. there are fears an appeals court could rule daca illegal. also this hour, we ll get the latest from cain ukraine, where forces have broken through from the south pushing russians. moscow claims it has annexed. a new report details systemic abuse within the women s national soccer league. we begin with our top story this morning. in florida where right now it is a race against time. for first responders to rescue people in hard-hit communities in the wake of hurricane ian, six days after this monster storm decimated the gulf coast. and while some have lost everything they own, others are expressing gratitude for their safety. my colleague kerry sanders spoke to a woman who is relieved to find her father alive in the wake of the devastation. there s no words. the destruction is mind bog thing, but just know that our loved ones are okay, that s most important thing
toll from hurricane ian climbing again. it s not least 125 people who are killed. it s expected to continue rising in coming days. president biden was in southwest florida today during the destruction, standing side by side with the state governor, ron desantis. the president said he was in, quote, complete lockstep, unquote, with the governor on rebuilding. this was the first time since the storm people were allowed back on to sanibel island. randi caid made a trip with some of us, and joins us now from naples. what was it like for residents who got there? anderson, it was a really emotional journey for them. their tears started on the bout on the way to sanibel island. we went with a couple who bought their home there just a couple years ago. they called it their dream home. they evacuated for the hurricane. they thought that would just be for a few days. today was the first time they