was captured, but while we were working, we learned he had been caught. have you heard that the suspected gunman has been caught? how does that make you feel they caught him? good, good, yeah. reporter: what if i told you that the suspected gunman has been caught? that would be fantastic. that s true. that s what s happened. oh, awesome. how does that make you feel? much better. reporter: uk see all their eyes light up when you told them the news. do you speak with anyone who s given up on riding the subway after the shooting? john, certainly most of the people we talk to on the streets are not giving up on the subway. but particularly on this block near the 36th street station, people are talking. some people are saying they don t want to ride the subway anymore. new york city is lucky there s a robust alternative of taking the bus, but it tabs longer than subway. i talked to a woman who works at
tabs to support your state and your local leaders and as you recover and rebuild. reporter: the governor grateful for the help. we ve gone for looking for our dead to starting to haul away the death and destruction around us. and in the steps to start rebuilding have already begun. i hope the people of kentucky know that i care deeply about them, and the president does too. reporter: in mayfield, biden saw the destruction of a town the emergency director said doesn t exist. downtown residents of a ruined apartment building pick through the remains and worry for friends and neighbors that lost everything. i don t know where they re going. i m sorry. but i know these people all my life and they re helpless. i don t know what to do for them. and every time i look around here, i grew up here. and it s horrible. reporter: volunteers offering
involved in these two payments, one to stormy daniels and another from ami, the parent company of the national enquirer to karen mcdougal. what this does is shed light on the depth for donald trump s involvement. it tabs a closer look at the start of the agreement between donald trump and david pecker, the chief executive of a.m.i. to have a.m.i. operate in service of the trump campaign and help suppress negative stories about donald trump during the campa n campaign. that started with this august 25th meeting that the journal talks about. there is a huge difference, paul, between something as it reads, you know, mighty shady and actually illegal. well, that s very true but i think the reason we re talking about this is this wall street journal case reads like a crime novel. it gives you all of the details,
almost overnight, and i think that i believe, and i urge the president, this is where the fight has to go. directly to the american people. and not wait. and i repeat the word waste time trying to appease the republican leadership when they have no interest in seeing the president, or this economy, recover, because politically, they think that s their ticket to winning back the white house. representative grijalva thank you for your time this morning. nancy pelosi blasting republicans. we re going to tell you why she s accusing them of disrespecting the president. is it just back to business as usual on capitol hill? and we re going to head back to the reagan library for tonight s big debate. the republican candidates to keep in mind past election match-ups. and it tabs both substance and tile to make a big impression on american voters. we re going to take a look back at what they might want to remember when it comes to tonight. boy, i m glad we got aflac huh.