far here. all day long, looking for empty spaces where someone might have survived. passing down small piece of concrete by hand. in a bucket brigade. they re using trained dogs on top of the pile and saws and jackhammers underneath trying to get inside the rubble, risking their lives to rescue others. at time a hellish scene made worse by heavy rains and winds and fires suddenly flairing up here. of course fires not uncommon with a collapse of this magnitude, but it makes it that much harder and dims hope. lives changed in an instant. walls gone. rooms exposed to the outside. bunk beds in a room on the top floor of the building. and the excruciating wait tonight for word of the missing. the most experienced rescue teams in the world, some trained right here in south florida. they answered the call on 9/11, and now their rescue efforts right here at home tonight. reporter: tonight, the
below and above at this time. can you please talk about the tactics that your teams are using? you mentioned going above so, throughout the night, no different than from when we began operations. so, as the heavy machinery comes in, we will begin removing some of the debris above, some of the light debris. as we place those devices to look for voids, we start looking for additional victims. we are looking for we are listening for sound. it s not specifically human sounds. it could be tapping. it could be steel, you know, kind of twisting. it could be some of the debris kind of raining down. we concentrate on those areas. from below we continue using light machinery. saws, jackhammers as we continue to tunnel through underneath.
we are looking we are listening for sounds. it s not specifically human sounds. it could be tapping, it could be steel, you know, kind of twisting. it could be some of the debris kind of raining down. so we concentrate in those areas from below, we continue with using light machinery, saws, jackhammers as we continue to tunnel through underneath. officials say they are hopeful that they may find some people still alive in the rubble. let s bring in former fema director david paulis, and the fire chief of miami-dade county. i m so sorry, because this was home for you and you re not far away in fort lauderdale, director. thank you for being with us this morning. thank you, poppy. it s a tough time for everyone right now. there is hope. we heard that from multiple officials this morning, and we ve heard a lot in the last 12 hours or so about these voids.
you have 588 violations. this is a woman, they deleted over 30,000 plus e-mails, taking jackhammers to hard drives, absolute and total gross negligence and deception to the american people. that s what infear yates infeweinfuriates people. she said she knew what the c in confidential meant and told everything evenshe didn t. this is everybody she didn t l. this is somebody that somebody else would never have goten away with. this is the political class in washington that sometimes get away with something. average people at home are saying are you kidding me. .i really held back on this. if clinton runs, maybe it will come back out there. this will never g go away -s will never go away, hillary. a fox news alert, turkish
this week over will stories. bolivia completely legal child labor. what stuck cashing in on its hippie past when we start off and it s in just over a year ago the marandi bridge ingenue a collapsed killing $43.00 people $600.00 more were left homeless now those affected are fighting for compensation. rita charcoal has lived near the rugby bridge for most of her life she says seeing the last few pillars disappear didn t bother her it was more of a spectacle but now she has to watch as the house she lived in for nearly 60 years is demolished only pieces of the 1st floor remain the same thing and so on then. you can hear the diggers and the jackhammers working away. the sound is