jessica aguirre. michael bloomberg s office said there s not enough room to seat two presidents and the victim s families. many from the bay area who answered the call for help says it s just not right. also tonight, we re getting our first look at new photos never before seen. elise, what are they saying? reporter: well, the fire chief is clearly disappointed. this would have been his first trip back to ground zero on 9/11 since the attacks nearly ten years ago. but this year first responders are being told to stay home. we re working in a graveyard. reporter: nearly ten years later, harrold chapel still can t shake the memories. it was a smell like no one ever wants to smell, because as a firefighter, i know what burning people smell like. reporter: in never before seen photos you can see him here looking exhausted at ground zero. he s one of 65 local first responders and one of thousands across the country who risked their lives and lungs on 9/11. 70% of us wer
pleasanton neighborhood that police say tina fales was brutally murdered. now 27 years later, police have arrested this man, steven carlson, tina s carlson at nearby foothill high. he was a nice kid. i hung out with him. i was his lab partner in chemistry. i never would have suspected him. he was a nice, clean-cut kids. this is the boy that she remembers. a much different portrait than the ones painted by other classmates. there was something about him from elementary to junior high to high school. he was mean. he was a bully. he had this odd way about him and just auto people feared him. lorraine showed up in juvenile court with her friend sandy. i m just completely filled with emotions right now. i m kind of at the angry stage. tina was found stabbed to death across from a canal near carlson s home. his father said that his son drank alcohol and smoked pot as a teenager but contends that he s not a murderer. so it s your believe that pleasanton has the wrong
big hole has opened in the containment vessel around the reactor, and large portions have collapsed. here is more on the plant workers who are putting their own workers putting their own lives in jeopardy to prevent a bigger catastrophe. reporter: they are the nameless, brave souls who volunteered or perhaps been asked to be the last line of defense. because they have specific skills and nerves of steel. five workers have already died and two are missing after the latest fire and two dozen are injured. nuclear experts say the skell ton crew are not managers, but probably technicians, men with the schematics of the plant in their head and can fix the clogged vents. they have crawled through the dark mazes, armed with flash lights and radiation detectors wearing the full body hazmat suits and breathing through cumbersome oxygen tanks. all the while, deadly doses are all-around them. their suits are protecting their airways, but doing precious little to prevent radiation from
showed no sign of external corrosion or intern corrosion for that matter. there were no signs of pre-existing damage or damage from excavation in the area before this fire and explosion. those were somof the theorie being tossed after the septemb 9 disastethat killed eight people and destroyed 55 homes. some of these theories are being ruled out n.t.s.b. did release information about a discrepancy in what pg&e said about the pip and what they found in their investigatio pg&e has always idtified this pip as being seamless. the evaluation shows it s not a seamless pipe, it s seamd and welded at number of judges. does midnight those were a factor in the explosion or fire? too soon to tell, but congresswoman said there is a difference in the inspection done on seamed pipes and seamless pipes. the first report came out in october. the full findings of the government panel which investigates disaste is still months away. that is what we re goin to find out exactly what happened