on the west coast side it s entirely the opposite. the water is actually retreating. you do not want to be on the beach when that water comes back. it comes back in fast and furious and can turn into a deadly situation. it is going to come back. as that storm makes its way north crossing over the main peninsula, that water will come back in. that, jake is when we ll start tows some of the biggest storm surges for the west coast of florida. and we have a lo the of individuals, including our onil kyung la. the courages will sustain that way before she finally starting to conditions get better in miami. that s for most people. it will remain bad for hours now
determine which bullets killed which person. kyung, thank you for your reporting. so what is behind gang brawls like the one in waco? and what will it take to stop them? sara sidner goes inside the gangs for us. it s definitely on now. reporter: this man is in a position to know just how dangerous biker gangs can be. cloaked in darkness he agreed to speak with us. he said he spend five years infiltrating three gangs for the dea. how would you describe how they operate? highly are they different in the way they operate? they re very similar. very sophisticated, structured like the military. a lot of members are ex-military. so they re highly trained for combat. they re much better than your average street gang at conducting war. when you talk about war, who are they warring with? is it just other gangs? or is it society at large?
deadly biker gang brawl in waco texas. a memo to law enforcement warns that the two gangs have been instructed to arm themselves and travel to north texas. police sergeant w. patrick swanton spoke and said he is ready for them. we won t talk about what we re doing. we ll just say that we re prepared and able to handle any threat that comes towards us. kyung la is in waco. i understand you have some news. yeah we re learning from the county sheriff is that the bond for each of the people arrested and being held that bond will be set for $1 million. not for all 170 people. $1 million each. that s the plan right now. we re a little unclear on whether or not the magistrate has approved it for every person but we can tell you, the sheriff is telling us that they are planning on each of these suspects having to face a $1
kyung joins us now. there was another bizarre incident involving robert durst last year in houston. what happened there? reporter: very bizarre case. really unexplainable as far as we can tell. he went to a drugstore in houston, a cvs, and for some reason exposed himself and he chose to urinate in the candy aisle. we don t know exactly why. we do know he ended up paying a fine, $500. his attorney at the time alluded to some medical issues. here s the important takeaway. that attorney is also his defense attorney in this case, in los angeles. will that medical issue resurface? at this point, anderson, we just don t know. we ll have to see what happens with the extradition. i watched the documentary, i think in six parts. to say the least, he is a complex character, and that s being polite. kyung, thank you very much. you heard from mike struck in kyung s reporting. he joins me now. thanks for being with us. you investigated the disappearance of kathleen durst in 1982. still an unsol
and if you re shocked we didn t bleep that it s very a very good reason. tonight we re going to talk about what you can say, what you can t say, and who gets to decide. make sure you tune in. it s going to be an interesting conversation. i want to begin with the millionaire and the murder. kyung la has the latest on the case against robert dufrt. robert durst in his mugshot, an image three families have waited decades to see. he was nabbed in a hotel staying under a fake driver s license with a revolver. it appears he was preparing to head to cuba. are the walls coming in on him? i thinko. jim mccormick says her sister wrote in her journal that she feared her husband, that she