and just launched it at the glass. i actually felt small pieces of glass hit the camera and hit myself and, you know, then the officer showed up and they tried to talk him down, and it was pretty extreme. [ bleep ]. five [ bleep ] years. trying to do it the right way! i m going to show you what i m made of. the transfer gil what s the problem? come on. what s the problem? i have a problem. and i don t want one. what s going on? my mom has four other [ bleep ] to see me.
people in the hospital. tonight 54 people remain hospitalized. two of them are children. a lot of them lost limbs. they re going to have a long recovery ahead of them. one hopeful note, brian, just to mention, there s a lot of u.s. military people have been coming here already and offering support. people who lost limbs in the war coming here now and trying to help these victims to move on with their lives and telling them they will run once again. yeah, that s one of the truly tragic after effects of these. these wounds are exactly the same as the combat battle injuries we ve seen overseas because of the heinous way these explosions were designed. kate snow, thank you very much for your reporting all night tonight from a newly happy watertown, massachusetts. and finally tonight, before we go off the air, let s spend our last minute or so talking about boston because as we ve been discussing, after all, this has been an assault on boston. no one who knows that city has any doubt abou
help these victims to move on with their lives and telling them they will run once again. yeah, that s one of the truly tragic after effects of these. these wounds are exactly the same as the combat battle injuries we ve seen overseas because of the heinous way these explosions were designed. kate snow, thank you very much for your reporting all night tonight from a newly happy watertown, massachusetts. and finally tonight, before we go off the air, let s spend our last minute or so talking about boston because as we ve been discussing, after all, this has been an assault on boston. no one who knows that city has any doubt about that city, its people or what they re all made of. but last night and today, that was really insult on top of real injury. think for starters about the children in that city who were forced to stay home on this
help these victims to move on with their lives and telling them that they will run once again. that s one. true truly tragic aftereffects. the wounds are the same as combat battle injuries we ve seen overseas because of the heinous way these explosions were designed. kate snow, thank you very much for your reporting all night tonight from a newly happy watertown, massachusetts. finally tonight before we go off the air, let s spend our last minute or so talking about boston because as we ve been discussing this has been an assault on boston. no one who knows that city has any doubt about that city, its people or what they are all made of. last night and today that was really insult on top of real injury. think for starters about the children in that city who were forced to stay home on this
ides use in afghanistan and he said they still don t know if it is domestic or a foreign even if something that has from someone from the united states. you have an al-qaeda cookbooks in how to make bombs. this particular type of bomb was described in inspire magazine which is al-qaeda magazine how to make the bomb in kitchen of your mom was the title. essentially it s what al-qaeda has used and al-qaeda inspired groups have used in different incidents. they have used the shrapnel taped and glued to the side of the pressure cooker. they have used the exact same thing to have the explosive to do as much damage as possible to maim and kill as many people as