country. reporter: and the reason why he spoke with us is that he wanted to share that frustration. he simply doesn t know what to do. he doesn t know how to solve this. he did come out and tell us that ana is out of surgery. the bullet has been removed from her spine. erin, he says that she will walk again. erin? those stories, it gives you chills when you hear the stories, the miraculous stories of recovery. she will walk again. we read the names of the victims who will not walk again. their lives are over. so wrongly taken from them. what more have you learned about them? reporter: well, we know that there are people in your community college, they look very much like anyone in your neighborhood school. we want to introduce you to a couple of them. the first person we learned about at the news conference, the family saying that they wanted to release a couple of details. this is jason johnson. he s 34 years old. he s one of the older students.
and i will politicize it because our inaction is a political decision that we are making. we are learning much more tonight about the shooter. we now know he had 13 guns, 6 recovered at the scene along with a massive amount of ammunition and five magazines. kyung lah is outfront in roseburg, oregon, outside of the college campus. kyung, we re hearing horrific stories from survivors about what actually happened inside those classrooms. reporter: the stories and accounts are from the young people inside, just trying to get an education. the tales are chilling. they are grotesque. a man heavily armed, carrying a small arsenal of weapons, with one intent, the intent to kill. many ambulances as possible to this incident. we have upwards of 20 victims. reporter: the gunman camed heavily armed, prepared to kill
staking out this underground bunker where police think the suspect is hiding out. this isn t a hole in the ground, this is a large built-up structure but hidden. took time to find it. also ahead the future of our food, wait until you see how some americans are shaking up their eating habits in a big way. are you on the bandwagon yet? on a mission for money, the newest frontier in mining one of the most precious and pricey metals on earth. good morning everyone i m randi kaye, 7:00 on the east coast, 4:00 on the west. a lot to tell you about, let s get to it. start with the standoff near seattle, a man accused of murdering his wife and daughter is holed up in an underground bunker. a swat team pumped in tear gas to force peter keller out. it s believed he is well-armed and the bunker is well-stocked. police are being cautious and patient. one friend of keller s wife isn t being so deliberate. i hope he resists. because i want him to know what a bullet feels like. y
is a stranger. before the president spoke at the service, he had a chance to tour the damage. take a listen. we mourn for loss of life. we re going to be going to the memorial service and try to help comfort the families and let them know we are praying for them and thinking about them. we had a chance to meet some of the folks that lived in this community and hear harrowing stories but miraculous stories. met an 85-year-old gentleman that has a lawn service, got his chicken pot pie out and storm went coming and he went into the closet and came out without a scratch. there are good stories and happy stories to tell here but obviously there has been a lot of hardship. the main thing i want to communicate to the people of joplin, this is not just your
whatsoever. these two or three miles that have seen the utter devastation, what s your sense about the need of those that are carrying out the search and rescue operation? do they need heavy earth moving equipment? what s your sense about the feeling whether people were drowned or trapped beneath the rubble. this is a lot different than haiti. haiti still needs earth moving equipment. no question about it miraculous stories of people rescued under the rubble. here that s not the case people for the most part did not die from the earthquake. they died from the tsunami swept out to sea. we haven t had any cases of people trapped in the rubble crying for rescue that hasn t happened. it s good to have the earth moving equipment but if viewers are wondering are there people still trapped who need to be rescued, that s a very low likelihood at this point. gary tuchman from sendai in