1:00 p.m. local time. john? natasha chen in moscow, idaho. a terrific report, thank you very much. more perspective now from former deputy fbi director andrew mccabe, who is now a cnn senior law enforcement analyst. andy, we just mentioned we re expecting officials to release more info tomorrow. it s now been more than a week since the murders, and we really don t have any answers. what do you make of the lack of details? well, john, there are a couple of things that are really troubling here. one of course is a lack of detail. now you would never expect any police agency to share all of the details of a crime of this nature with the public. but you would expect them to tell you some of the basics about how they re doing and what they re thinking, simply to calm fears, to let folks know they re on the job and they re getting things done. not only have they not done that, they have actually made statements that are contradictory and caused more confusion than they ve helped. so th
after a couple of days, after the incident, they did say they couldn t definitively say there was no threat to the public, and what we re being told is that, you know, because the suspect is still out there, of course, there is still a possible threat. so, people need to be aware of that, and hopefully we ll learn more when they hold a press conference on wednesday, tomorrow, at 1:00 p.m. local time. all right, we ll be waiting for that with you. natasha chen in moscow, idaho, thank you. i want to bring in now mary ellen o toole, a forensic science professor at george mason university and worked as a senior profiler at the fbi. mary ellen, this is a tough case. we just don t know that much and it seems like police are struggling to get information. if you had to mock up a profile on a potential suspect knowing what you do, what would it look like? well, i d focus on a couple of things. and one of them is that going into the house that night with multiple people there sleeping