brother cecil and david rosenthal and joyce weinberg. we ve been in spitting distance of evil. reporter: joyce s son was in court today as he had been for the two months of the trial. what was the mood in there like today? a bit tense. the upside is that we finally saw the monster come out in his prison garb. there is no closure because my mom is still dead. so we build from here. i can t bring her back. reporter: this community determined to move forward. we heal really through being able to continue to live our lives to the fullest. we have all been given freedom. we re all granted freedom in our life. and we can choose what we make of it. reporter: the end of the trial hopefully bringing a sense of shalom, some peace. though it cannot heal the pain, that may come only with time and prayer. for nbc news, david johnson, pittsburgh. and up next here tonight, high alert for an invasive insect -okay, and one more. -i thinknk we got itit. th
being a defendant with a lot of evidence is bad. being a convicted person who has the right to appeal, and he definitely does, as lawrence reminded everyone of that tonight, it is also bad. it is interesting with the context, which you and others have raced, tonight they wanted, the racists wanted to show martin luther king in the prison garb, and put that photo out there to make the point that he is a convict. and he was arguing, know there is something wrong with the laws. we talk about free speech, you are allowed to criticize the laws in this country. that is a good thing. so the fact that you have been convicted of something somewhere doesn t automatically mean anything for your wider public life. but, if you are badly convicted or appealing a conviction on something as serious as trying to end our democracy because of your terrible losing streak, which is where the losers stuff, he s a repeat loser of elections, and the alleged evidence of coup stuff combines into a very unpopula
tonight around the dallas and waco area. that will cool things off, might bring some wind, but any cooling, again, will only last a day or two. we re right back at it for the weekend. rounds of rain today across parts of the southeast, flood watches remain for parts of georgia and the carolinas. we ll see more of that action tomorrow into d.c. and new york as well into the northeast tomorrow night. and then tropical storm bret heading towards the caribbean, st. lucia and martinique under tropical storm warnings. you ll feel tomorrow night. this thing forecasted to die out hopefully in the caribbean by sunday. whit? rob marciano, thank you. late today, the massachusetts air national guardsman accused of leaking highly classified military documents pleading not guilty to six charges. jack teixeira has been in custody since his arrest in april. and the judge today once again denying him bail. here s abc s martha raddatz. reporter: jack teixeira arrived at the massachusetts courthous
emerging in business attire, a stark contrast from the light blue prison garb at his arraignment. how do you plead to nose offenses, guilty or not guilty? not guilty. reporter: nilo charged with seven counts for allegedly sexually assaulting four women 15 years ago, in a violent spree that haunted the charlestown area of boston. federal authorities using publicly accessible genealogy websites to track him down, later following him to a corporate event, they sail matching dna from his water glass to the four victims. tonight, lori pinkham one of nilo s accusers telling abc news, i m in disbelief that he is back on the streets, and also fear he will try and retaliate against me. just days ago, pinkham expressing outrage that he was even granted bail. we saw that you were enraged after the bail hearing. i just thought it was such a disappointment that they were just going to let him walk right out. these are such heinous crimes. these are such violent crimes. reporter: and
were in that southern tip of peru, a very remote area. this is the first video we have seen of joran van der sloot since 2010. and as you notice, she was shackled, the handcuffs were put on. and he was he s got his own clothes on, because in peru, you can wear your own clothes. you don t have to wear prison garb. i noticed when he was signing something at one point, he had a bracelet on, multi-colored. you ll see it right there, the bracelet. they did medical tests on him in those early morning hours, checked his heart, they took his blood pressure. i understand that they did a covid test. and so he was transferred to a prison where he is now, which is right outside of lima. he will remain there until interpol, which is the intercountry policing agency picks up and takes him to the airport. he will be handed off to u.s. law enforcement authorities. and we have a quote that we want