and nail gun who tried to break into an fbi field office today. investigators now looking into whether the suspect had ties to right wing extremism. let s go outfront. good evening. i m erin burnett. tonight, countdown. there is a deadline on the table, 3:00 p.m. tomorrow. that s when a judge says he needs a response from president trump to the doj, so he can make a formal ruling on whether to make that search warrant of mar-a-lago public. it comes as attorney general merrick garland took the step today of speaking out. breaking his silence, saying that he signed off on the warrant to search trump s mar-a-lago home personally, and he s doing it by the book. now formally requesting a judge to make the search warrant and supporting documents used in the search of trump s mar-a-lago public. just now, the justice department filed a motion in the southern district of florida to unseal a search warrant and property receipt, relating to a court approved search that the fbi condu
with odor free aspercreme. powerful medicine relieves pain fast, with no odor. so all you notice is relief. aspercreme. it s the worst radio active leak so far at japan s crippled fukushima reactor. you may remember it was damaged in that tsunami a couple of years ago. let me give you an idea how contaminated the water is. someone standing a foot and a half way way from tank for one hour would get a radiation dose five times higher than what nuclear workers are supposed to get in one year. they ve been cleaning up since march of 2011 when an earth wake and tsunami caused three reactor
units if it continues into next month. now, needless to say, the news has hit hyundai s share price. it fell almost 3 rers on monday. it s back a little over 1% today. amid reports that police may be set to tackle that strike. now, meanwhile authorities in japan now say there may have been more reactor meltdowns at the fukushima daiichi right after the earthquake and tsunami on march 11th. let s go to kyung lah. this is something many international agencies have suspected for some time. what we re hearing now from tepco is that it s not just reactor one, that there are two additional reactors where in laying out what tepco is defining as the worst case scenario also had full meltdowns. tepco says a major part of the fuel rods in this worst-case scenario in reactor number two may have melted and fallen to the bottom of the pressure
canceled flights in scotland and northern england. mr. obama will be visiting buckingham palace where he ll spend two nights. the president left ireland for the uk ahead of schedule last night due to that cloud of volcanic ash. in the u.s., the tornado that blew through missouri has claimed 116 lives and left a trail of destruction. the u.s. national weather service says it was the most deadly tornado in more than 60 years. those are the headlines, i m zain vergee at cnn in london. world business today starts now. good morning from cnn london, i m charles hodson. and good afternoon from cnn hong kong. i m andrew stevens. you re watching world business today. the top stories on tuesday, may 24th, under the weather, travel trouble looms as volcanic ash blows towards europe. meanwhile, investors on the continent have caught debt contagent fever. the scramble in the cockpit to save the airliner. they don t have ability to go anywhere. they don t have ability to
reporter: unlike chernobyl, these japanese reactors are surrounded by six-foot steel and concrete containment vessels, so even multiple reactor meltdowns would not likely be as bad as chernobyl, but if there were meltdowns, how far could the radiation travel? if the wind is blowing out to the ocean, as it usually does, then most of the contamination goes out there. if the wind shifts south, well, then all that some of the most heavily populated areas of japan are at risk including tokyo itself. reporter: how about the u.s.? the fires could be so hot that it would send radioactive particles carrying it across the pacific. reporter: the nuclear regulatory commission says even if that happened, there is a low likelihood that any harmful radiation would reach the u.s. or its territories. but uncertainty could continue for weeks in a scenario where there is no meltdown but the reactors are not stabilized either. martha raddatz, abc news, washington. and now we turn to what can