you re looking at a storm that s changed the character of a significant part of our state. i mean, this is going to require years of effort. some chose to ignore the evacuation warnings, despite the authorities making it clear the hurricane would put emergency help beyond reach. this is a storm surge that we talked about, ian fits the pattern of increasingly powerful hurricanes in recent years as a result of warming sea temperatures. scientists monitoring them say man made climate change is having an effect. whoa! today s flight was certainly the roughest that i ve been on in my six years of doing this. the worst of the onslaught may now be over, but for the state of florida, the task
ian fits the pattern of increasingly powerful hurricanes in recent years as a result of warming sea temperatures. scientists monitoring them say man made climate change is having an effect. whoa! never seen that much turbulence before. today s flight was certainly the roughest that i ve been on in my six years of doing this. the worst of the onslaught may now be over, but for the state of florida, the task of assessing the cost has onlyjust begun. the property damage may be one thing but there is confusion tonight about the human cost. the sheriff of lee countyjust down the road from here suggested that the death toll could run into the hundreds, although as you say the federal
of a storm, so we have to enter the eye wall at 10,000 feet, fly around the center of the storm until he finds zero wind, and that fixes the point from where everything else is measured at the national hurricane center. they use that to build their forecasts from that center point. harris: saw a reporter on the plane says the pilot said it was the roughest and worst flight of his career. we are told that a storm hunter for the national hurricane center went through the eye at the same time it actually turned around because it got so intense. so even i, between all the news and weather we ve done, we ve been on a lot of choppers. i was just down of the board in a chopper for hours. to turn one around, it s got to be pretty bad. amy: right, and these guys are built for this. they are looking for the center. this particular flight is in there looking for the particular position so we can get better data. sometimes these flights go 8-9 hours where they are tracking
every country that s asking for a trade we have hundreds of their people in our prisons that we ve rounded up all over the world. we ve got plenty of people to trade. i started this interview by asking how your son was. let me end it, how are you two doing? it s been rough, but we don t focus on that. we just mostly focus on what trevor s gone through because it s the roughest on trevor. and he s holding up like a champ, we think. we re very proud of him. but it s hard. i mean, to have everything just whisked away from you overnight. so it s been a long 2 1/2 years for him. yeah. and again, our health problems and emotional problems we ve had are nothing compared to what he s going through. literally a third world gulag as we refer to it. his conditions i mean, the conditions russians are in in our prisons, in our federal penitentiaries, they re in like the hilton hotel compared to where our son is at. it s horrible. and again, there s americans in places much worse than he s
certainty of msnbc s film, new documentary by the artist j.r. you ve likely seen his work but now a deeper look at how with paper and glue he is putting the question to the test. we have a preview. reporter: hope is a rare commodity inside california correctional institution, one of the roughest of the state s 35 prisons. the lieutenant led me on to a level 4 yard, maximum security. lieutenant, this is the yard but where is everybody? well, unfortunately, just before we got here there was an incident. reporter: this trail of blood the result of a stabbing likely ordered by one of the racially or ethnically based gangs that dictate much of what happens inside these walls according to the lieutenant. especially on the level 4 yards it is very controlled and manipulated by gangs. reporter: so the odds that the blood on the ground over there is a result of gang ordered violence are pretty high? quite possibly, yeah.