armed services committee, he announced great common ground on many different things, especially, how do we get spending under control. how do we audit the department of defense. megyn: you think it can be done. you don t think it s all obstinates and intransigence in washington? look what rand paul did, he talked about that, and got libertarians, everyone together on a common issue. megyn: he had ted cruz, marco rubio and the aclu and code pink together, never been done before. hurrah. megyn: congressman west, thanks for being here. a pleasure. megyn: a safety question he at one of america s busiest airports after a high profile bender bender over the weekend at new york s jfk. how does that happen? we ll have a live report. and a few hearts are breaking over women, work and the will to lead. and get ready for three strong women on a fired up debate on what cheryl samburg says about working women and how much harder they need to work.
home and at his own high school when he was also interrupted once by a wrestling coach. and also belonged to the second mile. we expect this to be dramatic testimony just as it was yesterday when we heard from alleged victim number four, who took the stand to talk about being assaulted, raped and fondled allegedly by sandusky over many years. he s now 28 years old. they played shower games, for example, in which sandusky got soap all over him and then assaulted him. we also he faced some tough cross-examination and at one point asked by sandusky s lawyer, why didn t you stop this? he said, i was afraid. besides, i was getting gifts. then he turned the question around and said, i wish i had, perhaps i could have saved other children. back to you, christine. susan, a very dramatic first day in the courtroom. we know you ll be there all day today too. thank you, sue an. i ll talk to a former child abuse and sex crimes prosecutor, wendy murphy, about what s next in the sandus
chunks of junk fell from a jumbo jet. bizarre story there. also this morning, questions about safety after a teenager takes a pretty dangerous plunge off of a rock climbing wall. cell phone video captured the whole scene as the teen s father is now demanding some answers. and later, another safety question. this one about our food supply, especially seafood. what scientists discovered about tuna from the nuclear zone in japan. it is going to alarm you. scary story there. we begin with beryl, no longer a tropical storm, but still clinging to the southeastern coastline. the storm is losing steam but the flooding downpours aren t going away anytime soon. beryl is expected to sit over georgia for much of the day before slowly moving up the south carolina coast late this evening. we get more from abc s ginger zee. reporter: loud, rude and violent. beryl was the guest no one invited. ghostly beaches whipped by sand. unused deck chairs rocking at the end of the dock. sad symbols
well same old, same old, just rue teens, but no one should think of this as routine. each day it has sort of fresh disasters. each day the urgency should be building, not lessening for folks who aren t here. billy, i appreciate your time tonight. we ll talk to you more next week when we re here live from the gulf. now our exclusive interviews with the survivors of the deepwater horizons where a series of deadly explosions tloed this, the greatest environmental disaster in american history. gut wrenching accounts, hear from a group of men aboard that rig, five of them, from the first signs of trouble to the desperate efforts to save others and themselves. we ll bring you that. the survivors will also bring you concerns about the safety question they had and why they say bp was cutting corners and taking risk. tonight is a partnership with 360 and cnn s special investigation. april 20th, gump of mention core, a crew of 126, some of the
mr. secretary, that safety question? well, it s obviously a very difficult situation, a horrible tragedy and one that is going to require international cooperation to figure out and get to the bottom of what happened. but we re obviously monitoring the situation on the ground and what you have in open sources is what s out there. so 18 hours so far and there s no major investigation at the crash site. every hour you lose access to this crash site, does the investigation become i don t want to say pointless, but extremely difficult? it s obviously a matter of concern and that s why last night the white house asked all the parties involved to calm the situation down, de-escalate and allow the international community to come in and do an investigation. we stand ready to help. the faa months ago put out told u.s. airliners don t fly over this region at all.