altitude and exactly what they tell you not to do from almost day one in fly. you know, just as a passenger and not knowing much, i know you would answer this sensitively. in that three minutes, as they are going down at a very fast speed, would passengers you know, would they be knocked out in some way? were they aware that whole time? it would have been a very wild ride. i don t think they would have had any perception it was 10,000 per feet per minute but obvious something was very wrong with that aircraft. would have had the falling feeling. yes. nothing would have caused them to lose consciousness? not necessarily. an awful thing. nobody knows it like you. thank you so much for come. good to be here. a writing machine raises serious constitutional questions. is a law still a law if the president himself doesn t sign it? building our wiress network all across america. we re adding new cell sites.
bodies of those killed in a devastating tornado almost one week ago. just ahead, one of the coroners involved in the daunting and grisly task. and clash of conservative men for the race for the white house. will it be sarah palin or michele bachmann? i m candy crowley and you re in the situation room. first to the u.s. investigation into osama bin laden and dramatic new clues revealing that he may have been trying to reach out to pakistan for protection in the years before he was killed. this comes as hillary clinton paid a visit to the country in a new effort to ease tension in the wake of bin laden s death. chris lawrence is at the pentagon with all of the details. chris? candy, all of this is coming out of the massive treasurer trove of intelligence that the navy s.e.a.l.s pulled out of bin laden s compound. this revelation is fascinating in that it really reveals one of the ways in which osama bin laden thought about trying to evade u.s. detection. documents seized sh
foreign countries? reporter: good question, nick. the bottom line is the streets of tokyo are empty. and the airport is packed. i think that says it all. people are trying to get out. and there is a, i would say, a wide scale and growing sense of concern about alarm about the situation. remember, as we all know, this is say country that understands perhaps more sensitively. the impact of radiation sickness. donny deutsch. when you talk to people there, is there a sense of just we don t know that maybe the government, it s not a question of covering up, it s some of the questions are unanswerable at this point? reporter: well, the company that is in charge of this particular nuclear power plant has had a history of having discrepancies in how it s presented risks. so there is there is there does seem to be a credibility problem and people are very
it is a sensitive issue, and it needs to be dealt with sensitively, reasonably. it is important we talk about this property, but the country wants and deserveses firm immigration control instead of the nonsense. that would make a difference. what it would achieve is getting back to where we used to be where we didn t have immigration questions. we weren t asked on a street. nobody raised it. why? they were happy with the level of immigration. we mu we could provide good health and housing and schools. it has been out of control. 1k3 from all i can here the democrats would make it much. what would the cut be? you said the cap. what is the number? 10,000 to 10 million? let me answer the question. you are reminding me of gordon last week. it is like another replay. the fact is every year you need to talk to the health authority housing authorities and business and set a cap to
david s referring to, that accident that ended up being for the greater good in general by bringing an issue to the forefront. we don t argue that there can t be those rare cases where the public good in releasing the tape outweighs the privacy interests. but those should be rare and there should be a deliberate process to determine that the public good outweighs the victim or the caller s interest in privacy. and then where that tape is released. it should be done sensitively, by which i mean, crime victims should have advance warning that this tape is going to be released. and they should have an opportunity to hear it in advance. you know, we have heard from victims and family members who have called our national crime victim help line that their outrage in hearing that tape broadcast is compounded by the fact that no one told them in advance that this was going to happen. right, i understand what you re saying, as well. these were things that