off. norah: our exclusive reporting about the u.s. navy s mission to stay prepared. this is not a 9-to-5 job, is it? no, it s not, it s around-the-clock. the prosecution is trying to understand, when did you decide to lie about your whereabouts? i don t know exactly when i made the decision to lie about that. a brutal winter storm rips across the country, including parts of california under blizzard warnings for the first time in history. norah: and a temple university officer is laid to rest. chris is physically gone, but his spirit, love, and laughter will live on through all of us as we continue his legacy. announcer: this is a special edition of the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting tonight from the uss nimitz. norah: good evening, and welcome again, from here in the western pacific ocean, where we are on vulture s row, the commander s observation point high above the busy deck of the uss nimitz that has just returned
in a solemn memorial, honoring lives lost, and saluting those still fighting for the survival of the country. may this be proudly proclaimed everywhere: ukraine is alive. that sense of unity reflected around the world. as ukraine war enters the second year of russia s brutal invasion, the number of dead and wounded on both sides of the conflict is in the hundreds of thousands. a statistic almost impossible to comprehend. but not for serhiy perebyinis. we first met him last year, after he saw this image that shocked the world, a family killed by a russian mortar as they tried to flee. only to realize, it was his own family.e to rnim by their clothing, their backpacks, he told us then. his wife, tetiana, 18-year-old
"It's been a really hard year," says Serhiy Perebyinis, whose family died when a Russian mortar tore into a crowd of people trying to flee Irpin.
Serhiy Perebyinis learned about the death of his wife, 9-year-old daughter, and 18-year-old son on social media. His story is just one of 43,800 collected by Ukraine s Museum of Civilian Voices.