vladimir putin illegally annexes four regions. there s no checks on mr. putin. can the west keep him under control? plus the road to 2018, virginia becomes a battleground for one of the most competitive house races in the country. you look across the spectrum, the number is 218. i spent time in a district that could prove decisive. hello, i m dana bash in washington where the state of our union is picking up the pieces after a devastating storm. the numbers and images are staggering. at least 67 are dead in florida, four in north carolina, more than 850,000 still in the dark this morning. hundreds of thousands now essentially refugees days after hurricane ian swept ashore and swept away life as many know it. already more than a thousand civilians have been rescued and evacuated according to the governor s office. we re getting a clearer view of ian s map-altering impact. entire stretches of florida s coastline are gone. once sprawling community like sanibel island
civilians have been rescued and evacuated according to the governor s office. we re getting a clearer view of ian s map-altering impact. entire stretches of florida s coastline are gone. once sprawling community like sanibel island, are completely shattered. homes and businesses, what they looked before on the left and what they look like now, piles of concrete rubble strewn on the beach on the right. tomorrow president biden and the first lady will travel to puerto rico severely damaged by hurricane fiona and on to florida on wednesday where estimates put the storm-related damage in the tens of billions. i want to go straight to the person leading the national recovery effort, fema administrator deanne criswell. administrator criswell, thank you for joining me. you took a tour on friday at the devastation in florida, entire communities as we just showed destroyed. how did what you saw on the ground compare to other storms that we ve seen in recent years?
community of people that i ve been hearing all week since i ve been here. they ve been saying that everybody wants a piece of this. they are so concerned about afghanistan and it really just points to the depth of feeling this military community has. we were talking about something like 55,000 americans living around here. all of them have been deeply touched by the wars in afghanistan and iraq. it really just goes to show how profoundly touched by the images they re seeing on television all of these people are. we heard these 31 and they re not all uniformed soldiers. ten of them, we heard, were afghan civilians who were collected from the debris of this horrible bombing and also brought along with about 20 service members also critically wounded, flown here to the medical center. this is the destination for
the deep state dogs is one group in a sprawling community rooting out insurrectionists on january 6th. one says it s a diverse group united by a common goal. what they are working for is accountability and they are going about that in different ways. whether it means publishing information or whether making tips to lawsuit. reporter: their efforts are also a rebuttal to republicans looking to whitewash the ho horrifying events of january 6th. every time i hear a laurmt t lawmaker of what happened, i think of their pictures and footage of what we have of them fleeing from what was going on. i know that they remember it too. this was a trauma for them. reporter: the hunters crowd source information often and assign state tags.
you traveled to tulsa to give us a preview of the film and more information on what actually happened 100 years ago because so many americans have never learned about it. reporter: that s exactly right, erica, this is a piece of american history that has been buried for about 100 years now and only recently are people finally starting to learn what the greenwood massacre was all about and the residents of tulsa say now is the time to not only commemorate those who were lost and its lives that were shattered but also to find justice for the survivors who are still alive today. greenwood was exceptional, greenwood was rare. reporter: the greenwood neighborhood of tulsa, oklahoma, once a sprawling community, a hub of black wealth and pride with a centerpiece known as black wall street is now this, one half of a city block that is almost entirely white-owned. it is also a crime scene. 100 years ago a 19-year-old black man was accused of