it s 10:00 a.m. in new york. i m lindsey reiser. i ll be joined ace this hour by yasmin vossoughianríz mississippi. she ll have much more on the tornado devastation in a moment. we re also covering major stories around the world. ine1 israel, massive protestsç(% against prime minister benjamin netanyahu. tens of thousands filled the streetsrcnç after the country s right-wing leader abruptly fired the defense minister for challenging netanyahu s plan for overhauling theq judiciary. this morning, sites are grounded and hundreds of thousands on strike. here in new york, backñ1 on indictment match in the president trump caseñr of hundr% moeschlp involving stormy danie. a jury is expected to resume today. we have another report of another witness. we re live. but we begin with the zi. yasmin. reporter: thank you, linsey. in this smalli] town of rolling fork, at the alabama border, desperate recovery efforts are continuing days after a wave of tornadoes tour throughe1
our governor has been here, our lieutenant governor, our congressman has been xdjfhere. state representatives andt(e1 senators have been here. they committed to this community tofá help us reb5$f the city o rolling fork back to what it once w#kñ and to makeñi it even better. you live justr yes, i fádo. you experienced this tornado? yes, i did. you had to batten down the hatches yourself? lp yes, my wife and i, we hado get in the tub. by the timefá we got in the tub and coveredçó up,fá the storm w coming through. in a nick of time, we were able to go intox itjf çóthrough. but lplastly, just the families that have lost their love÷( one, to know that theirt( mayor, the stay and their ñi> what was itok like, 200-mile-per-hour wind coming through? yes. q and now you view the destruction, when you walked outside, what was left of your ?
killer. i hate to say it but murder is a respected crime by a lot of these inmates and they don t bother me. we met gerald at the penitentiary in iowa where he was serving two life sentences for murder and attempted murder. 11 years earlier he opened fire at the factory where he worked. i was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and didn t know it at the tim-e3%mpráit(sr&y was trying to get me committed and i refused to go to a mental health place because i was afraid they d take away my guns. i was a gun collector. i had a lot of guns. i knew once they found me mentally incompetent, i wouldn t be able to have guns anymore. and it developed to the point where i got delusional and hallucinated. i imagined my wife had been kidnapped, raped, tortured and killed by these guys at work. i thought i d take vengeance ç into my own hands.