i hear people, parents, for example, worrying about their kids in school. do they bring them home? do they stay put where they are? or do they head home and just stay there? so, you know, what i can confirm is that yes, there is now a very it s a city here that is certainly on the edge. john? absolutely. kathy, thank you. kathy quia giving us the latest from jakarta. police move into ald being where one gunman is holed up. we ll continue to follow this story out of jakarta. back in a moment. huh.
for most of the year. who can forget this. nobody thought this girl would be recovered, yet she was. today, she stands to tell her story and she told jurors yesterday what it felt like. she said she woke up in her bedroom with a knife held against her neck and the moment of that is what began her nine-month ordeal. kris gutierrez is covering this story from the federal courthouse in salt lake city. what else did we learn in elizabeth smart s testimony yesterday, kris? reporter: martha, it was very difficult to listen to elizabeth smart testify for roughly three years. she sat there in a bright red jacket, they are voice never cracked as she outlined in vivid detail how mitchell raped her repeatedly, forced her to drink alcohol and licker and made her watch as he and his estranged wife perform sex acts. she also testified that she knew people were out there looking for her. remember, she was held captive for nine months at that remote campsite in a
bill: there is more from that area where the president has been forced to cut short his trip in indonesia due to volcanic ash, being spewed from the mountaineer by and the president plans to fit in a speech to the people, and we ll wait on that and those people waited nearly two years to welcome back their adopted son, and david piper has more on that story out of jakarta, indonesia. reporter: it was the late 1960s when six-year-old barack obama came to indonesia with his mother, ann to settle in the capital, jakarta, living in a modest house on the outskirts of the city with his sister he saw the grinding poverty in the country and learned valuable lessons about the different culture from the one back home in hawaii, the president s childhood in jakarta, is remembered with fondness and pride at the schools he attended and at the elementary school a
saying listen, we appreciate your service, and this, that and the other, and we can t hear you. and there wasn t a soft we can t hear you. it s we can t hear you. i can hear you. i can hear you. the rest of the world hears you. and the people who knocked these buildings will hear all of us soon. bill: that s the first time i heard that story. they were calling me george, and you could see the ang ner their faces. it was like i get it. i know what you want. martha: and he needed to respond to that. bill: i know what you need. martha: and it was such a great spontaneous moment, you know. so much of what we see from our presidents is scripted, and it was just it was such a spontaneous human moment and i think that s
mountain area. she says she knew people were looking for her because one day she recalled hearing voices in the distance calling out her name but she says she was afraid to react and act on that because mitchell, according to her testimony, threatened to duct tape her mouth shut and kill her and her family if she tried to escape. this was a girl who at the time was 14 years old, she says she feared for her life. martha: boy, what a story, and the poise with which she has held herself in all of this is just extraordinary. kris, thank you very much. absolutely. martha: kris gutierrez. bill: i remember the day she was found, it was like wow, it s a miracle, america. hope has sprung. in a moment the former president bush in an extended interview telling sean hannity about some of the toughest decisions he had to make it office. this is a great interview and we ll show you it in moments. martha: they re promising to take the health care law apart, piece by piece, republicans already tak