can, and he sees if he sees any threat to his day in power, he ll do whatever he has to do. but this crosses the line. eric: and speaker pelosi, also by the way, calling for hearings too. coming up at the bottom of the hour, we ll get more reaction from democratic congressman john garamendi of california. he happens to sit on the armed house armed services committee, and in the wake of the mueller probe, we ll talk about how they plan to go forward on this and the other controversies now brewing over the administration. arthel? arthel: yeah, eric, we have some weather to report. the situation remains extremely dangerous after tropical storm imelda floods parts of texas and louisiana. drawing comparisons to hurricane harvey. we re going to tell you where emergency workers rushed to save lives. also a store we all know decides to end the sales of e-cigarettes in the wake with of deaths linked to vaping. more news coming up.
harvey all over again. the remnants of tropical storm imelda, you know it dumped torrential rain on the area. so far there have been at least four people confirmed dead that may have been linked to the dangerous weather, and now emergency crews are going door to door to rescue those people still trapped by the rising flood waters. casey steagall is live in huffman, texas, which right now, casey, about under behind you like 16 feet of water in some praises? that s unbelievable. reporter: yeah, it is. in isolated spots this particular area back here is not 16 feet because it is going down pretty fast. i mean, that is the good news here, is that it s going down just as fast as it came in a lot of areas. for instance, 20 miles to the west over in metro houston, you drive around, and you really wonder what storm? even though it was largely underwater 48 hours ago. i want to step aside and let you take a look at what is going on back here. this is huffman, texas.