there you go. indiana took their basketball program which obviously bobby nooig had a few influence. it was an amazing program back in the '90ed and early 2000s. and thul of a sudden fell apart in the early part of the decade. now this coach, coach carerean brought this team back. >> save something for the interview. you're excite popped. >> we loi am. >> ewith love it when you're passionate. i'm dpon lon lemon in today for brooke baldwin. president obama's about face of a controversial oil pipeline and housing number, some good, some bad. roll it. police have pinned down a suspected jihadist of a rabbi three schoolchildren and three soldiers. [ no audio ] >>ening okay, parentally we're having an issue. we'll get back when we get it fixed. barack obama will speak a little more than an hour from now. bree i brianna, i saw the note last night when you got the information on this story. this is the beginning of an energy tour for the president. that was very interesting wh enyou uncovered it. >> that's right. that had to do with the keystone pipeline. or the southern segment of it. the part that does not cross the border with canada. that's where the president will be visiting tomorrow. the beginning of the southern portion of that. here we are today. this is copper mountain one. all of those solar panels you see behind me create enough energy to power 17,000 homes. as you know, the president is really feeling some political pinch right now when it comes to high gas prices. he's facing a lot of public criticism. and one reason he's at this particular stop is to make a case for his energy policies. renewable energy has been a huge part of that. he'll be touting renewable energy as a viable option. and that's obviously why he's here. then later today heel be in new mexico. heel go to an oil field on federal land. and this is a rebuttal to republican dritisms that he's not doing enough on drilling. finally, in addition he ends his day in ohio state where they're doing a lot of energy-related technology advancement. but the big visit is tomorrow in cushing, oklahoma. the obama administration rejected the initial plan in january. he el eel be there touting that they're moving forward on the project. don. >> appreciate it. want to go down to france where a standoff is under way right now. give us the very latest. [ no audio ] pounceable for the cold blooded attacks. he feels no guilt, no remorse and, in fact, he just said he's sorry he can't kill again. that's what he was parentally planning. he says he's associated with al qaeda and that he committed these various attacks for three specific reasons. one, because he doesn't believe in the ban on the women wearing the hijab in this country. two, because he objects to france's military involvement in afghanistan. that's why he killed the soldiers a the point blank range and three to avenge the deaths of palestinian children. that's why he targeted that jewish school, just three kilometers down the road from this neighborhood, killing, gunning three children there and a rabbi. we know that he is known to the police, don. he had a history of violent crime and they say that ale whether i turned it on to him on a tuesday. the jewish shootings or on a monday. and tuesday, when they started to look through footage and matched it up when they know from a man with petty crime here, they began fitting the pieces of the buzzle together. but it was only later that they managed to find his whereabouts. >> we have just koiple second here. what's happening now between the standoff between police and this man. >> well, question don't know. he said he was going to hand himself over. but he said that a while ago and it hasn't happened. police are on voicely unsure about going in a raid fashion as they did earlier on in the beginning because he used heavy fire against them. two policemen were injured. so they are reapply -- it's essentially a standoff at this moment. negotiations, they say. but what he's negotiating for at this stage, we're not really clear on. >> thank you. next up on "reporter roulette" a new report shows exactly where the country stands in the housing crisis. al alison kosik live from the new york stock exchange. >> you hit on the problem. housing is not on this straight road to recovery at this point. sales of previously owned homes unexpectedly fell 1% in february from january. but if you look at the numbers this time last year, it's actually an improvement. it's also showing a tiny bit of improvement from housing prices. they're frup this time last year but are still at their lowest point since 2002. so that's great news if you're buying a home for the first time. it's real tough if you're the seller. it's one of those mixed pictures on housing. don? >> what does this mean for the housing market going forward? can we see at this point in the recover is speeding up? >> not necessarily. it's not speeding up, but the trend is moving towards improvement. despite the sales drop that i just told you about, the longer-term view shows sales come back because of lower prices and super low mortgage rates. that's slowly and surely shrinking the inventory of empty homes it issing on the market. if that inventory kind of shrinks that could boost prices over time. we did speak with the chief economist of the national sale of realtors. take a listen. >> this pace can hold for the remainder of the year, we're saying the inventory will go back to the more balanced level condition and that will set the price for the first year of home price increase since 2006. >> mortgage rates are also starting to creep a little higher from the all-time lows. that could get people who are thinking of buying a home to get off the fence and buy sooner rather than later. don? >> thank you very much. that's today's "reporter roulette." >> sanford police, do your duty. arrest the murderer today. >> it's a very sensitive story and people are taking sides and have become very emotional about this. the outrage over the shooting death oof a teenager reaches congress. and developing today, the city of sanford has issued a letter explaining what police did, what they didn't do, and now naacp president ben jealous is calling for the police chief's resignation. he joins me live next. all right, let's decide what to do about medicare and social security... security. that's what matters to me... me? i've been paying in all these years... years washington's been talking at us, but they never really listen... listen...it's not just some line item on a budget; it's what i'll have to live on... i live on branson street, and i have something to say... [ male announcer ] aarp is bringing the conversation on medicare and social security out from behind closed doors in washington. because you've earned a say. we asked total strangers to watch it for us. thank you so much, i appreciate it, i'll be right back. they didn't take a dime. how much in fees does your bank take to watch your money ? if your bank takes more money than a stranger, you need an ally. ally bank. no nonsense. just people sense. you know who you are. you can part a crowd, without saying a word. you have yet to master the quiet sneeze. you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts. well, muddlers, muddle no more. try zyrtec®. it gives you powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because zyrtec® starts working at hour 1 on the first day you take it. claritin® doesn't start working until hour 3. zyrtec®. love the air. [ male announcer ] engine light on? come to meineke now for a free code scan read and you'll say...my money. my choice. my meineke. >> five members of the southern mississippi pep band have lost their scholarships after chants "where's your green card?" at a kansas state player. listen closely and you can hear them. >> did you see mills trying to come over and draw his charge? >> where's your green card? >> he's about as cool as they come right now. >> so the incident occurred sdurg the ncaa basketball championship tournament. the chant was aimed at angel rodriguez, a kansas state player who was born in puerto rico. the students are also removed from the band and will be required to complete a cultural sensitivity training course. froem -- president obama will be in seoul for a nuclear summit. george w. bush used binoculars to look into north korea from the sandbagged bunker back in 2002. this is why i mixed up those letters because the naacp is calling for the police chief of sanford, florida, to resign. that is a town where neighborhood watch volunteer george zimmerman fatally shot trayvon martin who was 17 years old. zimmerman said he fired in self-defense. here's the piston naacp, ben jealous. thank you for joining us. >> good to be here. >> why do you want the police chief to resign? >> last night we stood in a church with hundreds of people, more than 1,000 outside people talk about thab experiences watching young men in this town being mistreated, killed. somebody said if you kill a dog in this town, you'll be in jail the next day. trayvon was killed and his killer is still walking the street. they had all the cause they needed to lock up mr. zimmerman, but they just kept giving -- and they didn't do it. it's been four weeks and now they've turned it over to a state's attorney. that will be probably i think the middle of the next month before they even panel the grand jury. the whole time this man is just out there free. and this young man is dead. >> i have a lot of questions here. there's outrage all across the country here. there are people who believe it's a racial thing and many who believe it's not. there are people who say it's been a while. but can't we let the investigation play out. this person may end up being arrested or charged. or not. how do you respond to that? >> the reality is we're all hardened to see the d.o.j. open their investigation yesterday. even though all of us would have liked the grand jury to be em panelled, we have the date. those are two good signs. the reality is one of the things that makes the naacp superb, we have 1,200 communities across this country. and our branch president here mr. clayton, 26 years of law enforcement and 24 years as president of this branch here of the naacp, 12 year of that was an overlap. and he'll tell you that this chief has just lost the faith of a lot of people in this community. the reality is at very least, this chief should be suspended with pay, pending the outcome of this investigation. that's what we expect chiefs to do with their officers when their officers have done something to lose faith.. the reality is this chief should have made sure that trayvon martin's killer was charged. was actually held to the same accounts of somebody who killed a dog would be. >> i get you. i'm trying to be respectful here because we don't have a lot of time and i have a lot of questions to get to. if it turns out that federal investigators found sanford police did nothing wrong when they did not make an arrest. will you stand by the decision? >> we didn't go door to door, we just put out word. the reality is that just seems to be the tip of the iceberg. listening to our branch president say look, when a young man is shot, they should test the hands of the man who did the shooting and actually get the powder residue. they should gather his clothing for dna. they didn't do that. just basic step after basic step which was not taken. it gave mr. zimmerman special dispen sags apparently because he appointed himself neighborhood watch captain and took his word for it. >> i want to say the city manager released a statement on the city's website responding to some of the questions and allegations that you're making right now. and again, i have to point this out, this is not cnn's reporting, this is a person that you have on the ground doing your own independent investigation, i would imagine. but if it turns out through the justice department's investigation that the police department did nothing wrong, will you stand by that? >> we have full faith in the d.o.j. they've done a great job in new orleans. we have great faith that they'll do a great job here. i have not come across -- and i have worked in places like har lel, new york, and jackson, mississippi, i have not come across a community as tense as this one is, and it's not simply about this one case. it's about a pattern in this communi community. people, you know, who kill -- who attack men being treated differently. think about it, don. it was just a couple of years ago that we were talking about the son of a lieutenant from this force who attacked a black homeless man. you know, people here are saying look, orlando is a much bigger city. in the last five years, the last ten years, their preliminary hasn't been in the national news as much as sanford. when there's this much smek smoke inform a community of such a modest size, there's reason. there's a fire. and today as we sat with those community members and listened to their story, same with last night, we heard evidence of that fire. >> i have to ask you this. sometimes these things become so emotional and you don't want them to explode. some cooler heads is what i'm asking. what is your advice when it comes to that. we're all sad. if you're not sad for trayvon martin's family then you're not human. but it his to play out, even if it's not the speed in which you want it to. sure you know, the reality is, those of us raised in the judeo-christian traditions is taught that faith is the essence of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen. people have investigated a lot of faith here for week, praying and calling and rallying for justice to be done. and they're starting to see the wheels of justice move. d.o.j. opened that investigation a day or two ago because this community ultimately spoke up and said we need you here to restore faith in our law enforcement. and, you know, now the state's attorney has set a date for the grand jury to be em panelled. and so people here have already waited weeks for justice to be done. they have not been quiet, but they will continue to keep faith because they're seeing some signs that the faith is being rewarded. d.o.j. is involved. a date for the grand jury has been set. people say what do you make of all these rallies? this is what democracy looks like. this is what it looks like when a community says we aren't going to be vigilantes but we're going to be vigilant that justice is done by or sons and daughters. >> dben jealous, thank you. keep us updated into what you find out and what you're doing. what's behind the loud booms and shakes that are waking people up in the middle of the night, way out in the middle of nowhere. listen to the people of clintonville describe it. >> the first one sounded like that paintball gun where it was bang, bang, bang, bang in a row. the snek one next ones was lik boom, boom. it was similar but wasn't the same going off. >> it was like a bomb going off. >> tremors. >> it was quite loud. sounded like it was in the house almost. >> it isn't a one-time thing either. they've been happening three fig nights in a row. see all those dots right there? they represent all impeachment who called police reporting they heard or felt the booms. cin cindy, what is happening at your house? >> it's like having a noufourth july fireworks but underground. >> where do you think they're coming from? >> i don't know. it's very strange. when you hear them, it sounds like it's coming from the basement. you go down there and then they hear like it's coming from upstairs. then you go outside. it's very strange. crazy, i guess. >> so it's not kids playing a joke and setting off fireworks? >> oh, no, no. not the way the windows shake. all of us on sunday night when it first happened for a couple of blocks, everybody was just standing outside because everybody was thinking their house is going to blow up. >> people in charge, whatter they telling you? >> i'm sorry, what? >> the people in charge, what are they saying to you? >> they're just trying to find out. i guess, you know, they looked at all the options as far as gas lines and water mains and stuff like that. and they ruled all those things out. and they're called it a natural phenomenon. there's supposed to be a meeting. i don't know what they found out. i don't know if they ruled anything else out or found anything else out. >> hang on, maybe get some ear plupgs. >> we sent jim spellman to clintonville, wu wii. i know you just got there a little while ago. do city leaders have any idea what might be causing the booms? >> the first thing they thought was maybe it was an electrical substation. not happening. gas line explosion? not happening. they even checked with the military. nothing like that. the leading theory they have now, and it's not much than a theory is what they're calling a frost quake. it's been really warm here for about the last week. could the frozen ground be thawed so quickly cause some sort of seismic shift? not really much more than a theory now and it still doesn't explain why only in this small area of the town is being affect affected. >> electric problems, suer problems, gas explosions. they're meeting with an engineering firm to find out if they should set up monitoring systems to see if there's any sort of under ground cavern that they weren't aware of. i'm here at clintonville high school. they're discussing all of these possibilities. it's the only thing everybody in this town is faulking about. >> all right jim. keep on it. interesting. >> at the white horse tavern, h i had one drink. >> find out what he reveals in his dui trial. i'm a lobster girl. top quality lobster is all we catch. [ male announcer ] don't miss red lobster's lobsterfest. the only time of year you can savor 12 exciting lobster entrees, like lobster lover's dream i'm laura mclennan and i sea food differently. my dad and grandfather spent their whole careers here. [ charlie ] we're the heartbeat of this place, the people on the line. we take pride in what we do. when that refrigerator ships out the door, it's us that work out here. [ michael ] we're on the forefront of revitalizing manufacturing. we're proving that it can be done here, and it can be done well. [ ilona ] i came to ge after the plant i was working at closed after 33 years. ge's giving me the chance to start back over. [ cindy ] there's construction workers everywhere. so what does that mean? it means work. it means work for more people. [ brian ] there's a bright future here, and there's a chance to get on the ground floor of something big, something that will bring us back. not only this company, but this country. ♪ in here, the landscaping business grows with snow. to keep big winter jobs on track, at&t provided a mobile solution that lets everyone from field workers to accounting, initiate, bill, and track work in real time. you can't live under a dome in minnesota, that's why there's guys like me. [ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ >> 14 office workers wear orange and get fired. they say uh it's all about the happy hour they hit afterhours on payday and not all about work. but their employer sees things differently. they say it's a sign of protest. either way, is it a reason to get fired? >> here's the problem. the problem is it's an employment at will state. what does that mean? it means you can be hired or fired for any reason or no reason as long as it's not discriminato discriminatory. that there's statutes that protect you about age, gender, sexual orientation. a shirt is not a member of a protected class. the reality is, just because they wore orange shirts, they could be fired. maybe the legislature will do something about it but perfectly permissible under the law now. >> also in florida, th