jericka. the fact the suspected bombmaker is now in u.s. custody marks a major milestone in a prosecution that has been going on for decades. >> a quiet night in a scottish village shattered. >> reporter: this was the aftermath of the bomb. stashed in a luggage compartment of pan-am flight 103. four days before christmas. among the victims 35 students from syracuse university returning home after a semester abroad. >> no amount of time or distance will stop the united states and our scottish partners from pursuing justice in this case. >> reporter: two years ago the justice department brought charges against the man they say built the bomb, abu agila masud, a libyan national. last month he was reportedly detained in libya, leading to speculation he would be handed over to u.s. authorities to stand trial. now the justice department says he's in u.s. custody. the 1988 bombing was the deadliest mass murder in british legal history bringing the threat of international terrorism to the global consciousness. attempts to prosecute those responsible for the attack has been a decades-long multinational battle. one other man, an alleged libyan intelligence officer, was convicted for his involvement in the bombing. he maintained his innocence until his death in 2012. >> he just loved life. he loved his family. >> reporter: kara weipz lost her brother rick minetti 34 years ago. >> the fact the united states has custody of the alleged bombmaker is -- it's huge. it's a gigantic step. >> reporter: and jericka, the suspect is expected to appear in u.s. district court here in d.c. as soon as tomorrow. >> christina, thank you. let's turn to a monstrous storm to start off the week. it slammed into california with seven inches of rain and triggered whiteout conditions in some areas of the mountains. it's now set to sweep east with warnings it could deliver blizzard conditions to the plains and even life-threatening tornadoes in the south. cbs's danya bacchus is covering it all. dania, good evening to you. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. this is only the beginning of the blockbuster storm with california joining more than a dozen other states under a winter weather alert. the powerful cross-country storm dumping snow throughout the sierra nevada, with up to six inches an hour. winds causing dangerous whiteout conditions on roads spreading avalanche warnings and whipping lifts at ski resorts. heavy rains also pummeling the golden state, knocking out power, downing trees, and triggering new fears of landslides like this one friday in los angeles county. in neighboring orange county a swift water rescue this morning at a rain-swollen river. crews hoisted the man to safety. as california's storm system moves east -- >> oh! >> reporter: -- a rare weather phenomenon in iowa. thundersnow. the storm set to impact much of the country with blizzard conditions expected from colorado to minnesota with thunderstorms and tornado warnings in the south. while the storm is bringing much-needed rain and snow, california reservoirs are just over half full not enough yet to pull the state out of its historic drought. >> important to know. thank you. tonight the ukrainian city of odesa is in the dark. 1.5 million people in the city are without heat and electricity after russian drones hit two power plants this weekend. as imtiaz tyab reports, fighting also rages in the country's east. >> reporter: the sound of war crackles across the streets of bakhmut as russian forces lay waste to the eastern city once home to 70,000. a small group of civilians still living here tell a passing ukrainian soldier "we'll still be here when you liberate us." such defiance amid such devastation is a feeling oleksandr hanzachuk knows well. he's from borodianka northwest of kyiv which was brutally occupied by russian forces early in the war. this apartment building was once his home and is now unlivable. so you were in the building when this happened? "we were sheltering in the basement and the building started shaking," he says. "it was terrifying." hanzachuk takes us inside the apartment he used to share with his mother, a place they both called home since 1975. how do you feel seeing it like this? >> no cry. i smile. >> reporter: "i try not to cry," he says. "i try to smile and hope for a new life, a new home." in the shadows of hanzachuk's apartment building is one of the latest works by renowned graffiti artist banksy of a uk yain child defeating vladimir putin at judo. a defeat so many across this war-ravaged country are fighting so hard for. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, kyiv, ukraine. well, today a successful splashdown for nasa's artemis 1 moon mission ship. the uncrewed orion capsule was guided into the pacific ocean about 350 miles south of san diego. the 25-day test flight cost billions but the payoff, astronauts could be next. cbs's mark strassmann has more. >> splashdown. >> reporter: a homcoming splashdown. the first of many that nasa imagines in its lunar dreams. >> orion is in great shape. >> reporter: recovery teams pulled the orion capsule from the pacific. >> i don't think any one of us could have imagined the mission this successful. >> and lift-off of artemis 1. >> reporter: 25 days ago nasa launched the artemis 1 test flight. in all a 1.4 million-mile lunar round trip. from deep space orion beamed back spectacular imagery of the moon and earth. twice the capsule flew within 80 miles of the moon's surface. but the mission's biggest test came during sunday's return. orion slammed into the earth's atmosphere at 25,000 miles per hour. the heat shield had to hold up against temperatures of 5,000 degrees, half as hot as the surface of the sun. >> we're going to look at the data very carefully but i would say very happy with what we've seen so far on the heat shield. >> reporter: sunday's splashdown 50 years to the day after another landing. >> contact. >> reporter: apollo 17 touching down on the lunar surface. >> the challenger has landed. >> reporter: the last time humans moonwalked. nasa wants to return with the artemis program. a crude test flight around the moon in 2024. a moon landing later this decade. >> it is the beginning of the new beginning. and that is to explore the heavens. >> reporter: a new era in moon voyaging just moved one test flight closer. mark strassmann, cbs news, atlanta. ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. one prilosec otc each morning blocks heartburn all day and all night. prilosec otc reduces excess acid for 24 hours, blocking heartburn before it starts. one pill a day. 24 hours. zero heartburn. this cough. [sfx: coughs] this'll help. vicks vaporub? vicks vaporub's ...medicated vapors go straight to the source of your cough... ...so you can relieve your cough to breathe easier. vicks vaporub. fast-acting cough relief. theo's nose was cause for alarm, so dad brought puffs plus lotion to save it from harm. puffs has 50% more lotion and brings soothing relief. don't get burned by winter nose. a nose in need deserves puffs indeed. america's #1 lotion tissue. i'm jericka duncan in new york. thanks for staying with us. according to the federal communications commission about 19 million americans or 6% of the u.s. population do not have broadband service to connect to the internet. the biden administration's infrastructure act has allocated $65 billion to fix that. but in new mexico one man isn't waiting. he's floating his own solution to bring the internet to hard to reach places. john blackstone has that story. >> reporter: in roswell, new mexico the launch of an enormous silver air ship doesn't have the roar of a rocket, but in mission control chief of operations stephanie luongo finds plenty of excitement in what's being tested. >> i like the idea we're going to change the world and we're going to revolutionize earth observation and providing broadband to the underserved. >> reporter: this test flight is an attempt to show that a big balloon can do things that rockets and satellites can't do. >> we are going to disrupt the satellite industry once we get this operational. >> reporter: inside its hangar before the launch the huge aircraft towers over everything and everyone. but please, don't call it a blimp. >> is this a blimp? >> this is not a blimp. >> reporter: mikkel and his company designed and built it. >> we refer to as a happs, high altitude platform station. the purpose is to go to the stratosphere above 60,000 feet above the controlled air space and stay over an area of operation. >> reporter: his high altitude platform is meant to stay in the stratosphere above where airplanes fly but far below where satellites orbit. this aircraft will go up and basically hang in the air over one spot in the earth? >> absolutely. we are filled with helium for the lift. we have solar panels on the top side of it. we have batteries on the bottom. and we use that thee nd sta ove ns westergrd has high hopes for what his happs can do when it's equipped with cameras, remotes sensor instruments and a broadband antenna. >> whether that is human trafficking prevention or illegal fishing prevention, oaths conservation, methane leaks monitoring, protection of wildfire, rural connectivity, there's huge need. >> reporter: those are lofty goals, but westergaard has a track record for developing life-changing and life-saving technology. >> i've built companies in public health, in food security, in safe drinking water. >> reporter: his company lifestraw developed a water purifying filter providing clean drinking water to millions. and a mosquito-killing bed nets produced by westergaard have helped reduce malaria deaths by more than half. >> by may of next year we will have distributed a million nets and seen malaria rates go down from 1.3 million people mainly children dying every year to last year less than 500,000. >> reporter: his newest project also aims to help people in need. this time in need of internet underconnected be included in the advantages of a network world, whether that is education, online banking, online health. >> there's a whole lot of navajo nation out there. >> there's a whole lot of there out there. >> reporter: john badao the founder of sacred wind communications is working to provide internet access on sparsely populated tribal land in the southwest. >> on the navajo reservation itself in a three-state area the availability of broadband is very low. i would estimate it's probably no more than 40%. and even at that 40% the speeds are not that high. >> reporter: in tribal meetings badel has heard many stories of the need for connection. >> and one grandfather stood up and he said i don't know what this internet thing is all about but my grandchildren do, and he says my grandchildren won't come and visit me on weekends anymore because i don't have internet. >> reporter: but providing internet access throughout the navajo nation's 25,000 square miles is a colossal task. >> it would require companies to install 200 to 300 towers. how long would that take? maybe ten years or more. and the cost would be enormous. >> reporter: enter mikkel westergaard's high altitude platform station. sitting at about 65,000 feet over new mexico, it's designed to deliver broadband internet connection over hundreds of square miles. >> he is using a technology that he has come up with himself to reinvent an airship to provide broadband services over wide swaths of the earth. this can not only be used in new mexico. of course it has usefulness worldwide in the third world. >> you've done many projects. this seems different. what led you to this project? >> well, it's not all that different because most of what i've done in life has been building companies that have all the same technology platforms essentially, which has been around material science. >> do you see a time, then, when airships like this will be around the earth in many places, that this will be the standard, replacing what many satellites do today? >> i absolutely envision a future where this will be as normal as seeing ships in the port, as normal as seeing cars on the road, and as normal as seeing trains on the tracks. >> reporter: and as normal as having access to the internet. john blackstone, roswell, new mexico. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. restless nights fogging up your day? tonight, try new zzzquil pure zzzs sleep plus next day energy with melatonin to help you fall asleep naturally... plus extended-release b-vitamins. wake up feeling refreshed. pure zzzs. sleep better. wake up your best. skin your face will envy? with olay hyaluronic body lotion 95% of women had visibly-smoother skin. be fearless with olay hyaluronic body lotion and body wash. in march of 2020 our lead national correspondent david begnaud went to cookville, tennessee after a deadly tornado devastated that city east of nashville. 19 people were killed, including the kimberlan family, josh, aaron, and 2-year-old sawyer. david recently returned to visit family members of the victims to see how the community is honoring their memories. >> reporter: our trip back to cookville, tennessee began with a door knock. at the home of pastor rodney pitts -- >> there he is. >> reporter: -- and his wife trisha. >> nice to meet you. >> hey, nice to meet you. wow, it's been a long time coming. >> reporter: it has been nearly three years since we reported on that tornado. which killed their daughter erin kimberlan, her husband josh, and their 2-year-old son sawyer. he loved the church hymnal. one song in particular. >> that was his song. >> that was his song. >> he couldn't read other places that had a different songbook. he would look through it and find that because he knew what it looked like. >> reporter: the pitts took us to where the kimberlanss home once stood until the tornado ripped it off its foundation. that sacred ground where they died is now a living memorial. >> this was the area where sawyer played a lot. and they've made just a beautiful park out of that. to make it a happy place for kids. we can come out and smile. you know. it's good. >> reporter: and where the children now play trisha and rodney pitts often come to pray. and just reflect. >> i'm not the same person i used to be. that's for sure. >> what's changed? >> oh, man. man, everything. you know, you preach about how life is a vapor, that it's just -- it's come and gone and it's -- you tell people all along how fragile and uncertain it is. now i know it is. >> reporter: in march 2020 in the dark of night while so many people were asleep the tornado blasted through with 175-mile-per-hour winds and destroyed 170 homes. >> there were just big, tall piles of just rubble everywhere. and it was the oddest thing, david. there was no grass. it actually -- it pulled the grass out. and i just remember trisha just kept saying there's nothing here. there's nothing left. and in your mind you're thinking, well, they're somewhere. they weren't here. you know. but they were. >> how does it feel to have people still thinking about them? and talking about them. and checking up on y'all. >> it means so much to know that their memory's still alive and the impact that they had on people was enough that they still think of them. >> reporter: the community also built a memorial garden for the five children who died -- sawyer, hattie jo collins, dawson curtis, bridget ann marie mccormick phillips, and harlan marsh. >> eventually it will be a nice shady spot. >> yeah. >> reporter: they also planted tree fll 19 people d that night. like leisha ritenberry, who loved karaoke. sue and todd koehler, who married in 2017. amanda cole was the live-in nanny for the curtis family. she died along with terry curtis and his son dawson. and three trees for the kimberlin family. >> they died on march 3rd. the next day is what? march 4th. and that's what we're doing. we're marching forward. >> mm. >> day at a time. >> reporter: kim cantly is josh kimberlin's mom. how do you describe how much you miss him? >> he was my peter pan. he just brought laughter and just did it so -- just so naturally. god made erin for josh. >> beep beep. >> there's a lot of tragedy in the story of march 3rd but there's a lot of beauty too. they would have never made it -- if one made it and the other didn't. god took them together. all three. i hear their laughter, and it is a beautiful story. >> kim doesn't know if you've been a good boy or a bad boy this year. can you enlighten us? >> the sound. >> that's a pretty strong case. >> reporter: the memories. all bittersweet. well, we came back to really check on those left behind. to just see how you're doing. >> because of their faith, because of god's word, we're doing -- we're doing good. we are doing good. it gives us hope. yeah. death is something we'll all experience, but it's not the end. it's not the end. i know. i know i'll see them again. >> reporter: erin and sawyer are buried together. josh is right beside them. this is the photo that tells the story of those who rest here. >> we couldn't ask for any better. we're very blessed. all of our children have married, really into some wonderful families. but these -- this is deeper. >> reporter: you may be wondering, how do they deal with the unbearable pain? >> happy birthday, daddy. we love you and we're ready to see you this afternoon. >> reporter: well -- >> they're the lucky ones. >> yes. >> reporter: with unshakeable faith. >> god's been very good to us to give us everything we've needed through this process. >> and he's put up with the flu spreading rapidly nationwide anti-viral medications are in mie demand. cbs's bradley blackburn takes a closer look at what families should know before heading to the pharmacy. >> reporter: flu cases are increasing around the country, with 47 states or jurisdictions reporting very high or high flu activity. that's driving up the demand for anti-viral medications to treat the flu. >> if you're somebody who's older, if you have underlying medical conditions, you really should consider getting a prescription for an anti-viral drug if you you get the flu. these drugs have been shown to reduce the duration of illness but really importantly to reduce your likelihood of ending up in the hospital or even dying. >> reporter: tamiflu is one of the most commonly prescribed anti-virals. the pill or liquid is taken for five days. the newest anti-viral zofluza is a single dose. cbs medical contributor dr. celine gounder says start the course as soon as possible for the biggest benefits, usually within about two days of getting sick. >> if you stop too soon, you can have a rebound of the virus. you can have a rebound of symptoms. and so it's really important to complete that course. if you don't complete the course, you're also at more risk for the virus developing resistance. >> reporter: side effects can vary. nausea and vomiting are the most common with tamiflu. diarrhea is most common with xofluza. >> you can get side effects with really any medication. and sometimes those can be allergic reactions, a rash. sometimes that can be g.i. upset. but what's really important to understand is these side effects are rare, they're mild. >> reporter: and with covid-19 cases on the rise anti-viral medications like paxlovid can help people at high risk of developing severe illness. bradley blackburn, cbs news, new york. >> that is the"overnight news" t ce new york city, i'm jericka duncan. this is "cbs news flash." i'm matt pieper in new york. a sigh of relief on hawaii's big island. scientists say the eru