battle the flames ripping through lahaina. our visibility is really limited right now. reporter: this fire truck driving through the inferno, surrounded by blinding smoke. all units, all units, we ve got to get out of this fire. reporter: fierce winds whipping the flames through town. the fire chief telling us his crews didn t back down, but their hoses ran dry. they need water. that resource is so precious to us. so when they were running out, they were so disheartened. reporter: nearly two weeks after the fire claimed at least 114 lives, officials say 850 people are still unaccounted for. late today, president biden and the first lady touching down on maui, where they boarded a chopper for their first look at the devastation left behind from the country s deadliest wildfire. the president set to meet with first responders and survivors. and as the state investigates the response to the fires, officials warn there could be many children among the dead. today is the first d
their ground. we re going to take you live to washington in just a few minutes. in northern florida, it looks like the aftermath of a bombing. look at these pictures. but these vehicles were actually incinerated by fire after a string of crashes on interstate 75. ten people lost their lives in the wreck. drivers say they could barely see anything because of smoke from a nearby fire. there was absolutely no warning whatsoever. it went from being just, i mean literally i don t know how far, whatever you could see as far as you could on the interstate to just nothing. rolled my window down and actually started hearing thuds and crashes and it was so thick i couldn t even tell you where they were coming from. well, almost nine months after the u.s. raid that killed osama bin laden, defense secretary leon panetta says he s convinced someone in pakistan s government knew the terrorist leader was hiding in a huge compound near pakistan s military academy. in a cbs 60 minutes