put occur few into effect, this coming as we enter the third week of the murder trial against former minneapolis police officer derek chauvin. that begins in an hour. the prosecution will bring what could be its final witness to the stand today. let s begin, though, with this fatal police shooting of a black man in a minneapolis suburb. adrian is there this morning. this happened yesterday afternoon at a police stop, traffic violation. tell us what followed. reporter: oh, devastation, sadness and destruction. jim, this is sadly familiar. up until six months ago, i lived here in the twin cities. what i am seeing this morning reminds me move what i saw following the death of george floyd. this nail shop in the shopping center damaged, the entryway. if you walk over and look here, this men s clothing store destroyed. if we peek our cameras inside, you can see every shelf of this clothing store is empty. last night, jim, to those of you watching and listening, i watched people
leaving on vacation in cancun before thinking better of it, after one night at the ritz carlton. more on his story in just a bit. while the power is back on in all but about 350,000 homes, and that s a lot but it s not 5 million, the weather has left exploded pipes, major floods, people s homes have been destroyed. while taps are dry and millions are going without running water, food is also now in short supply. grocery shelves, refrigerator cases are largely empty. getting away is something most people can t do. many highway overpasses are just closed because they re frozen. fuel is in short supply. gas stations running out. no one seems to have any propane. tonight in a great state of 30 million people, people are focused on their survival and their loved ones. right now we re just we re really concerned about how fast the temperature is really dropping insides. it s, you know, either you stay in your house and, you know, you are cold and you freeze to death and you
their loved ones. right now we re just we re really concerned about how fast the temperature is really dropping inside. it s, you know, either you stay in your house and, you know, you are cold and you freeze to death and you have no food. i don t know how many gas stations we went to. five maybe. at least. at least. and we haven t been able to find fuel. we only have like two cases of water left, so we re trying to divide it between two families. there are still folks in danger. there are still people without power. and there are a lot of people who simply can t afford to go into the stores, so we re trying to do mass distribution sites. but things are real tenuous for a lot of people in the city. our friends at the texas tribune report things could have been worse if such a thing is possible. officials say the state was, quote, seconds and minutes away from a power grid failure that could have caused a months long blackout. this week s weather has been d
washington is facing increasing pressure to urge israel to do more to reduce civilian casualties, with its key western allies, including the uk, france and germany, having all stepped up calls for a ceasefire. i am nowjoined by aaron david miller, a senior fellow at the carnegie endowment for international peace and former state department middle east analyst and negotiator in republican and democratic administrations. good to talk to you, as always. how unwavering is washington s support going to continue to be given the pressure from international allies and the pictures we are all seeing coming out of gaza? i and the pictures we are all seeing coming out of gaza? coming out of gaza? i don t think either prime coming out of gaza? i don t think either prime minister coming out of gaza? i don t think either prime minister benjamin l either prime minister benjamin netanyahu orjoe biden is looking for a breach in their relationship. his administration obviously has huge co