we just showed. is the there evidence that the syrians are in possession of more chemical weapons than even that? well, this is what s really alarming, jake, because if you talk to chemical weapons experts and some intelligence officials they will tell you that there is reason to believe that there are multiple facilities inside syria, in rejet stream-held areas, that are still being used to make chemical weapons, and sarin gas, for example, actually has a relatively short shelf life, so if it had just been leftover stockpiles, the sarin would not have been potent. that leads many to extrapolate that they are continuing to produce these chemical weapons and that, of course, is a grave concern, not just to the syrian people but to the entire international community, jake. and jen, let me go to you. you were working for secretary of state john kerry at the time, and it was no secret that kerry wanted there to be a response to the chemical weapons attack. senator corker, republican ch
police and sheriff s officials in ohio after the owner of a preserve, game preserve, killed himself and let them loose on the town. the one monkey they couldn t find, police say the t cheetah, ate that monkey. authorities defending the decision to take those animals down. saying it was us or them. ja jason carol. reporter: so many questions this morning. why terry thompson the man that owned all the animals, why he opened the cages and set those animals free. knowing that many of them would most likely be killed. this is a manna by all accounts loved these animals. that s one of the major questions that investigators will be looking at this morning. in all, 49 animals killed. the pictures really tell the whole story. we see those pictures of those animals, wild exotic animals, killed out here. sheriff s deputies telling me they were sickened to have to do what they did to put the animals down but simply felt as though they had no choice. the story actually started to unfo