our favorite guest. no offense to the others. he brings food. and liquor. winning combination. always. all right, everyone. first, on a serious note, the killer wildfire torching homes in colorado springs and still burning out of control at this moment. the body of the only victim discovered in one of the 360 burned homes and declared the worst in colorado s history. a claim taken away from the fire burning at the northern part of the state. here s abc s rebecca stephens. reporter: this is what is left of the franklin family s colorado home. here is our front door. kind of see our welcome mat. reporter: 18-year-old emily who just became a fire fighter watched helplessly as the flames consumed her two-story house. all i remember is i looked through the trees. and i see the fire going under our deck. and i was like, i think that s my house. then it just goes up. i was like that s my house.
but not for your eyes. they re still so tired looking. with olay challenge that, with regenerist anti-aging eye roller. its hydrating formula with caffeine conditioning complex, perks up the look of eyes. it works in the blink of an eye. doctor doctor can t you see i m burning burning we pretend we weren t eating during the break. we were. anyways. following the supreme court s 5-4 ruling on health care yesterday, people have been asking just exactly what that decision means to them. there is a lot, a lot of questions here. abc s david muir visited an emergency room in los angeles to get some important reaction. reporter: inside this los angeles er there were two types of emergencies playing out. the patients themselves and the other one, the lifeline paid for by the taxpayer. a staggering number of patients with no insurance. which is why doctors saving lives here had an eye trained on the supreme court. because of the court s decision, doctors believe there
they work fast. well, before all of that, the fire is so intense, the smoke so thick, and colorado crews cannot tell yet just how bad the damage actually is. the picture does say it all. thousands of residents spending another night not knowing if they even have a home to go back to. look at that home up in flames. abc s rebecca stephens reports on worsening conditions from colorado springs. it s happened. it s coming over the hill. reporter: the massive waldo canyon fire has now engulfed more than 24 square miles. it s starting hundreds of fires in front of itself as it goes. reporter: and it is spreading fast, as fast as 14 miles an hour at times. 32,000 people have already been evacuated. i have never seen anything so scary. reporter: it is bearing down on colorado s second largest city, colorado springs, with the u.s. air force academy right in its path. 700 cadets have already been evacuated. ten acres at the academy s sprawling campus have burned. but so far there
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diane sawyer and george stephanopoulos will be here to lead our coverage later this morning. again the decision expected about 10:00 a.m. eastern. the tragedy of a family in syria goes a long way towards capturing the increasingly deadly, increasingly violent struggle that is tearing that nation apart. their story was first broadcast by the bbc and our martha raddatz brings you details. we will warn you there are some very graphic scenes. reporter: darkness. the children were sleeping when the deadly shells began exploding all over town. sunrise did not bring an end to it. russian-made helicopters and more artillery pounded whatever was below. and this is where the bbc found that one of those shells landed, a once beautiful home, a family with six little boys. one lies dead his father mohamed shattered by the loss. his other boys wounded and frightened. 8-year-old rhian, weeping as he recalled at take. reporter: the syrian army did this to me he will never forget that.