promises to speed up the process by which families can identify the remains of lost loved ones. >> going forward, we will have regular briefings in order to update you about what our progress is to get that number of unaccounted for individuals to zero, that is our goal to connect each and every one of those names with a loved one to make sure that we have reconciled that process. >> there are some signs, some signs that process is improving tonight. yet not enough or fast enough for many of the affected families. brian todd is live in joplin tonight, and brian, early on, once the list was finally, finally made public, already you found some discrepancies, some mistakes? >> reporter: we did, john, almost no sooner than we got this list than we found that one of the key people who we have been profiling this week with he and his family, he was reported missing, he was on this list, but we found him on this list twice. his name is lansz hare, we interviewed his mother when the tornado struck. this is the list of people officially reported missing by their families, t232, you can se under lantz's last name, it says hare, then it says caylee. his middle name is caylee. you flip the page, you see it here where i have the mark. now it's listed as kaylee lance. same address, same age. so clearly he's on this list twice, we have asked officials why that mistake was made, we have tried to get that answer, we have not gotten any response yet, john, and we do have some sad news to report that since this list came out, not more than a couple of hours later, i spoke with lance's mother michelle, just to ask her about the discrepancy here and she had some even more sad news to report, they did get a positive identification of lantz from local law enforcement and he is deceased. >> in that conversation, and this is tough, i was there for a couple of days. when you talk to these families, of course they want to find their loved ones alive, they're looking for miracles, but many of them, when it gets to be four or five days later, their hopes have been dashed and they're trying to get a sense of closure. is that where some people are? >> reporter: the hares and other families, know that their loved ones are deceased, they still can't get to the bodies, to start to plan emmoral services and things like that. there was another family, they were with their son in the hospital when he passed away. and the authorities took the body and put it in this temporary morgue or somewhere elsewhere they're keeping some of the bodies, they can't recover that body either. that's a frustration as well. people have to have some closure, they have to plan memorial services, but because of this process, local and state officials trying to get their arms around finding the missing, identifying the bodies, they haven't been able to release all the bodies yet. you have to feel for the officials, they're trying to make everything accurate and there's another person on the list that we know of. james williamson. i talked to his daughter, tonight, we profiled her yesterday, she told me he's alive. and that he was out volunteering somewhere and they just didn't know where he was. he's on the list. they have got to try to update this list. they have to move faster, i think they know that. >> and to that point, there's the biggest issue here is compassion and the search for these hurt families. but there is as you get in today, an accountability question, there's no question the officials were overwhelmed, there's no question that the state and federal authorities were trying to re-enforce them in the last 24 hours or so. but when you find discrepancies and they don't get back to you. they are running into a credibility question, not just with us, but as we have been in the community the last few days, with their own citizens. >> reporter: they certainly are. and it's a huge problem, they have got to straighten this out, they have got to get the information out there. they did say today they're going to start holding regular, daily briefings, i guess the sense that it will be streamlined, that they'll be getting it out faster. you saw the chaotic nature of what's going on here and they're just trying to get their arms around the accounting of people, finding people that may still be alive, if thatted with's got closed yet, i which may be. they're getting inundated with calls, people pulling them aside, give me this, give me that information. it's tough for them in a small town like this for them to get their arms around it. now they're getting help from state and federal officials and we hope it gets a little more streamlined. i flew back from joplin just this morning and if you were here with us last night, you might remember that i spent some time with a couple who'sa neighbors said their son was taken away in an ambulance. >> how long is it going to be before anybody tells us anything about any of the bodies? is it going to be days before anybody knows? there's people sitting down there that whatever you guys are hiding them, their bodies are just -- >> i can assure you -- >> we wanted to check back and see if there's any progress today. joining us now from john lynn, missouri a couple, tammy and tony neederhelman are frustrated because they are unable to account for their son zack five days after the tornado. tammy, i want to start with you first, the government says he's sending in more state troopers, we're told that federal officials will be more involve, i belie essentially the state and federal government taking a more active role in identifying the bodies or finding the missing. are you in more hopeful today than when i was with you yesterday. >> no, not at all. every time the phone rings, i pray that number might be some information, and every time it's a letdown. i don't have a lot of confidence bimt built up after all we have been through this week, i did see this morning, there is a list that zachary is finally on a list. not, you know, maybe a little bit of comfort at least we know they actually put something in the system. but -- >> tony, i want you to listen, this is don bloom, he's from the federal mortuary operation's response team, the federal government saying they're going to take more leadership role, local officials maybe were too overwhelmed here. listen to how mr. bloom explains the delays and the frustration. >> but we have to be 100% accurate. so as much pressure is put on us to speed up the process, the process has to take its time. we have to be 100% accurate. and our people are dedicated at not being pushed into making rash decisions or speeding things up. that is why the process on our side takes a little bit longer than you feel it needs to. >> that an acceptable explanation to you tony, or do you think that's a cop out? >> i think it's more of a cop out. yeah, i do understand they have to be 100% sure of who they are processing, but it doesn't take that long. i mean the way science and technology is today, you know, it should be -- i mean they should be able to take care, you know, process the body within two hours and have, you know, a phone call made to where somebody can finally get some closure. >> and that's the sad part here and i want to remind our viewers if they weren't with us last night. one of your neighbor s told you that they saw zack's body being taken away in an ambulance. but your presumption is you've lost your son. how do you think state and local officials should let you go forward here? >> well, i have asked if i could actually come in and, you know, look. i understand that there's a lot of people in there, there's children, i know there can't be everybody in there is not children that are between 12 to 14 years old and they're all male, i know that. so i know they don't want to put people through seeing bodies, but at least let us look. like i have told them, zachary, we were told his face was not harmed, we would be easy to recognize. he has very disinstinct scarring, i understand bodies that are hurt would be a little bit harder to identify. and i don't -- i want my zachary laid to rest, but i also want everybody else to have closure. i mean i know there's so many people out here hurting. and it's just so hard to see everybody suffer. >> and as you go through this, tony, help somebody explain who might not quite understand what it's like every day to get in that line, every day to fill out more paper work, every day when you're looking for, as tammy poignantly describes as at least the beginning of some process of closure, to be told almost that you're the problem. >> it's real frustrating. and it just feels as though the officials that orchestrated this whole deal, they really care less. it seems to me that they want to get on to cleanup and maybe start building or whatever. but there's a lot of families need closure out here. last count i seen was 125 in the morgue and that's unacceptable. i moean we're five days into ths now, andi inas far as i know, there's been no phone calls made. >> we tried to go in with you to that meeting where you were asking questions. at the very beginning the microphone was still on you and it picked up some of the conversation where you said why doesn't anybody in here have a heart? is that how you feel about this process? >> yes, because i feel like they all are quickly stop you when you're trying to say something and stop you in the middle of the center, and say this is the way it needs to work. i know that if one of those federal officials or the jasper county coroner, one of them had a loved one in that morgue, you can bet they would have been identified and he would be laid to rest. i just feel like we're being treated as a number and we're all individuals out here. >> tammy and tony niederhelman. we promise you if there's anything we can do along the way to help, we'll keep trying. >> we appreciate it. >> thank you both very much. we taped that interview this afternoon, a little more than an hour ago tammy called us to say that she had finally received a phone call from the morgue and they were told to come down to the morgue and they were shown a piece of paper with zack's name on it confirming he was deceased. we asked tammy if she thought that the coverage on cnn helped speed her case along, she said absolutely. she said finally they are doing something and maybe the same thing will happen for everyone, even in her grief, voicing hope that the other families can be helped dealing with this problem in joplin, missouri. our thoughts and prayers with tony and tammy tonight of course as they begin what s-- will thoe families with missing and unaccounted for finally get help? governor jay nixon joins us next. ♪ [ male announcer ] in 2011, at&t is at work, building up our wireless network all across america. we're adding new cell sites... increasing network capacity, and investing billions of dollars to improve your wireless network experience. from a single phone call to the most advanced data download, we're covering more people in more places than ever before in an effort to give you the best network possible. at&t. rethink possible. 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[ male announcer ] helping people achieve without limits. at the hartford it's what we do... and why we're the founding partner of the u.s. paralympic team. show your support at facebook.com/thehartford. of the u.s. paralympic team. what are you looking at? logistics. ben? the ups guy? no, you see ben, i see logistics. logistics? think--ben is new markets. ben is global access-- china and beyond. ben is a smarter supply chain. ben is higher margins. happier customers... everybody wins. logistics. exactly. see you guys tomorrow. this is the list we talked about at the top of the program, 232 names, the official list of the missing from tuesday night's tornado in joplin, missouri. we took the names and the addresses and we put them in on the map. this is joplin here, i want to come in a little bit and look into the community here in joplin. if you look closely here, there are new satellite images, many of the pinpoints where people are listed as missing, i was just there for a few days, it numbs you to walk through these streets and see the power. in the swathe of destruction, you see there's so many among the missing tonight. we were just talking to todd and tammy niederhelman, these are particularly devastated houses just swept off the foundation, their name was one name of 232 on this list. come back out to the missing, you see them, they come along the swathe, and tonight finally there's a official list of the missing. the question is now that there's a list, will the families get a quicker resolution? joining us now from joplin is the missouri governor jay nixon. i want to start with this. i'm holding up the list that came out today, 232 names on it. how confident are you in this list, after several days of confusion, conflicting information and that confusion causing a lot of pain and anguish for the families involve, how confident are you now that this list is an accurate list of the missing? >> yesterday morning we brought in a state team that had about 60 people working all night last night working on the various sources that came in from across the country. i'm very confident that the list we have this morning were skon fi confirmed unaccounted folks. we have been working on that list, i am confident that the hard work of those 60 professional over the last 30 hours has yielded the accurate list that we can now work with families to connect. >> and what conclusion should we draw, governor, you and i had a conversation about the fact that you had to bring in this state team. is it fair to say that part of the pain and anguish that the families are feeling is the fact that the local officials were simply overwhelmed, some of the families would even say not quite competent? >> a response was starting and calls were literally coming in from all across the country, they just began trying to make a record of those contacts. as time moved on and we moved through that first list, it was clear that there were a lot of data points coming in that needed to be put together. so yesterday morning seeing the way that that was, we decided to take over that part of the operation, bring our folks from drug and crime control, bring troopers off the road to make sure we manage that and make sure we put a hard list out there that's accurate that we'll work with over the next few days to move that 232 number of unaccounted for people down to zero, that are our goal to get to zero. >> this is tammy niederhelman, she said a neighbor saw her son's body taken away. she got in line, sometimes she was told go away, we'll call you. other times she was told to fill out more paper work. i want you to listen to her. >> i want my zachary laid to rest, but i also want everyone else to have closure, i mean i know there's so many people out here hurting and it's just so hard to see everybody suffer. >> governor just a short time ago, that couple did get a call from the morgue and they have been able to identify the body of their son. they think that the process was sped up because of the attention they received and they're worried other families who don't find a tv camera might not get help as quickly. what about the other families? how long will it take? >> well, as the other families are there, all of the families that are on that accounted list have been contacted or are currently being talked to individually through that area. our folks worked to move that unaccounted number down and then work across with the folks at the morgue and the folks that are doing the other identification to make sure that there was some folks here that were not only badly injured, but you know, this tornado of this magnitude does very, very heinous things to a human body and making sure that we get accurate counseling as well as accurate identification is very important and i think the additional effort we took over yesterday will speed up the process, but it will not slow down the accuracy, we're going to make sure these difficult discussions are had so tonight all of those families that have been on that list are going to be contacted for sessions in which we go through, the officials go through where they are, what the process is so that they'll know full well what's going on. >> there was some tension and it's inevitable tension, i don't mean to make too big a deal out of it, but there's some tension from those who came in to do search and rescue and officials saying that it's time to bring in bulldozers and for search and recovery. could there possibly still be survivors in that rubble or is it time to move on? >> it has been warm and there is still -- we'll keep those search families throughout and those dogs out there until they're fully assured that the areas have all been cleared of that likelihood. but i did sign an executive order this afternoon putting our national guard in charge of beginning that process of moving debris out, beginning the process of cleaning that huge swathe of space so that we can begin the rebuilding process, clearly we're moving forward in the next phase, we're out there in pockets where there still may be folks that are living and we're not lessening our efforts in those areas, but the areas that have been cleared, we'll begin the process of getting the debris out of the way and getting joplin rebuilt. >> i want to ask you, sir, because you're the governor, there has been a lot of complaints and there will be complaints, some of them are legitimate, some of them are born of emotion and grief, and we need to understand that, but grade the process, especially the early days, especially of someone who has heard all the complaints and someone who took the step to say we need to bring in more people from the state. >> i think that we were focussed in those first few days by backing up the local police and others to make sure that we had a coordinated search for the saving of folks and a few people were saved, people that otherwise would be on the wrong list here are on the list to recovery. that's an important fist phase. as you move into the next one, there's going to be a lot of grief for this entire area, i think a collective sense of what's lost here. thousands of homes gone, thousands of businesses gone, folks that are lost and families separated, but my sense is this is a community, we're going to have a memorial service on sunday, when i spoke to the pastors, they were unified in that. this is a strong community and we'll work to recover. >> let me try asking it this way in closing, are there important lessons that the governor of missouri has learned that when you get past the most painful part of joplin and you're on the path to rebuilding and recovery, are there lessons that you will make sure that god forbid anything like this happen in your state, that first 72 hours won't go like the first 72 hours there? >> we had hundreds of firefighters from all across the region who saved lives and covered the effort. when i see the local folks strained beyond their limits, we move n that was yesterday morning when we brought these folks in. i think they did solid work last night. families are having tough discussions with folks as we speak about the difficulty of the challenges they have in their lives to come in the future. now is not the time to point fingers, my sense is this region ask working together to recover and i'll look forward to mourning with those who have lost. the mourning here is not over. that mourning and that feeling of sadness will go far beyond, your you know, some of the initial challenges, we're going to be calm, we're going to be reassuring and we're going to make sure there's complete and accurate information out there for the people who need that information. >> you can be sure that you and your state, particularly that community are in our thought and prayers. when we come back, sarah palin's about to take a big bus trip. if she gets in, would fellow tea party favorite michele bachmann get out? and as we go to break, even four plus days after this deadly tornado in joplin, new evidence of just how powerful the storm was. this is a security camera in the back of a home. there's no audio, but look at this. what's so special about web browsing on the new blackberry playbook? ♪lash! ah ahh... that's right, it runs flash. so unlike some tablets we could mention, you get the best of the internet, not just part of it. ♪ flash! ah ahh... ♪ [ male announcer ] when you come to new york from a place like detroit, no one expects you to influence the world of fashion. but when you grew up surrounded by rock 'n' roll and heavy industry, you just might make a name for yourself. ♪ that's what a blue-collar attitude can do in a white-collar world. this breaking news in presidential politics tonight. cnn has just confirmed that former massachusetts governor mitt romney will make his formal declaration that he's running for president next thursday, june 2 in new hampshire, the state that is critical to his hopes. also tonight, more presidential politics, sarah palin back on everyone's 2012 political radar in a big way. the former alaska governor announced today that she's beginning a quote one nation tour beginning this weekend right here in washington. she'll then take a campaign style bus to new hampshire. the fox news channel says palin will remain a paid contributor, despite renewed speculation her bus tour is the first step in a run for president. and that raises an interesting question, has she assured fox news she's not running, she's just taking this bus tour, or does fox news have a different standard for sarah palin than it had for newt gingrich and rick santorum? we spoke with another likely can date, minnesota congresswoman michele bachmann who says she can raise enough money if she runs and will make her final decision about seeking the republican nomination within days. >> it has absolutely nothing to do with me, it has everything to do with the american people and our economy and where we're going to go. and my decision about getting into 2012 or not is a completely independent decision. it doesn't matter if you get into the race or if anyone gets into the race, my decision will be made on whether i think it is the right thing at the right time and we'll let you know in june. but i do know that no matter who the candidate is on the republican side, that person needs to be elected because barack obama has not been good for our economy, and we have seen millions of jobs lost and they're not turning around, and the dollar has been grossly devaled because of this president. because of our president, we need to have a change in course. >> if someone came to you and said here's our plan, but now that governor palin is going to run, it's going to hard to raise money. be sure you have the heart or the spine for this, would you run or let it go? >> i have great respect for governor palin, i consider her a friend, and if she gets in, she gets in, that won't impact whether or not i get in or not. >> won't impact you at all? there are some who have questioned your discipline if you run for president. >> they should watch me. >> they should. you had a conversation with chris wallace right after the libyan bombing started where you said you heard a report from an ambassador in tripoli where 20,000 or 30,000 people had been killed. that number was not anywhere near reliable. and people said michelle balkman sees one news report and goes and quotes it on television. do you think you have to have discipline in politics? >> the fact is, i read and i read a lot and that morning i had read a report by ap and the overall number was correct and it was a number that was given by the ambassador. it was innocent one particular engagement, but it was the number of people who had been wounded so far, so that was accurate. >> another thing people cite is when the president was going to india, there was a report in a publication over there that used this wildly exorbitant number about how much his trip would cost. and you quoted it again. >> i was quoting from the financial times, so i gave the source that i was quoting from and it was a financial newspaper from india and so it isn't my job to go and fact check sources that come out in publications, so i was using that quote. >> it's your job as a candidate, the left likes to use you as a galvanizer. very good point, though, when you're in the presidential realm, i do think that message discipline is required and i do think that that is something that all of us have areas that we need to do better on and that's certainly one i'll pay a lot of attention to. >> i read a fundraising detail under your name who was talking about our president is too busy gal vanting around europe with his irish cousins. president bachman would never take a personal trip on a g-8 trip. >> of course presidents take trips, but remember, i think if the shoe was on the other foot and we had a republican as president and we just saw the devastation in joplin, missouri and we see the president of the united states playing ping-pong on tv and we see him serving up hamburgers? in a day we're not dealing with devastation in the heartland of the united states, that would be fine for the presidenting to bt doing these things. the thing we have to address is dealing with the economy and jobs, quite honestly and the president has not had his eyes on job creation. his idea was job creation was borrowing a trillion dollars from china and spending it on p projects that didn't increase jobs, you can't walk away from that. so my children and your children and your viewers' children have to work that much longer to pay back the trillion dollars that didn't yield jobs. that's a decision that our president made that had negative consequences for future generations. >> we have a republican presidential debate in just a few weeks in new hampshire, will i see you there? >> that may happen, we'll let you know very soon. >> congresswoman bachman, thank you so much. we talked about her views on libya, afghanistan and many other issues. next here a rare public comment from former president george w. bush about the revolutions sweeping the middle east. it's dif - t adththod easy-to-swallow petes. [ sam ] my first ride lasted just 30 seconds. another reminder of what i couldn't do. ♪ the accident could have been my excuse to quit. i made it my reason to go even harder. ♪ [ male announcer ] helping people achieve without limits. at the hartford it's what we do... and why we're the founding partner of the u.s. paralympic team. show your support at facebook.com/thehartford. welcome back. a very busy news day today. a u.s. official confirms to cnn that pakistan has given permission for the u.s. to send a team of specialists to bin laden's compound. in texas today, the former president george w. bush broke his public silence about the wave of revolutions in the middle east and north africa. >> and i'm not surprised. that freedom continues to march forward. >> former president also warned the united states should not quote, grow wary and become isolated from what the president -- joe arrepaio of maricopa county on the immigration ruling. we're adding new cell sites... increasing network capacity, and investing billions of dollars to improve your wireless network experience. from a single phone call to the most advanced data download, we're covering more people in more places than ever before in an effort to give you the best network possible. at&t. rethink possible. the count on chevy event is here. your ticket to a cruze eco. 42 mpg and over 500 highway miles a tank. one of our 9 models over 30 mpg highway. fuel up, rock on. very well qualified lessees can get a low mileage lease on a chevy cruze eco for around $159 a month. or qualified buyers can get no monthly payments for 3 months. fuel economy based on epa estimates. deferred payments offer ends may 31st. [ male announcer ] for the things you can't wash, freshen it with febreze. febreze eliminates odors and leaves a light, fresh scent. it's a breath of fresh air. had a tree that bore the most rare and magical fruit, which provided for their every financial need. [ thunder rumbling ] [ thunder crashing ] and then, in one blinding blink of an eye, their tree had given its last. but with their raymond james financial advisor, they had prepared for even the unthinkable. ♪ and they danced. see what a raymond james advisor can do for you. the supreme court today -- the justices upheld the 2007 state law punishing businesses for hiring illegal immigrants. the 5-3 ruling is seen as a defeet for the obama administration which had argued that law interfered with federal authority. the chief justice john roberts wrote, arizona has taken the route least likely to cause tension with federal law. jeff, anything novel in this decision on the issue of, say, state's rights? >> this is an expansive view of state's rights and it is very much a preview of the big case that is coming down the pike which is the federal review of the more controversial immigration law, the 1070 law, which if this decision is followed, would certainly be more likely to be upheld than we had thought before today's decision. >> and that bigger law, sb 1070, allows police -- gives police broader latitude, if they see suspicious behavior, they can ask for documentation. if you continue the logic, do you get sb 1070 embraced by the supreme court or was this more scenario to deal with business regulation or the question of employment? >> it's hard to draw that connection precisely, but i think it is very much a signal that the five conservative justices are looking to uphold 1070, i think it is more likely today for them to uphold 1070 without this decision. this decision is a green light to all kinds of states, states all over the country to get involve in the immigration fight. it is a zbrlt green light for most republican representatives to restrict immigration under state laws and a lot of states are going to take up that invitati invitation. >> and is it that these five justices, this is how they think, or did the obama administration just misargue this, their view was immigration, federal jurisdiction, anything that messes with it can't be. >> that was the argument you had to make and that was the only potentially winning argument. and they did get three votes, elena kagan was solicit for general when this case was being prepared so she didn't participate. this is just a legal/political decision that conservatives see one way and liberals see another and there are more conservatives on the supreme court so they won today. >> you mentioned justice kagan recusing herself. a lot of people say good for you, justice kagan. if you did it for this case, you better when the health care debate comes to the court. >> elena kagan was quite clear that she was not involve in any of the health care deliberations, there were no legal issues that came before her. this case was actually briefed, the petition was actually prepared while she was attorney general, this was a very recusal decision, i think there's zero chance she will recuse herself when health carickar kocare com year. >> joe arpaio, you have been criticized by some over the years, you've been praised by some but criticized by others for the aggressive practices you take in your business sweeps, targeting illegal immigration. as you read this ruling, will you be more aggressive tomorrow than you might have been yesterday? >> i don't know, i'm going to continue doing our job, we have been doing it anyway, 504 people we have arrested, raiding 46 businesses, john, the majority have false identification, the illegal aliens working there, so we're going to keep going. i have two more coming up on the line for all of these critics, especialliy lsome of those hispanic regulators, i'm going to continue my crackdown on illegal immigration. >> what should the legislature do in arizona? what should the governor do? what should the united states congress and the president do to make it so that you don't have to do this at your level? >> well, i think the congress and the president should look at this decision. i think locally here in this state, we should have more tougher penalties on the employers, right now it's just a civil offense, so i would like to see that happen, maybe it will now after this decision. but you know once again, 1070, no 1070 or these laws, we have been doing it anyway in three years, thousands we have arrested, my office have, so we have the laws on the books, let's enforce the laws. >> as you know your critics and they include the united states justice department in this administration, say that you're not following the law, that you're profiling. >> they have been investigating me on that matter for 2 1/2 years. we don't. and if they want to keep investigating, okay. but that's not going to deter me from doing the job. i think i have proven that in the last two years. so they can investigate me. i have been a top law enforcement official federal, i know how the system works. but let's not throw politics and try to drive me out of office. >> you heard jetubin say the lan because a lower court said no, we think they might be unconstitutional. if the united states supreme court tells arizona your law is fine, what would you do differently then? what new powers would you have? >> nothing. we still ask people where they're from after we stop them on any type of violation. we're still doing the same type of thing regardless of the 1070, but it would be nice to have the supreme court, if it gets up there to rule in law enforcement and the state of arizona. every little bit helps fighting this problem. >> every time we have you as a guest on the program -- it's been a while, but every time i will get emails, other conversations. some of them polite, some of them not so polite saying, you know, why doesn't this guy acknowledge there's less after a problem now? there's less of a problem coming across the border that they would say and the white house would argue they've put more people on the border and lowered your problem. is that not true? >> that's why in 30 days when i mobilize our posse, air posse, we locked up almost 300 people. smugglers and coyotes and drug traffickers. they're still coming across, 300 in that operation. they're still coming across. by the hundreds and thousands. >> even in this tougher economy? the statistics, the statistics tell a different story. >> i don't know. i should get an award from the president because i'm helping the economy. all those people we arrested in the workplace, now people here that are here legally can find a job, and those illegally go back where they came from. i think i'm doing something for the economy. >> all right. we'll keep in touch as that plays out. sheriff joe, before you go, a question -- "the new york times," "arizona republic" reporting you have somebody new in your community to take care of and protect. that sarah palin, the former governor of arkansas -- i'm sorry, of alaska, and her husband, toidd, have purchased house in scottsdale in your county. what do you make of it? >> no, there's some rumors about that. i hope she gets here. the more the merrier. as long as they come here legally, i have no problem. >> i somehow knew you would work that in. sheriff joe arpaio from maricopa county, arizona. we'll keep in touch. a familiar face, we're joined to talk about today's arrest of a man that was covered, committing the worst genocide since world war ii. working on social activities like clean up programs on beaches in many locations... and regional replanting activities that will help make a better world for all of us. ♪ one team. one planet bridgestone. [ melissa ] i hit the water and everything changed. ♪ i saw what my life could be... and found the strength to make it happen. ♪ i lost my leg serving my country. now i serve in a new uniform. [ male announcer ] helping people achieve without limits. at the hartford it's what we do... and why we're the founding partner of the u.s. paralympic team. show your support at facebook.com/thehartford. pants pockets... and anyone, anywhere who would hide our precious coins. we're coming for what's ours. maybe you didn't hear. but dimes, nickels, even pennies have power now. because the volt charges for about a buck fifty a day. making most commutes gas-free for just a handful of change. so we're taking it back. all of it. we have some driving to do. the 2011 chevrolet volt. it's more car than electric. tonight a 16-year manhunt is over. rat co mladic, the serb military commander during yugoslavia's civil war has been found and arrested and will face charges of genocide, extermination and murder. among other things, mladic led the 1995 military campaign that left nearly 8,000 men and boys dead, the worst european ma massacre since the holocaust. christiane amanpour was the cnn correspondent during the bosnia ma wars and saw firsthand the results of mladic's orders. many who remember the bosnia wars of the 1990s who remember the atrocities, maybe remember the name. you're one of the few who have met the criminal and seen the cold stare of a murderer. tell us what that was like. >> exactly right. we lived and we reported the war, the siege of sarajevo, the bombardme bombardment, we saw men, women, and children who were not spared the monstrous that were rained down on them for three long years, 3 1/2 long years. i met him several times. he was a very cold man. he would smile and talk and try to be genial. but the eyes were very, very cold. and he was determined -- he believed in what he was trying to. do he believed that it was right to just kill or expel muslims from that part of boonz, that they wanted to keep it as an ethnically pure statelet so many years after world war ii. >> help us understand the chapter we're closing or hoping to close here. milosevic is dead. karadzic on trial in the hague and now mladiv apprehended. >> this is a very good month for international justice. that is what we should understand. that osama bin laden, for instance, was on the lam for nearly ten years after 9/11. he's been delivered summary justice. now ratko mladic, the architect, perpetrator of so much genocide for when which he's been indicted and crimes against humanity in europe after world war ii. so the chapter that is closing and the signal that it's sending is that justice will eventually be done. no matter how long it takes, no matter what kind of conspiracy of silence and of protection that serbia and people there were giving to him in the end, in the end his day has come. 16 years after the indictments, for the relatives and family of those people who were slaughtered, some of them executed in cold blood, the families of 8,000 men and boys who were moslems there are now going to at least see that these crimes cannot be committed with impunity. that one day justice will be done. >> christiane amanpour, important perspective. good to see you, my friend. >> thank you. >> thank you. i covered the white house for 8 1/2 years once. never have i seen a statement quite like this. first a little background. the house of representatives passed three provisions of the patriot act, scheduled to expire at midnight. 25 i've 153 vote -- 250-153 vote. the patriot act reendorsed by the country, the president out of the country. the white house put out this statement -- "failure to sign this legislation poses a significant risk to u.n.