driving erratically. that was their initial statement. for getting behind him in the first place. we don t know how he s driving and there s no visual depiction of it. the state autopsy shows stanton crew wasn t drunk as the police suspected. he had no alcohol or illegal drugs in his system. but seven months after the shooting, a new jersey grand jury finds insufficient evidence to charge the police officers with criminal wrongdoing or racial bias. a federal investigation also concludes that the officers did not violate crew s civil rights. officer underwood always maintained that he made a split-second decision to use deadly force to save the life of a parsippany police officer. he always felt terrible about having to do what he did, however, he always felt that he accomplished what he was trained
we didn t see anything, nothing to make us think a tornado was mere, nothing like in my mind i envisioned there would be, and we opened our car doors, and in a split second this most terrifying wind came up out of nowhere and it knocked out car doors, both of them, up against the front fenders of the car, and it was awful. i cannot describe to you how terrifying it was. but my husband grabbed me back in the car and he said it looks like well have to ride this out so he says, he grabbed me and this is a matter of a second or two, and he grabbed hold of me and put his arm through the steering wheel and i saw him do that and i put my arm through the steering wheel and grabbed hold of him and we held on to each other, and from that point on to be honest, i think i must have hit my head because i have
it looks like a bomb went off and the roof of the tractor supply store completely torn up and, that is where it hit first and the manager of the lowe s department store saw the tornado there at the 200 yard warning of the tornado heading towards them and was able to get the people into a safe spot within the store. eric: that is amazing, so chilling when you think of the manager, could actually see the tornado, right across and then, have the presence of mind to shepard everybody into a safe spot. rick: all of us wonder, what would we do if we had a split-second to make a decision and he probably had, he said, 60 seconds from the title the tornado was at that store he saw across the way and a wide tornado, not a small one and he said it was 2 to 300 yards wide heading towards them and to make the quick decision and be able to get people into the right spot in the store, it is an amazing story and everybody in
tsunami waters and crushed. a sea of debris flows inland with deadly speed engulfing everything in its path. the traumatized survivors have spent the weekend tieing to help themselves. the people were washed away along with their hopes this man says. my parents have been washed away and haven t been heard of since. this is all that remains of the shinomaki now. we lost everything in a split second, this woman says. we were spared our lives, but i m not yet convinced whether that was a good or a bad thing. across the worst affected area, rescue teams continue to search
years, can we create nations? should we be nation-building? or should we be fighting terrorism? i think sometimes that al qaeda is a very mobile enemy, and there are many people who have written about how we need to have special forces, that will go to various parts of the world in a split-second and stop terrorism and, big, large, ground forces in areas fighting conventional war, may not be the best way to fight terrorism and let s have the debate. i m not sure i have all this answers, at this point. but i need to learn more about it and i want to be part of focussing the debate, how long we stay. martha: dr. paul i want to look at a recent poll that came out this morning from fox news opinion dynamics and it has to do with how important the obama administration is. this people s votes. in the kentucky senate race. and, it says, 56% of voters, in this poll, say they will be expressing opposition to the obama administration in the vote, if that is the case, with the folks who turn out,