reporter: did you see her silhouette? no, ma am. i seen movement. that was all i seen was like a shadow moving. the first thing was, in my mind, was to protect reporter: did you stage this death? absolutely not. reporter: did you murder debbie? no, ma am. my wife was everything. she was great in every sense of the word. reporter: that offers the kellys little comfort. the only real satisfaction would be have your daughter come back through the door, and that s never going to happen. reporter: what do you want people to walk away from watching about her and her life? i think debbie was an inspiration. she will always be a part of me and still is. reporter: so ambitious, so hard working, so close to
after the settlement. little comfort to former fox news ain core gretchen carlson. i think it s horrifying and outrageous that any company after dismissing somebody from allegations such as this would not only resign a contract, but allow that person to come back on the air. o reilly says he ll address the issue today. let s bring in our correspondent brian stelter. reporter: this $$32 million figure is boomer ranging. everyone is talking about why he would have been willing to pay $32 million to a woman accusing him a sexual harassment. it is something of a mystery because we will never know exactly what lis wiehl was alleging. she was a long time legal analyst. she came to him in january,
its military keeps a vigilant watch over air quality levels. but new yanji, for some parents it s of little comfort. translator: i have a 4-year-old daughter. these tests could make buildings collapse. there could be radiation. i d i d like to move to beijing or shanghai, but i don t have the money. reporter: it s fair the say people are more nervous about the constant nuclear activity going on not that far away from here. but threw is also this kind of pervasive sense that there is not much we can to be it. we still have to pay the bills and take the kids to school, so life goes on, right? so the restaurants are still open. there is still outdoor recess, and new buildings are going up, even if they might be shaken by another nuclear test soon. a concerted effort to look past a problem that s becoming increasingly hard to ignore. matt rivers, cnn, yanji, china. we ll take a short break. but coming up, young undocumented immigrants who started businesses in the united
reporter: an entire city thinking the same thing, though collectively about to connect the nuclear dots. translator: everybody came in and said it was an earthquake. a bit later we realized it was from the north koreans. reporter: this man runs a restaurant in town where conversations have lately focused on kim jong un s nuclear program and what it could mean for them. translator: i m worried about the radiation. it could really hurt us. reporter: concerns over radiation escaping from the test site have increased with each explosion. some experts suggested that the mountain at the site could collapse. china said it has not detected anything of the sort and that its military keeps a vigilant watch of air quality levels. but for this parent, it s of little comfort.
from folks at noah, kinds of terms, kinds of warnings i have not heard before. based on your experience what are you looking for? what scares you for your state? you know, what scares me about hurricanes, frankly, is the eyewall. i know this is a big hurricane, it s got winds that cover a large area. really the scariest part of the hurricane always has been, as is evidenced from andrew and every other hurricane is that eyewall and unfortunately sarasota right now is scheduled to get that eyewall. so even though it s calm, even though it s okay right now, this is actually a bad time because this is when you are evaluating everything you ve done and you said did i do this, did i do that, you start watching the coverage from the people down south. so just knowing what s coming is makes the fact that there is no wind right now of little comfort. obviously when we saw the track of the storm change and it went up the west coast, then we saw people making last minute