took a turn for the worse. the claim alleged a doctor on the flight recommended the plane land immediately to get her to a the hospital. flight continued another 90 minutes. the rest of the way to dallas after the flight crew consulted american airlines own doctor on the ground. by the time the plane landed she was without a pulse and died three dater later from a blood clot in her lung. family attorney says the airline was negligent in not diverting the flight. why did the pilate mickot conti he had a doctor telling him she needed to land. that my client was in distress and needed emergency medical care. that s what it boils down. reporter: also alleging medical equipment on board the plane malfunctioned further complicating potential life
other things end up getting more complicated. so unless you can break the circle by getting power or diesel supply at least in place so other things begin to flow, it s a pretty tall order. we have the united states military steve schmidt was saying it has the best heavy lift capacity in the world. you should be ideally hearing a plane land every five minutes. i imagine that is not the tempo as of yet. it s not the case yet. earlier today we were speaking to people from the military who were telling us so really still a long way to go. i think they re looking forward to the end of the week is perhaps the next bench mark as to when at least commercial site between puerto rico and mainhand
other things end up getting more complicated. unless you can break the cycle by getting power into place, it s a pretty tall order. the united states military has the best heavy lift capacity in the world. you should be ideally hearing a plane land every five minutes. i imagine that is not the tempo as of yet? reporter: it s not the case yet. early today we were speaking to people from the military who were telling us about one a hour was landing. gives you a sense of the gap they need to close before that amount of supplies is reaching the country in the way that it needs. so really still a long way to go. i think they re looking forward to the end of the week as perhaps the next bench mark
the whole thing s become a vicious circle. as long as there s no power, water, energy supply, all the other things end up getting more complicated. unless you can break the cycle by getting power into place, it s a pretty tall order. the united states military has the best heavy lift capacity in the world. you should be ideally hearing a plane land every five minutes. i imagine that is not the tempo as of yet? reporter: it s not the case yet. early today we were speaking to people from the military who were telling us about one a hour was landing. gives you a sense of the gap they need to close before that amount of supplies is reaching the country in the way that it needs. so really still a long way to go. i think they re looking forward to the end of the week as perhaps the next bench mark between flights between the mainland and u.s. have approached normality.
the president arriving for the g-20 summit there. he has a series of big meetings which begin within hours. he will sit down with with the german chancellor, angela merkel today. tomorrow, his face-to-face meeting with vladimir putin. his stakes could not be higher. again, the president touching down here. as for his reception in germany, may not seem as warm as he seemed. angela merkel setting the stage for what could be confrontational moments. as we are watching the plane land, let s go to frederik pleitgen. fred? reporter: there certainly have been. one of the things you have been talking about is the reception by angela merkel and the city of hamburg as well. that certainly won t be as warm as we saw in poland. we are at the place where protesters are gathering not only protests against president trump here, but, of course,