president biden's oldest granddaughter opening fire on multiple suspects. and the abc news exclusive tonight, for the first time, the videotaped interviews with two attorneys who worked with former president trump, charged in georgia's election interference case. what they have told prosecutors. first tonight, explosions and gun fire deep inside gaza. our team imbedded with the israeli military outside a children's hospital. the israelis tonight claiming it was used as a hamas command center. and what they'll show our team. is it evidence of hamas operations? and were some of the hostages kept there at one point? and outside the largest hospital in gaza city, the facility without electricity now. 39 premature babies inside had to be removed from incubators. and tonight, what u.s. authorities are now saying about that very hospital. matt gutman in israel. we have new reporting here tonight on the deaths of five elite american soldiers killed aboard a special operations helicopter in the mediterranean. all five now identified tonight. martha raddatz with late reporting. here in the u.s., that secret service agent protecting president biden's oldest granddaughter, opening fire on three suspects, breaking into a vehicle outside her home. the suspects getting away. pierre thomas reporting tonight. the abc news exclusive. for the first time, our investigative team obtaining some of the videotaped interviews with two former trump attorneys charged in georgia's election interference case. what they told prosecutors. attorney jenna el lils was told donald trump, the boss, as they called him, would not leave the white house under any circumstances. trump's lawyers now responding tonight. aaron katersky standing by. the massive fire shutting down one of the busiest and most congested highways in america. part of the i-10 freeway in downtown los angeles. and of course tonight, when will it remain? in new york city, the scare high above the ground. two workers dangling from scaff scaffolding. also, a state of emergency tonight. the ground rumbling tonight. and former speaker pelosi's husband taking the stand just moments ago. what he testified. good evening. it's great to start another week with all of you at home. we do begin tonight with our team inside gaza tonight. a rare look at israel's ground war against hamas. israeli forces surrounding gaza city and moving in, now at some of the hospitals that are now the center of this fight being watched by the world. israel says these hospitals are being used to shield hamas fighters. the palestinian red crescent denies militants are inside al shifa, one of the main hospitals there, where babies have been taken off incubators. tonight, president biden saying hospitals must be protected, but two u.s. administration officials now saying the u.s. has seen intelligence supporting israel's claim. and you're about to see what the israeli military showed our team today. tonight, the israeli military surrounding al shifa hospital, of course, the biggest in gaza, claiming hamas has a command center underground. doctors trying to save lives amid this fight. those premature babies among the most at risk, of course, taken off the incue bay or thes. doctors say there is no electricity now. our matt gutman with israeli troops. bullets overhead. and what the israeli military shows him. is it evidence of hamas operations inside these hospitals beneath them? and is there evidence? abc's matt gutman leading us off from israel. >> reporter: we mounted up on those jeeps and drove into gaza. the roads ground into dust, and everywhere in this city of over a million people, those apocalyptic scenes. blown-out buildings everywhere. in northern gaza, we embedded with the israeli military to see the children's hospital they say was used as a hamas command center. the road leading past what had been a luxury hotel, now charred black, much of it collapsed. in the billowing dust, scores of soldiers on foot. then we load into these armored fighting vehicles. we are now inside this armored fighting vehicle and we are going toward the rentishi specialized children hospital. it has been evacuated. we unload outside the hospital into active fighting. we meet israel's chief military spokesman daniel hagari, a former naval commando. you can hear the tank firing down the street. he says this was the house of a hamas commander. it was next to a school and the hospital. just up the street, those tanks firing. i don't know if you can hear all that small-arms fire in the background. we got to get down now. we hear the whistles from the small arms fire around us. when you hear the whistle, in addition to the crack, that means it's very close. but for the israeli military, it's important to show us what was going on here, and that hamas was using this as a command area for its operations. we're using the tank as cover right now. and tonight, with the world now aware of the horrors at al shifa hospital, just a few hundred yards away, the israeli military saying hamas is operating a command center beneath that hospital, too. two biden administration officials say the u.s. has intelligence supporting israel's claim. doctors deny that, and say the hospital is no longer functioning. and without fuel for the generators, they had to remove 39 premature babies from their incubators, lining those tiny bundles on a gurney, desperately trailing to keep them warm and alive. three of the babies have died. and back here at hospital, hagari leading us into the hospital through a hole made by an artillery shell. those ak-47s look pretty hold and rusty. was this a crack force? >> no, no. some of the gear was operational gear, but also some of the terrorists fled away. did not stay here. it shows us the war machine, hamas is conducting from hospitals. a hospital for children. >> reporter: further into the basement, a separate section, >> we see a hair. >> reporter: hagari revealing that chair. and we press the israeli military beyond what they're seeing here, are they sirn hostages were held here? what makes you think this was a shot where somebody was held hostage? >> we are going to bring here a forensic team. the only reason i brought you here, and i'm taking a huge risk, because you see the fighting outside. tying hostages on a chair in this facility, in a basement. fighting us from hospital. using the children here in this hospital, a hospital for children, as a human shield. this is hamas. tying here. >> david: let's bring matt gutman in here. and as you know, the biden administration aware the world is watching these hospitals. of course, this new intelligence, two administration officials now saying the u.s. has intelligence supporting israel's claim that hamas has a command center under al shifa, a hospital where the babies are among the patients in the most dire need tonight? >> reporter: it's a tough balancing act for the administration, david. on the one hand, president biden tonight saying he has not been reluctant in expressing his concern, saying more needs to be done to protect the hospitals and the patientsed in. on the other hand, white house officials are saying they are very confident about that intelligence you just mentioned, that hamas is using those hospitals as command posts. hamas denies that. david? >> david: matt gutman and his returning from inside gaza. matt, thank you. we have new reporting on the deaths of five elite american soldiers killed aboard a special operations helicopter in the mediterranean. all five now identified tonight, and we're learning more about the mission they were assigned to. what they were readying for, amid this war in the middle east. here's our chief global affairs correspondent martha raddatz tonight. >> reporter: tonight, the names, the images of the five elite soldiers killed during that nighttime midair refueling exercise now released by the pentagon. the five soldiers were aboard a special operations aviation helicopter in the mediterranean sea, the kind of helicopter which often flies the army's delta force and the navy s.e.a.l. team 6 to secret missions. midair refueling is difficult in the best of circumstances, this was made far more challenging in the dark wearing night vision goggles, but it's not clear yet what went wrong. the soldiers, based at fort campbell, came from across america. chief warrant officer stephen dwyer of tennessee. chief warrant officer shane barnes of sacramento. staff sergeant tanner grone of minnesota. sergeant andrew southhard, of arizona. and sergeant cade wolfe of minnesota. the elite forces were deployed to the eastern mediterranean in case they were needed to evacuate americans from israel or elsewhere in the volatile region. >> david: martha raddatz with this new reporting tonight on these elite u.s. soldiers lost. and martha, we are also learning more about u.s. air strikes in the last 24 hours on syria? iranian-backed militias that have been attacking u.s. forces? >> reporter: exactly, david. those air strikes in syria are believed to have killed roughly half a dozen iran-linked militants, according to a defense official, but the rocket and drone attacks against american forces in the region have not let up, despite the u.s. strikes. david? >> david: martha raddatz with late reporting from washington. martha, thank you. tonight, we have learned a secret service agent protecting president biden's oldest granddaughter opened fire on three suspects breaking into a secret service vehicle outside naomi biden's home. the suspects getting away. and here's our chief justice correspondent pierre thomas now. >> reporter: tonight, in the nation's capital, a search for suspects, after a secret service agent protecting the president's eldest granddaughter opened fire. the secret service responding to three men trying to break into one of their secret service vehicles outside of naomi biden's home in georgetown. the thieves got away in a red vehicle, no one apparently injured. the brazen attempt happening against a backdrop of a city seeing a surge in violent crime, like this armed robbery caught on camera less than a month ago, and a spike in car theft police say is fueled in part by juveniles. >> we have too many young people involved in violent activity in our city. >> reporter: the mayor focusing on juveniles as car theft is up a stunk 98% in the nation's capital with 141 young juveniles arrested for carjackings, a third of all carjacking arrests. the incident at the home of naomi biden, who got married at the white house last year, is another example in d.c. right now, no one is immune from crime. david, the white house had no comment on this incident, and so far, no indication that the would be thieves knew whose car or home they were targeting, david. >> david: pierre thomas tonight. pierre, thank you. we turn now to the abc news exclusive. for the first time, our investigative team obtaining some of the videotaped interviews with two former trump attorneys charged in georgia's election interference case. what they told prosecutors in exchange for their plea deals. attorney jenna ellis say iing tt donald trump, the boss, as they called him, would not leave the white house under any circumstances. here's abc's senior investigative reporter aaron katersky. >> reporter: tonight, abc news has obtained excerpts of two alleged co-conspirators charged along with former president donald trump in georgia. cut plea deals on reduced charges in exchange for their cooperation, giving interviews to prosecutors. >> we're here with a proffer with jenna ellis. >> reporter: ellis, who falsely claimed ballots were manipulated, recounting a time at the 2020 white house christmas party, when she said trump aide dan scavino told her trump planned to simply refuse to leave the white house. >> he said to me, in a kind of excited tone, "well, we don't care, and we're not going to leave." >> reporter: ellis said she asked him what do you mean. >> he said, "the boss is not going to leave under any circumstances, we are just going to stay in power." and i said to him, "well doesn't quite work that way, you realize, and he said, "we don't care." >> reporter: scavino did not respond to requests for comment, and an attorney for trump called the purported conversation "meaningless, kwtsz since he did ultimately leave the white house. sidney powell also told prosecutors trump was determined to stay in power, despite his aides repeatedly telling him he lost. what was president trump's reaction when this cadre of advisers would say, you lost? >> it was like -- well, they would say that and then they'd walk out, and he'd go, see, this is what i deal with all the time. >> reporter: trump has plead not guilty and denied wrongdoing. during powell's guilty plea they both denied she was his lawyer. but powell told prosecutors trump knew she was one of the few willing to support him. >> i was the most experienced federal practitioner in the group. did i know anything about election law? no. >> reporter: powell pushed the outrageous conspiracy theory that voting machines were controlled by venezuela, even pointing a finger at former dictator hugo chavez, who died nearly a decade earlier. >> this was exported by venezuela by maduro and by mr. chavez. this is the consummate foreign interference in our election. >> reporter: she told prosecutors trump weighed a plan to seize voting machines in multiple states, despite no evidence of ballot fraud. >> that would have allowed the machines to be secured in four of five states or cities and see about doing a bipartisan or military or whatever everybody agreed on review of the machines. >> reporter: sources told abc news a number of former president trump's co-defendants in the case have previously been offered plea deals. nil cooperator, david, could be called to testify once this racketeering case goes to trial. david? >> david: all right, aaron katersky, olivia ruben, and our entire investigative team. my thanks to you all. we continue now, and former president trump's sister, mary anne trump barry passed away overnight here in new york. sources say emted ress responded call regard iing cardiac arrest. she retired in 2019 amid an investigation into the trump family's tax practices. judge barry was 86. we turn now to los angeles tonight, where a massive fire shut down part of one of the busiest and, of course, most con guested highways in america, part of i-10 was shut down, it remains closed tonight. mola lenghi in los angeles. >> reporter: tonight, structural engineers and contractors working around the clock to reopen one of the busiest freeways in the country. >> the urgency is now. we will get this taken care of. >> reporter: the rush hour commute shaking up downtown los angeles, as the 10 freeway, known to nearly 300,000 drivers, remains shut down, pushing commuters and commerce to other con guested highways. it's uncertain how long this stretch of the i-10 will be shut down. take a look at the freeway, it's usually packed with cars, but right now, you can see this is completely empty. what is certain is the major distribution this will cause to the hundreds of thousands of drivers. >> i'm a little worried it's going to get worse. >> reporter: new images tonight showing the burned debris after that massive inferno erupted just after midnight saturday. more than 160 firefighters battling the flames for hours. what's left -- melted guardrails, concrete columns peeling, revealing the rebar wires. and the protective layers under the bridge now exposed. crews zeroing in on this section, constructing support walls and beginning to take samples from more than 100 damaged columns. >> reporter: well, just moments ago, governor newsom saying the cause of this fire appears to be arson. it was intentional wli set. the whoa and how remain under investigation. david? >> david: mola, thank you. when we come back here, in new york city, the scare. two workers dangling from scaffolding. and former speaker pelosi's husband taking the stand just moments ago. what he revealed. salonpas, makers of powerful pain relief patches for 89 years... believes in continuous improvement... like rounded corners that resist peeling, with an array of active ingredients... and sizes to relieve your pain. salonpas. it's good medicine. 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