attacks. also -- >> he didn't pull the trigger. >> face-to-face with the killer, a survivor's terrifying account. i am richard quest in london. this is cnn's world report. good morning to viewers in the united states, and around the world. police say a 32-year-old norwegian man arrested on friday may have been involved in the oslo bomb blast and the massacre on the island that left at least 91 people dead in total. local media are naming the man as anders behring breivik. police are not confirming his identity, but when asked about extremism in norway, the prime minister told the news conference police were aware of active groups. >> translator: compared to other countries, i will not say that we have a big problem with right-wing extremists in norway, but we have had some groups, and we have followed them before, and our police is aware that there are some right-wing extreme groups, or at least has been some groups of that kind in norway. but, again, i very much underline that we will not speculate and we will await the investigation from the police before we say anything more about this particular case, but it's part of our work, and the police follow this kind of right wing extreme groups. >> the police admitted the suspect was not previously known to them. a spokesperson revealed what was known about him so far. >> he is a free mason, and we cannot provide further details or specifics on this guy. this guy has not been on the police radar it seems. >> the scale of the attack is only just becoming clear. 84 people are now confirmed dead, and the massacre at utoya island, where the suspect opened fire with an automatic weapon. it was aimed at a camp for young people. some people jumped into freezing waters to try and escape, and others hid and the gunman continued to search into targets, sometimes firing into the water. the suspect believed to have been involved in the huge bomb blast that hit central oslo on friday afternoon. in that blast, seven people are considered dead, and scores more are injured. the police say two attacks are likely links. and our correspondent is near utoya island this morning. she joins me on the line. let's begin with where you are and what you are seeing? >> we are still on route. it's supposed to be a 45-minute drive from oslo. we have been driving for 2 1/2 hours now. we only presume the direct roads to oslo have been cut off to transport the injured and the dead to oslo. we're still on route. the stories that we are hearing about what happened on the island yesterday are just horrific, and the gunman was carrying out his rampage for longer than an hour, pit afull pictures really, and this was a summer camp for members of the labor party, some as young as 13 swimming desperately away from the gunman to try and avoid him shooting in the water after them. one eyewitness we spoke to swimming back to shore because his boots were so heavy and having to play dead so the gunman would not shoot him then. and we're hearing when the actual police arrived on the island, the young people were running and begging and crying for them to put their weapons down just to be sure that the horror of what they just experienced wouldn't happen again, because of course this pan was dressed as a policeman, which was what he used to be able to cross the island on public transportation as a result of the oslo attack saying he was doing a routine security check on the island as a result of the attacks, and it gave him easy access of such a populated island. 84 lost their lives, richard. >> diana, as you are driving towards the island, just very briefly, tell us you obviously, since you arrived in the country, and spoke to norwegians obviously, and engaged the mood at this early stage. >> reporter: yes, people are horrified. i looked out my window this morning and the streets were completely empty. last night the streets were eerily quiet. you would expect people to be busling around. people say i never could have imagined that something like this could have possibly happened in norway. they said somehow it seems more obvious in countries like the united states and the united kingdom, one man told me. but not here, not in a culture is that incredibly open, which has never experienced any kind of terror attack before, and certainly not the largest, you know, gun rampage that we could remember in modern times to take place here in norway is something horrifying to people here, richard. >> diana, continue making your journey to the island and we will check in an hour's time for further progress. a picture has been posted on the twitter sight that shows the killings in progress. it's a disturbing image we are about to show you. it's an aerial picture from the island, and can you see the man presumably the shooter in the bottom left of your screen. his arms out stretched in front of him. there are several other bodies grouped together in the water in front of him, and that gives you an idea of what the moments -- well, moments -- what the hour was like as he made his way around the campground. the officers of norway's red cross are very close to the site of the bomb blast that rocked oslo. vivian polson is a spokesperson there at the site. the scene in oslo and the scene at the island, tell me how the red cross is responding to the crisis? >> there has been the red cross out all night searching for people, and helping in the rescue mission. we have also had around 30 people trained in support helping the victims in the shooting nearby, in a nearby hotel where relatives and the youth have gathered. this is something that we will continue to do for a long time. we are opening up red cross centers across norway because these are people that will need help for a long time. >> the -- do we know how many of the youngsters are still on the island, or has the island now been evacuated? >> i am not sure. i know they are still searching for missing people, and i know there are still missing people, but i am not sure how many people are still there. the police are still on the island searching. >> you say, of course, which is usually in these situations psychological and social support is being given, but what sort of reports are you receiving back of the stories and what people are saying? >> it is just a gruesome and unreal situation. people are not quite believing what they have been part of and they, i think, are still in shock and will be for a long time. what we are appealing for in norway is that everybody takes care of everybody and we talk to each other. it's not just the people that were on the island affected, these were youth, 600 from around the country. you have relatives and friends in every part of the country, and they will now also be needing support. we're appealing for everybody to just take care of each other and talk to each other. >> vivian, we thank you for that and will talk to you later in the day. joining us there, the red cross spokesperson from norway. we are going to bring you all the implications of this. coming up in a moment, we will inbound oslo where authorities are now starting to get a better picture of what took place. this is cnn. 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[ male announcer ] think, type, go. with just type. only on the new hp touchpad with webos. a i can only imagine how you felt when you saw casey anthony walk free. what did you feel when you saw the images? >> a huge disappointment. there is one shot of her where she has this kind of an eerie grin once she gets into the car, and it really just gives you a chill. what i would really like to know, piers, is who foot the bill for that private jet that picked her up at the orlando executive airport and we think deposited her somewhere in california. that's what i would like to know. i think i got a bead defense team that later fell off the defense team, parentally due to bar complaints. but the bill for the private plane went to the same address as his office. so i think i know where the private plane came from. whether she was really on the plane, i don't know. i doubt she's lingering in the florida area. i think she's going on to the next bigger, better deal out in california. >> but should she be vilified now she has been released? she's been through a court case, a jury of her peers reached their verdict and on that basis she has been acquitted of killing her child. if we respect the legal process and the legal system, should she now be vilified in public? should she ab be allowed to lead the life she should want to lead? >> of course. that's what she wanted to do all along, piers. that's why she killed her child. that's why she got the tattoo, the sweet life. that's why she partied on a stripper pole in a mini skirt and pushup bra while caylee was missing, ie, rotting. her child was rotting. all right? you think i can put my head down on a pillow knowing 15 house as way from where i slept every night my child was laying in a swampy water muck? no. so, sure, live it up, casey anthony. go ahead. but you're forgetting, the justice system doesn't exist in a vacuum. you're forgetting something called the bill of rights. now i know you brits don't have that. but we do. and the very first one is freedom of speech. now why are you suggesting that the world can't comment on tot mom's not guilty verdict and her choice of lifestyle? hey, maybe she'll turn into sister -- mother teresa for all i know and do good works the rest of her life. but you know what? i'm not a betting person. but if i were, i would bet she's not going to turn into mother teresa. i would bet she's going to make all the money she can and run right through it on a high lifestyle. that's what i think is going to happen. >> no, the brits don't have the bill of rights nor do we have trial by television. >> trial by television. that doesn't happen because if that happened, this jury certainly wasn't listening to me. they came up with a not guilty. >> yeah. but you see, that in itself, the jurors then begin to see themselves as kind of big part actors because they're being beamed to the world and wherever you have seen the trials by television now involving notorious people, the results normally got wrong way to public opinion. and create -- >> i don't know what you just said. >> take o.j. simpson case. >> goes the wrong way to public opinion. what does that mean? >> that means that public opinion had been driven, i think, by the saturation and coverage on television and all the commentary so that most people were directed to believe and, you know, i'm sure you wouldn't deny the fact you were directly able to think this that this woman killed her child. >> actually, i have a lot more respect for my viewers. i think they can make up their own minds. and also it's funny that you would say that. because in our constitution, i guess you can compare it to the legislative history, the legislative minutes when laws are enacted in our country. someone is taking down everything that's being said as laws are passed by congress. we had something similar to that when the constitution was written. and our forefathers openly discussed, piers, how they wanted every courtroom in america to be big enough for the entire community to hear the trial. so there is no closed door justice or secret proceedings. the people that watched this trial including myself made their decision just because it doesn't agree with the jury's decision is a whole other can of worms. but america can listen and hear and evaluate the evidence just as well as you and i could. so that was their decision. i'm sure you saw the usa today poll which said two-thirds of america believes she's guilty. and that's their right to have an opinion and voice it. >> well, nancy, whether we come back, we want to talk to you about your days as a prosecutor and the tragedy that you referred to that led to you becoming a lawyer in the first place. almost tastes like one of jack's cereals. fiber one. uh, forgot jack's cereal. [ jack ] what's for breakfast? um... try the number one! [ jack ] yeah, this is pretty good. [ male announcer ] half a day's worth of fiber. fiber one. we have had people working overtime, triple time, weekends, unpaid, nothing in it for any of us except we believe he killed her. >> that was from your days as a prosecutor. i have to say, i love the hair there. >> thank you. jealous? >> tell me -- honestly, i lot of fact that even then you had this firebrand attitude. i mean look at you smashing your stick. you were an aggressive prosecutor. very direct with your eye contact with the jurors there. clearly something that was a passion for you. i'm assuming that the passion for you was driven not least by the fact you yourself had been through this appalling tragedy of your fiance being killed by a co-worker. >> yes. there's keith. he got that black eye from a baseball. keith was in school on baseball scholarship to get his degree in geology and was almost through and was working a summer job. he was at a construction site. and he left at lunch time to go get soft drinks for everyone and when he -- pulled back into the site, a co-worker that had been fired was angry and had showed up at the site with a gun. and the theory was he was waiting for the boss that fired him but when he saw the truck, he just opened fire and he shot keith five times in the face, the neck, and the head. keith was still alive. when he made it to the hospital, he did not live. >> i can see now this is clearly hugely traumatic part of your life. it makes you very emotional. i'm not surprised to talk about it now and seeing the pictures of you and keith together must bring back all sorts of memories for you. what happened to him spur you on to do? when you remember your feelings at the time, did it drive you on to finding justice for others? was it as simple as that? >> you know, piers, it's -- it's so complicated and i actually very rarely discuss it. other than eluding to it briefly if i'm asked questions about it. you know, piers, people always talk about closure. and they throw that around as far as cindy and george anthony they have closure it's all over. there is no closure. it's like breaking your arm. and you never get it set. but you learn to flip a pancake or sweep the floor. not the way you did before, but in a different way. yes, it affected my life. i went nearly 30 years without being able to really seriously entertain marriage or a family. in fact, the word marriage would actually give me -- actually physically have a shake when it was brought up. and i remember it was like a dark swirl after his murder. i couldn't eat. i couldn't drink anything. i lost down to about 89 pounds. i dropped out of school. i was at my parents home. i couldn't stand to hear the tv, the radio in the car. i couldn't stand to hear a clock tick. it was just too much. and i ultimately -- i went to go stay with my sister in philadelphia. she was a professor at the warten school of business at that time. i would sit on a park bench and watch students go by while she was teaching. and it dawned on me there that i had no idea what law school even was. but that i would go to law school. and that somehow i could make a difference. i had planned to be an english shakespearean professor hopefully at a graduate level. and i couldn't imagine being in a classroom the rest of my life. and that had been my dream. i'm sorry to say that since that time, i have never had the heart to open up a single shakespearean play or book. it's just -- i just can't. that was a different life and a different dream and a different girl. that girl is gone. but what i have now is a life that has been dedicated to seeking justice and very late in life god heard my prayers and answered them 10,000 time over by giving me twins and a husband that loves me and accepts me like i am. so it was not what i planned. but god gave me something very different. >> nancy, we'll take another short break. when we come back, i want to talk to you about your new marriage and the children you have, the way you are able to rebuild your life and propel your career into becoming one of the most high profile defenders of justice that this country has. >> thank you, piers. 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[ female announcer ] together at last. introducing new stouffer's farmers' harvest with sides of lightly sauteed farm-picked vegetables. find more ways to get to the table at letsfixdinner.com. vietnam, 1967. i got mine in iraq, 2003. u.s.a.a. auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation, because it offers a superior level of protection and because u.s.a.a.'s commitment to serve the military, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy. get an auto insurance quote. u.s.a.a. we know what it means to serve. to your kids' wet skin. new neutrogena® wet skin kids. ordinary sunblock drips and whitens. neutrogena® wet skin cuts through water. forms a broad spectrum barrier for full strength sun protection. wet skin. neutrogena®. announcer: when life's this hard, it's no wonder 7,000 students drop out every school day. visit boostup.org and help kids in your community stay in school. nancy, before we went to the break, very emotional talking about your fiance being killed. you moved on and got married and had children. what do you think, when you get all this attention now and you've had all this success and you're so high profile and get criticized and praised in equal measure, when you get criticized, what do you think is the biggest misconception about you? all the criticism and all the praise doesn't amount -- it is not worth the salt that goes in my bread. tv is fickle. you can be loved one day and hated the next day. you know, one day you're getting an award and the next day you're getting a death threat. so what does it all mean? doesn't mean anything. what matters to me is that i try to do the right thing on air and off air. and what my children think of me, what they're going to read about me one day on the internet. what my husband thinks about me and my parents and my family. that's what matters to me. what keith thinks about me, how i live my life since he was murdered. i know he's watching. i know he's cheering me on. that's what matters to me. >> well nancy, you've been incredibly honest in this interview, more than i thought you were going to be about that part of your life. and, you know, personally, i love watching the show. i think you're a force for good. and i think that you are ballsy and aggressive but at your heart, you want to bring justice to people like kay caylee anthony. >> thank you, friend. >> coming up next, my inte