still to come, oops, when forgetting your kid at a restaurant becomes international news. >> what if you intentionally leave them there? and apple unveils the latest goodies, tempting treats for all you techies. you're watching "world news now." ♪ ing "world news now." ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] eligible for medicare? that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement plans, they pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay. and save you up to thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. call today to request a free decision guide to help you better understand what medicare is all about. and which aarp medicare supplement plan works best for you. with these types of plans, you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients... plus, there are no networks, and you'll never need a referral to see a specialist. there's a range of plans to choose from, too. and they all travel with you. anywhere in the country. join the millions who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations... and provided by unitedhealthcare insurance company, which has over 30 years of experience behind it. call today. remember, medicare supplement insurance helps cover some of what medicare doesn't pay -- expenses that could really add up. these kinds of plans could save you up to thousands in out-of-pocket costs... you'll be able choose any doctor who accepts medicare patients. and you never need referrals. so don't wait. with all the good years ahead, look for the experience and commitment to go the distance with you. call now to request your free decision guide. this easy-to-understand guide will answer some of your questions, and help you find the aarp medicare supplement plan that's right for you. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> well, like that apple store here in the big apple, apple is known for its designs but may have just topped them all. >> apple executives are saying their new laptop is the most beautiful computer they have ever made. that's not all. david louie from our san francisco affiliate is at the developer's conference. >> this is our 23rd, wwdc. yes, it's older than many of you are. [ laughter ] >> reporter: they're young, they're anxious to create the next great app and patient listening as apple took two hours to show them what is new. one of the most significant, new map software developed by apple to replace google maps. apple even flew helicopters to get aerial views of landmarks and cities. analysts say apple knows what it is doing. >> over an hour a month. people are spending with maps. that doesn't include new features like turn-by-turn navigation. adding the features it is bound to have a very positive impact on how they're using those services. >> reporter: a major focus was on mobile apps, and apple unveiled a powerful new 15-inch mac book pro, that brings the high resolution retina display to the mac book. >> what this mac book pro says is that apple thinks that there is a very important market for laptops and that is not going away. >> reporter: the retina display will appeal to producers, and it is also the thinnest laptop, thinner than a finger. analysts say apple is sending out an important message. >> we have our pc, tablets, our phones. i think it was clear today the mac and notebook is not going away, it's just becoming more portable and powerful. >> reporter: developers learned about the next generation, iso 6, which will have 200 new features when it comes out this fall. that will give them the tools to create new apps for the ipad, iphone and ipod touch. there was no mention of the iphone release, iphone 5. but with a new mobile operating system coming out this fall, it would be a fair assumption that would be the time for a new iphone release. david louie, abc news, san francisco. >> want some stunning numbers here, the app store has 650,000 apps and over 30 billion downloads and counting. >> and counting. >> and counting. >> key phrase. the new notebook is nearly as thin as mac book air and features not available on other models, retina display technology which has something to do with your retinas. >> coming out with new stuff. >> red eye reduction on the iphone. >> let them figure it out. coming out with new stuff. apple need the money. they're hurting over there. about time, guys. >> come on, seriously. >> coming up next. lots of you already weighing in on the next story. >> britain's prime minister accidentally leaving his young daughter at a restaurant. we have the details next. accidentally leaving his young daughter at a restaurant. we have the details next. rlrlrll ♪ you abandoned me love don't live here anymore ♪ >> ha-ha! prime minister david cameron is being called the forgetful parent after leaving his 8-year-old daughter in a restaurant. >> oops, kind of like a bar. >> yeah. >> the incident has touched off a debate for every working family and even nonworking family around the globe. our report from outside london. >> reporter: david and samantha cameron, the image of a young modern power couple. so how could they do it? this was the scene of every parent's worst nightmare. the camerons were enjoying a spot of lunch here before taking their eye off their daughter nancy for a few second and leaving without her. the prime minister in one car with his bodyguards. wife samantha in the other with their other two kids. each thought 8-year-old nancy was with the other. 15 minutes and two miles later, the camerons discovered she was missing. nancy was safe and sound, in fact, she was helping out the staff in the pub. but the british government was on the defense saying mom and dad were "distraught" when it happened. then the prime minister went straight away to get her. >> i do think it is disgraceful, yeah. >> reporter: in fact it was cameron himself who told diane how he tried to balance it all. >> i always said it must be possible to be a good prime minister, father and husband. >> reporter: in march couples in maryland and texas made headlines by leaving their children at chuck e. cheese. working parents know it is easy to get distracted. >> you are expected to respond to an e-mail. expected to always be available. that's not something that existed ten years ago. >> reporter: perhaps that's why many felt a little empathy, knowing these days what happened to the camerons could happen to anyone. >> oh, wow. embarrassing for the cameron family. the facebook question of the day -- have you ever forgotten or lost your child? go to wnnfans.com. >> lots of comments already. my grandma left my mom at a gas station. my mom was one of six kids. she was in the bathroom. it can happen. and ryan says i lost my little sister one time on purpose. sandy says, it can, does happen. usually the outcome is good. few end tragically. >> what about you, you are mom of two? >> intentionally, yeah. it didn't end tragically. just for like, five, ten minutes or so. yeah. it didn't end tragically. just for like, five, ten minutes or so. ♪ pop goes the world ♪ it goes something like this ♪ everybody here is a friend of mine ♪ ♪ everybody, tell me, have you heard? ♪ [ female announcer ] pop in a whole new kind of clean with new tide pods... a powerful three-in-one detergent that cleans, brightens, and fights stains. just one removes more stains than the 6 next leading pacs combined. pop in. stand out. ♪ you didn't have to stoop so low have your friends collect your records and change your number ♪ ♪ now you're just somebody that i used to know ♪ >> my girlfriend is obsessed with that song. wonder if she is trying to tell me something. she plays it all the time, i swear. >> goethe? sounds like sting. >> little bit. yeah. >> on a tangent there. it's been 50 years since one of the most daring prison breaks in american history. in 1962 three inmates set out from alcatraz island. >> cecilia vega spoke to a u.s. marshal who believes some may still be alive. >> reporter: they called it the rock, an island prison built so no man could ever escape except maybe frank morris, john england and his brother clarence all serving time for bank robbery when they broke out of alcatraz exactly 50 years ago. it is the stuff movies are made from. but for one u.s. marshal, the escape from alcatraz is still a very open case. >> there has never been a body recovered. we have to operate under the assumption that there is a possibility they made it. >> reporter: i'm standing inside the actual cell that one of the men escaped from. how did they do it? they used spoons stolen from the mess hall, made a drill from vacuum parts and it took months to dig through this thick wall to a narrow space behind it and to the bay outside. guards found pillows under the bed sheets and lifelike papier-mache heads with real hair stolen from the barber. the prisoners made a raft and life preservers from 50 rubber rain boats and set out fighting wind, rough currents and frigid shark infested waters. >> i have seen information that leads me to believe, the raft did land on angel island and footprints near the raft. i have also seen -- i've gotten leads from different places all around the world. different lead that make me feel there is a possibility that at least the brothers probably lived. >> reporter: nephews of the england brothers and believe their uncles survived. >> they were excellent swimmers. this bay has got nothing on them. >> reporter: today all three prisoners would be in their 80s and look something like this. and the lone investigator is still searching for them. >> reporter: if you find these guys, what's the first thing you would say? >> you're under arrest. >> reporter: do you have your handcuffs? >> i do. just in case. >> reporter: abc news, san francisco. >> we never thought the chance was good those guys would return 50 years later. >> hello? that would be a dumb criminal. >> more from abc coming up. was good tababababababababababab this morning on "world news now" -- tales of abuse from jerry sandusky's accuser. >> disturbing testimony from the first of many witnesses against the former assistant coach and we'll hear more when day two begins on this tuesday, june 12th. >> announcer: from abc news this is "world news now." good tuesday morning, everybody, i'm paula faris. >> i'm rob nelson. the testimony on day one was graphic to say the least. we'll get a full report from jim avila at the courthouse there in pennsylvania. >> plus the latest close encounter with a bear. seems bear sieltings across the country have become so frequent as we head into summer. we'll hear from a man who was mauled by one and managed to call 911. i'm sure you have heard plenty of stories about the cape cod bear on "world news." well, it has been captured. >> breaking news on this tuesday morning. there is a special report that the cape cod bear has been captured, 5:00 p.m. they go out. used a tranquilizer to subdue the 3-year-old male all of you can get back to your partying and wonderful things. >> our work is done here now. >> cape cod, safe to go back outside. yes. plus, one of the bravest people we all know in the building, robin roberts, displaying grace and courage as she revealed her health battle in an emotional announcement yesterday on "good morning america," made a lot of headlines, captured the thoughts and prayers of everyone in this building and her many, many fans around the country as well. >> we'll you all about her prognosis. later in the "the skinny," lindsay lohan's latest brush with the law. perhaps she wasn't so truthful after her weekend crash near l.a. lilo, a liar? no. >> lindsay, go away. my lord. jurors in the sdurveg case have -- sandusky case heard from the first of several men who claim sexual abuse by the former penn state coach. >> sandusky's lawyer says the men are motivated by financial gain. jim avila is covering the trial. how are you feeling this morning? >> reporter: the man who prosecutors called a serial predator but says he only treated boys like a father with harmless touching and no sexual intent heard the first witness against him tell a completely different and horrifying account of years of sexual abuse that included more than 40 individual attacks at the hands of jerry sandusky. some in the penn state shower. some at sandusky's house. others on the road with the penn state football team. >> it is clear. it is concise. it meets the elements of the law and the case law against him. it sets forth that involuntary deviate sexual intercourse happened. >> reporter: prosecutors corroborated the victim's testimony with pictures of expensive gifts and love letters. one letter had a lewd title written in the third person in sandusky's handwriting on penn state letterhead. hope there will be meaning to what we had together. and finally, you seemed as if you bought into everything and were doing well. >> that letter is clearly sexually oriented. it is clearly telling this victim that he knows that he did something to this victim. >> reporter: in last minute court papers filed, the sandusky team presents a novel explanation for the letters. quote, these words, tones, requests and statements made in the letters are consistent with a person who suffers from a histrionic personality disorder with what? >> with respect to the disorder one thinks of wanting to be the center of an attention at the party, one describes their speech as being easily impressionistic but dramatic. >> reporter: sandusky's attorney claims the alleged victim and seven others prosecutors plan on calling to claim sexual abuse are in the middle of a conspiracy for money. quote, these are cute kids, why would they lie? joe amendola told the jury, these young men had a financial interest in this case, they're going to sue us. jim avila, abc news. why if money is the motivation here, why would the kids lie about something, these young men now, lie about something so personal, tell me that society attaches such a stigma to, why would the stories be consistent, the sandusky interviews with "the new york times" so creepy, basically admitted attraction to a certain extent. it seems like this thing has to be not related to money to some extent. >> the evidence has been corroborated. seems like most incidences if you read the testimony, a lot of the cases, started in the shower, throwing soap at one another. victim four said, i didn't have a dad around, i didn't have a father figure. i am in high school. people are jealous, other people are jealous, they see him going to the games, getting the gifts that sort of thing. that is really the type of kid he preyed on with his foundation, the second mile. >> as part of the football program he was an authority figure, a giant on the campus. >> a father figure, and bad father figure. >> day two today. in other news, an intense manhunt has unfolded over the past 24 hours for the suspect in those auburn university killings. s.w.a.t. teams converged on a house in montgomery after getting a tip the suspect was hiding in an attic at the residence. three people were shot to death saturday night at a party not far from the auburn campus in an apparent dispute over a woman. two were former football players. also some arrests in this case. two men arrested for injury in this case, as well. this morning, a navy drone crashed on maryland's eastern shore yesterday. thankfully no one was hurt. the $46 million aircraft was on a training mission when it went down in a pretty swampy area. the drone is operated by four crew members who were on the ground. and about 30 gallons of jet fuel were spilled after a tanker trailer collided with a train not far from seattle. the locomotives were going about five miles an hour when the accident occurred near a boeing facility. well, a warning about a gruesome case of domestic violence caught on camera. the video, we do warn you is highly disturbing, a florida woman arranged to meet her ex-boyfriend at a 7-eleven to exchange custody. instead, police say he doused her with gasoline, set her on fire. she was pretty badly burned. doctors say she should recover. he is in custody. she should get full custody of that child. with no rights to that father. more than 30 years after an australian mother said a dingo took her baby, a coroner is backing her claim. lindy chamberlain was convicted of murdering her 9 week old daughter during a camping trip in 1980. her husband was charged as an accessory after the fact. they were cleared a few years later but lived under a cloud of suspicion. now the latest coroner's report found that previous evidence had been misinterpreted. it cited recent dingo attacks on children. >> wow, 30-year mystery now solved i guess. an alaska man is recovering after an unfortunate encounter with a brown bear. he had been on a solo hike outside of anchorage when he came across a mother bear and her cub. never good. he says before he could grab his pepper spray she charged right at him, swatting and slapping him for what seemed like an eternity. he finally managed to scramble up a tree. he called 911 from his cell phone. >> hi, i'm the guy that just got mauled by a brown bear. >> okay, sir, we're getting paramedics on the way. they're going to come -- start headed -- >> i can hear the brown bear still huffing in the tree. i was able to climb a tree. so i'm as high up in a tree as i can get. >> he sounds pretty calm all things considered. state troopers said he did everything right to avoid an attack. he carried pepper spray. walked with ski poles and made noise before coming around the bend. but this time it just wasn't enough. >> what are the tips if you see a bear? do you play dead or actually hop around? >> i have heard both theories actually. >> run. >> i run that's just me. get on my track shoes and go. whew, hopefully the guy is all right. >> yes. here is your tuesday forecast. luckily, rob and i are not going hiking any time soon. >> or ever, ever in life. >> severe storms, possible tornados, central rockies into nebraska, texas. thunderstorms from new orleans to pensacola and the carolinas. rain in the northeast and pacific northwest. >> the southwest heats up with a 105 in phoenix, 88 in albuquerque. cooler, in the 70s, fargo to new york city. atlanta at 85. dallas 10 degrees warmer at 95. okay, rob, you don't have kids, but i know you will get a kick out of this next video. we have all seen our share of adorable toddler videos. this one is a little different. this time the baby behind the camera. >> take a look at the world from a 2-year-old's point of view. british filmmaker, daniel gray, strapped a helmet cam on his daughter before hide-and-seek. it's 3:00 of heart warming giggles, and calls for "daddy" and energetic panting as olivia goes hunting for dad. >> folks around the world clearly getting a big kick out of it. it received more than 500,000 hits in five days. we did not speed that video up. a lot of energy. like to move it, move it. they go like that 24/7. sure you don't want to babysit my children? >> four years, soon as they graduate college. coming up, the new health battle for our friend robin roberts. we will hear from her and about her prognosis coming up. you are watching "world news now." ♪ makes me work a little bit harder makes me that much wiser ♪ ♪ makes me that much stronger makes me work a little bit harder ♪ ♪ makes me that much stronger makes me work a little bit harder ♪ follow the wings. ♪ makes me tha ♪ makes me that much stronger makes me work a little bit harder ♪ ♪ makes me that much stronger makes me work a little bit harder â™