quicker resolution? joining us now from joplin is the missouri governor jay nixon. i want to start with this. i m holding up the list that came out today, 232 names on it. how confident are you in this list, after several days of confusion, conflicting information and that confusion causing a lot of pain and anguish for the families involve, how confident are you now that this list is an accurate list of the missing? yesterday morning we brought in a state team that had about 60 people working all night last night working on the various sources that came in from across the country. i m very confident that the list we have this morning were skon fi confirmed unaccounted folks. we have been working on that list, i am confident that the hard work of those 60 professional over the last 30 hours has yielded the accurate list that we can now work with families to connect. and what conclusion should we draw, governor, you and i had a conversation about the fact that you had to bring in th
promises to speed up the process by which families can identify the remains of lost loved ones. going forward, we will have regular briefings in order to update you about what our progress is to get that number of unaccounted for individuals to zero, that is our goal to connect each and every one of those names with a loved one to make sure that we have reconciled that process. there are some signs, some signs that process is improving tonight. yet not enough or fast enough for many of the affected families. brian todd is live in joplin tonight, and brian, early on, once the list was finally, finally made public, already you found some discrepancies, some mistakes? reporter: we did, john, almost no sooner than we got this list than we found that one of the key people who we have been profiling this week with he and his family, he was reported missing, he was on this list, but we found him on this list twice. his name is lansz hare, we interviewed his mother when the tor