tv After the Bell FOX Business January 8, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EST
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in mexico, infamous drug kingpin el chapo is now in custody. geraldo rivera is here with reaction of the major takes down. [closing bell rings squires. melissa: even with good jobs report, the market down 114 points, contributing to the worst week for stocks in history. see crude oil trading lower as well. nasdaq down by another full percentage. s&p even more than that 1.1%. david: nothing was positive. dow was down a thousand points for the first week of 2016 let's go straight to the floor of new york stock exchange with adam shapiro. adam we had a great jobs number. we thought that might turn things around and add to that bottom-fishing and nothing. >> it wasn't good enough the jobs number to keep traders happy. only two dow components closed in green today, apple and microsoft.
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apple still trading below $100 a share. microsoft barely staying positive. david, as you mentioned, jobs number, 292,000, unemployment better than 5%, better than analysts expected. wages remained stagnant in december, remained flat after gone up five cents per average hourly worker. that is part of the problem, people are concerned there isn't kind of productive we need to put money back in the pockets of people that buy stuff and help the market go up. keep in mind what happened today, not only worst ever start of the year for the dow. also very bad for the s&p 500. but as you pointed out, 17, 425 is the number to watch. we're down 1,000 points. closing down on the dow now for the year down 1,000 point from the close in 2016, david? david: adam, i'm hearing traders
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worried about what happens in the china over the weekend, that is why there is advance in selling over the end of the session. did you hear that from trayers. >> large number of sell orders coming in last 30 minutes of trading. they weren't talking about china but the fact that wages are not going up that consumers don't have the money they need to help stocks go up. david: there is question of oil, adam. you mentioned salaries are not going up. there is downward pressure on wages in america. everybody feels poorer perhaps than the market would indicate. oil, everybody thought because oil goes down, people have more money in their pockets, they go out to buy more, that hasn't happened, has it? >> they're not seeing that. consumers holding on to money they're saving by not paying as much money at pump. we see that in the federal reserve reports, savings is now almost five, 6%. in economy that is driven by consumption we could make the argument why you need to save money but it is bad on the other side when people aren't spending
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for economy based on consumption. melissa: what are they saying looking beyond this into next week? what is the next signpost ahead for people watching at home, what should they look for? >> what david is talking about, what happens with china especially on monday. chinese tried to remove the obstacle that led to yesterday's big selloff for them. they closed 30 minutes into the trading day, removed circuit breaker. investors and are wondering can chinese government actually sustain the market? even though we're not tied to the market sets perception among investors here, could come monday. david: blood on the streets is a phrase we haven't heard this week. has it finally gotten to the point where traders say, wow it can't go much further. >> no. jonathan corpina was at the booth, he said there is no sense blood on the streets. nobody likes to see, basic
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simple to understand, dow is off 1,000 points from 2015 close. nobody likes that. david: adam shapiro, i have to ask is there any safety whatsoever? gold going down in addition to anything else. is there any place in terms of safety, maybe bonds traders looking for until the market stops going down? >> they're not talking about bonds, talking about buying opportunities. believe it or not apple had to cut number of iphones from suppliers they will be selling you have a huge market in all of plays, china. what some traders were talking about the fact that consumer spending in china, despite this slowdown economically, consumer spending in china has maintained at its levels that would indicate apple might have a very good quarter as we go into the new year. melissa: okay. david: let's pray for something better over the weekend. adam, thank you very much. melissa: meanwhile mexican drug lord, joaquin el chapo guzman was caught six months after escaping from a fun nil built in
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his prison. geraldo rivera went to the tunnel for his escape. >> they lowered equipment into the hole, dark now, but lit during the el chapo saga by electric lighting system that was incredible. this is the power winch they used to lower equipment that they needed into that big hole, three stories down. we're going down there. melissa: joining me now, geraldo rivera, fox news senior correspondent. geraldo the story is still developing and breaking. have we heard where they found him and/or anything? >> have we heard retirement is postponed couple month because of collapse of the dow? melissa: so there is that, yes. >> he should have sold stocks for the infrastructure he must have created to dig that mile-long hole. it was incredible excavation. it showed that he bought and paid for officials from prison guards up to prison
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administrators, maybe even beyond. maybe even capital of mexico city. he was a billionaire drug lord. perhaps the person, individual, most responsible for flood of heroin on to the streets in places likes chicago and may i add manchester, new hampshire, one overdose death every single day. this is blow. it is good news. will he be replaced? his second-in-command cruz is on the lamb. he escaped murderous shootout. i had that wrong when i did liz claman's show an hour ago. i know the mexican marines, elite force that surrounded el chapo and his thug, killed five of them at least as they captured el chapo. some did escape this is good news. it will not be completed, this good news story unless and until el chapo is extradited to the united states where he can be held securely. melissa: let me ask you, geraldo, i heard you say before, this is somebody, prison guard, go to the prison guard and family, either your families is in jeopardy or i can bribe you and give you money you will have
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a better life type thing was able to sort of buy off everyone along the way. >> prison guard gets 200 bucks a month of the figure it out. el chapo goes to prison guard or someone goes to prison guard for el chapo, i know your wife maria and your sons and juan and address is 642 sina low yaw boulevard. here is your choices. give you $200,000 to help me escape or i will kill your children or i will rape your wife. this is man who managed in the old mafia days but with none of the finesse to terrorize the sinaloa state that run the operation got him on forbes 400 most wealthy people in the world. look what happened, heroin addiction, number one political issue in new hampshire. melissa: he needs to be extradited to the u.s. there wasn't any thought they could contain him in mexico.
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do you think he will come here? >> there is a lot of doubt. you know how any nation is proud of sovereignty of ability to clean up their own affairs. mexico was humiliated by some heavy-handed american tactics, vis-a-vis war on drugs and trade policies and so forth that have come down the pike. now with this language about immigration and allries of it. so they are filled with pride when they recaptured el chapo the first time he escaped. no, it will be 3 or 400 years. serve his time in mexico prison. then turn him over to the united states. now i am hearing, now i am hoping mexico in the relative short term will put him on a plane with u.s. marshals to get him where he should be in that supermax in colorado six stories underground. melissa: geraldo rivera, thank you so much. appreciate your time. >> i'm shot. i'm bleeding heavily! david: a gunman confessing to trying to execute a police officer in the name of islam.
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the philadelphia officer ambushed was shot three times after 11 shots were fired as he sat in a marked police car. the suspected, the suspect identified as 30-year-old edward archer, pledged his allegiance to isis during his own confession. fox news's rick leventhal is in the newsroom with the very latest. rick? reporter: david, philadelphia police commissioner sworn in three days ago was astonished this officer was able to survive this point-blank attack, obvious assassination attempt by ex-con as you mentioned pledged his allegiance to isis. photos are chilling. gunman using stolen police issued 9mm handgun opens fires on 3-year-old police officer jesse hartnett as he rolls towards 60th and spruce streets in philly. fires from nine feet, six feet, three feet, with his weapon inside patrol car and officer hartnett is only hit three times in the left arm. hartnett exits the vehicle, his arm bleeding and useless returns
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fire with the suspect and hits wounding he had war archer, 30-year-old ex-con who may have radicalized behind bars. his mother told philadelphia inchoirer said her son had couple head injuries and hearing voices. law enforcement described him as disenfranchised loser than ties with terrorist. he pledged his allegiance to isis and opposition to law enforcement. >> he certainly was targeting police. want targeting motorist down the street. he knew who he was shooting at. my god, the way he has his arm inside of that vehicle, he knew what he was doing. he was trying to assassinate this police officer. reporter: officer hartnett will need multiple surgeries and suffered nerve damage. the suspect was treated for his wounds and behind bars waiting on first court appearance fbi and whom land security are assisting executing search warrants on the suspect and
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shaking their head one of their own could be targeted for death at close range and somehow manages to survive. david: rick leventhal. thank you very much. incredible story. here is bill daley, former fbi investigator. first of all the bravery of officer hartnett can not be emphasized too much. was shot three times. 11 shots fired at him. still managed to get out and shoot and subdue the perp. this was incredible act of bravery. >> really incredible we're talking about this police officer being in the vehicle. the vehicle was moving, if you look at some videos. he ran up to the vehicle, shot him. he was able to stop the vehicle, get out, being injured, being shot and shooting him and actually shooting the suspect and hits him, really incredible. talk about somebody who has tenacity, perseverance and really nobility to carry out his duties even when severely injured. david: not with standing the bravery of police officers this has got to affect cops as they go on the beat tonight all over america.
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>> well it is, david. actually something that we know has been in the back of minds of police officers if not in the forefront for number of years now. if we look at stats last year, 15 police officers who were ambushed and shot last year. david: right. >> the department of justice released some information saying that since 1999 through 2013 there has been upward trend in ambushed type attacks resulting in more and more fatalities. although the cause of this and motive behind it is being investigated and suspect himself is association with isis there are many other reasons why people do this. it is a terrible, tragic kind of trend we've seen. david: bill, finally got to ask you a question about the radicalization of prisoners in federal prisons. a lot of people are worried about that. there is suspicion this suspect may have been radicalized behind bars. this quote from congressman changing bureau of prisons how they let radical imams.
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over the years our federal prisons have become breeding ground for radicalization. your opinion. >> i believe i have to echo that, david. as you're talk here about people coming in both preaching to them but also just as we can imagine close society they live in and how they share their beliefs with each other. coming, even coming out having free access, we'll find out soon whether this was also precipitated by his continued access through the media or some other social media pushed him to this point. isis is moving on many fronts. david: have to get radical imams out of prison. no place for them there. bill daley, appreciate it. terror in america, men arrested in california and texas. one reportedly written plans to return to syria to fight alongside other terrorists. we're live in sack -- sacramento
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for update. melissa: obama administration meeting with bet for better plans to fight terror on line. david: american hellfire missile, sensitive, secret technology, sent to europe end up in the hands of cuban communists? details coming up i thought i married an italian. my lineage was the vecchios and zuccolis. through ancestry, through dna i found out that i was only 16% italian. he was 34% eastern european. so i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors we thought was italian
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melissa: the isis threat in america. federal officials arresting two terrorism suspects. one in california, the other in texas. fox news's claudia cowan outside u.s. district court in sacramento with the latest. claudia, these men are from different states but they have some things in common, right? reporter: they do, melissa, good afternoon. first terror arrests of the year both involve palestinians born in iraq who sought refuge here in this country.
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23-year-old mohamed yunis al-jayab, moved to sacramento in 2014 faces charges of lying about travels to syria to fight along extremist groups including isis. department of justice gathered evidence that al-jayab talked about jihad which starts in when he was 16. he joined civil war there. he wrote on line, eager to see blood. investigators say he was eager to go back to syria to fight there again. officials say while he was posing a safety threat here in the united states there is no indication he was planning any kind of terrorist attack. remains behind bars at sacramento county jail and due to be arraigned at federal courthouse in just about an hour, melissa. >> what about the other man arrested in texas, was there a connection? reporter: well that is not clear. according to the affidavit, al-jayab was in communication
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with an unnamed individual who resided in texas asking about ways he could get more weapons training. so it's possible that that unnamed individual could be 24-year-old omar al hardan, who entered the u.s. as refugee in 2009. he was arrested in houston and faces charges providing material support to the islamic state. the indictment alleges he lied about his weapons training specifically with automatic machine guns. he lied on his application for u.s. citizenship. al hardan made his first court appearance a few hours ago to see if he understood charges against him through an interpreter. he said he did understand those charges. and the judge ordered him back in court next wednesday for a bond hearing. back to you. melissa: claudia, thank you so much for that report. david? david: here to weigh in, chris harmer senior naval analyst at institute of study of war and.
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rich, there is sense here as we look to events in europe, new year's eve incident in germany where a lot of refugees, hundreds of refugees apparently got out of control. peggy noonan wrote to fears americans have as we see things fall apart around the world. americans to not want america to become what europe is becoming right now. is that a danger? >> really is a danger. domestic counterterrorism is changing, used to be second generation immigrants or wayward youths seduced into terrorism as way of establishing some identity for themselves. that is particular model fbi is used to look at, counterterrorism center is used to looking at. these are different and throw gasoline on fire of debate whether or not to admit syrian refugees. the fact that the administration which really didn't do much in way of background checks here, really puts that into sharp relief as well. david: they claim they have done
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more background checks than ever. chris the problem is, if you're a governor of a state like this, you say, look, i have to protect my citizens of the federal government is not doing it. texas governor greg abbott says this is precise why i called for halt to refugees entering the u.s. from countries substantially controlled by terrorists. >> well, i don't doubt for a second that the federal government is doing a lot of background checks on refugees. david: but it is not enough. >> reality when you're talking about people who come from stateless construct, nationless construct, who don't have any paper identity as far as we understand it, could be people born in palestine or jordan or syria or iran or iraq or turkey they can assume identity very easy in war-torn country. they use that identity to infiltrate through the legal immigration system. i don't doubt the federal government is doing a lot. a lot more needs to be done.
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we don't have handle from national security perspective. one point i want to quickly make, isis and al qaeda are clearly aware limitation in the system. they're pushing their followers into the legal immigration system. david: our enemies know all about it. chris, richard, have a great weekend. thanks for coming in, appreciate it. >> thank you. >> bomb factory found in brussels. details on the apartment reportedly used to make explosives in the paris attacks. next we'll talk to former navy seal rob o'neill what needs to be done to stop potential attacks here and abroad.
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david: investigators discovered what they believe may be apartment used as bomb-making factory that supplied suicide belts used in november 13th paris attacks. our greg palkot is in london with latest on developing story. >> belgian prosecutors in fox news they could have important break in their investigation into the november
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paris terror spree. discovered in an apartment in brussels, trace of a volatile tatp explosive material, other bomb-making gear a well as three hand made suicide belts. they thought brussels was operational hub for the terror here is more hard proof. many of paris attackers after mowing down their victims with guns blew themselves up in various locations leaving some 130 people dead. the find today reveals possibly more carnage was in store. just as important also found at that apartment a fingerprint from salah abdeslam, key suspect in november terror. it was thought he used apartment as a hideout after returning from paris. the apartment is in the neighborhood of brussels known as hotbed of jihadi activity in the belgian capital.
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there were several arrests past several weeks of alleged accomplices in the terror plot. police are trying to figure out identity of yesterday's attempted attacker at a paris police station. armed with a knife, he shouted "allahu akbar!," god is great in arabic, made a move on the station and was shot dead by two police officers. it was thought he was a 20 years homeless man from morocco. now police are not sure raising new concerns about possible terror links to this individual. the terror problems in paris, brussels, around the world just keep growing. back to you, david. david: greg palkot. melissa. melissa: here to weigh in former navy seal rob o'neill and fox news contributor. we hear about bomb making factory in brussels. two days after we learn about jihadi university in raqqa. what does all this tell you? >> what is it going on, melissa this is direct growth of result of isis. regardless how much territory
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we're claiming we're getting back. this is all spawning from raqqa. comes out of raqqa. goes through turkey into western europe. what they found there was there is remnants of it. atp, which is asset tone peroxide. this is mother of sate ton for bomb buildings because so volatile but it is there. coming from schools in raqqa. they're teaching people how to do it. bringing videos across. one of the videos was captured. it will get worse as long as we let raqqa continue tobruk call. continue to be middle of jihad. melissa: in your training as navy seal what is step one? do we need to go in? we know where raqqa screen hadi university is? should we go blow it up? >> i've been saying personally we need boots on ground with unilateral operation with marines and u.s. army to take them out initially and worry about the coalition stabilization afterwards.
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if we do it with bombing that's great. way we're doing right now isn't working because we're too lax, our rules of engagement, there is too much there. everything from dropping leaflets to continued worry about collateral damage will be there anyway, that is the way islamic state fights. they put human shields there. we need to bomb them to no beginning or send troops in there to take them out. this is the divine capital this is what inspiring people because the capital is there. nothing is being done. take them out to wipe out schools, universities, hope fully rescue kids in the middle of this growing up to be jihadis anyway and take them out and take away divinity of whole thing. melissa: we look at different news events. this in brussels or news of philadelphia. man come and shoot police officer and said doing it in the name of islam. >> yes. melissa: seems like it is spreading everywhere. still people who don't want to connect it. whether mayor in philadelphia saying it has nothing to do with muslim religion. is that a mistake?
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>> it is a huge mistake. hearing the stuff that isis is not islamic, these are the most islamic people as far as they're concerned out there. they're doing exactly what their version of islam even though perverted version, doing exactly -- they needed to do to for them. as long as they're there, these crazy people like one in philly, whether or not he was radicalized in prison, doesn't matter. as long as isis is around he can claim it isis. he has legitimacy and isis loves it. as long as they have safe haven or base there they will keep doing it. it will get worse. melissa: rob. thank you. i'm afraid your night thanks for ur hp toght,ob. dad: lten thaguy en tal abo the matrs. ooti phidelpa coin t me oisla very latest details on this chilling ambush. melissa: they got him, el chapo, six months after his stunning prison break. ♪ it's a fact. kind of like ordering wine
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officer jessie was sitting doing nothing and was shot at 13 times by archer. incredibly he survives. he was hit three times in the arm, even managed to get out of his police cruiser and chase the suspect and return fire and wounding the suspect before getting help. and archer was captured a short time afterwards telling investigators that when he was captured that, yes, indeed he wanted to execute a police officer in the name of islam, pledging allegiance to isis. the question now is who this this guy? we know he's annex con. he used -- the gun he used was stolen from a police officer back in 2013 from the officer's home. it's unclear how many hands that gun may have gone through. but investigators want to know this is an excon. was he associating with people on the outside with the same extreme ideology. they want to get into the background of this guy.
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another thing they told investigators is that he targeted police officers because they enforce laws not consistent. as for officer as we said remarkable, he survived, he's facing several if not multiple surgeries to repair his arm, which he has suffered permanent nerve damage, boy, but he did survive and of course now investigators want to know if this was a singular attack -- david: survived and shot. thank you. >> sure. melissa: the gunman pledged allegiance to isis saying that he shot the officer in the name of islam. the mayor of philadelphia saying the exact opposite thing. listen to this. >> no way, shape, or form does anyone believe that islam or the teaching of islam has anything to to do with what you've seen on that screen. it's terrible, and it does not represent the religion in any way, shape, or form or any of its teachings. and this is a criminal with a stolen gun who tried to kill one of our officers has
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nothing to do with being a muslim or following the islamic faith. melissa: huh? i mean here now former fbi agent chad jenkins. we were watching this live and these statements came within a few minutes of each other where you have the police chief and commissioner and all standing there saying again and again what he said. i'm doing this in the name of islam. you were not enforcing -- the way you enforce laws in violation of the crime. on and on and then you have the mayor come out saying that anyone would say even for a minute that this has anything to do with the muslim religion. how do you reconcile those things and does it make it harder to enforce the law if you refuse to connect them? >> well, melissa, it does. i mean my goodness first and foremost, what an amazing individual and warrior spirit that jessie hartnett displaye. melissa: yeah. >> and showing philadelphia's finest and what they do for
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all of us here on a nightly, daily basis. and my hat's off to him. what an incredible american. and my thoughts and prayers for him and his family right now. but to couple on what you're saying, melissa, you're absolutely right. i mean to see this threat and not to identify it for what it is when the perpetrator is actually telling us his motivate and what you know? my hat's off to the police commissioner for basically just giving factual information, outlining it and then for the mayor to come out and saying that it's not inspired by islam is just plane and simple. until we identify the threat for what it is and, you know, having rob o'neal on earlier. i loved listening to him. i'm a big fan. the one area which i differ, though, is when you look at the islamic state, they are strict adherence to the way in which muhammad and his following him in 6:23 and the
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following 60 years preskibed and wanted islam to be followed and the islamic state is following that to a t. and how do we thwart that? you be the light. all we talk about is evil, evil, evil, evil. we need to be the light and say you know what? this has been identified. it's how they proscribe to it, it's the nary section in which they follow. but until we do that, all of the other peripheral things won't begin to deter this from growing and growing. melissa: yeah. and at the same time, you know, when you hear the police chief like you said come out and say in very plane language there's no editorializing in there he said he pledged his allegiance to the islamic state and that's why he did this. they're just reporting exactly what the guy said. i guess the other side would say he's a crazy person and he's going to try to -- anyone who would run up to a police car and fire into it is deranged and violent and murderous, and he could say
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he's doing it in the name of isis or islam, but in truth he's just a crazy person with a gun. what's wrong with that kind of thinking? >> because of the, you know, we're trying to look at this as an isolated incident. and while w we can look at it as that specific isolation, we need to take into perspective what has happened over the, you know, last 24 months of isis and radical islam since 9/11, 2001. and when you look at it from that totality of the circumstances, this is not an isolated incident. the two arrests, one in california, one in texas. not isolated incidents. melissa: yeah. >> i mean the list goes on and on and on, and i think that's where we go. and i've got to mention this. daniel 7:25 he said that there will be times, at the end of times there will be a kingdom that rises like no other kingdom that tries to set the laws and the set ways. well,
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you know what? the times right now they're not going in 2016 on any islamic calendar and guess what? what is the one law that we all know about right now that they're all trying to proscribe to. sharia. we never know what it was and now it's all around the world . melissa: thank you so much. >> thanks. david: meanwhile el chapo made that extraordinary prison escape through a mile-long tunnel, has been captured again. this is according to the mexican president. has details on what lies next for the cartel leader. william. >> well, david, out of all the places in the world this billionaire could have been, police literal found him almost in his backyard not far from where he was born. a 3rd grade drop out who picked fruit who went on to revolutionize the mexican drug business and became the number one most narcotic salesman in the world. captured an hour ago in a
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shoot-out by marines who ceased armored vehicles and rocket-propelled grenades and high powerful sniper rifles. some thought he might be in central america. instead, police found him in a wife beater t-shirt at 4:30 this morning in a modest home in an average neighborhood killing five bodyguards in the process. now, the question is what happens next? after escaping twice among mexican jail, a major embarrassment to that country, the drug lord is more than capable of buying his way out of any mexican prison, which is why the u.s. wants mexico to immediately extra indict him to the united states where he's wanted in seven cities for drug dealing, laundering, and murder. dea sources tell me it would be a huge win for the u.s. but some agents do not think that is going to happen because guzman has bought and paid for and bribed so many police and public officials that he keeps too many secrets to let go. as for the amount of drugs be
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entering the united states, don't expect, david, for that to change soon. he has many lieutenants who will take over the cartel. that should not change. moments ago the attorney general said she is proud of mexico, but she has said in the past we're very concerned he would be brought to justice. there's no reason to believe that we are not doing some arm twisting in mexico city right now to get him back. david: and the drugs keep flowing across that open border. william, thank you very much. well, bill daily former fbi investigator is back with us. bill, tell me, please, that this guy is not going to go back to a mexican prisoner where he has bought off half the mexican police department. >> well, i can't tell you that, david, but to the point that was raised before. certainly it would make sense for him to be brought here to the u.s. not only face justice but also be put in one of our super max. david: but can we do it? do we have the power and the authority to do it? >> we certainly have the power, at least the leverage to talk to the mexican government and compel them to do that as best we can. david: let me -- >> however. david: we're really short on
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time, bill, but i've just got to ask the power of this guy comes from the sell of heroin. we have a heroin epidemic in places like we never did in new hampshire where people are dropping because of his heroin. this guy's heroin. meanwhile we have a president who is not too hot on drug laws. the dea must feel like they are under the gun. literally under the gun. how do drug enforcement officers in the u.s. cope with this drug epidemic when we have so much mexican heroin and so many laws against heroin in the united states. >> i can tell you that it continues to be a challenge, and we give them tremendous credit for going in day in and day out in trying to disrupt some of these larger chains and these distributors of these drugs. however, to your point, david -- david: quick. >> this is an issue that is really supply and demand issue. we've got to still look to cut off the supply while trying to get the people off of it here
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and a $200 savings card marcoto criticize him fornfair missing votes. "but i am going to miss votes, i'm running for president." but he's been missing votes for a long time. "one third of all of his missed votes in 2015 were missed before he announced he was running for president." over the last three years, marco rubio has missed more votes... than any other senator. washington politician marco rubio. doesn't show up for work, but wants a promotion? right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message.
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melissa: washington and silicon valley looking to join forces to fight terror. top white house officials are meeting with ceos of major technology companies to ask for their help in thwarting terrorists just as the obama administration announces a new counterterrorism task force. peter barns has the details from the white house. peter. >> well, hey, melissa that's right. the administration has been pushing social media companies and tech companies for more help in tracking down terrorists and shutting down their digital communications. the government's efforts have ramped up following the terror attacks in san bernardino and in paris of course. the administration has sent a team of top officials to silicon valley for a meeting with tech executives and companies today. the delegation includes white house chief of staff dennis, the president's counterterrorism chief lisa
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monaco, attorney general loretta lynch and fbi director james comey. >> clearly there should be some common ground that we can find here between law enforcement, the united states government, and these technology companies. and that will be the kind of conversation we're hoping to have. >> and as you mention, melissa, the administration also announcing today a new countering violent extremism task force, which is a -- being formed to help kind of better coordinate the efforts of government agencies to counter isis and terrorist messaging and recruiting online. i am told this is not a really product of the meeting in silicon valley. today this is something that the administration has been working on. again, with coordinating government agencies, and it does not involve any -- it does not
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include any technology companies. melissa. melissa: peter, thank you so much for that report. >> you're welcome. david: no connection to radical islam; right? melissa: no. david: meanwhile a u.s. missile ending up in cuba. you heard that right. i'm not talking about gitmo, i'm talking about communist cuba. how sensitive american military technology ended up in the hands of the cuban dictators. your path to retirement... may not always be clear. but at t. rowe price, we can help guide your retirement savings. for over 75 years, investors have relied on our disciplined approach to find long term value. so wherever your retirement journey takes you, we can help you reach your goals. call a t. rowe price retirement specialist or your advisor ...to see how we can help make the most of your retirement savings. t. rowe price. invest with confidence.
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due tooufit accident and you do have an accident, ouclaicenters ar avaible assist yo24/7. for a eeuote call liberty mutual at switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a wholnelit. liberty mutual insurance. david: in one of the worst logistical moves, a training missile was accidentally sent to cuba, communist cuba in 2014. and now the united states s worried its technology can end up in the hands of our enemies. jennifer griffin has the details on this story. it would be funny if it wasn't
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so serious. what do we know about the missing missile? >> well, some who i have spoken to are calling it the latest cuban missile crisis. but as you said it's not funny. a senior official confirming to us from the wall street journal this morning that an entered hellfire missile, which is usually fired from a predator drone or attack helicopter was sent to cuba by mistake in 2014 after a nato training exercise in spain. the missile did not have explosives, but it did have sensitive technology that the pentagon is worried may be in the hands of cuban allies and u.s. adversaries, russia, north korea, or china. u.s. officials are concerned that cuba may have shared this weapon, using counter terror strikes with those countries who could now reverse engineer it and learn about these state-of-the-art sensors and target technology and design countermeasures to make these air-to-ground measures obsolete.
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what's even more worrisome is that the u.s. has been trying to get the missile back from cuba since the middle of 2014 at a time when the state department was working hard to that you relations with this communist country. david. david: unbelievable. how did we find out it was gone? >> well, the pentagon didn't realize it was missing. martin realized after several months that the hell fire did not return to it in orlando, florida. the missile had been sent as a mentioned to spain for that nato exercise and was supposed to fly from madrid by a frankfurt back to u.s. instead it was diverted by land from spain to france's charleston airport and sent by air france to cuba. the wall street general quotes unnamed u.s. officials, quote miss shipments happen all the time because of the amount of volume in the defense trade. but no official could recall an incidents when a u.s. missile was sent to a sanctioned nation.
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u.s. investigators still are not certain whether there was the result of human error, criminal activity, or espionage. david: absolutely extraordinary. jennifer, thank you very much. appreciate it. incredible story. melissa: may the odds be ever in your favor as the record powerball jackpot $800 million is up for grabs. you focus on making great burgers, or building the best houses in town. or becoming the next highly-unlikely dotcom superstar. and us, we'll be right there with you, helping with the questions you need answered to get your brand new business started. we're legalzoom and we've already partnered with over a million new business owners to do just that. check us out today to see how you can become one of them. legalzoom. legal help is here. iall across the state belthe economy is growing,day. with creative new business incentives, and the lowest taxes in decades,
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melissa: well, you can't say we didn't remind you. $800million, the biggest powerball jackpot in history take place tomorrow night. david: the powerball is played in 44 states as well as district of columbia, u.s. virgin islands, you don't have an excuse to get one. melissa: yes, you do. you're not going to win. david: the odds of having the winning powerball ticket, one in over 292 million. to put that in perspective, you have a better odd of seeing a ufo than winning the jackpot. so may the force be with you. melissa: what nevada you have
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a better chance of seeing a ufo. they always say being benefit by a shark. david: being benefit by an alien. melissa: yeah, there you go. a vending machine tipping over and killing you. you have a better chance of that. david: anyway go out and get one. it's fun. melissa: no. david: risk and reward starts now. >> "we" an officer shot. officer 603, we have an officer down. >> a 30-year-old man pledging allegiance to isis shot at an officer about a dozen times. this is risk and reward i'm diedre bolton. the gunman is in custody. after confessing to the attack in the name of islam. the philadelphia police commissioner described the grizzly scene moments ago. >> the suspect in question is
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