tv After the Bell FOX Business October 6, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT
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joan industrials. s&p lower, same for russell. so much news today. we want to thank lew penditosi of eaton vance. markets set to close ahead of tomorrow's market report and 2:00 a.m. landfall of matthew. david and melissa pick it up for "after the bell". [closing bell yanks. melissa: i'm melissa francis. david: i'm david asman. we have you big market news. hurricane matthew a massive category 4 storm barreling down on florida. this is the strongest storm to hit the u.s. in over a decade. we're hours away from impact. already the wind is whipping up and the waves are crashing down on the eastern coast. residents in a mad dash to stock up on necessities, leaving shelves bare.
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there are reports of local gas stations are running dry as millions of people along the storm's path have now been ordered to evacuate. some just can't get out because their tanks are empty. we have all the latest details to come. melissa: back to the markets. the dow in wait and see mode, ending the day flat. we had been down 188 points at the low. home depot, dupont, apple biggest gainers. walmart a big drag. we'll talk about walmart in a second. oil the big story as the hurricane nears the u.s. phil flynn, price futures group is fox business contributor. watching action from the cme. lori rothman from floor of new york stock exchange. lori, you have your eye on key industries impacted by the storm. reporter: absolutely, melissa. travel stocks embracing for hurricane matthew. extended day america, trip advisors all down by 1 1/2%. jetblue down 1.3%. jetblue's fort lauderdale hub canceling 65% of its flights
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since this morning in prep for the arrival of matthew. hilton worldwide another one on the list we pulled for you, down .8 of 1%. it is worth noting the market made up a whole lot of ground today. posted little change. obviously december jobs report released tomorrow morning. really ahead of this storm, ahead of a lot of questions about what overall economic impact it will have. now there are a lot of insurers with a huge poise sure to florida. we took -- exposure. federated national down 8%. hci group down 12 1/2%. universal insurance down 12% today. interesting, jpmorgan put out a note in third quarter, there was manageable global catastrophe loss. and the industry could very well beat estimates in the third quarter. now with the storm coming in the fourth quarter it is a whole different story. back to you. david: lori, thank you very much. phil flynn, oil is up again. back above 50 bucks a barrel. a lot has to do with the storm. i'm wondering not everybody is
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in the path of the storm. they still will be affected by gasoline prices going up, right? >> absolutely. what we're seeing here the rbob futures are rising. you will see a lot of gasoline demand, david, as people try to get out of florida but that could turn into no demand a couple weeks from later. we just saw a report from florida power & light, if the storm hits florida, 2.5 million people could lose electricity. that means you're not getting any gas, any lights, not getting anything. you will see a surge in demand. this storm for traders is very difficult to judge because, right now, what we do know is the storm is going to dramatically drop imports into the united states. what happens after that? we don't know because we don't know exactly where the storm is. it could get back in the gulf, and that is a fear for traders. david: phil, thank you very much. melissa. melissa: over before it even began, twitter shares plunging amid reports that would-be
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buyers, apple and google would not make a bid for the struggling company. charlie gasparino is the latest with us on this one. what should we have? >> we should point out fox business was first to throw a lot of cold water on this. we did not believe cnbc reporting that massive amount of bids were imminent. the reason why the stock is down today, even more so than it would be otherwise is that salesforce.com, the one bidder that seems still in it, is at least publicly through the ceo mark benioff is throwing cold water on the deal as well. i mean we should point out that benioff, this is kind of new, inside salesforce.com there is a lot of skepticism from the c-suite executives about doing this. even though benioff spoken postively about twitter in the past about a potential acquisition. combine that with what we reported yesterday, a near
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revolt among salesforce.com investors and it looks less likely, at least at this level, that sales force is going to be putting up a bid and combine that with some of the comments benioff made yesterday to a bunch investors basically he said i'm not going to do anything crazy. i like the company. they have got problems. i'm not going out on a limb like this. that is why the stock is goes down. it pierced $20 a share. last time i looked it was below $20 a share. couple things for the retail investor looking to play this. i would largely ignore cnbc. someone is leaking nonsense to them for whatever reason. i would remember this, twitter will be sold at some point. i don't think it can survive as independent company. i've been saying this for past year. it is the level it will be sold at. we're talking about market cap of $15 billion. add on a premium if they are sold. if you get close to 20 billion, given problems it faces, including user growth, coming down. the fact that revenues are not
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profitable. it has some revenue issues. you know, this is a company that you have to be really careful about in terms of playing it on take over speculation. as we've been reporting, on fox business, not cnbc, for a long time, a lot of people looked at this and walked away. doesn't mean sales force will not buy it. i think he wants to buy it. i think shareholders will crucify him if he does buy it. that is the conundrum he faces now. we have to play it out and be very careful about this story. the trolls at cnbc will lead you down the wrong path on this. melissa: bottom line, don't listen to cnbc on this? >> the bottom line that they are drolls. that is italian slang. melissa: i'm familiar with that. >> they would mislead you to the directions to the nearest chinese restaurant, okay? just saying. melissa: charlie gasparino,
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thank you so much as always. david. david: for those that don't know, there is chinese restaurant on every corner in new york. government officials are saying mylan overcharged the federal state medicaid programs by millions of dollars. the pharma giant wrongly classified epipen as a generic instead after name brand product. what this meant it allowed them to pay out a 13% rebate instead of a 23% rebate. this shifted millions of dollars in charges over to taxpayers and consumers. joining me now is jason rotman, lido isle advisors, dominic tavella, diversified financial consultants. dominic, first to you. this is perfect storm for the company. one thing after another. when you look at a chart, what surprises me most about this chart, that the stock price isn't down even further. >> look reality here, we're dealing with an election year. even if this was not election year, this would be a huge problem. but the fact is, every politician looking to get
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reelected going in front of a mic, we need to get evil pharmaceutical industry. david: i got it. >> the reality here the only thing that can save this company from further scrutiny, deep scrutiny is the resignation of ceo. she has to take one for the team. she has to resign. this reminds me of wells fargo. david: i understand this is a election year and a lot of grandstanding, but this company has done a lot of things wrong, but this is epitomize what is is wrong with our pharmaceutical/government system? >> well i would disagree, especially on most recent point, david. i read before mylan acquired the rights of epipen it was considered classified as generic. there is legitimate argument that is just, this case should be thrown out and the government has a $20 trillion national debt. they have to figure out one way to get money. this is a shakedown. david: hold on a second. more than just a shakedown, dominic they have pretty clear
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evidence the fact what they did, they essentially stuck consumers and taxpayers with millions? >> the clear, no one can argue the evidence they raised prices on it particular product overag, squeezing out every nickel, every dime. they will have to do something really dramatic. david: we'll not convince jason on this though. >> mylan's buy. melissa: brick-and-mortar to e-commerce, walmart is lowing its 2017 guidance as it slows new store openings in order to grow its e-commerce business, positioning the company to go head-to-head with amazon, good luck, over the future of retail. jason, let me start with you. i mean, it is kind of like turn a giant ship in another direction. on other hand if they weren't doing it we would be criticizing them because everyone is trying to buy stuff online but yikes, i don't know. what's your outlook? >> exactly. i just have a little different analogy but you're right. walmart has to be doing what they're doing. they have to be spending the
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money or else clearly and imminently they will go the way of the dinosaur. like a 78-year-old silver-haired grandpa chasing his 20-year-old strapping grandson in a race. it will never happen. walmart is the grandpa. it will not happen. walmart is doing 1/10 the online business. they have to try to play catch-up which will never happen. melissa: dominic what do you think? >> we talked about this in past shows. they have a real problem with their web commerce. they have done a good job trying to improve it, but i couldn't agree more with our other guest. they need to do something dramatic. their client base is dramatically different than amazon. it is not live or die situation. they have to take money from the brick-and-mortar side of the business, invest it heavily here to keep pace. not a direct apples-to-apples comparison. they need to spend money right way. melissa: gentlemen, thank you. david: we'll get back to the storm in a minute.
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we're three days away from a political storm. we'll look how donald trump and hillary clinton are preparing this time around and the advice they have been getting from their teams. melissa: this as trump is still hitting the campaign trail while clinton is out of sight, deciding instead to capitalize on the storm coverage. why the hid of the gop is now calling on her to apologize to america. david: you see in lower right of the screen, the storm track. we're hours from impact. the strongest hurricane to hit the united states in over a decade. after a real lull in the hurricane season, this is the first cat-3 since 2005. going to the florida coast. the latest on the track and timeline, live from the weather center. >> 1.5 million floridians and visitors are under evacuation orders. conditions will rise in a few hours. this is gameday. the things they love to do most on these balloons. travel with my daughter. roller derby.
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melissa: breaking news, hurricane matthew getting stronger by the minute. the category 4 storm barreling towards the u.s. strong winds already whipping through parts of florida, topping 140 miles per hour. millions of people being urged to evacuate from the storm's path. this is a bilge one. janice dean, fox news's senior meteorologist is tracking the hurricane. janice, give you us the latest. >> the latest we'll get a new advisory probably less than 40 minutes. we'll bring that to you. every advisory brings us more information and updated tracks to tell us where the storm is going. for now, still a strong category category 4 storm. the pressure dropped one millibar. so the storm is strengthing. it is going through changes here. eyewall replacement cycle we call it.
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it is trying to restructure itself. that is an indication it trying to strengthen again. we might see a period of weakening and then a period of strengthening, depending how close it gets to the coastline. obviously weaker storm would be welcome news. category 4 storm. 130 to 150 miles per hour. at one point in it is lifetime it was cat-5. also potential for tornadoes with landfalling systems. tornado watches within next couple hours. not big strong, tornadoes but they could cause structural damage as well. millions of people. 11 million people under hurricane warnings up and down the east coast of florida and in towards georgia. we're fielding winds 25 to 35 miles an hour. potential landfall with this system, if not a landfall, very close brush with category 3 or category 4 hurricane, not just
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for matter of couple hours, but a few days. that is the danger. millions of people are impacted along the coast. that's why we have evacuation orders. hopefully people are heeding the warnings right now. melissa, back to you. melissa: janice, thank you for that. david: you can see why everybody is preparing for the worst. people lining up for supplies ahead of deadly storm. they may need to survive for days without any kind of access to power or things we've grown act discuss many -- accustomed to. activating emergency response center to rush supplies to affected area. we have the president of home depot's southern division. i have to give you guys credit. everybody talks about how wonderful a lot of rescue workers are. a lot of talk about fema. but the folks in the private sector do at least as well if not perhaps better than some folks paid to do this on regular basis.
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you guys are known to be the last to close, first to open after the storm. how do you keep your staff safe? >> david, thanks so much. i appreciate you having us on today. keeping our staff safe is very, very high priority obviously. what we try to do, we do want to be the last store to close to provide the great service and support to the community but we do that with an eye to making sure each and everyone of our associates gets home and gets safe. we take a roll call. we have two or three contact numbers for each associate. we make sure we reach out to them during the storm. as the recovery begins we make sure they're taken care of. david: boy that buddy system works every time. that is a great way to do it. let me ask about florida specifically because there are a lot of older folks there, a lot of retired people. i'm wondering if you guys deliver, if you have services for people who may be too old to do it themselves, put up plywood and stuff? >> yes. i'll tell you. we had a pretty significant run on plywood and portable power tools.
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we have extensive installation group out in the markets as weather permits to help those folks out. david: there are laws against this. you may take umbrage at it, but forgive me, i have to ask you there are questions about gouging. florida's governor said we're not going to allow it. you guys have price monitors in store from the government or price police, if you will to make sure you're not raising prices? >> david, great point. that is absolutely something we don't do. we make sure that our prices today are the reflect what the market was going into the disaster. we don't allow the fact there might be an opportune chance to raise a few prices to get in the way of being a very good and responsible corporate citizen. david: finally, getting back to the first point, i know a lot of people argue that the private sector many cases does a better job than public sector keeping people safe. some people say that you guys actually, look at some of the disasters that happened with
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fema in new orleans after katrina, what do you think about that? >> we have over 150 people in our disaster response center right now. these guys are dedicated and committed to making sure that our communities are well-taken care of and that our stores and associates have materials they need to fend off this disaster. we look inside, say, hey, our core values reflect we want to be very good corporate citizens. we want to build great relationships in the market. while we would hope that the storm isn't as bad as predicted, we're prepared for the worst. david: god bless the free market. tim, thank you for what you're doing for folks in the southern states. we appreciate you being here. >> david, thank you i appreciate you having us on. david: melissa. melissa: more than a million 1/2 people ordered to evacuate in florida. cars lining the expressways bumper-to-bumper did desperate to get somewhere safe. the florida attorney general warning hotels about price-gouging during a sate of emergency.
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>> if you're a hotel, you're increasing your prices we are going after you. you can not increase your prices in a state of emergency. so, get ready because we're coming for you. melissa: there you go. that is pretty stern. florida has not been hit by a hurricane of this magnitude since 2005. david: we have some more breaking news in grand scheme of things this may not be the most important but louis state university and university of florida are postponing saturday's big football game slated to be played in florida. this as hurricane matthew barrels down on sunshine state. not a lot of sunshine there this weekend. we'll bring latest on other related stories throughout the hour right here. tune in to fox business tomorrow starting 4:00 a.m. eastern. these hurricanes don't sleep, folks. "fbn: a.m." starting an hour earlier with latest on hurricane matthew as it makes landfall. maria bartiromo will pick up coverage at 6:00 a.m. melissa: afghan troops missing in the u.s. what the shocking
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new report means for our national security. that is coming up. plus, we are nearing the second presidential debate. which nominee would be better stimulating the economy? robert wolf, former ubs america chairman, outside economic advisor to president obama to weigh in on that. >> my economic agenda will be very, very simple. it is called jobs, jobs, jobs.
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throughout the evening right here on fbn. melissa. melissa: the washington post coming out with bold and one-sided article on its editorial board. the headline reads, a president trump could destroy the world economy but would a clinton presidency be better for the economy? robert wolf, outside economic advisor to president obama, and 32 advisors. the premise of the article is idea that he would set off a trade war. if you look at details it assumes there would be no deal replacement. that he would sort of blow up agreements and then not replace them with anything. do you believe that would happen? >> i don't know what would happen under a trump presidency, and i know everyone thinks i may have written that article. i had nothing to do with it. listen, he has come across incredibly protectionist. i think that we're a country that can not have barriers when it comes to trade. we need to be involved with free trade.
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that has appropriate labor standards and appropriate environmental standards. as you know, melissa i'm on the president's export council. so i am in support of tpp but when i read the article it, hit a lot of points that would not be good for the country. you know, bilateral tariffs on china at 45% when we're aconsum. those things would hurt us dramatically. >> i hear what you're saying, that makes perfect sense. that assumes that is the landing point that's where we end. assumes somebody, for all things has made deals his whole life. look whatever industry he has been in here and there, whether real estate deals or television deals or business deals, whatever it is he does end with a deal. this kind of assumes that doesn't get in place. the flipside of the argument on trade side, i agree with you, somebody who studied economics free trade is always better. >> yeah. melissa: people on the other side make the point we don't
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have free trade right now. we let china. china puts tariffs on our companies as they try to do business they're hobbled but we're not hobbling chinese companies in return. what do you think about that argument? >> listen, obviously when you look with us and china you have to look at currency aspect. melissa: yeah. >> their currency versus the index has not performed well. so it is not just how they perform versus us. it is how they perform with a basket. they're a global powerhouse, not just versus the u.s. certainly i feel that for many years everyone looked to who had lowest currency because everyone needed trade. everyone needed foreign direct investment. the reason i'm so supportive of tpp is actually china is not part of it. so we would be trading with the 11 nations, including australia and new zealand, vietnam, the philippines, indonesia and actually having agreements that actually benefit to the u.s. as opposed to benefit of china.
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if we don't walk in, china will. melissa: right. and we got to go, real quick, the way things are with china right now, you think that's good? >> no. i think we actually have to definitely figure out better ways that we can work with them but you know -- melissa: youon't think walking in guns blazing is way to go. i got it. >> the thing with trump, he has not shown an alternative. all we know where he is from a protection it perspective. thank you. david: smartest guy on hillary's team. we're days away from the second presidential debate. new details how the candidates prepare for the big night. battle of the foundations. both clinton and trump's philanthropic efforts facing a lot of scrutiny but the same attorney general taking on "the donald" giving his democratic rival a pass. financial whistle-blower charles ortel is here with his take coming next. >> they said they won't accept
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more than 13,000 customers are without power across florida. we're hearing power may be out in some areas for two weeks, even more. david: oh, lord. pray for them. we're days away from the second showdown on debate stage between hillary clinton and donald trump. as candidates prepare for sunday's big event, they're offering well wishing to victims and regions affected by hurricane matthew. blake burman in d.c. with the latest. >> hi, david. donald trump and hillary clinton are gearing up for debate sunday night, preparing day tomorrow and days leading up to it. it has moved away from the political homehomestretch to the potential devastating hurricane off the coast of florida. trump earlier today sent out a statement echoing please of public officials throughout the southeast. here is what he said in part, quote. these warnings are very, very serious. if youhome is in the path of
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the hurricane and you're being advised to leave you need to do so right now. nothing is more important than the safety of your family. clinton sent out a tweet earlier this morning. she wrote, quoting here, hurricane matthew is a major storm. i urge everyone to follow emergency instructions and evacuate if you're told to. stay safe, florida. it is tough to escape the politics no doubt even though we are facing potentially a natural disaster. the clinton campaign receiving criticism for adding a television ad buy on the weather than r channel in florida. a clinton spokesperson said it is minuscule part after ad buy. they had done it earlier in the week and they had done a lot of ad buys. they requested the weather channel to pull the ads until after matthew passed. the head of the republican national committee reince priebus added, it is shameful
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that the clinton campaign was even considering exploiting hurricane matthew for political gain by running ads on the weather channel in florida. meantime in that state "the tampa bay times," i had tomorrow board, big newspaper in florida, as it relates to politics endorsed clinton for president. they called trump, stunningly unprepared and temper american tally unfit for presidency. focus on the storm there. david: focus on the keep the eye on the storm as they say. thank you, blake. melissa. melissa: as we approach the next presidential debate, governor mike pence has advice for donald trump as he prepares to take the stage. >> i encourage donald trump to what he did in the first debate, be himself. he made a real connection with everyday americans. so my advice to him for sunday night it what it was before the last debate. go out, be yourself and share that vision for how we will make america great again and he will have another great night.
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melissa: erin elmore, trump surrogate, gianna caldwell, republican strategist and kristie setzer new heights. you wouldn't want to see him imitate pence, if you do something like that a long period of time, you have to be yourself more or less, wouldn't work. at same time, shaking his head as opposed to taking bait on insults the way pence avoided taking the bait, seems like would be a good strategy, no? >> absolutely. donald trump always promised to surround himself by smart people. he found one of those smart people in mike pence. i think following mike pence's advice is right thing to do. be true to who you are. hit hillary where it hurts on her horrible track record of lies and deceit and deceiving american people. melissa: christie, would i imagine democrats would like to see especially what they saw at the end of the last debate, a
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repeat performance from donald trump? >> they certainly would. i would also give that advice that mike pence gave to trump to say, do exactly what you did in that first debate. i think we would all be really happy with that donald trump has a tremendous i would charitiably call empathy problem. this will be a town hall format where he will have to connect with regular americans mike pence seems to think he does connect with. i think that will be a major uphill battle for donald trump. someone who, you know, has said such unfortunate things about women and even this recently this week about military veterans who killed themselves. melissa: no he, you're twisting that. that is not accurate. giano, let me go on to you. the problem he does try to answer a question, he does engage where most politicians totally ignore what is being asked of them. they just pivot to what they want to say which is infuriating if you're someone doing interviewing but in this kind of
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situation especially when he tended to get himself into trouble when he engages, for a good portion of the time it might make sense to do that? >> that does make sense but i think he can answer the question by simply stating, i apologize for things that i have said that might have hurt people, period. move on. i think with donald trump this particular debate is one that he must win. i think there is no question about that. hillary clinton is someone who has shown she is willing to do or say anything to win an election. even put an ad buy for a swing state which is experiencing a hurricane on the weather channel melissa: we don't know that. i want to be fair. we don't know that wasn't in place, the camp made the buy a while ago. >> they said earlier in the week. melissa: thanks to all of you guys. david, for the next round. david: the knicks round clinton foundation officials coming out with big oops, they filed information with the new york
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attorney general's office was missing from previous disclosures. however, the attorney general just said, well that's okay, but not so with the trump foundation which was told to stop fund-raising in new york by the same attorney general, eric schneiderman, who by the way is a strong hillary clinton supporter. so is politics behind an unequal application of the law with these foundations? with us charles ortel financial whistle-blower who found major gaps in clinton records. is there any question in your mind which foundation deserves more scrutiny, which one is it? >> certainly the clinton foundation, various entities we know about, and those people have not begun to focus upon yet. the once we know about declared $2 billion in incoming donations. trump you're talking about less than 50 million. david: just in size you have two billion as opposed to couple of million. we're focusing now on the reporting, because the trump
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foundation reporting wasn't up to snuff. neither was the clinton foundation reporting. what are the biggest gaps in the clinton foundation reporting? >> biggest gap, bar none, the fact they are supposed to provide real audits, strict audits. new york state has tough laws on this. the clinton foundation never procured a legally compliant audit since october 23rd, 1997. not any year for any entity. that is serious offense. david: wow. what kind of information would appear in an audit we don't have available to us at this moment? >> an audit, independent verification how much money you started with, how much money you ended with. what you made in the way of profit. charities don't really have profit. difference between revenues and expenses, movements in cash. unless independent parties check the numbers, nobody really knows what is it going on. in new york, if you want to raise more than $25,000 you have to submit yourself to rigorous regime which the clinton foundation has never done. when the attorney general lands on you are not allowed to fund
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raise. david: the clinton foundation had money coming in from foreign entities, sometimes entities related to foreign governments like swedish lottery which is essentially controlled by the swedish government. it wasn't that swedish entity which the clinton foundation in sweden was not listed on the clinton foundation 990 report, right? >> new york state has toughest set of force, char 500 forms, schedule 4-b. from 2004 forward, each clinton foundation should list grants by department, by amount. clinton foundation hasn't done it. not having seen what they refiled, i'll tell you whatever they refiled still doesn't solve the problems. david: we're tracking storm. we'll continue to do so. it hit haiti. already 100 people in haiti have been killed by the storm. clinton foundation spent many millions of dollars in haiti to gin up, turn it from desperately
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poor country where they have something approaching lower middle class. have they succeeded at all? the. >> it has been a diabolical failure. it's a case study in charity fraud. not simply the clinton foundation, there is interim haiti recovery commission. bill cochairs it. estimated 10 billion went toward the mess. that is a lot of money for haiti. they refuse to account for it. haiti is wiped out again. recovery efforts after 2010 was not done properly, not monitored properly and accounted for properly. david: this is pathetically poor country. terrible that they have to go through that that they could have done better the thank you, charles ortel. melissa. melissa: hurricane matthew makes it ways up the coast as damaging storm as others evacuating coastal areas. >> now it is time to hunker down for the storm. get into shelter. please go shelter.
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melissa: you are looking at a live shot from daytona beach, florida, ahead of hurricane matthew. many people are evacuating area just as many airports are beginning to shut down. orlando airport will close at 8:00 p.m. as miami airport remains open but all airlines have operations. david: meanwhile millions of people are bracing for -- melissa: bracing for what might be the most dangerous hurricane in decades. sorry we're switching around. hurricane matthew expected to hit florida in hours with warnings that it could decimate hundreds of miles of coastline. steve care began is in sebastian inlet, florida, with the latest. steve? reporter: we've seen conditions gradually get worse every few hours.
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wind gusts 20 to 30 miles an hour. we do see anywhere up to 12 inches of rain. the waves have gotten bigger. the real heart of of the storm m where this point is still 10 or 12 hours out there. real concerns especially for floridians who live along the coast or in manufacturing housing. 1.5 million people have been told, they should evacuate their homes. throughout the day we have been running up against a number of people doing just that they have their cars packed with belongings and food and pets. people concerned about, heading to hotel lobbies and you might see people on walkers or wheelchairs. tremendous stress. they're leaving their homes. they don't know if they have anything to come back to at all. really heading off into very difficult conditions of travel. that travel condition has been getting more difficult each our. several airports closing. with the heavy rain and now darkness, highways are getting worse.
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a catastrophe, according to florida governor would be a direct hit on florida. it is not clear whether or not that is going to happen. that would bring 140 mile-per-hour winds to the coast. that means, large trees down, major structural damage to roads, housing, roofs off and some houses destroyed as well. that is what the state is hoping to dodge more than a million people trying to get to higher ground and safe shelter. back to you. melissa: steve, thank you. david: we have breaking news on the train that crashed in hoboken, new jersey last week. get this the train was traveling eight miles an hour, but 38 seconds before the collision, it increased to the maximum of 21 miles an hour when it hit the bumping post according to the ntsb. no explanation why it sped up at last minute. melissa: that is big development. david: big development. melissa: wow. missing in action, dozens of afghan troops are awol from
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military training here in the u.s. next, lieutenant again thomas mcinerney sound off on how the country needs to prepare for the worst case scenario. this woman owns this house, with new cabinets from this shop, with handles designed here, made here, shipped from here, on this plane flown by this pilot,
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they are, but one of the courses of action, david, is, that they could be radical islamists isis taliban that were specially trained to come in, and 44 of them in this country that if they're properly trained could be a major problem. but let's say they came to america, they loved it, they wanted to move in with friends and relatives. david: could have happened. >> et cetera. could have happened. but, we must look at both courses of action and be very quick and responsive to it. unfortunately i don't think this administration with its open borders policy will do that. that could be dangerous. david: the first thing that popped in my mind was orlando. remember the orlando shooter. he was born here but his parents are from afghanistan. his father apparently had a tv show in which he spoke highly of the taliban, who we're fighting in afghanistan. they just killed one of our troops this week. is there any connection perhaps in the afghan community with
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terrorist organizations that concern you? >> yes. just what you mentioned. and in the way the taliban have embedded themselves and way that changing conditions going over there. this is why, when, mike pence was asked the other night in the debate about how do you get homegrown terrorists? well, first of all, you have got to identify it as radical islam. you must train the fbi and law enforcement to those characteristics and yes, sir that you ask them that will tell you that they are radicalized. david: yeah. >> that is the important part, david, that they must do. so because we don't know, by the way, this is unprecedented. i used to run a large program at luke and williams air force base of germans, saudis, swiss, emiratis, a whole host of 10 different nations and we never had this happen before. i think it ought to send up at least yellow warning signals. that's find out. david: security, at very least
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the rest is up to you. . nfidence. go long™. ♪ >> hurricane matthew is forcing disney world to shut down. the happiest place on earth closing in just minutes at 5:00 p.m. eastern. it is going to stay closed through tomorrow. >> imagine the people who spent months planning for it. disney isn't alone, sea world and universal orlando down for the day. no decision made about saturday. the last time disney world closed for a hurricane was 2005. that's the last time a cat 3 or bigger hurricane hit the united states. >> yeah, absolutely. we're going to take a look at other pictures that we have right here. daytona beach, florida. >> those are nasty clouds.
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very nasty clouds. >> palm beach is a little further south but as the bands come across the southern part of the florida coast, some parts that are even closer to the eye may be looking better for the moment. not for long. >> stay safe. here's "risk & reward". >> time is running out. this is clearly going to have a direct hit or come right along our coast and we're going to have hurricane-force winds. there are no excuses. you need to leave. evacuate. evacuate. evacuate. are you willing to take a chance to risk your life? liz: florida bracing for hurricane matthew tonight. the eye of the category 4 hurricane, it is about to touch down on the coast of theo
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