tv Greta Van Susteren FOX News June 11, 2013 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
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had to be a liberal. they expect the government to buy them a new car. all right, that is all the time we have left this evening. the news continues, greta is next to go "on the record." see you back here tomorrow night. tonight, well, what does it take to get a straight answer out of the government? >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all on wells of hundreds of millions of americans? >> no, sir. >> it does not? >> not wittingly. there are cases where they could inadvertently perhaps collect. >> the implications from one's office is that clapper's statements were not direct and truthful. >> he just flat out lied. it's ridiculous. it's an absurd answer. that question he was asked was provided to him a day in
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advance. >> director clapper has been straight and direct in the answers he's given and actively engaged in an effort to provide more information about the programs that have been revealed to the leak as classified information. >> the director lied to you openly, the american people. had it not been for the leak, no one would have known. he would have gotten away with it. >> the president has said correctly in my view, that strong congressional oversight is absolutely essential in this area it's not possible for the congress to do the kind of vigorous oversight that the president spoke about. if you can't get a straight answer. >> it's appropriate now to have a public hearing to give the committee and the american people the opportunity to look at the disclosures that have come out here in the last ten
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days or so. >> is it fair to say you're not content with the answers he gave you? in your statement you said he gave his office a chance to amend it, what did he do? >> sent them the questions ahead of time we indicated to them afterwards there would be an opportunity to amend it. and that's where i'll leave it. >> what did they do, did they respond? >> the answer at the hearing was never amended. >> our obama administration officials lying to congress? thanks for joining me. let's talk to dni clapper's statement. was he truthful or not? >> i think what he's trying to tell us is that we don't monitor your phone calls or the content of your e-mail or conversations. there is no right of privacy regarding your phone number. that's the best i can give you.
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>> the specific question that senator widen asked, does the nsa collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of americans. he said no sir. senator widen said it does not. there are cases where they could have inadvertently collect ed. >> we do collect phone numbers. >> that was untruthful? >> i don't believe what they're telling us about benghazi. the irs makes no sense to me. this administration has a problem, people don't trust them. when it comes to this program, i support it i think it helps us disrupt terrorist plots in the makes. >> that's a different question. >> was he truthful? >> you have to call him back and ask him.
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we do collect data not the content. the only way you can get content is if a judge issues a warrant allowing the government to do that. there are checks and balances. >> you mentioned benghazi. the american people want to have faith and trust in our government. have you benghazi, the irs targeting. >> you have attorney general holder asking about potential prosecution of the media? he said no. and now you have clapper. i don't know how you get around what clapper said. i was a defense lawyer, i don't know how i would spin that. he simply didn't tell the truth on it. >> from my point of view, ien watt to do two things. i want the government to be honest and accountable. and we disrupt terrorist plots before they mature. this program has checks and balances. no one can listen into your phone calls or mine without a warrant being issued by a federal judge. they have to show the judge that
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the terrorists that we're following has made a phone call to your number before we can monitor content. >> that's an entirely different question. >> whether the administration we want to have confidence in is playing it fast and loose. >> i totally agree with you, i think the problem we have here -- the president himself, blamed the attack on a video in a spontaneous riot that was illogical. there was nothing other than evidence of a coordinated terrorist attack. you have a lady taking the fifth amendment. have you jim rosen's situation, the attorney general said he had no knowledge of a pending or potential criminal investigation. when he signed documents allowing jim rosen to be listed as criminal co-conspirator, now you have clapper saying we don't collect any data.
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all of that makes it difficult for lindsey graham to come on your program and say, when it comes to the nsa program, i understand it, there are checks and balances, i know about it. >> if clapper under oath makes this statement in response to the senator's answer and you don't trust that he was being truthful, how in the world can we have the dni, the highest ranking intelligence officer in our nation, how can we trust when he goes to work every day? this one's under oath? >> this is a real problem. i don't trust what the intelligent -- what the white house is telling us about how the talking points got changed. who was in that saturday meeting? what did the president do that night? the irs, i can give you a list of things. >> at least the president, whether you agree with him or not, he's elected. this is an appointment by the president. >> call him back and -- >> call who back? >> clapper and say -- let's call holder back. but here's -- >> i wish i could.
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you're the one who's in the senate, i can't. >> i wish i could too. here's the one thing i want to tell the american people. you should really be concerned about, we're under threat from radical islam. they're trying to attack our homeland every day. there are plots being formed throughout the world, directed at us at home and abroad, and we need to stop them. >> i don't think anyone disagrees with that. everyone wants to stop terrorism. i want to stop terrorism. i have a question whether this program works because we were tipped off to the russians about tsarnaev in boston. even with a tip we couldn't figure that one out. the second question is, in terms of the president saying we're not -- they're not listening to the content. the mere phone numbers you call are very telling without listening to the content. i think there's a deeper involvement to privacy than just
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a random set of numbers. >> i'm involved in helping create this program and having checks and balances. phone numbers are not attached to a name. the only time that anybody can monitor content is when a terrorist, known terrorist phone number is connected to a number in the united states. then have you to get permission from the court to identify the person. >> that would be really convincing, but for the fact we have a guy who's three months at a government contractor booz allen, and he somehow got access to all this stuff, i don't believe that. if a three-month contractor can get part of the confidential information, secret stuff, why shouldn't i think a four-month contractor doesn't get the phone numbers of people. >> the people who have access to this program are in the dozens not in the hundreds. and they have a paper trail. >> this guy got caught. >> this guy is not a patriot in my opinion, he's a potential
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felon. you shouldn't believe everything he tells you. >> he did produce a court order, that is a sealed secret order. >> these orders are just issued every 90 days to allow the government to data mine. >> it shows -- there's access to secret stuff by rogue people. >> all i can tell you is that this is not the first time someone has revealed information about classified programs. and every time this happens, we become weaker. and how much more are we going to tell the terrorists about what we're trying to do to follow them around and stop them from striking the united nations -- excuse me, the united states. >> i know what you meant. >> how much are we going to tell the terrorists before we lose our ability to defend our homeland. i don't want your phone cals to be listened to or my phone calls to be listened to, unless there's a good reason and a federal judge is involved. we don't have to trust the obama administration or clapper, you have a federal judge whose job it is to oversee this program.
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we have stopped terrorist attacks before they were executed because of this program. if we lose this program, we don't interrogate detainees any more, we kill them. the ones we catch we read them their miranda rights. we're not collecting human intelligence. if we destroy this technological intelligence program we're really in trouble. >> nsenator, thank you. we have a lot more to talk about, we'll have another conversation. >> many americans are fed up with all the cloak and dagger dealings. some are. n now, a bipartisan group of senators are introducing a bill to change that. it would force the government to declassify the secret court's opinion. rudy giuliani joins us. >> nice to see you. >> what's your position, democrats and republicans are seeking to declassify this? >> well, greta, i was there at
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the creation of the fisa court at the end of the carter administration. watched it for many years when i was associate attorney. the court functions in a responsible way. the reality is, keeping these documents secret is enormously important to protecting the methods by which we find these people who are coming here to try to kill us. it's enormously important to protect the identity of the people who are given the information to us. i've written i don't know, 100 of these things and it's very hard to write them and be completely careful about preserving identity. have you to give information. very intelligent, very smart, counter intelligent people can figure out who and what you're talking about. i wish the senators would step back a little and not overreact. i mean, we could be doing something very, very dangerous here if we start revealing all
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of these affidavits. >> well, i think that the whole idea would be that it would not be the entire -- everything all the time. but classify everything, things we don't need to classify. here's the question that i have to you, about the fisa court which plates in secret. in the calendar year 2012, they made 877 applications for war around thes from the fisa court. of that 877, the government withdrew one, they didn't want to consider it. 100% of them were granted by the court. i juxta pose that againsted warrant that was issued for my colleague james rosen. a lot of people are scandalized that that warrant was granted. that was granted by a federal judge, that's what makes up the fisa court. why should we be suspicious that the fisa court is equally like a
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district court that issued the warrant for james rosen? >> there is a difference. the rosen affidavit is totally unjustified and the judge who signed that should be ashamed of himself. the judges on the fisa court take this job seriously. they meet in a private place, there can be no interception. most often they can't have their law clerks with them. it's done in a careful way. it's a very different thing than what you're used to for the normal criminal justice process. the fact that they authorize most or all of -- >> 100%. >> the fact that they authorized most or all of the applications. >> 100%. >> greta, i won 95% of my cases when i was u.s. attorney. you know why? we prosecuted guilty people and we were careful about bringing our indictments. the justice department only brings the very best cases to them. it goes through an enormously
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rigorous process in the justice department before it get to them. this justice department, past justice department. the court in a way is being put in a bad light because they get very good applications that have already been very thought out carefully. and there's a lot of conversation that goes on. >> let me ask you this. >> the judges will say, you don't have enough of this, you don't have enough of that. and they go back and get it. >> mayor, the warrant for my colleague, james rosen i assume went all the way up to the attorney general of the united states. it's such an important warrant. likewise the warrants i suppose that come from the fisa court go up to the attorney general. at be i have lots of questions about that. the fact that 100% of them. i don't buy it, i've seen cases in the justice department. many fine men and women who are
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prosecuted. i've seen cases where there's prosecutorial misconduct. look at the senator ted stevens case. it does happen. and to promise that we have no mechanism now in the fisa court, just to have another viewpoint. to have like an ombudsman -- to give people a chance for the one time in a thousand that it really isn't justified. >> i'm sure that's going to be considered now to have some kind of a review process. important to that review process, however, it's got to be kept secret. >> we can't have this information out there even though the press wants to analyze it. you can't do that, what you're doing is, you're alerting our enemies to how we're catching them. you're also alerting our enemies to the people who are giving us information about them. who they can go kill and torture. this is very high stakes. the only thing i can tell you
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from -- i don't know, 17 years experience in the justice department is, this area is dealt with in a much more careful, much more judicious way than just about any other area of the justice department. and this is drew of the obama administration this has been true of the bush administration, the reagan administration that i was in when it was in its infant stage. you don't want to throw out the baby with the bath water here. >> the people that execute that 100% warrant that's issued, include people like this guy snowden who's a contractor only on the job three months. >> i don't get that -- greta, i don't get that at all. you want to get on something of an outrage, i don't understand how a guy who's been there for three months, who never graduated from high school, who looks like a pretty mixed up, confused guy to me, i don't understand how this guy gets access to classified information that members of congress don't
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have access to. that's an outrage and somebody has to fix that. >> we have that problem. i don't know how many other snowdens are out there, but then you have the problem with the dni, the head guy testifying before court. did you think he was telling the truth in answer to senator widen's question? >> i assume james clapper is a real patriot, a man who serves his country. >> that's not the question. i'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt. >> let me read you the question. >> i'd like to hear his explanation. i see the ambiguity in the answer. i sat there, when i first heard it, i said, what are you talking about? unwitting. there can be millions of unwitting intrusions? this makes no sense. in deference to his service to our country we have to allow him to explain it. >> he did explain it. this was his answer. i have great respect for senator
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widen, i thought in retrospect i was asked, when are you going to start/stop beating your wife kind of question, which is meaning, not answerable by a simple yes or no. so i responded what i thought was the most truthful or the least/most untruthful manner by saying no. that's his answer today. >> i don't understand the least/untruthful answer that he can give. i think this guy needs a little counselling. >> he's the head guy. that's the problem, though. >> the least untruthful answer that he can give means it's an untruthful answer to some degree. maybe the better answer would have been, senator, i'm sorry, that's a question i can't answer. because it is surrounded by classified information. i've been before congress in my role as associate attorney general. u.s. attorney, and there were questions i couldn't answer about an investigation. questions i couldn't answer because it's classified. >> just say no. >> you just say, i can't answer that question.
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you even can say, senator, i can't answer that question. maybe in private session we can find a way to answer that question. >> mayor, always nice to see you. >> always good to see you. >> now to tonight's hot issue. was the fisa court just a rubber stamp. it's inconceivable that president obama did not know about the targeting. what does former governor john sununu think. he's here he'll tell you. and edward snowden, now an international fugitive coming up. who's this, and why did he just tweet this picture? start guessing. go to gretawire.com with your guess. the answer coming up. econd -- we chip away. at redefining capability. f whatever days may come. like beach days... rainy days... even vacation days. made with pride. crafted with passion.
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i wish we could lie here forever. i wish this test drive was over, so we could head back to the dealership. [ male announcer ] it's practically yours. test drive! [ male announcer ] but we still need your signature. volkswagen sign then drive is back. and it's never been easier to get a jetta. that's the power of german engineering. get $0 down, $0 due at signing, $0 deposit, and $0 first month's payment on any new volkswagen. visit vwdealer.com today. speaker of the house john boehner blasting president obama over the irs targeting scandal, speaker boehner insisting the president had to know. >> do you think the president is being straight with the american public? >> i think it's inconceivable. it doesn't pass the straight face test. how could your chief of staff, your general council know and you not know? there's a serious problem at the irs many our goal is to root out
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the problem. >> every string you pull on this thing unravels something new. >> who's running this government. do you trust them with your health information any more than you -- you don't think that could be leaked. >> this white house is acting like every other white house i've seen. stonewall, stonewall, stonewall. >> no one is being held responsible or accountable. there's no one taking responsibility in this administration. >> this wasn't operated or done by some low level employees in cincinnati. who directed them and where did this come from? >> how high up might this irs scandal go? former new hampshire governor john sununu joins us. nice to see you, sir. >> good to be here. speaker boehner says it's inconceivable president obama didn't know about the targeting. do you agree with that? >> i think john boehner is pretty close to being right on. especially since the chief of staff supposedly knew about it. i cannot imagine a white house in which a chief of staff would
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deliberately not let the president know about something that could have a serious ramification as that. >> i suppose that each white house is operating a little differently. tell me, what is the job of the chief of staff. i understand -- when you come in, you say, this is what you should be telling the president. should you sort through what goes to him and what doesn't? >> the chief of staff's job is what the president wants the chief of staff's job to be. it is different in every white house. i can tell you in the bush white house, i was chief of staff, and there was nothing i knew that the president didn't know. except maybe once or twice when barbara wanted to order broccoli i didn't tell him. >> i guess in terms of measuring -- targeting -- the irs targeting something we've all -- we've seen that in a prior administration, i assume that would be something that would be a red flag to a chief of staff? >> look, you do not keep your president in the dark on something that's important. unless the president tells you, i don't want to know about these
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things, which makes it even worse. the president had to have an inkling that something like this was happening. or else he had a culture in his white house that is unacceptable and should be unacceptable to the people of america. the president can't say, don't tell me anything that's going to cause a problem. because the president then is part and party to a process there that's improper. the president probably had an inkling, he may not have known who was being told to do what. he had to have an inkling there was some thrill shenanigans of this nature going on. >> you would not expect he would be part of it, but rather when the irs council -- april 22nd would be the time line. >> i think when the chief of staff and council got, the president should have gotten it at about the same time. >> how do you measure -- what's your sense of the american people's view of trust in the government. we have a lot of things going on in the irs. we have testimony before
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congress. we have the new -- now the nsa revelations. what's your thought? >> it is surprising to me how quickly some of the folks that i will call the traditional indifference. are traditionally indifferent to these kinds of things are now talking about them back home. and i think this president is underestimating the fact that the seeds have been laid for real distrust of the presidency and this executive branch in the minds of the american people. i think it's a big problem. you add them all up, and you see an administration that is willing to expand the rollie of government, and allow government to do things americans have traditionally thought were unconstitutional. >> what is the real harm other than he walks away with a legacy that is unappeal something. >> it creates distrust in government. >> and then what? >> and then what you have is a populous that loses faith in its
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system. when they lose faith in its system, they really stop worrying about trying to improve it. this country has big problems and it needs to be improved with the help and support of the public that's out there. >> governor, thank you. always nice to see you, sir. >> good to be here. >> booz allen, the nsa contractor now firing its leaker edward snowden. why are we trusting contractors with our secrets in the first place? who just tweeted this picture? here's a hint. he has a famous father, start guessing. in a answer coming up. go. you,. 'm going to dream about that steak. i'm going to dream about that tiramisu. what a night, huh? but, um, can the test drive be over now? head back to the dealership? oh, yeah. [ malannouncer ] it's practically yours. [ wife ] sorry. [ male announcer ] but we still need your signature. volkswagen sign then drive is back. and it's never been easier to get a passat. that's the power of german engineering. get $0 down, $0 due at signing, $0 deposit,
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allen vice president. why do we have so many contractors. why do we not do this internally? >> i suppose part of the reason, congress passed this law requiring lots of things to be done, and then they don't authorize enough people in the civil service to do it. and those slots are filled up by contractor people. and i got to say, that it's not always the civil servants who are more trustworthy. we captured a man named aldred james, a spy, he was not a contractor and we captured a couple years later, robert hanson, who was a terrible spy. the quality of the individuals and the preparation and the schooling and so forth, i think more than whether they're contractors or members of the civil service. >> is there anything. and i realize we have very limited amount of data. is there anything peculiar about
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snowden. he was only with booz allen three months. before that he had been with the cia. anything unusual about liz clearance with you? >> i have no idea? >> nothing at all? >> i don't know. >> what happens when someone gets a security clearance and works at booz allen for ten years and leaves. do you lose your security clearance? >> it depends if it's transferred to a different place. if you're working on intelligence matters and you can keep your clearance updated you don't lose it. if you just quit or go off to do something else, then i think in relatively short order, your clearance is lifted. >> booz allen mostly deals with government contracts? >> it may, i haven't been there for six years. >> they have 24, 25,000 employees, and 75% of them have security clearance. that seems like a lot of security clearance is outsourced? >> i don't know.
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>> it's possible. >> i haven't gone into their clearance process or had anything to do with booz allen for six years. >> any thought about how damaging the leak is? >> i think it's very damaging because it gives terrorists an idea of how we collect and what we might know. and you can't just inform the american people. you're informing the terrorists when you lay something like that out. it's really kind of the function -- what they've done is the functional equivalent of what stinson the secretary of state did in the late 20s. he stopped all the state departments code breaking of other countries because he said, gentlemen don't read one another's mail. he was probably pretty glad that the u.s. navy was not being gentlemenly with respect to japanese codes. otherwise we might have lost the battle of midway. when you make a decision as snow den did, that you're going to take the place of the president and the congress and the judges
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that are on the fisa court, and you're the one who's going to zoid to balance between security and privacy, you are undertaking an action that could get people killed. and i suppose snowden either doesn't care or doesn't think about, i don't know. >> do you think that the people who are terrorists, that they would realize -- i guess i thought -- i've seen too many television shows. i would have thought they would have not wanted to use telephones anyway or the internet. they would have wised up to that one by now? >> people can be careless. and, you know, we've -- we have had programs for decades in which the government has access to and keeps records on what's on the outside of the envelope. it's called -- i think it's called a mail -- some kind of a mail system. that's been sanctioned by the supreme court for decades. we've been doing with first class mail for decades what
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we're now doing with this new program that's monitored a lot more than the mail program. >> every piece of mail? >> whatever they want. there's an authority, the mail registration program or something like that. they had a small piece in the wall street journal today. >> the tough one was everybody. was the mail system everybody? >> pretty much people who communicated. that's what they did, they wrote letters in ancient times. and so we have had a system for decades and we have one now, but it's much better supervised than anything was under the post office in the old days. supervised by the courts, sup supervised by hearings before congressional committees and the rest. what they have, and i think this bears on jim clapper's statement, what they have is not -- they have data of some sort, it's what's on th exterior of the communication. but they don't have content i think clapper's statement would
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have been more accurate if he had said we have data, addresses and so forth. but we don't have contact. >> if you called a suicide hotline, they got a little content? >> well, by implication, maybe you're a pranker if and you just like it. >> that's right. that would be a dumb thing to do. but anyway. >> a lot of dumb things. >> nice to see you, sir. >> and tonight, two sizzling questions, where is edward snowden and who is edward snowden. an international manhunt is out for the high school dropout. l.a. times reporter joins us with more. any idea where he is tonight? >> no, authorities say there's no evidence that he's left hong kong. he may still be in hong kong. >> checked out of his hotel? >> disappeared. girlfriend surfaced today. professes to not have anything to do with this, and not know where he is. >> and she has had no communications as far as we know
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with him? >> who paid for that hotel? it looked like a fancy hotel? >> i don't know, i assumed -- he said he was making $200,000 a year, i assume he could have afforded a couple nights in a nice hotel in hong kong. >> he worked for the cia in 2007. at least he was in geneva switzerla switzerland? >> he said he was posted in an undercover capacity. he wasn't a spy, he was an i.t. guy. that gave limb a lot of access to apparently a lot of secret things he was not an operative. >> he became disenchanted with the cia while he was working for the cia for what reason? >> he said he thought they were behaving unethically. a banker got a swiss banker drunk and took advantage of that banker. he was troubled by that. he thought about leaking then, but didn't want to retray human beings. when he got to the nsa, he felt he could -- he saw this massive
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surveillance state and that's something he could disclose without putting individual lives at risk. >> did he work for the nsa or leave the cia and work for a contractor? >> he became a contractor, and that's really common in the post 9/11 world. there are hundreds of thousands of contractors who hold top secret security clearances. and that's one of them. >> the reason i ask, in 2007 he's in switzerland. in 2009 he's out of the cia, right? >> right. >> three months ago booz allen picks him up, and he's now in -- he's now in hawaii or wherever. and in the interim period, he was at least for a short beard of time working for a contractor at an nsa installation. >> the time line is loose there, as far as i understand. we do think he was in hawaii or at least had a hawaii address for a year. booze said he on started working there three months ago.
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>> knock thought this guy might be a weirdo, he may go rogue? nobody was suspicious of him? >> we heard no evidence of that. and i mean, you know, you hear the neighbors say he was quiet and unassuming and didn't want to talk about himself. you would expect that of an nsa employee. >> thank you. there's an ongoing dangerous situati situation. a live report from istanbul is coming up. a mile. a mile. to treat my low testosterone, i did my research. my doctor and i went with axiron, the only underarm low t treatment. axiron can restore t levels to normal in about 2 weeks in most men. test test test test oren with prostate or breast cancer. women, especially those who are or who may become pregnant and children should avoid contact where axiron is applied as uneected signs of puberty in children or changes in body hair or increased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor.
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consent of fellow senators. they agreed. how did he get so fluent in spanish? he spent time as a catholic missionary in honduras. while spanish speeches on the senate floor are rare, he's not the first to do it. should a u.s. senator give an official speech in spanish on the senate floor? why or why not? tell us. we're back in two minutes. [ female announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain and inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function so moving is easier.
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♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] for dad's first job as dad. nissan tests hundreds of child seats to give you a better fit and a safer trip. snug kids, only from nissan. ♪ discuss this is a fox news alert. thousands of defiant protesters taking on police many nurk can i's capitol. you're looking live at istanbul where the sun is just coming up. laura welsh is there live with the latest. laura, i realize the sun is just coming up now. can you recap what has been going on there?
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>> sure. my yesterday your today at 7:00 a.m., the police went in and dismants elled barricades they cleared oud the entire square. per the current prime minister, that's now a public pedestrians way. this is ironic. they used grenades and tear gas as well as these water tanks. i've been to the protests before, and i was also gassed with tear gas. it's unpleasant. it went through my mask. you could see people vomiting and some asthma attacks and many injured today. around midday the prime minister reiterated what he was saying, behind these protests are lobbyists in cahoots with international media trying to tear down turkey and its economy. i've spoken with a lot of protesters i know a lot of protesters. in general, they're very normal people, there's a great, great variety. some are minorities, but i would
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say the majority are students or recent graduates. activist activists, everything. again tonight around 8:00 p.m., more people congregated, thousands, they were also dispersed, it did get a little rough. and essentially what the protesters want is they want their civil liberties. they want a bigger voice in government. they feel it's authoritarian, even they've said fascist, and he speaks about once a day, he also has a lot of opinions about how people should live. he said many times that a pie tree ottic woman should have at least three children to help produce and create a larger and healthier turkey. anyone who has an alcoholic drink is an alcoholic. i don't think he's going to back
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down. and now the protesters are heart broken but very angry as well. >> our connection's a little rough, but i appreciate it. thanks for joining us. >> straight ahead, who is this and who is his famous father? the answers next. [ snoring ] ♪ [ snoring ] [ male announcer ] zzzquil™ sleep-aid. [ both snoring ] [ male announcer ] it's not for colds. it's not for pain. it's just for sleep. [ snoring ] [ male announcer ] because sleep is a beautiful thing™.
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okay, it's time to hash it out. like father, like son. captain schwartzeneggar tweeting this photo with the caption early morning pump who is getting into shape for summer? patrick is the son of arnold schwartzeneggar and maria shriver. he might not want to imitate everything his father has done, let's just leave it at that. looks like skies just got friendlier. travelers turning air rage
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into music, huffington post tweeting passengers break out into r kelly's "i believe i can fly". those passengers breaking into song after hours on the tarmac. there is no air conditioning, no snacks. the airlines says a mechanical problem was to blame but airline passengers giving passengers a $100 credit towards a few tour light. last night we showed you the krispy kreme doughnut sloppy joe. tonight wendy's whips up a nine patty burger, sit true. hungry customers can get a burger with nine slices and nine slices of cheese but only in a canadian city of brandon, costing $21.99 and $24.99 if you want fry was that.
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we don't know the cost of the angioplasty you'll certainly need but you can hash it out with us. coming up, why did the obama administration need superman's help? the answer next. from capital on, bjorn earns unlimited rewas for his small business take theseags to room 12 please. [ garth ] bjors small busiss earns double miles on every purchase every day. produce delivery. [ bjorn ] just put it on my spark card. [ garth why settle for less? ahh, oh! [ garth ] great businesses deserve limited reward here's your wake up call. [ male announcer ] get the spark business card from capital one and earn unlimited rewards. choose double miles or 2% cash back on every purchase every day. what's in your wallet? [ crows ] now where's the snooze button?
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[ crows ] help the gulf recover, andnt to learn from what happenedg goals: so we could be a better, safer energy company. i've been with bp for 24 years. i was part of the team that helped deliver on our commitments to the gulf - and i can tell you, safety is at the heart of everything we do. we've added cutting-edge safety equipment and technology, like a new deepwater well cap and a state-of-the-art monitoring center, where experts watch over all oudrilling activity, twenty-four-seven. and we're sharing what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. safety is a vital part of bp's commitment to america - and to the nearly 25000 peopleho work withs here. we invest more in the u.s. than anywhere else in the world. over fifty-five billion dollars here in the last five years - making bp america's largest energy investor.
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11:00 almost here time for last call. is the super hero headed to the white house? here is jay leno. >> new superman movie opens on friday. we had russell crow on the other night. he played superman's father. it's a great story. his dad realizes his son is gifted with x ray vision he puts him in a rocket sending him towards earth because he knows with those powers he can get a job with the obama administration. it's a fascinating, fascinating start. wow. >> greta: that is your last call. thank you for being with us tonight we'll see you again tomorrow make sure you go to gretawire.com and answer a special question, put a
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special one up for you. go there, answer it. good night from washington, d.c. see you tomorrow night at 10:00 p.m. eastern right here on the record. now. author guy will be mad. >> bill: the o'reilly factor is on. tonight. >> i can't find out anything, can you? i don't know what happened to benghazi. i don't know what happened in the irsz. i don't know what happened with james rosen. i don't know what happened with this one. they won't tell us anything. >> bill: that's what i said on "the today show" this morning as yet another scandal has dropped on the nation. this one involving an alleged coverup of crimes by hillary clinton's state department. james carville, rand paul, cawley and colmes will all analyze. >> i think that it's important to a lot of people who support the family that they have a front row seat. they don't trust the media. >> will the american press cover the zimmerman martin trial in a farewell? we will take a look at that question. >> would you mind if some of
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