tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News March 17, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT
10:00 am
>> it gets huge. >> it is wise to get off of the streets efrler. >> my daughter grace is somewhere in that. >> i would never find her. thanks for joining us. thank you guys. new evidence disappearance of flight 370 was preplanned. if that is true why? thank you and welcome to hq. >> thank you for having me. the search area for the missing maylasian jet is covering 11 countries and thousands of miles of deep ocean and two possible paths of the plan when it was last detected by soilths. they are looking into the backgrounds of the pilots and ties to extremist. kathryn is live in washington
10:01 am
with the latest. >> reporter: thank you, sant ra, the investigation was formally declared a criminal case. and the head of the homeland security committee said computer hard drive and the pilot's flight simulator was recovered. they now high as 46,000 and dropped. a seasoned investigator said the computers and simulator may show fdz of pre-meditation. >> if there was a practice in the simulation it would give them confidence. i look for practicing in low altitudes among the mountains and out of the ordinary beyond just weather, which is discussed the captains practiced in extreme weather. >> the maylasian authority acknowledged that the flight maintenance system and updates
10:02 am
on the status of the jet went dark before the piloty final communication and then the transponder went dark. the you kro signed off with vietnam air traffic they never connected with chinese controllers. it was in the no man's land between chinese and vietnam air space. >> two things are possible. ran out of fuel and crashed in the ocean or the plane lapded in southeast asia in indonessia and could be used as a weapon. >> data from the aircraft satellite communication link. it is used to set abroad a search from kak siowa stan and indonezia and southern undian ocean. the u.s. assets are in the south
10:03 am
because this is based on additional intelligence. >> thank you, kathryn. adjusting for time difference. we are in day 11 of the search of the missing airline. it would make it longest in recent history. it took investigators ten days in the flight that went down in indonezia and five days in the air france flight that went down in the atlantic ocean. and when a passenger jet crashed in a indonessia volcano it took crews 20 hours to reach the wreckage. all people on board should die. >> the maylasian government is not cooperating. u.s. congressman peter king is with me from new york. you say it is from youserating from the fbi and your
10:04 am
understanding that the maylasian government is not cooperating. is that the case with the fbi time on the ground. >> the fact is, you have 7 or 89 days when they reached out to anyone. and in times like that an organization such as the fbi and scotland and interpoll is effective in tracking down the back grounds of the people. it is inconsistent with the policy over all. they didn't share the information that the plane changed course. first four days people looked in the wrong location even though they anyhow it changed direction. >> is there a sense of them changing? >> a little.
10:05 am
maybe if they think they share it would be used in other instances or a feeling of pride of doing it on their own. whether it is the radar they didn't follow-up on and bringing in experts like the fbi to assist in the information or sharing the information where the plane went down. it is countries like singapore that do. >> the government in singapore is different than mayasia. >> they have to brought in people to ask for assistance. >> you said things on sunday that raised my attention. the plane and pilot of a susued plot on behalf of the pilot or co-pilot or both? and you suggested that they
10:06 am
wanted to fly as far away from land as they could. what is that based on? >> in talking to a number of people in the intelligence and aviation community and people who deal with matters of this. there is no reason why preprogramming and flying the plane in a different direction and why it flew in the indian ocean. if they flew seven out in there. and if they landed somewhere it is one thing. if they crashed the only reason to go out and crash was for the plane never to be found and that would be a suicide that couldn't be proven and whether they are looking for insurance premiums or shame in committing suicide, that seems to be logical reason. >> but just to be clear, the reason that you are suggesting this is just a theory?
10:07 am
it is nothing more than that? they would fly the plane far away to allow family members to collect a life insurance policy? >> that is been done before. if you can't show suicide, the family is entitled to life insurance or religious background suicide is considered shameful. the experts i spoke to trying to figure a reason why you go to the effort to preprogram and fly the plane and heading down toantartica. it is dopest and roughest ocean and difficult to find an airline. >> you say this is been done before when? >> i am told of instances where pilots took their planes down and did it in a way suicide could not be proven. >> what about terrorism, there is no record of chatter.
10:08 am
>> i am not ruling out terrorism. terrorism can't be ruled out. the fact that there is no terrorist chatter or communication been found. i would not rowel out terrorism especially since al-qaeda had a strong presence in malaisia. and even though there is a run throughs, they haven't done a full investigation of all of the passengers on that plane and no, i would not rule out terrorism at all. i am not ruling anything out. i was saying what was the most likely theory. if it was a suicide, why would it be aimed 5 or 6 hours out. >> everybody has a theory and very few answers. peter king, republican from new york. thank you. >> thank you, bill. we are two weeks away from
10:09 am
the critical obama dead line march 31st when uninsured americans must buy insurance through the exchanges or pay a fine. >> thank you. >> dead line is looming and coming up quickly and the biggest milestone for obama care, we are still seeing the white house scrambling with advertisements or twitter and trying to get young people to sign up. >> absolutely. and what we are at. the recent survey, we are looking at prospect of 41 percent of those uninsured intend to remain so and that guts obama care. >> so they are just opting to pay the penalty according to the bankrate.com, study. folks will roll the dice and stay uninsured.
10:10 am
>> it is the reason for obama care. the president talking about 50 million uninsured americans. that means that we are looking at 2 or 3 people among the 50 million ultimately being insured under obama care. that is a disastrous result and an uneconomic report and we are paying 1.8 trillion to insure. and by the time we project out these numbers to insure 5 million people. it is an utter disaster for obama care and means it is totally unsustainable. i am not talking about repeal or rolling it back. the program will implode as a result of the economics. >> lou, it is not just folks deciding to opt for the penalty and not sign up, but the study reveals that half of the uninsured is aware that the
10:11 am
deadline is march 31st. >> and 71 percent are unaware of subsidies. that means there is a disalignment and what is actually happening. this speaks to the inability of the administration health and human services and cm s to move people in the system even with a man date and punitive fine. >> the white house releasing its bracket. 16 sweetest reasons to get covered. thank you for joining us. >> you need health care are you going to be all right. >> i need a glafsz water to get through the hour. >> we'll so you in prime time. normally we see you on cross business. >> you are crossing over to the news side. >> my pleasure to do so.
10:12 am
>> a vital system shut down before the final words of flight 370. what could have happen in that plane. >> it is great stuff and navy seals to the rescue. a tanker carrying hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil. >> and president obama punishing russia for the crisis in the ukraine. ambassador bolton said the white house is being outplayed. >> we sent secretary of state john kerry to london to negotiate. that is like a cupcake negotiating with a steak knife. we asked people a question,
10:13 am
how much money do you think you'll need when you retire? then we gave each person a ribbon to show how many years that amount might last. i was trying to, like, pull it a little further. [ woman ] got me to 70 years old. i'm going have to rethink this thing. it's hard to imagin how much we'll need for a retirement that could last 3years or mor so maybe we need to approach things dferently, if we want to be ready for a longer retirement. ♪
10:15 am
10:16 am
hand back over to the libyan authorities in tripoli. and former anti- gaddafi fighters refused to give up their weapons and targeted the oil sector. they are announcing a series of measures to increase the cost on russia and those responsible for what is happening in ukraine. first, as authorized by the executive order i signed two weeks ago, we impose sanctions on specific individuals responsible for undermining the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the government of the ukraine and making it clear there are consequences for the actions. >> president obama announcing sanctions in response to the crisis in ukraine. it comes after the referundum in crimestoppers to join the russian federation.
10:17 am
it is what the u.s. and europe say is illegal. it doesn't target vladimar putin but key players close to him. joining me now is ambassador john bolton. thank you for joining us, ambassador. >> glad to be with you. >> so how do you vow the united states response so far to this? >> i think it is so weak it is embarrassing. naming 11 individuals and imposing visa restrictions and freezing their assets in the united states. that is nothing in the beg picture. vladimar putin has put thousands of russian troops in an international border and staged a referundum in the crimea that is soviet style in the way it was handled and putting pressure on the ukranian government in kiev to get the outcome he wants and our response is to sanction 11 peoples?
10:18 am
and this is showing putin he has the cards and upper hand. he will continue to do this. >> in the advisors to putin, they froze their assets. are you saying that the sanctions will not be effective? >> no affect at all. the argument of sanctions has been going on three woks. any of the 11 individuals who thought they might be sanctioned and left any assets in the united states to be frozen deserve to lose them. number two, the argument that the state department made on background, it is the russian a llearcs whose wives want to shop on fifth avenue and vacation in the united states and have significant assets here, they are the ones to go after. these 11 individuals named by the united states are political advisors and i don't doubt through corruption have gotten
10:19 am
assets over the years, they are not the big economic alarcs of russia or the ukraine. this is a mininal response bite united states. it will tell putin he's dealing with people who has a sense of their own weakness. >> many fear two possibilities. putin tries to move further in eastern ukraine, or the president as he said, impose more sanctions. the ball is in whose court now? >> i think what happens next is that having put russians boot on ukraine's neck, putin will say to the ukranian government let's negotiate. he is just a now weeks ago increased the price of oil and gas that ukraine has to pay and they get 80 percent of the supply from russia. i think he is playing for the whole thing and he can get a government in kiev
10:20 am
subserveiant to his wishes. if negotiations between kiev and moscow europeans will run for more sanctions. >> and so will obama. >> what happens to your relationship with russia? >> they are so laughable it will not affect. if you want to sanction russia. freeze the banks and assets and not just 11 political hacks. >> all right. ambassador john bolton, thank you for joining us. >> putin will talk tomorrow. >> crimea has a long and complicated past with russia and dates back centuries. currently 2 million people live in the region and 80 percent of its population speaks russian we are told. and 12 percent are crimea and
10:21 am
a muslim group that are removed from their home land. >> and i have a question for you. what is third hand smoke? it might be killing us. what the experts are saying about third hand smoke. >> teenagers said to be killed in his girlfriend's bed room by the father. the father was not charged, should he be? we'll analyze this. >> the homeowner discovered a 17 year old male in his daughter's bed room, there was some type of altercation and the father shot the male one time. why do people count on sunsweet prune juice to stay fit on the inside? it's made only from prunes, nothing else. it works, simple as that. it's a natural source of fiber and 5 essential vitamins. it's the smart choice for me. try sunsweet's amazing juices and new amazing prune light.
10:23 am
10:25 am
an icon on the mississippi river is no more. the demolition crews recently brought down the metro dome in minneapolis and making quick work of the power plant in st. paul. it was shut 40 years and the site is cleared to make way for a river front development. >> brought it all down. an alarming new report. saying the smell of a cigarette where people had been smoking might be capable of killing you, really? john roberts is live in atlanta. what is up. >> reporter: pretty surprising stuff. we know about the dangers of smoking and second-hand smoke. but there is it an emerging threat. residue left over when people work indoors and homes and bars and hotels. it is tar and nicotine and other
10:26 am
compounds that stick to walls and furniture and clothing and carpets. new research found those chemicals can stick to human dna and cause damage to give rise to cancer. third hand smoke never goes away. the research is an expert. >> when you live with someone who smokes. the fact that the smokes stays in the room and third hand smoke is there all of the time means that your exposure doesn't end when they put the cigarette out. you are exposed constantly. >> at particular risk are children and infants that pick up toxins. and there is evidence that residue for from third hand smoke is absorbed to the skin. experiments with mice who lived in cages contaminated with 30
10:27 am
hand smoke showed hyper activity and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. you need to pant over walls and throw out carpets and furniture. and the risk doesn't end when smokers end. children who moved in homes occupied by smokers showed elevated levels of nicotine. >> john roberts, interesting finding there. >> is there a growing toy to the white house? and will the president hurt or help the candidates? >> also is chocolate the new aspirin. a new effort a chocolate pill that promises to end heart attacks and stroke. can you believe that? you have that option. ♪ ♪ if you wear a denture,
10:28 am
take this simple test. press your tongue against it, like this. it moves! do you feel it? it can happen with every denture. these movements may irritate your gums. but you don't have to bear with it. you can try fixodent plus gum care. thanks to its formula, your gums become one with your denture. this helps stop movement and helps prevent gum irritation so you can keep enjoying life. [ apple crunches ] fixodent. and forget it.
10:31 am
10:32 am
>> and being jailed after being stopped for suspected drunken driving. they found several drug bottles in the car. >> forget about the candy bar and how about a chocolate pill. trying to find the nutrients in dark chocolate that prevent heart attack and stroke. it is co-sponsored by mars, the candy company. >> what did you say? why not eat the chocolate. it has the nutrients of many, many candy bars. that would be a lot of the calories. >> we were looking earlier. >> if you could put think in a pill? >> would you put chocolate? >> i thought about this one for a while. everyone had dark berries and put the nutrients in the dark berries. and send me a tweet. i am waiting. send me a tweet at bill hemmer
10:33 am
and sandra smithfbn. >> and new questions about security procedures for airline crews and now that investigators of the missing maylasian jet are focusing for the pilots and a flight engineer. john is a former navy seal and federal air marshal. >> you are qualified to comment on this. what do you think happen? >> first i think we need to find out why someone is taking the fun out of eating chocolate. snshg that's true. >> with this plane. what is bothering me about all of the events with the pilots happening over and over again. i know numerous pilots, they are professional as you could possibly want and they work in a time environment every day.
10:34 am
but i am starting to question how some of the screenings go on and are they looked at regularly? they are flying so much and in a high demapped, high pressure life they should be screened psychologically from time to type. and a lot of these things can come out. this like this investigation and normally just happen way too late. >> johnathon, is this a game changer at this point? you think we will readdress the way we are screening flight crews today? >> i hope so. there are so many lessons to come out of this tragedy whether it is terrorism or some kind of strange mystical mall function in the plane. we need to look at how we go back and screen these people as they psychological problems. it could be nothing but a connection to somebody in
10:35 am
maylasia that is having issues. why isn't that known before he gets on there? there are serious issues. >> johnathon, with someone with your experience level, were you shocked by this? was this something that you thought could be happen or have you been taken back by this? >> having been a seal, i am an expert in targeting and i try not to be surprised about these things. it is unconventional warfare. terrorism is unconventional warfare. and we look for the gaps, and the vulnerabilities in the systems and then we work around that, whether you are a seal or terrorist. that is what it is about. getting the biggest bang for the buck and if this is terrorism, this is evolution in your tactics. >> will we find the plane? >> that is a good question.
10:36 am
i had friends talking on facebook and the question comes up, are they trying or doing everything they can. and another friend came on and said the titanic went down in 1912 and they didn't find it until 1985. >> johnathon, one of the biggest things, we talk about the investigation focused on the pilots now. our security measures are different here than other countries. it is thrown about that possibility it was an air carrier that had less screening measures for their flight crew; is that something you kept in the back of your mind? >> absolutely. and just look at. this again, i look at things in an unconventional way, if you have a airline that allows smoke on the plane and allow passengers to light a flame on an aircraft that is carrying and basically a bomb that is waiting to be lit.
10:37 am
if they are still in that day and age, i can't expect them to be up to parin their screening. >> as an air marshal did you so things. i know you can't comment specifically, but did you so things that led you to believe that a situation like this could happen. so many people ask them could i take off in an airplane and have something loc this happen? >> absolutely. unfortunately, you are talking about an environment that humans are running the show and as great of a creature we are. you are susceptible to dropping the ball when we are complacent. and unless we are willing to sit a shooter at the front dorat the cabin and ready to shoot anybody. we will be susceptible. >> johnathon.
10:38 am
former air marshal and fbi agent. thank you for commenting on that today. >> my pleasure. >> i believe we will keep the senate. we have great candidates with experience winning in tough states. >> president obama's senior adviser down playing concerns that the senate will lose this fall. that is opposite with what robert gibbes said home moments later. >> there is a real, real danger that the democrats could suffer loss says because the real estate and turfs in which the elections are taking place begin with an advantage to the republicans. >> lares is a syndicated roast. and a roberts. you agree with gibbes. >> he is right. when you are on the payroll of
10:39 am
the white house, you say what the company line it. you can say the truth as a private consultant. everyone knows that the president is about as welcomed as president a bas is in downtown jerusalem. they don't mind his money but don't show up in person because he brings bad baggage. and there is a chance democrats could lose the september because of obama care and baggage. is that corrects simon, it is mid- march. who is closer to the truth? >> it is going to be a close election. we know that the democrats unlike in 2010, have deployed technology and targeting of demographic groups in the way they didn't in the midterms. they will be more advanced than they were before. and for democrats, president
10:40 am
obama needs to get his numbers up. and if the democrats keep the senate he has work to do and make sure he's doing everything he can. >> do you think that the climate on go up. >> there is a handful of candidates don't stand with the president. it happen with the republicans in 2006. but the democrats are more unified. and the republicans are the divided party now. and so, i think it is dangerous for the republicans to overplay the divisions in want democrat party. the troops are deployed and it will be a good fight. >> they are saying that the guys are all divided. >> there are tough divisions between establishment republicans a republicans and the tea partiers. but considering in the democrat party. the party wants to get reelected and they don't want the
10:41 am
president to be a part. will you run on the president obama's success of obama care that is a bigger train wreck? or run on the nsa or irs record or benghazi record? you have to have a scorecard to just keep track of all of the different crashes and burns. >> do you think he goes on the trail and if so, with whom does he show up? >> he will go out and do follow-upped raising campaigns and raises a bunch of money and sends it. it is like having a bad inlaw. don't mind the money but god forbid they show up for dinner. >> john, you want him as an inlaw? >> absolutely. we have a long way to go as you said bill in this election. we could be in a situation where obama care is much more successful than we think today. the economy is improving and we have a long way to go and it feels very soft.
10:42 am
and the democrats are aware of what they have to do and working hard. >> thank you, gentlemen. and tell your in-laws hello. >> the alleged mastermind of the september 11th attacks speaking out about osama bin laden's son-in-law who is now on trial in new york. how this could influence the verdict. >> a teenager shot to death after the father found him in the room. the grand jury is deliberating the fate. >> you don't want boys around the daughters. but the sons are young and kids will do things. @e@8ñúñ÷@@
10:43 am
10:44 am
10:45 am
two full servings of vegetables ...return on investment wall isn't a street... isn't the only return i'm looking forward to... for some, every dollar is earned with sweat, sacrifice, courage. which is why usaa is honored to help our members with everything from investing for retirement to saving for college. our commitment to current and former military members and their families is without equal. normally in the morning it is martha and me. what is happening? guys.
10:46 am
coming up in the top of the hour. incredible story of a pilot who gouged out a would- be hijacker eye with his bare hands is here to tell us the story and what he thinks about the missing maylasian airline. how it takes him back to the terfoying idea. and i will speak with him. and the suspicion turning to the plane's own pilot and the show bomber and a crime stoppers boss defies the judge and eats a piece of paper that id's the tipsters and he eats it in court on camera that man explains why he is ready to go to jail tro to protect his sources. >> martha, we'll be watching. >> taste like chicken, right. >> great, see you, martha. >> and a mother is demanding murder charges against the man
10:47 am
accused of shooting and killing her 17-year-old son, when that man found a teen in her daughter's bedroom. she and the victim were reportedly dating. the grand jury will decide what if any charges will be brought to the father. what a tragic story. give me a sense here. this is southeastern texas, near houston, what was it 2:30 in the morning. >> reporter: exactly. what happened as far as we know. the girl's younger brother went to say good night and saw two feet sticking out of the bed and the younger brother goes back to call the father. from what we know and has been reported. who is this and the girl, this is critical. the girl doesn't say he's my by friend or dating. she said i don't know who this
10:48 am
guy is and he's in the bed. the father leaves the girls bed room and comes back and gets a gun and there is a argument and he said we don't know what the victim said. but the father said he was going for something and at that point he shoots him once and he's dead. >> so this boy, age 17. was shot in the head. >> yes, one shot and dead. >> and this man's daughter is 16. >> escape-year-old girl. >> it was in her bedroom. >> she brought and snuck him in. and the father said what is going on here? the girl didn't say we are dating. said i don't know. >> were they dating? >> yes. but no one anyhow about it. the father and younger brother didn't know about it. he pulled out the gun and what is going to happen here legally will go to a grand jury. they have to look at, texas
10:49 am
castle doctrine. most states are it. it moans, the man and woman of your castle and if someone comes in your castle and you are in fear of your life or bodily injury you don't have to retreat. it is like a stand your ground. but you may shoot and use deadly force. but the crazy thing here, he wasn't an intruder, the girl brought him in and the girl and daughter made it worse by not saying yes, she panicked not saying this is my boyfriend. and the father seeing his daughter in bed with a boy, he has no idea they are dating and an intruder. and it locks like he goes for a gun, he shot. under the castle doctrine it may be hard to get a charge. >> this is exclusive to texas? >> no, the castle doctrine is in
10:50 am
most states. >> do you expect a indictment in >> not on pre-meditated. and most would be and in this castle doctrine saying, hey, i didn't know, i thought he was an intruder, my daughter didn't say anything differently, i shot. >> one other thing, the girl denied she knew -- >> denied. >> is that true? >> that's what we hear. that's what's been reported. >> so is she culpable in any way? >> if he is charged, i would think she would be charged as well with some kind of an accomplice. she's not under oath, anything like that. but accomplice to a manslaughter. if she had said, hey, dad, my fault, this is my boyfriend, maybe this wouldn't have happened. >> we're out of time. we have to run. we're going to stay in touch with you on this story. thank you. well, most of us will be happy to see this brutal winter finally come to an end. turns out all that snow and ice may be a blessing in disguise
10:51 am
for one of america's most important waterways. we'll explain. [ dennis ] it's always the same dilemma -- who gets the allstate safe driving bonus check. rock beats scissors! [ chuckles ] wife beats rock. and with two checks a year, everyone wins. [ female announcer ] switch today and get two safe driving bonus checks a year for driving safely. only from allstate. call 866-906-8500 now. [ dennis ] zach really loves his new camera. problem is...this isn't zach. it's a friend of a friend who was at zach's party and stole his camera. but zach'sot it covered... with allstate renters insurance. [ female announcer ] protect your valuables for as low as $4 a month when you add renters insurance to your allstate auto policy. call 866-906-8500 now. what are you doing? we're switching car insurance. why? because these guys are the cheapest. why? good question. because a cut-rate price could mean cut-rate protection. you should listen to this guy. [ female announcer ] with allstate you get great protection and a great price, plus an agent! drivers who switched saved an average of $498 a year.
10:52 am
10:53 am
10:54 am
it's a place named one america's most veteran friendly employers. next is information and entertainment in ways you never thought possible. welcome to what's next. comcastnbcuniversal. the winter of 2014 will go down as one of the snowiest in years, but all the misery that came with the snow just may be worth it. for the great lakes, water levels there have been below normal for more than a decade. the melting snow and ice are expected to help a lot. garret is live in chicago along the shore of lake michigan with more. >> reporter: yeah, you can see it's definitely still wintertime here in chicago. but the great lakes, they reached their record lows just this last year. but this gradual decline they've been seeing over the last 15 years has led to bigger beaches, which is something a lot of people enjoy when it's a bit warmer. but those lower water levels have also caused a lot of
10:55 am
headaches for shippers as they haven't been able to carry quite the same amount of goods that they have in the past. that's as they're going across the great lakes and on to ports around the world. that's an effect we feel, you know, gets passed along, higher costs. but now thanks to the polar vortex and these bitter cold temperatures, things are starting to turn around. just over 93% of the lake's surface was frozen over earlier this month, which is more than twice the annual average. the sheets of ice trapped in water that would normally be lost to evaporation, that boosts the overall water levels. >> ice cover is actually a good thing for the lakes in terms of water levels. in lakes michigan and huron, we've been seeing record and near record-breaking low water levels for the past several years. the ice cover combined with all the snow we've been getting is probably going to make those water levels jump back up more than a foot come spring.
10:56 am
>> reporter: and you can see the difference in this satellite image of ice last year when the lakes were at their lowest level ever compared to an image this year when ice covered more than 93% of the great lakes. by the time all this snow and ice melts, the lakes are expected to go up by just about a foot to right around their all-time average or just below average. that's going to be good news for folks as the temperatures warm up. they can pack away the winter coats and pull out those bathing suits. >> garrett, thank you. live in chicago. >> or we can just dream. >> there you have it. are there benefits to be found in a chocolate pill? so we asked today, what would you want in a pill form? summer. >> that would be good right now. >> your best answers are next.
11:00 am
>> yeah, paula. >> amber, i would put common sense in a pill and send it to capitol. >> so would we. see you tomorrow. >> thanks for having me today. >> you bet. i'm bill hemmer. here's martha. >> thank you, guys. well, the search for the missing jumbo jet widens today as investigators zero in on the two pilots and whether this plane's disappearance was a suicide or a hijacking. welcome, everybody. i'm in for gretchen today. the search for the boeing 777 and 239 people on board now stretches from asia to the southern indian ocean. malaysian officials saying they're not only looking at the pilots but also scrutinizing the background of everyone on that plane. with the help of interpol and now the fbi involved as well. malaysia airlines did appear to clear up one mystery when officials
232 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on