tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News March 20, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT
10:00 am
so don't look for more information until day light. but you should watch fox nows for braking details. >> we'll not have another information for 6 or 8 hours at least. >> and thank you. fox nows alert. moscow is firing back minutes after president obama announced new sanctions against russia for the take over of crimea. russia has now sanctions against u.s. officials and visa bans and asset freezes. russia has an american list. and meanwhile, russian troops are in crimea. and moscow is hinting at further retaliation in the nuclear talks with iran. there is a lot more in this triangle as we continue the high- stakes show down on hq.
10:01 am
another fox news alert. the discovery of two larming pieces of debris might be the biggest break in the flight of throe 70. we say might. welcome to hq, i am bill hemmer. >> and i sandra smith. a ship on the scone is scouring the area with radar. kathryn harris has the details. >> reporter: a source close to the investigation tells sources that they are cautious that the debris below to flight 370. digital global operating of colorado provided images and further analysis bee the group of spacial organization. this is a government intelligence agency.
10:02 am
they have support from new zelapd and the u.s. and the u.s. navy returning from a ten hour search failing to find any debrie. and a altitude of throw hundred foot. and the renowed focus on the southern indian ocean. they are located in australia and the focus of a al-qaeda affiliated plots in the past. >> the rational thought would be attractive targets in that region would be the u.s. and other military facilities along the australian coast. look at the maps of airports they could have focused on. there is a significant swathe where this aircraft could have
10:03 am
hit. if the debris is confirmed in international waters, the investigation will fall to the malaysian and though we have a strong interest in this case we can join as a wreck noised party. but begin the facts as we know them today there is nothing here to allow the u.s. to take over the investigation. >> how dow find the debrie that australia picked up on soilths. the indian ocean is remote and especially the southern part of that sea depths average more than three miles. a navy seal and president of sole survival. kate how are you? >> i am doing great. >> what do you make of the soilths images at first. >> i wish i had more information. we all hope and think it is the best lead so far. but that part of the ocean often times you will find floating
10:04 am
trash and water battles that create islands and i hope that is not what these images are. >> your expertise is survivors. >> and you are traveling this plane 600 miles per hour upon impact and you are able to survive that. can you survive the 20 to the swells for 12 days, is that possible? >> look, even taking it back to the point of take off. for example, i was found on the site and alive, i would have had to overcome first 45 empties of the flight hoping that purpose decompression was done and i would have to find oxygen and then i would have to survive the impact of the plane crashing in the ocean. we saw captain sully do it and
10:05 am
it was in a river that was flat. most people are not used to being in an airplane crash. and plane in the water that i need to escape without drowning, what is next. i am in 10-20 to the seas and average surface temperature is 35- 45 degrees. and if i am not in a ra ft you are dealing with hypothermia and not all planes are required to have the ra fts. the fa makes us have them. we don't know if the malaysia jet had the ra ft. that would be best chance of survival. >> you are right about that. >> you don't want to give false hope. but some of the images out of/beijing, they are struggling. and understandably so. they don't have any questions.
10:06 am
i don't know if today helps them or not. >> it is tough. putting yourself in their position. do i give up hope or hang on to it? and in the end of the day, all of those basically huge obstacles that i discussed in january a gentlemen washed ashore after being at sea for 13 months and travelled over 5,000 miles and he survive on drinking turtle blood and his own urine which i would not recommend. >> he is alive you are right. 16,000 foot for water depth. the storms that we heard about in the indian ocean. this is intense stuff. debrie fold could have travelled hundreds of miles in 12 days. how do you track that down? >> i mean, it is fairly easy to do if you have a point of impact
10:07 am
and you do the math. you do ten and half and break it down in hours and the direction and hours of the current. we had to do that with diving profiles in the sole time ands calculate a general area. the currents if that impact is accurate is heading close tore australia and decrease the sdaps to try to search for survivors or answers. cade. thank you for your time. it is dope in the night there now and it is dark and not much of a search effort underway. maybe one norwedgian ship. the airlines will not be back up until day break. cade, thank you for your time. >> it is my pleasure. >> sandra.
10:08 am
>> your guest dictated whether a huge factor from space and air and on the seas. chief meteorologist rick, with the latest conditions in the indian ocean. a fascinating story as we watch the weather be a factor for search ares in coming days as well. what are they dealing with now, rick? >> this is a stormiest area in general in the global. looking at the soilths image. that is where the debris areas were found. but you can see all of the lines of clouds, those are different storms move nothing the southern hemisphere and it is all just reversed and cold fronts moving through with a center of low pressure that is closer to antarctica. and this is all of the cloudiness. and we'll have lower wind, we'll have less cloud cover and then we have storms that move on
10:09 am
shore. white indicates clouds and green indicates precipitation. and we have a clearing by saturday and sunday. that is our time. saturday and subpoena. and we have another storm coming through and black lines, those are where it is going to be very windy and another storm develops right there. we'll so more stormy weather by the time we get to 2 or 3 days from now. it is a little window where weather conditions will be improved for them before the next storm moves on in. >> and the current. this is the third largest ocean in the world. what do we know about the current? >> we have five on the grounds and this is very close down to that antarctica ocean. this is 8 or 12,000 feet dope and look at the currents, and here you go.
10:10 am
count are clockwise direction of this current here and the gentlemen before said that's why the debrie would move close tore australia. but there is a current that moves off australia that could cause small current and kind of going in a separate current against the direction of the entire current. over all, it brings us closer to australia and that would be some good news. >> thank you, rick. >> you think the pain and angquish it is unbearable and as the search continues. they are a cowing the malaysia government of a distardily act. >> and a teenager dodging security and making it to the toppest building on earth. >> how he pulled this one off. >> new questions of how
10:11 am
president obama would tip america's hand. and giving vladimar putten a clear picture of how far the u.s. would go in stopping moscow. >> this is a role crisis and the president of the united states shouldn't declare we will not use military force. vladimar putin knows. that we may have toine be if bow have a war and repel putin's advances by force. [dog] larry? larry? larry?
10:13 am
wanna play? [announcer] a healthy dog is a playful dog. [dog] let's do this larry. [announcer] help him keep those muscles while he loses a few pounds with beneful healthy weight. de with wholesome rice,real c, even accents of vitamin rich ggies. it's calorie-smart and tastes so good. beneful healthy weight...from purina.
10:14 am
10:15 am
that from/beijing. >> people need to know and mr. putin needs to understand that the ukranians shouldn't have to choose between the west and russia. we want the ukranian people to determine their own destiny and have good relations with united states; with russia and europe with anyone they choose. that can only happen if russia also recognized the rights of all of the ukranian people to determine their future. >> president obama a short time turning up the hot on russia and announced new sanctions over the annexation of crimea and russia firing back with sanctions of their own. the president facing critics saying he is relying too much on sanctions and that the white house is showing too much of its hand to vladimar putin.
10:16 am
kristin whites author of smart power between diplomacy and war. >> thank you. >> and the president targeting the chief of staff of putin and 19 other individuals and a russian bank that provides them support. is the united states doing enough? >> no, i don't think so. secretary of state kerry was over there before the vote in crimea saying there would be an array of options that would be brought to bear against russia and they would have severe consequences and they would get worse. and all that happen. 19 individuals sanctioned and people who would probably never travelled to the united states and don't have assets and affected by this. and not that much has happen. and vladimar putin again is marching to another country, he did it in the nation of joefrjia and ukraine and pushing on an open door. >> and so now we have russia
10:17 am
responding on sanctions on nine u.s. officials including u.s. senator john mccain and house speaker john boehner and deputy security advisor car lineat kinson. my question to you. is russia looking tougher than the united states? >> yeah, i think as with the sanctions we placed on their individuals, these were unlikely to want to visit russia any time soon. what is more important is what putin is thinking as far as the next step and the option of going into other part was ukraine or the model he set up. he has the right to march in the soviet yun that has a large russian speaking population is dangerous. he could go to estoppia and the baltic states that is part of nato and that means war between
10:18 am
the russia and the united states. we need to deter him and do role things that deter vladimar putin. >> are you talking military force? >> not involving u.s. forces directly. i wouldn't have said we are not going to involve ourselves in ukraine. ukraine demonstrated a willingness to fight for themselves. there is still a number of things to do without taking the burden themselves. we can provide material and intelligence and saying we are not doing anything militarily we rowel it out and president obama speaks for nato without consulting nato allies and actiac acting deference. >> how about the argument of we can't afford to help militarily. >> it is not true. we have a $16 trillion economy.
10:19 am
i am not saying we should not get involved. america is only decline if it decides to be decloin. a billion or throw billion in loan guarantees that don't cost anything up front to ukraine and prop up the military and get the economy going again and especially if we have the europeans chip in. the military only cost one- fifth of the federal budget. and if you went back to spending levels, we would have a balanced budget. america is only in decliep -- decloin if we decide it is. >> new clues of flight $0.03. pieces of debrie spotted in the ocean and do they belong to the missing plane? that is not certain. >> and u.s. coast guard facing
10:20 am
10:23 am
10:24 am
coast guard hard. adam is live in california on that. >> reporter: bill, the coast guard overseas 95,000 miles of coast line and they are the only u.s. agency that makes drug arrest hundreds of miles offshore and do it legally. but like other agencies, they are do are more with less. they have mandatory cuts. drug smugglers are turning to the high seas and crossing a border that is harder to defend. >> it is more effective in stopping the smuggling and cartels shifted to the maritime. >> it is like finding a needle in the haystack. >> reporter: federal spending
10:25 am
cuts reduce operating cost 25 percent. and threatening efforts to roach the president's goal of intercepting 40 percent of the drug shipments by 2015. >> we deal with the assets and hours and try to use them best as we can to stop the smuggling threat. >> the boats are more sophisticated and the area of operation tripled in size last year and similar to the size of montana. some of the smuggling boats have three enemyings and tons of drugs. >> it is an irpt diction of the vessel before they make shore. our investigations are largely based upon those interdictions. >> those are so important, bill to give you an example they go five or sen days to find the drug smugglers and some case s they are down 2 or 3 days in the
10:26 am
water. >> bill. >> that is a change. >> thank you, adam. >> thank you, adam. a real break or false hope? what to make of satellite images from thousands of miles overhead that could show remanents of flight throe 70. a former airline pilot will share his we saw the terrible with the website that was our fault. and we have sewn 5 million people signing up. and people have two weeks to sign up. >> the president is pushing obama care before the deadline. and today he talks to ellen. is that the full court press? working out and we'll debate that. >> can you guess what this says? i know you have the talent. >> new york.
10:27 am
10:31 am
quick check of the headlines, a 19-year-old from pennsylvania behind bars accused of sending a poisoned latent birthday card. it contakened the deadly chemical ricen. >> and a new jersey tone in trouble with the law after sneak negligent world war ii. he went through a hole in the fence and climbed ska folding. the guard was asleep at the time and was fired. >> unbelievable. >> you have ten seconds and maybe the right thing will pop out. >> new baby buggy. new baby. come on.
10:32 am
how did he do that. >> it paid off for him. two letters on the puzzle. and i want to make sure he didn't have a cheat sheet. >> and 45 grand to the winner. >> what puzzle have you solved. >> send to bill hemmer. >> and sandra smith fbn. >> law enforcement officials telling us that the flight simulator that belonged to the 53 year old pilot is transported back to the fbi lab in virginia, for analysis. kathryn harris tells us an area of expertise to provide assistance to lead investigators in malaysian.
10:33 am
and additional fbi agents went to assist in the investigation. that's the latest on that. 32 past. >> this mystery over flight 370. australia will wait until day break to search for the debris of the flight 370. and the merchant ships using radar to search theiary. four hours by air off the australian southwest coast. jp joins us now. >> thank you. >> what do you think when you see the debris? >> i am hopeful that the united states and australia are using their satellites. they may not tell you all of the capabilities but put three satellites and in the orbits and
10:34 am
counter rotating against the rotation of the earth and around the equatic. there is a hover machine to cover the entire earth and they can read so they say which will not be admitted a license plate from 23,000 feet. what i hope for, is that there is enough distinction on whatever is floating there like a symbol or number that clearly identifying this as a pose of that aircraft. >> we had a number of false leads. this one obviously of particular interest because of the length of the debris and would be longer than say something falling off of a cargo ship. chances on this being part of the plane what would you think? >> if that aircraft went down in the open ocean. 15 or 20 to the 12. those big engines sitting there.
10:35 am
they would tear off the engine mounts and they are designed to fail. and you would have damage to the wing in the neighbor hod or half or three- quarters in the neighborhood in 80 foot. i am heart eped bow such a large object floating since the machine now out of gas. wing tanks were empty and they will float. >> it would be the wing tanks that would float and stay on the surface. the engines would break off. >> sorry to interrupt. is this a chance on the weather changing that this piece, to could sink in the next couple of hours and no longer be a pose of evidence? >> that is a real thought. you have a slit in it and gets
10:36 am
up ended and the slit on the bottom and breakage part would fill up and that would deputy down and that would be unfortunate timing. yes, it could deputy down, yes. >> you are saying that ideally the u.s. would get more involved with the soilths imagery. this is a u.s. company that proifed the images. you are saying we should go beyond that and use our capabilities to an likewise the depree. >> i don't know that we are not. i was heartened by the president saying this early this morning that we are utilizing in so many words all of our resources. australia is one of our closest allies. they have satellites and nothing to touch the united states. and so maybe that wofon wording and more than a capability of a commercial satellite. that satellite focusing down and
10:37 am
there is a real chance. >> we certainly hope so. thank you for joining us. >> thank you, sandra. a pleasure. >> it gives financial security and moms mental security that their kids are going to have decent care and at this moment, when a lot of young people as they come out and getting the first and second jobs, they don't necessarily get a benefit. and now is the time to take a look at it. healthcare.gov actually works the way it is supposed to. >> and that from ellen and a late game of full court press. how is the sales job going? >> martin and steve, gentlemen, let the madness again in march. how is the sale job going, martin?
10:38 am
>> i don't think it is going well. i think young people are smarter than the president gives them credit for. they know obama care was a loy and their partners were told they could keep their policies if they wanted to. and they have no reason to trust the president. and factually it is a bad deal for young people and they are too smart to fall for the sales job. >> steve? go ahead. >> the piece that the president said 5 million people signed up for the exchanges. but 5 million signed occupy the partner's plans and health care through medicaid. and 64 percent of the people in this country want to keep the affordable care act. some of them want it fixed and that's what people are looking for from the republicans. >> but we'll look at different numbers. pugh came out with a survey.
10:39 am
by the way, sunday is the four- year mark for obama care, going back to the time signed in law. 53 percent disapprove, mark. >> that's the way it has been. it was that way before it was passed and nancy pelosi said they would shove it down the american people's throats and it is been that way every day for the last four years. when will the democrats support the majority of the american people. >> steve thinks that the republicans need to find something else to run on. do they really? look at the pugh study. enrollment numbers are well short of that. and they are looking at 5 million. we don't know how many people paid under 5 million. >> it will be 6 million before it is all done.
10:40 am
>> bloomberg came out with a poll x. they don't want it repealed and that's the key. where are the republican ideas of how to fix the parts that people don't like? they shouldn't be harder to find than the malaysian plane. >> mark, solutions, go. >> solutions that the republicans put out multiple plans instead of obama care. they tried to repeal it. >> the real plan to repeal and divolve the power back to the people in the states. it is not a federal government issue and the federal government should not be involved. and it is only a rrobegans that makes washington d.c. people to think they can put one size fits all. we should trust american people at home in their states. >> steve, go? >> stimulative.
10:41 am
34 billion of personal income increased in january since the law passed and 40 billion increase in personal spending. it is stimulative and helping the economy and people want to keep it. >> thank you, gentlemen. >> 53- 41 from pugh. thank you, guys. >> time is running short to find flight $0.03. it is only a matter of days with life left. they are searching for the debris that could be part of the plane. >> could anything found in the simulator help with that search in >> we'll talk to a former agent about this next. >> and unfortunately with the weather conditions. it is like wreckage and debrie and other aircraft are continuing to search. when you have diabetes like i do, you want a way to help minimize blood sugar spikes. support heart health.
10:42 am
and your immune system. now there's new glucerna advance with three benefits in one. [ male announcer ] new glucerna advance. from the brand doctors recommend most. ♪ [ male announcer ] bob's heart attack didn't come with a warning. today his doctor has him on a bayer aspirin regimen to help reduce the risk of another one. if you've had a heart attack, be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. 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. ♪
10:44 am
♪ ♪ . ♪ ♪ nothing's missed with tena twist... ♪ because tena gave you a new outlook, we've give ♪ nothing's missed with tena twist... ♪ ♪ don't miss a beat... ♪ nothing's missed with tena twist... ♪ presenting the fresh, new face of fearless protection. ♪ nothing's missed with tena twist... ♪ >> coming up on the real story.
10:45 am
how many hours are left in the malaysian airliner's black box. not many. and we'll talk about the weather that is a factor in the search. and the whole if you like it you can keep your plan? it may not be thorough for the firefighters, they have issues with the law and big developments in the terror trial of osama bin laden's son-in-law all coming up. >> 15 minutes away. and desperate search for flight $0.03 and 239 people on board. fbi sending the flight simulator to the forendsic lab in virginia for analysis. johnathon gillian is a former air marshal and this news braking on fox 15 minutes ago. what can the fbi do, johnathon? >> i was there for a while and an fbi special agent working
10:46 am
here in new york for eight years and i am here to tell you when it comes to forensic investigation of computers, no one does it better than virginia. and we have those who specialize in this and i can't get in the spectaculars of how they do it and the techniques they have. if there is something that needs to be found on a computer, they can find it. and simply deleting, you delete something. it is on there forever. and they're experts in going in and finding it. >> it would appear that the malaysian government is loosening the strengths on the investigation. we have word that fbi agents are en route or arrived. and that connected to the simulator coming to quantico,
10:47 am
virginia you reach the same solution? >> you are i think seeing with malaysia. they don't have the tax base we have and a lot of the count rows that are involved. they don't have the economic structure to carry out this large of an investigation for a continue amount of time. and you will so people back out. and they will reach out to us. and they don't have the tools and techniques. we are involved in more than that part. our navy is involved and there will be agents there to look at seeing if it is terrorism. >> our navy and air force and the fbi can help. what are they specifically looking for it you are leading the investigation on the simoutor, what do you want to find? >> on that simulator, it is not uncommon for pilots ta to
10:48 am
practice emergency procedures and routes and put all of these different airports on his simulator. what is more important than the simulator, will be the computer analysis and if they go and bring like home computers in. if somebody is bad in doing something, it is going to show on their computer. it is it no way to hide. if you do information search it is on their. >> simoutor come loaded with thousands of a strips. >> but which ones did he go to? that is some what telling? you can tell the difference between an emergency airport to go to and something sen hours away. that is a big difference. >> and we are assuming it is the pilot. it could be the co-pilot or somebody on board. >> i don't think they have flight simulator and they are
10:49 am
focusing on. that the investigators that are there, they are trying to find the evidence to tell them what direction this is going. and again, you have to let the evidence lead the investigation and not the theory. >> keep the gravinngs on the screen. hard facts that we think we know. time over sen hour and 30 minute period. back to the simulator, johnathon. how long would it take the fbi to take them in a direction based on what they found. >> since it is a damaged computer it will not take as long and it is a troph priority for quantico, where it rises to the top of the list of things to do. you will so things very quickly. i wont want to give a specific time but it would be quick. is it hours or days.
10:50 am
>> days if not weeks. >> thank you. >> crisis in ukraine escalating and russia refusing to back down and ukraine warning that things. the latest developments in that conflict. a new way to help drivers avoid a parking ticket without having to feed the meter. oh yeah, we found a way. >> that would be nice. >> nice in this town. my journe, i've learned that when you ask someone in texas if they want "big" savings on car insurance, it's a bit like asking if they want a big hat... ...'scuse me... ...or a big steak... ...or big hair... i think we have our answer. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
10:51 am
10:52 am
10:53 am
10:54 am
everyone is going to want to hear this? >> that's right. avoiding parking tickets is getting harder every day. one company in pennsylvania is trying to fix that. that's good news for this student. attends college in stranton, pennsylvania, a town where classes with last three hours but parking meters expire after two. basically you got a lot of parking tickets when you first got a car last year. >> i did. it was always difficult to find parking spaces. when i did, i would forget to go back in and get my change. jiggle around, search through the car cushions, real hassle. >> this year things are different. in july scranton became the latest city to adopt parking payments from smart phones via application or text message meaning he can refill his meter from anywhere, including class. this technology has been around
10:55 am
for years but it was slow to catch on in the united states. >> people are so used to use coins that they were very slow to move to new technology. >> danny is from pango, one of four pay by phone companies in the u.s. he says municipalities in 2014 are finally catching on to how profitable remote parking payments can be. in fact, it's so profitable, scranton is the first city to wave the convenience fee for the service. >> that's right. every city that do it can see increase in revenue by 20 to 50% in the first and second year. >> profitable and user friendly. pango sends text messages to customers when their meter is about to expire. it's a service a forgotful student can appreciate. >> i no longer have to search for quarters in my car and i don't have to go out to my car to check. it takes me out of the equation, sends the updates whenever i need to do anything.
10:56 am
>> updates which allow him to think more about his studies and less about his parking ticket. >> that sounds like a win all around. >> coming to new york soon they say. >> really? >> very nice. come in handy. >> let nypd know that. there's an app for that. thank you, douglas. guys, incredibly lucky guest on wheel of fortune. >> what have you solved? your best tweets next. co: i've always found you don't know you need a hotel room
10:57 am
until you're sure you do. bartender: thanks, captain obvious. co: which is what makes using the hotels.com mobile app so useful. i can book a nearby hotel room from wherever i am. or, i could not book a hotel room and put my cellphone back into my pocket as if nothing happened. hotels.com. i don't need it right now.
10:58 am
10:59 am
11:00 am
married my wife the final piece. how romantic. >> tomorrow for more pain. >> on my friday. i'm happy to be here. it's fun. >> "the real story" starts and jenna lee is in. >> president obama announcing more sanctions targeting officials a short time ago. i'm jenna lee in for gretchen carlson. vladimir putin is retaliating travel ban. the conflict with russia is at a, quote, military stage. the growing tension as ukrainian troops pull out of crimea following the takeover of the naval headquarters there. drawing up a plan to evacuate outnumbered troops back to the mainland, allies to participate in joint military exercises as russia takes more steps to
229 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on