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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  March 26, 2014 8:00am-10:01am PDT

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from the site of the trade centers the brother of bin laden has been convicted. we will have more on that >> another news alert. and breaking developments in three stories. another obamacare delay and why the administration says you can take your time. karl rove is here to react. and live in washington state with what rescue crews are doing in the mudslide. and new images called the most credible lead yet in the search for flight mh370. we know you have heard it before. but 122 objects spotted in the southern indian ocean and what they could mean for finding the
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wreckage. and brand new stories you will see here first. >> the defense making its case in the oscar pistorius case and when the blade runner might take the stand. and what our commander is chief says is a bigger threat than russia on american soil. and the young bride who pushed her husband off a cliff wants to withdraw her guilty plea. why she had a change of heart. >> new fall out from the latest obamacare delay. i am jenna lee. >> and i am jon scott. just days before the deadline for obamacare there has been a change of heart. there is going to be an
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extension for folks that claim they tried to sign up, but need more time. they have to check the box saying they tried to enroll before the deadline will have until mid-april. republicans charge it as a political move meant to help democrats facing reelection in november. karl rove is here former white house deputy chief of staff under bush. how do you see it? helping the folks or is this politics? >> this is politics and making sure the administration isn't embarrassed by the enrollment numbers. as of two weeks ago, five million people signed up for a
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plan. they had not paid or enrolled. the original goal was 6 million and now is it 5 million. 20% of the people who have picked a plan haven't paid for the plan. they would have to have 8.4 million people select a plan and hope 80% pay for it. so they know his number isn't 5 million and they know know they are going to be short of their target and they are trying to string it out and get more people in the plan and so have a chance to obsuicate this. >> and is it possible the people that signed up used to have
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plans? >> 27% according to a mckinsey study were previously uninsured. that means this isn't providing coverage to people who were previously uninsured. and the goal of the administration was to have 39% of the people that sign up be under the age of 35 because they high a higher premium to subsidize the coverage. it is 27-28% are under the age of 35. that means we have this big glob of people that signed up and the insurance companies will have to examine the pool that signed up and starting in april and may
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and june figure out the premiums for next year. so if you have people that signed up for health insurance and they are older, it means that in july and august they will send out notices and the premiums will jump because they don't have enough young people. can you imagine just before the election we have big premium increases? that is not going to be a pretty sight. >> we have had four years to plan for this. we passed the four year dear birthday. and nancy pelosi said we have to pass the bill before we can see
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what is in it. why another extension? mo >> we are talking about extensions, deadlines, delays and this comes to two points: one is the administration has proven it isn't competent to lay this out. there is a fundamental problem and we are having to take over 1/6th of the economy and government can't run this big decision and we are seeing the results of government trying to take on too much and replacing the choice of markets and the individuals. >> unbelievable. karl rove. interesting analysis there.
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thank you. we'll discuss that more throughout the show. in the meantime, new images hoping to help finding flight mh370. 122 objects were found in an area of the indian ocean where searchers have been focusing on. jennifer griffin has more from washington now. >> reporter: the malaysian government has received satellite images from france's airbus and defense space agency. they were taken on march 23rd. >> in one area, we were able to identify 122 potential objects. some objects were floating and some were 23 feet in length.
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some appear to be bright possibly indicating solid material. they were located 2, 557 kilometers from perth. >> reporter: they were similar to the ones provided by the chinese a few days ago. the p8 air flight surveillance was able to fly today. but the weather could be getting bad today. the pinger and underwater drone arrived in perth last night. the relatives on board are still having trouble taking the news. china's one-child policy and the lack of belief in the afterlife is making this especially
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difficult to accept the reality. comby tolds us fbi exploiting of the pilot's hard drive and the flight simulator should be done by the end of the week. >> thank you very much for your updates. another scandal hitting the united states secret service. three agents assigned to the president in europe sent home after a night on town. one having so much fun he never made it back inside the room. peter deucey has more on this. what did the agents get caught to doing? >> reporter: they were drinking too much too close to the start of the shift. one of the agents had so much to drink he could not make his hotel room key work so he passed
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out on the floor in the hallway. the hotel called our embassy to see what is going on. a team leader as well is in treena trouble for not doing anything to stop or slow down their dreck drunk colleagues. there is a new rule that agents are not supposed to have anything to drink ten hours prior to work. the president said this: >> when we travel to another country, i expect us to observe the highest standards because we are not just representing ourselves. we are here on behalf of our people. >> reporter: and secret service higher ups are furious about
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this because of the warnings that stemmed from the columbia situation. the three agents are on administrative leave. >> what were the agents supposed to be doing on the trip? >> they were part of the president's last line of defense. the counter assault team. they are not the ones you see alongside the motorcade. they are heavily arm and ready to shoot it out. all of the counter assault members are trained and all secret service agents go through a background check that takes 6-8 months. >> what a story. paternity party or secret
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service? >> those guys give up a lot. >> when the key doesn't work in the room? >> the key probably worked. he couldn't work the key. let's turn to a serious story. the search for victims of a catastrophic mudslide entering it's fifth days. the death tol toll is rising but crews are hoping for a miracle. new pictures and calls from the moment the mudslide gave way. >> there is a mudslide. we watched trees falling and all of the houses are gone. of the houses are gone. of the houses are gone. yup. all 5 of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line, anytime, for $15 a month.
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a fox news guilty is the verdict of the jury in new york city regarding the son-in-law of
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bin laden. the jury began deliberating about 24 hours ago. it didn't take long to con vict him and he faces a lifetime sentence. she was convicted of providing material support for terrorist as well as providing such support. more details on the conviction as we get them. john hunt is live. >> reporter: the jury deliberating for six hours so a quick verdict given by them at the federal court down here. the son-in-law of bin laden
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guilty on all cases. they said he acted as a chief spokes person for bin laden making a storm of propaganda videos. defense argued he was just repeating words giving n to him and there was no conspiracy. jurors set aside that and convicted him on all three points. this is a significant victory for prosecutors because this is the most senior al qaeda member to be tried in a civilian rather than a military court and that is significant indeed. >> all right.
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jo joh johnathan hunt reporting live. fox news alert now on the race to find survivors in the mudslide in washington state before it is too late. the search is in it's fifth days with crews using dogs, bulldozers and their hands even to comb through the wreckage. the mudslide tore through the community on saturday and the death toll is expected to rise. dan springer is live from arlington, washington. >> reporter: the death toll did rise yesterday. 24 people are dead and another 176 are officially listed as missing but that number is expected to drop today. the one bit of good news in the tragedy is two of the victims found were supposed to be helping a daughter move stuff saturday morning at 11:00 but they slept in.
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john was with a naval commander and served 32 years and they had five chuildren together. they do have high-tech equipment to find victims like pinging cellphones but the cadaver dogs have been the most useful tool. they have not heard signs of life since saturday night. some residents are talking about the fact they can not go in and the complaining about the rescue. the slope was identified as one of the highest risks of a deadly landslide. it would have been more deadly if not for good timing. the county search helicopter was training 25 miles away when the slide hit and dhea they were on
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scene quickly pulling survivors from this. a dog somehow managed to survive and showed up a day or two later. his name buddy and his owner was shocked when he saw him. >> i broke down crying and really happy my dog was all right. i am just shocked at how well he did against high whole house falling on him. >> and this recovery effort has grown to 250 people including a state mort system has more bodies are expected to be found. it is being called the most credible images yet for the search in the missing malaysian plain. and the president saying he has a bigger concern than russia's
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president obama turning heads with his comment about the stand standoff with russia and crane ukraine saying he has bigger worries. >> russia's actions are a problem. they don't pose the number one security threat to the united states. i am much more concerned when it comes to our security with the prospect of a nuclear weapon going off in manhattan. >> the president of the center of security and a former deputy
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assistant of secretary at the state department. and i want to show you what we are waking up to in new york. it a newspaper saying thanks for sharing a nuke at nyc, mr. president, with a question mark. so many questions to asking on this. what is your reaction, frank, to the president's comments? >> i am going to say i welcome the injection of a little reali reality into much of the administration on this. we do face nuclear threats. i am at least concerned about a bomb over new york city or cleveland that would release an electric magnetic pulse and that would mean the loss of a city and the loss of the power that supplies the entire country.
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that is what we do need to be talking about. what we have seen in betraying ukraine is that those countries that had nuclear weapons, the old soviet union weapons, maybe at considerable risk and that means it is much less likely other nations in the future are going to be persuaded to give up their nuclear weapons particularly the bad guys >> the president made that comment coming out of the hague and this was a nuclear summit where they are creating guidelines for countries to follow in order to keep their nuclear weapons safe from terrorist. only 35 of the 50 countries signed on and russia, china and pakistan were not one of them.
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considering that news and what was trying to be accomplished at the summit, and what is happening in ukraine and russia and the president's number one security threat, what are your thoughts? >> i think the president is right. russia isn't our number one security threat. they are not going to launch nuclear weapons against the united states and probably certainly not going to invade europe. they are a concern, but let's put it in perspective. the other point you raise, and the point that mr. gafney isr e raising why the president was over there and that is to discuss loose nukes. that is a real threat and there are countries that haven't signed on to the strict regime
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the president wants to see. that is what he is talking about saying a nuke in new york. >> and it scary. do you think the actions on the world stage as of late are acting as a deterant for terrorist to go after the so-called loose nukes especially if they are in russia. ambassador? >> yes and no. look this is a on-going problem. there are a lot of nukes out there and a lot of irresponsible states. iran worries me the most. you have a state with a proven enrichment ability. they can produce a dirty bomb and have ties to terrorist who want to do us harm. that is a toxic combination that worries me.
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when you talk about creating international regime and efforts to control nukes let's start with iran and the irresponsible states. >> are our actions actually detering loose nukes coming to the global stage? it is one thing to state a concern, but it is another to stop it from happening. >> you are clabsoluteslly right. the president has focused on ridding the world of nuclear weapons starting with ours. the nuclear security summit as you indicated involves are lot of countries that are not threa threats. the countries that are threats whether in their own right and i hope the ambassador is right but i hope to rely on hope that the russian's mass nuclear weapons
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are not a threat to us. we should have a defense against those. but we certainly have a treat we can agree upon from iran. and instead of preventing that country from being a source of nuclear threats or loose nukes, we are enabling under the obama ad ministration them to become the nuclear power. and i think we need a serious debate about this and i hope the president's comments will stimulate that debate. stimulate that debate. when folks in the lower 48 think about what they get from alaska,
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quick look at what is still to come: another look the new debris and the defense is going to make their appearance in the
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oscar pistorius case and what the police are saying led to the accident that killed paul walker. just in, the fbi make ing a major announcement about the ten most wanted with a list including a leader of the ms 13 gang. law enforcement is even concerned that al qaeda might have approached to get help getting terrorist into the country. rick has more on this. >> reporter: the fbi is offering a reward of up to $10000 leading to the capture of juan garcia who has been on the run since february of 2010 and wanted for the murder of his former girlfriend and her 2-year-old son who were shot and killed in a wooded area of new york's long
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island. he is a native of elsavador. he invited the girl to dinner but the friends took him to a isolated place. he was killed with a gun and killed the toddler when he started crying. the ms 13 gang is powerful and they have an estimated 10,000 members in 40 states considered an international criminal organization engaging in drug trafficking, murder, extortion and child prostitution. >> garcia decided the penalty for disrespecting the gang was death. while crime and gang related activity goes hand-in-hand, the
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execution style murder of vanessa and her 2-year-old son is a new low even for ms 13. >> they fled the country after the killings but two were caught and convicted here in new york. garcia still on the run. what a story. another satellite finding what could be wreckage of malaysian flight mh370. images showing 123 possible images of debris close to where the other objects were spotted. they are combing thousands of square miles and the u.s. navy fleet is joining them. commander marks is here and can you give us an update of what you were able to see or not able to see today? >> sure.
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hi. our g8 landed from the flight about four hours ago from it's daily flights. it was one of the 12 planes up today. it sees anything on the surface of the water. but no debris associated with an aircraft directed. we were optimistic because of the satellite mimages but nothig concrete was found. we want to get out there with the control aircraft is because we need the exact location we can before we move the advanced equipment in the water. that is why we need a better lotion. >> we have been talking about the toad pinger locaters and you are saying you need to get a better idea where a debris field
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could potentially be before we put them out there having them troll along the find a ping? >> that is correct. the toad locater epl is a highly sensitive microphone and it will be put in the water and it will listen for the ping from a black box. these block boxes are not very strong. it may go a couple thousand meters or so. if you don't put it in the right location. if is tens or thousands of miles away you will not see it. putting it in the water now wouldn't be eish -- efficient -- we need to get a better location, once we get the best location, we will put the pinger in to listen for the black box. >> and to be clear, we have
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these satellite images being reported of 122 items and we have your information the crew coming back and didn't see any airplane debris. it is very specific because you are able to see anything on the surface so it isn't like your aircraft went out there and didn't see nothing. they just didn't see anything related to an airplane. >> absolutely correct. we'll fly at about 5,000 feet. our radar, the advance radar can see objects as small as a basketball. when it gets a radar return, it will drop down in altitude and use a censor, infra red if needed, and you can drop down and have a person look through
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binoclars. so we do things. today we saw dolphins in the water. >> what about the conditions? we talked about that yesterday. really rough conditions. i know you are several hours ahead of us. what do the conditions look like over the next few days? >> two days ago was very rough and all of the flights were cansled. today was better and that allows us to use the full spectrum of the tools and that gives us more option. these planes are all-weather planes and built to fly in bad weather but you want clear to get the censors. it was good today and we are expecting it to be good tomorrow. on the water is different.
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very choppy seas. but the air is going to cover by far the biggest area and then a visual conformation. >> and that is when we can put the toad pinger in the water. best of luck for your team. we are rooting for you guys and hope for good news soon. >> oscar pistorius could soon take the stand. prosecutors have rested and the defense is going to present his case. why might here his version of what happened the night he shot his girlfriend.
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right now the defense is preparing its case in the oscar pistorius case and lawyers from the defense side said he will
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take the stand first on friday probably. the defense is going to trying to back up the claim that shooting his girlfriend, reeva steenkamp, was a horrible. we have a trial and criminal defense attorney here. there were more than a hundred witnessess on the prosecution's list and they only called 20. why do that? why put so many on the list if you are not going use them? >> if one goes south, you might want to bring in someone else to make it better and you want to prep the defense for everyone that could testify. >> there are real problems he is going to have to explain. he said he was going to get fans
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when all of whatever happened in the bedroom took place. but one of the fans were plugged in. so he apparently had time to plug in the fan as he is buri buried -- worried -- about an intruder >> it is going to come down the the credibility and whether the state believes his case. the state is trying to present reeva steenkamp's side because she cannot testify. now we are going to hear from the only living witness. he is going to have to wrap up the loose ends and tie it together in a creditable way. >> his family lawyer says he doesn't think they have a choice, they to put him on the stand >> he is guilty of murder and it
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is only premeditated or not. the only person that can speak to that is him. >> we have another story from montana. a woman who was murdered eight days pled guilty to tossing her husband off the cliff and now she wants to change her plea. we will find out why and get your thoughts on that after the break. is the inside of your body. see the special psyllium fiber in metamucil actually gels. and that gelling help to lower some chesterol. metamucil. azing benefits in 1 super fiber.
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a bombshell development in what became known as the newly
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wed murderer case after a wife pushed her husband to his death has changed the guilty plea. >> when you plead guilty to second-degree murder and realize the penalty is worse. she took the plea deal and thought she would get a sentence of ten years. and now the state is recommending life in prison still. imagine two young lovers eight days after the wedding and the groom vanished. reported missing by friends.
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the body was found and graham said she got cold feet and was hiking with him to talk it out. prosecutors argue it was more planned out. they dropped the first degree murder charge in exchange to plea to a lesser murder charge. now she wants out >> why is she changing the plea? >> the attorneys reached this deal and now the defense attorneys are saying you didn't negotiate in good faith because the life in prison was supposed to be taken off the table. they feel like the deal was soured. >> let's go back to heather hanson and ashley merchant. have you heard of a case like this, heather? it would seem this would be casted in concrete when they
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made the plans >> plea records are done off the record and under rule 11 you can withdraw from the sentence. i am not sure the reason is strong enough to allow them to do it. >> the defense thought she deserved ten years maybe for a second-degree murder con victio and the prosecution things it is still appropriate here. >> plea bargaining is a contract and the client and defendant relied on the expectation she would get ten years. if they are changing their terms of the bargain she can change her terms. it comes do you know to what was agreed upon and what was conveyed. if she entered the plea thinking she was getting ten years and
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that wasn't the case, it could be considered cohearsed. >> you say this is off the record. i would think much of this is written down >> much of it is but if there is no proof it is he said/she said. the judge doesn't have to listen to the report even. she wasn't ever garn teed ten years i bet. >> would they have to have a new trail? what do they do if the judge let's her withdraw the plea? >> they go back to the same position they were in before she entered the plea. they could renegotiate the case and enter into a new plea or she
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could decide she wants to be to go to trial and the statements made couldn't be used against her. it is going back to square one. >> what a strange case and the latest twist is odd to me. thank you both. investigators maybe inching closer to finding the remains of flight mh370 and we will talk about the partial ping that could help reveal what happened to the missing jet before it stopped flying. and new information about the moments leading up to this train derailment in chicago. what the federal investigators are saying about the crash.
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jenna: a fox news alert just before noon on the east coast, we are awaiting information of the mudslide in washington state. investigators about to hold a news conference any minute now
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where we hope to learn more about the rescue operation that is still taking place. crews are continuing to calm the disaster area using bulldozers, chainsaws, they're using their bare hands trying to find anyone that could have survived this. the huge hillside on saturday, 24 people are believed dead, dozens more are still missing. we will march the news conference and bring any updates as we get them. in the meantime, any delay to sign up for obamacare. jon: five days to go before the deadline to enroll, and white house announces an extension. all they have to do is check a box the website saying they tried to sign up and had trouble and they get extra time. no way to check if they are telling the truth, it is all done on the honor system.
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they say the delay the political moved to help democrats running for reelection this november. the white house says it is simply an attempt to ease the last minute rush. ed henry traveling with the president in brussels belgium. >> white house officials are saying move on, there's nothing to see here. jay carney had signaled the podium if people were trying to get in last minute the paperwork was in the system they would try to accommodate people but the fact remains jay carney along with a whole string of officials had been saying for weeks now that march 31 was the deadline, end of story. take a listen. >> march 31 is the deadline for enrollment. you have heard us make that clear.
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>> if you say you already were in the system in the pipeline trying to do the paperwork, you could basically get this extension. jon: what an admission. the building of this website was so bad you might not be able to sign-up. that is the case, we will allow you more time. that is what this amounts to, right? >> sure. they tried to say yes, we website was a disaster from the beginning, we own up to that, but we are trying in recent weeks to jack up the number of people going in with the president doing the "between two ferns" video. he knew there would be a surge of people getting him because it was such a disaster. john boehner said really, more delays? listen. >> last night brought us yet another delay of obamacare,
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another deadline made meaningless. putting enough loopholes into the law already, it is now resorting to an honor system to enforce it. is this a joke? >> white house officials believe the joke will be on republicans in the long run because they believe republicans like john boehner have put too much stock in repealing the law. that case has been undermined a bit by the president continuing to delay his own law. jon: thank you. jenna: fox news alert, another partial paying was sent by the jetliner eight minutes after the last full transmission. this is the search continues now for the plane and a remote area of the indian ocean effort was delayed because of bad weather. in the meantime what is being called the most credible lead so
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far, relational officials say a french satellite captured images of 100 pieces of debris in the southern indian ocean, not far from where three other satellites detected objects. live with the latest now on that. >> the satellite images compelling from a credible source giving optimism they will find this. the weather is getting worse, the black box battery is dying and the 12 airplanes came back with nothing today. here is the image taken by satellite on sunday. enlarge image blurred by cloud cover, 154 square miles total. the number of objects identified about 122. some bright in color. the largest 75 feet long, roughly the size of a wing. it is consistent with the flight path. also, not far from debris
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located on earlier satellite images. >> it is not very far from the object over here and over there. this is the most credible lead we have. jon>> the 12 planes that went ot today so nothing linked to the flight 370. here is the latest clues. previously officials said the last thing the digital handshake between the satellite at aircraft came in at 11:00 a.m. now they say one more came eight minutes later, a partial ping that could mark the actual crash time. why is that significant? ping happen on the hour, this could have been the electrical system trying to reset during the crash or significant rapid descent. it could help the search teams focus their search to further shrink the area the pilots had
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to fly. the fbi says they should complete their search of the home flight simulator for e-mails, web searches and deleted files by friday. back to you. jenna: thank you. jon: there are several satellite images that could be debris of the missing plane but still no trace of the actual ship. more than two weeks later nothing identified as part of the boeing triple seven. not even a seat cushion. the ceo, we get so used in this modern world to see video of it, which is of it, why is this satellite search so frustratingly fruitless so far? >> it is tough to scan that level of area. we don't know precisely where the plane went down. we are talking about 500,000
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square mile area. we are just getting a snapshot on a daily basis. if there is cloud cover like the french satellite image, it is skiers what we are trying to look at. incredibly difficult process when we are not really sure where we are looking. jon: up until now we have seen evidence of one or two or maybe three pieces of debris in the ocean that could or could not be from the plan. alan the defense minister says 122 items, that sounds all of a sudden significant like they have been able to zero in on the spot where the plane went down. how hopeful are you? >> unfortunately you find out they are largely garbage dumps and we hav had a bad habit of dumping a lot of debris in the oceans. a lot of stuff floats around, so that is not surprising that they would see objects.
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they have to pull something up and prove it is connected to the flight to get any confirmation. jon: assuming this plane went down in the indian ocean. >> factually we know it is no longer flying. we don't have a good handle on where, that is the problem. jon: that is becoming a problem as time passes because the longer it goes, if they do find a seat cushion or a piece of the wreckage, it will be more and more difficult to backtrack the current and the wind and figure out where the debris actually came from, right? >> exactly. the latest sighting has my head scratching because it is clustered for the australians and the chinese, wait a minute, this debris should be widely dispersed by now due to the current and the wind, it will not be clustered to where it was
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before if it is the same impact. that has me questioning whether this is actually related or not. i am dubious it is tied to the same impact. jon: all right. thank you for your expertise. >> sure. jenna: the white house administration officials said he wants to make sure officials ams don't get caught up by any last-minute rush the it is it politically motivated? and take a look at this, a train jumped the track and hits the top of the escalator at a very busy airport. the latest on this accident next.
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jenna: we are told about the new delay to sign-up for obamacare. the formal cataract could have on a midterm. most americans still oppose it. the firm provides analysis for that paul shared her thoughts on the findings giving advice to fellow democrats saying in terms of obamacare don't defend it, say it was squashed from the beginning and we will fix it. we will not go back to the days of leaving you on your own with the insurance company. again, her advice. the battleground poll she did fighting 53% of likely orders oppose obamacare. 43% are in favor of it. here is fox news digital editor reacting to the enrollment delay when it was first announced last night. >> this is the first nod for political reality this is this administration knows in an election year they cannot find people large sums of money for a
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product that they can't get to because the website is so bad, this comes down to vulnerable democrats telling harry reid make this go away, the last thing the president wants is a bill on the floor republicans can make them get bad votes in a danger. jenna: was this delay for the people that might need it if they get stuck online? or is this really about politics? >> if you are stuck in line, somehow delayed or have problems that changed your situation so you now are eligible for the subsidy, that is understandable like people standing in line for voting or the bank or something at 3:00.
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this politics, i don't think there is away from it you want to make sure politically you are saying w we're getting in the maximum number of people in the tent as close as possible to be 7 million that had once been predicted for the six months enrollment. jenna: you can get an extension for your taxes, is anything different for this? >> they don't have the statute it authority to extend the open enrollment deadline and here they are now asked any open enrollment deadline. quite frankly i would imagine what this means is the number of those enrolled in a more importantly number of those who are actually paying into the system or have completed whether they are getting subsidies are not completed their part of the payment process i would imagine those numbers are probably very, very low, which is the real
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reason to delay it. jenna: we really don't have firm numbers at this time. what do you think in the advice? don't defend obamacare. it was squashed from the beginning. we will fix it. what do you think of the advice for democrats? >> i think it is a little old. we go back to florida wit wherey lost to republican, but republican also was talking in terms of if you look at the poll numbers, americans and a majority of non-tea party republicans say let's make it work. given what happened in the florida elections, the current thinking is democrats need to be more aggressive saying this is a landmark talking about the benefits of people who are seniors people with pre-existing conditions, people who did not have insurance a cheerleader rather than being defensive.
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they have turned this narrative against obamacare, and that hurts it. jenna: the white house things republicans have put too much stock in repealing the law. should some of this advice coach republicans as well, they should talk about fixing it? >> i do think it is imperative they put forth real substantive ideas about how to fix a major problem for a lot of americans with the health care system. but i also agree, this advice, what is really great about it for republicans is it opens up republicans to say that is right, you didn't read the law before you passed it. you are now saying it is flawed and needs to be fixed. maybe they should have thought about that back before they read
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the law. jenna: at this point we don't have hindsight. we have a lot more time, we will see what the final numbers are when we get them. thank you. jon: as a crisis in ukraine becomes increasingly dangerous, foreign policy experts cutting the president putin too much slack? as he continues his power-play in that part of the world. plus, frightening new video of the train derailment at chicago o'hare airport. they say it is a miracle nobody was killed. 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. ♪
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jon: a dramatic video of when a train crashed at chicago o'hare international airport. you can see the train pulling into the station and crash
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landing, even climbing and escalator up the platform. forcing people nearby to run for their lives. live in chicago with more on that. >> the train operator was fast asleep when it came barreling into chicago o'hare airport stock. that is what she told ntsb investigators. she did not even wake up until it hit the bumper, jumped the track and continued on obviously. this is not the first time she has fallen asleep at the switch. >> on february she dozed off without stopping. they became aware of that almost immediately and a supervisor admonished her and had a discussion with her. >> chicago transit authority. that same operator was disciplined for oversleeping and showing up late for a shift in
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the 60 days since she was trained. the ntsb is now gathering data about all of the mechanics and trying to determine why the trip stop did not hold the train. the injuries on the train are relatively minor given the dramatic nature of this crash. now the ntsb has released the scene, they have begun the process of cutting up the train and removing it from the airport stop. lawsuits have already begun. jon: i am guessing that is a multi-million dollars. >> at least it will cost her her job. jon: thank you. jenna: growing concerns russia will take over more of ukraine today as they try to figure out how to stop vladimir putin from further destabilizing the region. our political analyst showing too much sympathy particularly on the defense crimea used to be
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part of russia? our next guest has interesting ideas writing in the "wall street journal." mr. putin is pursuing his interest as ringleader sitting on the timebomb that is a commodity-based economy. best u.s. policy will seek to lead a fuse on the bomb, strengthen allies and contain fallout. joining me now, columnist the "wall street journal." you say light the fuse. what do you mean by that? >> we want to accelerate the putin regime. that should be the principal goal of american policy. putin praise on his own middle class, on his own people and as we know his own neighbors. one of the things we like to do
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is looking at $70 billion worth of capital flight. we want to penalize the oligarchs handling a lot of money. most of all we want to be increasing not only the supply of natural gas and oil at home, but also our trade with western europe heavily dependent on the russian energy support. jenna: in your column you went through some of this hammering about whether or not we can judge vladimir putin. we went into iraq and others called it. there is an equivocation of that. >> sometimes you have to make a distinction. a 12 year crisis, violating one u.n. security council after another.
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we went in, took out an evil dictator, we sacrificed 4400 american lives fighting al qae al qaeda, try to stand up as perfect as it is a relative government that doesn't threaten is people, doesn't threaten their own neighbors. how is that remotely comparable to putin using a bogus pretext to seize a piece of territory that might have been russia but it was turkish before that. jenna: it is great we can have a debate about what is going on in the world, but what about the cause as we can judge vladimir putin? >> there is a moral an embarrassment that takes place that says because we have sinned at this or that juncture, we
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cannot stand up against naked aggression and make a statement about that. that is simply wrong and plays into putin's hand. he wants us to say i went into russia just like you went into iraq. there are other countries that could have historic claims, poland could have a historic claim. poland is a modern democracy that does not use history to justify aggression. jon: the president will be speaking in 60 minutes to half an hour, he will have a speech that addresses ukraine and talks a lot about europe. one of the things you touched on as we wrap up is just the size of russia as a country. he could be in power for what, another 10 years legally as president? what needs to be said especially in the speeches coming up by the president to address the situation? >> he has to personalize this.
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this is about our policy to make sure a regime that is stealing from its own people doesn't get a pass and isn't allowed to rewrite sovereign borders. we are going to make putin and his team repave. jenna: is there a reason he has to say that? >> the president of the united states should not have to wring his hands in the face of aggression against a sovereign country and ally of the u.s. jenna: thank you. jon: meantime the russian military cementing its hold on crimea seizing the last remaining crimean ship off of the peninsula. they dramatic standoff last night the ship tried to sail to freedom .in the russians four days. but it was surrounded by several russian military vessels and helicopters, both exchanged fire.
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nobody was hurt but in the end the captain and the crew of the courageous vessel was forced to abandon their ship and return to shore. north korea at it again. coming up, rogue nations explosive reaction to the meeting between president obama and leaders of south korea and japan. we will tell you what they did. and live in cape cod, massachusetts, where spring thi. more than 10 inches of snow and dangerous wind gust up to 65 miles per hour. david lee miller is braving the weather, he is up next.
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jenna: fox news alert. may be spring put parts of new england under a blizzard warning as you can see. massachusetts expected to bet up to foot 1/2 of snow by the end of the day with pun meshing 60 mile-an-hour wind gusts. we have in hyannis, massachusetts, in the middle of it all. david lee. >> reporter: almost lost my hat, jenna, moments ago because of high gusts. gusts are over 70 miles per hour, approaching hurricane force gusts. as for the snow, we've seen close to foot of it in parts of cape cod. as you can see it is still coming down and coming down more sideways. temperatures, high 20s, 30 degrees. still here very, very cold. this is the port in hyannis.
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it is deserted today. if you look down in this direction you can see a few boats here in the port. one of them is a ferry. all of the ferry service today to the outer islands, such as nantucket, martha's vineyard, we are told that is suspended because of this spring storm. and another consequence of this storm, some 8,000 or so people we are told, are now without power. but yet there is some good news, jenna. we expect the temperatures by the end of the week to hit about 50 degrees. and summer, well, that still 86 days away. don't unpack your swimsuit just yet if you're coming here. there is one thing to be mindful of. i took a look in the record books. in april, in cape cod, jenna, it has snowed nearly a foot. so they might be getting a break at the end of this week but, it is not summer at least, not yet. back to you.
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jenna: all the more reason to hold on to that hat, right, david lee? you will need to keep that. word to the wise about the bathing suits. thanks for the advice. david lee miller, thank you. >> reporter: my pleasure. jon: just hours after president obama met with leaders from south korea and japan, north korea is firing missiles. south korea's military reports that they fired two medium-range ballistic missiles. they flew off north korea's east coast. this is the first launch of missiles since 2009, a violation of u.n. security council resolutions. protests in south korea as conflict escalates between the two nations. they're pushing north korea to apologize four years to the day later of a deadly sinking of a south korea warship that killed 46 sailors near the western seaboarder of north korea. north korea denied any involvement. joining us is gordon chang, nuclear showdown, north korea
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takes on the world. why launch these missiles right now? >> first there are a couple things. they want to express their disdispleasure with the annual, south korea u.s. military exercises. jon: like sinking the warship. >> sinking the warship and other things. they're unhappy with president obama meet withing leaders of south korea and japan. they have to test these things because they sell them. if you scrape the paint of iran shahab 3 missile it's a from north korea. they sold the things to pakistan. they need to show their customers that these things work. jon: they have nuclear weapons and you say they're selling nuclear material to the iranians. >> and to the syrians. the actor -- reactor that the irisraelis destroyed in 2007, was north korean reactor with north korean technicians there. every time they have activated a device three times there were iranians on site watching it.
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they have a joint nuclear weapons program. jon: the president said the other day, what keeps him hupp, or yesterday, what bothers him, the thing that scares him the most is not a russian ic b m but some kind after rogue nuclear weapon being set off above manhattan where we're sitting right now. iranians certainly, could do something like that. so could the north koreans. >> and also, north korea has established links with about every terrorist group in the world. they merchandise their nukes. they merchandise their missiles. who is to say they will not sell this stuff to terrorists in it was good for the president to say he secured loose nuclear material from belgium, italy and japan. bell gums are not the problem. they will not be the one that is set off a nuke in manhattan. jon: you point out if the north koreans sold ukraine yum, enriched uranium the iranians, all this concern whether iran is
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getting the bomb, they basically could have component evidentiary right now, right? >> the important assumptions we have with these ongoing nuclear negotiations with iran they don't have enriched-uranium in order to put into their weapon. we know the north koreans sold semiprocessed uranium. we know the two countries have been colate rating on all nuclear programs. that assumption we have should be wrong. jon: how should the world respond to the lawn of these missiles and everything else that the north koreans are doing right now? >> first thunk you get the u.n. security council to impose tougher sanctions that will be forever. so the thing the united states needs to do is lien on south korea and china, because both seoul and beijing have been supporting north korea in different ways. what we need to do is tighten those sanctions. this is something we have within our power to work with the two
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governments. that is the where we have to have our major initiative. jon: it has become a very scary world all of a sudden. gordon chang, thank you. >> thank you. jon: jenna. jenna: keep focus on politics. the white house changing obamacare law without consulting congress. a lawmaker reacting to the latest enrollment delay. that senator, senator barosso joins us live in a moment. a live look at the dow trading up amid a growing debate how america can create more jobs. does the answer lie in bringing in more skilled immigrants? one professor thinks some stay with us.
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jenna: "happening now," some new reaction to the latest delay for obama care days before monday's deadline to enroll, the white house announcing an extension giving some more people to sign up a little more time. if you start the process you can continue the process past march 31st. the move goes against claims from the obama administration just within the last two weeks
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this would not happen. >> are you going to delay the open enrollment beyond march 31st. >> no, sir. >> is it correct that you don't have the authority to extend that deadline? , the position that the centers for medicare and medicaid have made, do you agree with that? >> i haven't seen their, their statements, sir, but there is no delay beyond march 31st. >> can you rule out the idea that the president doesn't delay the individual mandate? >> yes, i can. >> you can? that will not happen? >> that will not happen. jenna: republican senator john barrasso joins me right now, chairman of the republican policy committee and dr. barosso, a an orthopedic surgeon. nice to talk to him about health care issues. senator what do you make of the reversal now? >> jenna, they are panicked at the white house. they set a number of seven million people ensured through the health care program and the law. they're woefully behind that and
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they're panicked and want to try to get the numbers up any way they can. we're still trying to find out how many people actually have insurance, not just have gone to the website which is what the white house is counting but actually how many paid for the insurance? and of those that are paying, how many didn't have insurance beforehand because after all the president said he wanted to get 30 million americans who didn't have insurance to get insurance. they haven't even been counting that, but it looks like there may be fewer than two million americans after all of this spending and all of these things. jenna: we actually don't know the numbers yet, right? that is one of the issues we're having, we don't have accurate numbers in some things you're asking. senator, as a doctor as well as a lawmaker, what about this question? we get extensions, we need to file our taxes. should people have more time if they need to shop appropriately for insurance? what is the risk of that? >> well this is just one of
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about 25 different changes the president has unilaterally made to the health care law and, all you have to do is ask on honor system. give me an a on my test and sure, i may have, or not, handed in the paper. the president continues to make swiss cheese out of this law. and the other question to all of this is, what kind of insurance do people have in terms of what kind of coverage do they get if they actually go through this health care website. and buy insurance and what we're finding is, many people are not able to keep their doctor, can't get the kind of care they want and specifically for cancer patients, the associated press is telling us that only four of 19 major cancer centers in the country will be covered by all the programs you can buy insurance for on the exchanges. so the president makes promises but he is not keeping, keeping very few of them. jenna: looking forward the extension would give people on
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the honor system until mid-april to make the final choice on health care. is there anything within the senate or congress in general to stop the extension going from mid-april to mid-may oar maybe going to november when there is election. >> that is the key thing about all of this, jenna. i think the president and democrats are panicked by what's happening. there is so much opposition to the health care law. the president said the website would be easy to use as amazon. cheaper than your cell phone bill. you could keep your doctor. people are not finding the president's statements to be true. he wants to continue to push pain associated with this law. jenna: there is nothing you can do? >> push the pain beyond the november elections. jenna: there is nothing you can do to stop that. >> there are lawsuits filed on different parts of health care law. the supreme court visited yesterday about one of the specific cases and there arguments there. so that is the route to go. the american people are seeing that they're not signing up for the health care law and the
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administration is desperate to try to find a way -- they talked about there was going to be a mad rush. the administration is mad because there is no rush to sign-up for health care. jenna: we don't mow the numbers. we don't know that. we'll continue to watch the legal challenges which is the path you say has to be taken to try to challenge this law. just real briefly here, you wrote an op he had at fox news.com. one of the things you said republicans do believe in reform for the health care system. when will americans see a comprehensive republican plan for that reform? >> republicans don't believe that the answer is a 2700 page law. we know those are full of problems and unintended consequences which is the problem of this health care law. we need to go step by step in the right direction to make sure that people with preexisting conditions are covered. we need to make sure young people can stay on their parents plans. we want people to get more bang for the buck, shopping across state lines, leveling the playing field from a tax standpoint.
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there are specific things that we can do but this 2700 page law has been fraught with disaster for the country. jenna: we look forward again to seeing a comprehensive plan and whether or not that is presented by the gop before november is a big question. we love to have you being back to talk about this. senator barosso, thanks so much for the time today. >> thanks for having me. jon: there are questions whether america is losing jobs because of our immigration policy, particularly for skilled workers. last month we saw the unemployment rate tick up slightly to 6.7% with 175,000 jobs added in this country. now a dartmouth professor writing in the "wall street journal" says a job is lost every 43 seconds because skilled immigrants are not being hired in larger numbers of the theory, that skilled immigrants bring in more jobs for americans, particularly at technology companies. let's bring in gerri willis, fox business anchor and host of "the willis report." gerri, is this professor on to something? what do people say about this.
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>> he has pretty interesting numbers. the silicon valley companies have been complaining for some time that people get high-tech visas 58,000 given out, there are not enough of them. we need more. that is because we're not graduating enough stem, science, technology and research graduates out there. they say it's a real problem. and in front of congress not too long ago last year, bill gates from microsoft, the microsoft founder said for every single skilled worker brought from overseas, another five jobs are created. that is where that statistic comes from. once more, microsoft is putting its money behind its mouth. they have set up a barge 12 miles offshore of san francisco as a haven for international entrepreneurs. so the issue is red hot, jon. jon: right. i suppose that 12-mile limit keeps them outside some reach of the federal government. >> that's right. jon: does everybody agree on this. >> no, they don't. there is a wide-ranging debate on this. one of the fact that is people
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who oppose this idea say is that look, if there's a problem with stem graduates, why aren't salaries going through the roof? why aren't they spiking? and they're not. they have got a point there. once more, when you look at graduates of these programs, you find that a year after graduation a lot of them are not even in their field anymore. 64% of computer and information science graduates are not in their field after a year. 54% of engineering graduates are not in the engineering field anymore. which is shocking. of those engineering students, half say they left because of pay and a third say they left because there were no jobs. so, big debate, jon. jon: gerri willis, fox business network. thank you. >> thank you. jenna: possible debris field spotted in the search for the missing malaysian jetliner. the latest in the hunt for flight 370. millions of baby salmon trucked hundreds of miles away. the unprecedented and expensive fish rescue. why officials say it's necessary.
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jenna: massive effort to save california's drought-stricken salmon population. wide life officials are taking a drastic measure relocating the salmon 200 miles across the state. claudia cowan streaming live from rio vista, california with more. >> reporter: jenna, don't let the rare rainstorm moving through northern california today fool you. wildlife officials say they are trying to avert a fishing disaster because they say drought conditions could kill millions of baby salmon as they migrate from the northern california hatcheries out to the pacific ocean. this year those fish are bypassing the trouble spots and hitching a ride down river. these tiny fish are getting sucked into tanker trucks for the trip of a lifetime, the first of 30 million california
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salmon in a normal year would have been released at their hatcheries, mike greated down the sacramento river to the pacific and eventually return to spawn. >> it is in the ideal an we're having to take extraordinary measures. >> reporter: this gives the fish their best shot? >> right now this year we believe so. >> reporter: the climate controlled trucks carry the young salmon 275 miles down river to san pablo bay where they get a chance to acclimate. over past 2 1/2 months barges with nets will transport the young fish out to the pacific ocean where the chances of surviving and growing into adults will be significantly higher then left to fend for themselves. >> if these fish were released in river, their survival would be less than 5%. this is really giving them a leg up on survival. >> reporter: this massive fish rescue is costing taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars but officials argue the state's $1.4 billion salmon industry and tens of thousands of jobs are at stake. >> what that means jobs in the
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year 2016 whether these fish come back as adult and we have something to catch in the ocean and in the river. >> reporter: and because a quarter of these tiny salmon have been tagged in a few years, hatchery officials will be able to get a pretty good idea how many did make it back and also ways to improve on this plan b to boost salmon survival in future drought years. jenna. jenna: interesting, claudia. thank you. jon: salmon fillet and a lovers dream coming up. story behind the world's largest, key lime pie.
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♪ we had an extensive conversation about key lime pie. as a crew, we agree we are for them. dozens of people digging in to the joint treat. it was dedicated by florida key
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chefs in honor of key day. it can produce more than 1,000 slices. >> on a bitterly cold day in manhattan, the florida keys sound good. >> i will take a piece of pie. america new's headquarters starts now. >> moments from now president obama speaks to american allies in europe and what will jose about vladimar putin and russia. welcome to hq, i am bill hemmer. >> and the president met with american alloys and nato leaders in brussels. ed is traveling and joins us, how is it? >> reporter: good to see you elizabeth. the bottom line, the president is meeting with leaders in nato

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