tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News April 10, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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message in a bottle be? george says, if my phone is still in existence, con tan me. steen -- steven, i would write a knock-knock joke and put the punchline in another battle. now here's shep. >> good afternoon. the practicing from central florida where cops just raised the stakes in their hundred for map they say caused a deadly crash interest daycare center in orlando. there's 5,000 didn't reward for the arrest. a four-year-old girl died and more than a dozen others were hut. cops say the driver sped a. from that scene, that he left behind screaming children and their helpless caretakers who frantically tried to save lives with cpr. we just got the guy's rap sheet. his name is-korcado and cops
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have busted him eight times before. he served time in prison for trafficking cocaine and is right now out on bail for a different hit-and-run and a long lest of drug charges. cops say this case started when he rammed his suv into another car from behind this time yesterday. that sent the smaller car flying threw the daycare center's wooden wall. on the other side of the wall, dozens of children, some of them babies in cribs in the chaos that followed, bloody children on the ground. parents ran to the scene. >> scared to death. actually scared to death. >> it was really hard. hi first child so it was extremely hard to kind of process everything. >> you know it was. witnesses say the man whose car crashed through the wall was in a daze.
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he wondered asking, what did i do? the cops say the guy who started it all, they found the suv and there it is. it was damaged in the front. nearly 4 hours late -- 4 -- 24 hours later the police say the man is still on the loose. >> some horrendous details from parent and children who were inside the daycare center yesterday and were either injured or saw their friends good down. >> he told me he saw the car come through. he saw the person in the car. he described his friend getting hit in the stomach with a table. he said he saw his friends underneath the car. he said he saw one of his friends in the rocks and blood on her face. >> that daycare center just outside of orlando has been in
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operation for 25 years. there were 50 children in attendance yesterday, some of them babies just six weeks old. >> did you get anymore details on the victims. >> several children still in orlando area hospitals. one in critical condition, two in serious condition. as for the four-year-old who died from her injuries despite valiant efforts to save her, lilly, age four, her mother she was -- said she was sitting at a table and the car plowed into her. the mother says she is lost and doesn't now how she will survive. the teenager accused of going on a bloody rampage in this high school. slashing and stabbing classmates with two kitchen knives is a nice young man who had never been in trouble before. the word from his lawyer who says he ordered a struck exam for the client. prosecutors charged the teenager as an adult now, including four
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counts of attemptedded homocide and 21 counts of aggravate assault. among his apparent targets a student who doctors say got a knife in his liver. the blade missed his heart by mill meets. the suspects denied reports that other students bullied his client. he says the teen was no loner. >> a b-plus student. the family is like ozzie and harriet. they have dinner together every night. they did not see this coming. >> we're learning more about the survivors. one of the victims says he pushed his friend out of the attacker's way. he says the suspect then plunged a knife into his back. >> when someone said they saw blood, earn started screaming, and when i got hit, everyone noticed and just started running in different directions. >> he says his friend did not run. he says she stayed right by his side, applying pressure to his back, helping save his life.
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we'll speak live with her in a moment. another victim reportedly posted this celly to instagram, showing himself in the hospital, pointing to his pan damages. witness -- bandages. witnesses say after students ran out of building creaming and discovered in blood, folks grabbed sweatshirts and used them as tourniquets. steve is on scene. how is that community handling this? >> well, it isn't easy. they've been dealing with the shock and grief in very different ways. a little while ago a group of students walk up to the from door of the high school, you can see some video we shot. they taped up a sign on the front wall. we love our sky. pray for fr. franklin regional. we are fr, we are strong. now last night others dealt with the tragedy in a different way. takenning prayer services-candlelight vigils. 21 people were stabbed. one student in very critical
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condition. one security guard, also stabbed in the sum in this incident and he has been released from the hospital. >> anything new from the investigators working this? >> well, they're trying to come up with a motive. that's the big mystery here. the perpetrator, 16-year-old alex hribal, in jail, charged as an adult. some say he was shy, would keep to himself. others say he was bullied, his lawyer says nothing of the kind there was one report he sent threatening messages to students at the school the day before. that's being investigated. and according to officials in court yesterday when he made his first appearance, alex hribal said, i want to die. shep? >> steve on scene. we mentioned the student who says her best friend took a knife to his back to save her. he says -- i should say, she now says she held his hand until they got to the hospital. her name is gracey evans, a 17-year-old at that school. and joins us live on the phone.
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nice to talk to you. >> hi. >> he says you're quite his hero today. >> yeah. but he is more of the hero. >> how is that? >> he saved me. well -- >> let's become up. you and your friend, who is in the hospital, you and your friend are walking down the hall and you hear something screaming about blood. take it from the. >> yeah. so, what happened was then as soon as the kid looked at his hand with the blood, he -- this kid just -- he comes don the hallway, silent and no expression, and just starts stabbing people, and brett jumped in front of me -- >> brett is your friend in the hospital -- >> yeah, well-being discharged today. >> excellent. go on. >> so he stepped in front of me, and he took the knife in his back for me, and he just went down, and in less 30 seconds i
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saw three male boys get stabbed. i didn't know what to do. i was screaming and i was crying, and so all i could do was let out a blood-curdling scream and that when the fire alarm was pulled. >> you guys ended up then, it's my understanding, in a storm room or closet? >> yes. we end up in a storage closet. >> what happened there? >> there was a kid in worse condition that what brett was. so i left brett for a few minutes to go take care of the other kid, and my first instinct, not knowing what to do, i go to help the kid. i lay him down to get his airway unblocked and put pressure on the wound. and he barfed, and i felt bad. i had to stand up and go, but as soon as i stood up an emt came in and said, you have to move, so i moved. >> then you ended up going with
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your friend brett to the hospital. is that right? >> yes, i did. he was -- after i left the room, he started yelling in pain, and i went back into the room, and i just held his hand and he would not let good. and i went to the hospital with him. and he -- even if i had to leave for a second he would ask where i was. >> we're looking at pictures of brett from his hospital room. i guess you're about to be joined at the hip tv their rest of your lives. friends -- as for the guy who dd the stabbing, you know his older brother. what was this about? >> i have no idea. i haven't seep his brother. i mean, his brother is a really nice kid, really well-liked. i just don't know the brother that well. from what i heard, he was just a kid that just liked to be alone. >> well, gracey, his lawyer says
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that is not the case, but the investigation will good forward and it's great to hear you and brett and all the rest who survived this are doing better. gracey, so nice to talk to you. >> thank you. >> all the best to you and the race there outside pittsburgh. time. a bunch of people accused of kidnapping a prosecutor's father and sending threats to his family. a prosecutor. texting relatives, threatening to torture him and cut him into pieces. ahead, the dramatic mission to save him that ended with a hostage rescue team bursting through a wall. plus, bad news on wall street. it's getting worse as the hour moves on. the dow is off 283. that about 1.7%. that is not even the worse of it. the nasdaq is having the worst day i've seen in i don't know how long. it's off three percent. the reason for this is troubling. we'll get to thatting reafter this.
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how did edward jones get so big? t me just put this away. ♪ could you teach our kids that trick? [ male announcer ] by not acting that way. it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. five people accused of kidnapping a man in north carolina, sent his wife a picture of him tied up and sent text messages thenning to torture him and cut off his arms and legs. that's the word from investigators. we have a picture of the victim
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on our wall. the fbi reports agents packing a lot of fire power rescued him last light in atlanta. his family says he disappeared saturday in this home in ware forest north carolina, more than 400 miles from where the fbi agents found him. the individualnapping may be related to his tower's work as a prosecutor. what is the connection with the victim's daughter? >> the victim, frank jansen, has a daughter who is a assistant d.a. in north carolina. she successfully prosecuted a violent habitual felon, and while her father was missing, authorities say his cappers made demands to the jansen family, and while they wouldn't go into details about the motive for the kidnapping, they say the demands were for the benefit of melvin who is serving a life sentence.
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four of the final people charged in connection with the kidnapping are in their 20s >> police didn't immediately describe this as a kidnapping, right? >> that's right. out of an abundance of caution, they started out simply scraping this as a missing persons case. frank jansen was abducted from his wake forest, north carolina home, on april 5th. the police kept the fact this was a kidnapping underwraps. here's why. >> we did not know this immediately but once we uncovered evidence to lead to us that conclusion, we could not share it with the public bus rehe'sing that information was not in the best interests of mr. jansen's safe return. >> authorities say the criminal investigation is ongoing, but the search effort ended success fully. this north carolina man in captivity for five days handbeen
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rescued, is doing okay and being reunited with his relieved families. >> you may have seen the big news coming from late night. david letterman is out and now we know who is in. nation, cbs has announced one steven colbert will replace david letterman. a five-year deal. the news comes a week after letterman announced his plans to retire next year. so they send out a statement, david said, steven is a friend of mine and i'm flattered contribute chose him. i happen to know they wanted another guy with glasses. no word yet on whether colbert will take his comedy central
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we're still watching wall street and it's still not looking good at all. there you go. the dow is off about 250, a percent and a half. worse in the other indies -- indexes. the nasdaq is down three percent. the rope is the biotech sector is getting beaten up badly. it was last year's darling but right now biotech is tanking and it's taking down the nasdaq and the rest of the markets with it. s&p down two percent. updates throughout the hour. >> the russian government kept information from the fbi on one of the boston marathon bombing suspects. that's according to the reporting of "the new york times." the russian government had previously released some information about the older of the two brothers, tamerlan tsarnaev. some of the russian information came out two years before the attacks. and russia released more details
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after the bombings happened. tamerlan tsarnaev and his brother, dzhokar tsarnaev, are the sole suspects of the attacks at the boston marathon finish line, killing three people and injured more than 200 others. tamerlan tsarnaev died days after the attack during a gun battle with police. his brother faces the death penalty. catherine her around has more -- herridge is live. >> what we understand from lawmakers who have been briefed-is places some blame on the russian government in 2011 russian officials warned the fbi and then the cia that tamerlan tsarnaev was a follower of radical is lamb and was preparing to travel to dagestan to meet with extremist groups but only after the bombing that russia provided the fbi with
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more information, including the contents of a phone call between tamerlan and his mother back in russia, where they talked openly about islamic jihad. the charm of the homeland security committee saying the fbi made mistakes. >> some things fell through the cracks.at it our job not to make people feel bad about that but see how we can do better in the future so we don't have one of these events again. these one or are or two-men operations are very difficult to detect and disrupt. >> mccall's homeland security commit career was the first to publicly confirm the fbi did not table local cops where tamerlan lived. >> what is with the foreign connection? >> federal authorities say they found very little evidence of tsarnaev brothers were tied to a
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terrorist group. some lawmakers argue the fbi did not look hard enough based on two fact-finding trips overseas. >> in the course of doing that i learned that the fbi the cia were given detailed information about tamerlan tsarnaev through heroics -- security services and i. >> the could i unexplained piece of evidence in this -- the key unexplained key is the pressure cooker bomb but not found in the al qaeda online magazine which investigators says where is where the tsarnaev brothers got the directions to make those bombs. >> thank you. >> for more on this, let's turn to former fbi deputy assistant director, dan ya colson, also the former director of the fbi's anti-terrorism force good to see you. >> good to see you, too.
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>> i guess the fbi is limited by law and statute. >> they really are. they can only conduct an investigation based on the guidelines of the attorney general, and when they get also built of information, they can only conduct a preliminary inquiry. there was a comment the fib did not tell boston. they're not allowed to do that. so there's self-serving statements here and if they want to see how to do these things better the guidelinesessed -- guidelines need to be changed. >> the older brother, tamerlan, was on the radar but american thoughts thought he was more a danger to roche than the united states and the russians would not give up a lot of informationes not surprising. >> they never do. i i've worked with the russians and they give you a peek not not everything. there's a veil of secrecy over
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everything they give to us and if they would be alsomer forthcoming would could have done a better job. good example is once the bomb goes off the gloves come off and the fbi can do anything to conduct a comprehensive information. when you just have a little bit of prior information it acknowledge allows you to do a few things. >> for those who might say, well, russia is nation non grata, this is would a way to take the heat off the fbi. >> i would say, give the fbi more authority, conduct a logical investigation. >> more authority. >> well, more leniency in the guidelines. they have the authority but it has to get to a certain threshold before they can use things like wire taps and surveillance and more sensitive investigative techniques. they're investigation was
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extremely elemented by law. >> have been doing a lot of phone tapping on all of us, i guess they can't on tamerlan and dzhokar. >> it appears so. >> danny good to see you. >> thank you. >> investigators have changed their story about the final words of flight 370. who said what now? that and the latest on the search, which appears to be going much better because there is a brand new ping they tell us, if that is the case it could be invaluable in figuring out where the world this jet and all those people are. we asked people a question, 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,
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decade to report the problem after 13 people had died. last week on capitol hill one lawmaker accused of worker of trying to cover up the fally ignition switch issue. >> a man accused of murdering nine people as a drug cart yell hitman said he actually killed up to 40 people over three decades, according to the strict attorney in north alabama. prosecutors say the killings stretch has cross three states. >> first-time job claims fell to the lowest level for seven years. we'll have continuing news coverage right after this. [ male announcer ] this is kevin.
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narrow don't the search area even more. we can show you the current search area. on the left, in the yellow and black tinted area there, the hunt for floating debris. it's now an area the size of about the state of virginia. a quarter of what it was a few days ago. crews now say they've already looked there but today thayer crossed it in tighter patterns. on the right is the area where the australian air force has been dropping sonar equipment to pick up signals. that area is the size of the city of los angeles. the head of the search is optimistic they'll find the plane soon. today, a malaysian government official says investigators now believe the pilot spoke the last and final words to air traffic control. it was very minute in question. and the last worths were: good night, malaysian 370. the official said the pilot's voice did not show signs of,
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quote, duress. malaysian officials originally said the final words were "all right, good night" said be the copilot. we learned a few more things today. what else? >> each time they hear something new it brings new hope. here is one of the up sos they heard. this is computer analysis of one signal. experts are trying to confirm if that came from a black box, from flight 370. our open trace gallagher spoke with an ocean salvage expert who is not involved in the search, but says he convinced. >> these represent they have located where this plane has crashed. >> malaysian officials say they
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are now also hopeful. >> i hope it's the black box. if not we'll still not give up. we have been through this so many times. so many places. even if it is not, i will persevere. >> the australian government is saying the pings may last another ten days even though we're pat though 30-day period they're rated to last. >> if they die -- a battery doesn't die like that. it slowly gives -- loses its effectiveness. so maybe marries -- maybe there's more. mike? >> it's good news in terms of trying to find something. but the reality of it is, we may be looking for a black box that may not tell us what we really need. there's a lot of loose ends going back to the first episode of this, after the airplane took off, that need to be investigated. everything that comes out, another thing.
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now the pilot made the last announcement -- the last radio contact. then it's the airplane supposedly went around air space of indonesia. we're getting this left and right. we have to sort those things out. >> the words on the cockpit voice recorders. if they pilots were incapacitated or died before the end of the flight at it one thing, but if a pilot was ditching the plane into the ocean as the flight ended, that quite another. >> the only problem with the voice recorder, if it copies over every two hours, that first event that took place may be gone. >> the first part of it. but is it your sense that from what we're hearing now, five different sets of pings, is it your sense they though the general area now and -- they know the general area? >> there's nothing necessary the that would make an electronic ping. there's nothing the. at it the middle of nowhere. so they're probably picking it
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up. the question is, can they try angulate and get it to and then recover it? >> if you arrester, there's a whole new series of things to be done. >> absolutely. every parameter on the airplane will be on the black box. the fuel settings. the power settings. speed. all those things will be there. whether that will tell us enough as to why the airplane headed south rather than north, we don't know. >> we know we wouldn't have gone through everything over the last 35 days if they just had the tracking devices available and, as you said, would cost less than an inflight entertainment system. you'd hope the would be pressure on the industry to get its act together. >> that's a done deal. that will happen. we haven't needed before. airplanes haven't been disappearing. as of today, they're moving to do michigan like that, you -- do something like that. you can bet on it. >> mike, thank you. prosecutors in the oscar
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pistorius murder trial are grilling the blade runner about his past. like the time he fired a gun in a crowded restaurant. but the olympian claims he didn't actually pull the trigger. we'll take all of this to a lawyer. we're closing watching the markets. dow is down 1.4, the s&p down 2%. the nasdaq is crashing, down 3% on this session alone. the details as we approach the final bell just about 22 minutes from now. stay with us. [ male announcer ] legalzoom has helped start over 1 million businesses.
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oscar pistorius today faced a new round of tough questioning from south africa's so-called pitbull prosecutor. he took the stand for a fourth straight day and denied again he murdered his model girlfriend. first the prosecutor went through text messages between the played run -- blade runner and the girlfriend. he lawyer read some of her messages to the court.
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as he described oscar pistorius as a selfish boyfriend. >> today was one of my best friend's engagements, and i wanted to stay longer. i was enjoying myself, but it's over now. you have pecked on me incessantly. so. that not what happened the previous day. you have picked on me insis santaly. what is -- incessantly. what is that about? >> it's not true. >> you know, mr. pistorius, we don't have -- this is her on voice. picked on her incessantly must mean what it says, over days in your relationship, you picked on her. >> pistorius insisted he never picked on riva, and that she was never scared of him. the prosecutor later tried to portray oscar pistorius as a guy who is crazy about guns. he brought up a separate incident in which oscar pistorius fired a pistol inside a packed restaurant a month
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before he shot and killed his girlfriend last year. the olympian says the shooting in the restaurant was an accident. that the gun misfired. before the court adjourned today, the prosecutor focused on photos of the athlete's bedroom from the night reeva steenkamp was shot and killed. he says the photos contradict what the runner said happened there. the prosecutor called his version of the story a lie. pit pit -- pistorius still says the shooting was a terrible mistake. arthur is live here on the fox news deck. didn't mean to. compare what is going on in south africa to our system of government. for example, the question you just showed, when he said can -- when pistorius said, i don't remember, and he prosecutor says, i knew you weren't going to be able to remember this, that wouldn't happen here. the defense attorneys say, objection. the court says, don't go after
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them like this. there's no jury here. you don't want to have the guy up there crying, take the picture of her bleeding and show it to him and he's throwing up. you don't want sympathy for him. and is attacking petty things. because he said to her you're pick only me -- what is the saying, don't pull victory from the -- >> from the defeat from the jaws of victory. >> he has the scientific evidence. and the story it doesn't make sense, you hear someone to in the bathroom, you get up and blow the dorp away. >> doesn't make up you get up and lock the bathroom door, and she did. the prosecutors argue is the
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rope is they were in a fight and she was trying to keep him away. >> and the neighbors heard him yelling. why is he on the extend for four days? i get him to admit what he can't deny, shot the gun, in shot the gun in the restaurant, and then just go away. they have the case. don't mess it up. >> but is that the way you play it when you're not dealing with emotions when in the re before a judge doesn't matter. >> the judge is still a human. not like they're talking to a computer that they're just inputting the evidence and then they're pitting -- spitting out 0 decision. i wouldn't give hmm the opportunity to be sympathetic. has been sitting in the front row and throwing up and snotting off over the place. is that enough for the jump to
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say i'm not going to give him life. 20 years. >> there were two instances where somebody said to reeva steenkamp on text message, i love you. both her mother. that oscar pistorius never said that. the rope the prosecutors played it to say is you keep talking about you loved her butout didn't text her. >> this is a three month relationship. 90 days they knew each other. how that plays into the judge's mind i'm not exactly sure. in my mind it is a factor one way or the other. could you love or be so passionate about someone you want to kill them? or you feel them slipping away and you don't want anyone else to have them, are you going to kill them as well? that up to the jump. >> wonder how much longer he'll be on the stand. >> ate too -- it's too long. >> have a good one. >> yes, sir.
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>> fox report. a medical helicopter crashed as it was taking off from the roof of a hospital in albuquerque. facial says no patients were onboard and all three crew members are okay. they had just dropped off a patient there. it woulds say a gust of wind may be to blame. >> security cameras catch a shootout in a hotel in philly. police say they're amazed the shooters didn't hit anybody. cops say it happen last week but just released video, hoping will help track the gunman down. >> surveillance video shows a guy stealing a bunch of guns from a store outside of seattle. the owner says he is out thousands of dollars but what bothers him is the missing weapons. >> might be used in a crime. everybody who has a gun shop worries about that. >> investigators are worried as well. they're still looking for the
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thieves and all the guns. >> dozens of passengers have gotten sick on another cruise ship. officials say it will keep sailing. why is that? all those e-mails and phone calls you have to answer after you left the device for the day? i should say, when you go home for the day, this stays with you. mine works all day, 24/7, 365, that's what you sign up for. maybe you should move to france. the french won't have anymore e-mails after 6:00 or before 9:00. vive la france.
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thanks to a new agreement, i.t. workeds at google and facebook and other tech companies no longer have to check their mart phones once the leave the office. it covers workers with flexible schedules. the new rules give staffers a chance to disking. officials in one swedish city want to try out a six-hour work day, and could create jobs jobsd improve employee health. opponents say the officials are trying to drum up political support. you go, europe. >> cruise officials will not change one ship's itinerary even though dozens of passengers have gotten sick. the cruiseline asked the passengers to just stay in your rooms for the rest of the trip. it will be fine. according to a spokeswoman for princess cruises, 100 people are sick, possibly from norovirus.
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it's really awesome. they say it's common among people living in close proximity to each other, like in a cruise ship. this particular ship, the crown princess, set sale over the weekend from los angeles, this map shows the planned stops. crews officials say it will -- it still set to return to los angeles on saturday. trace gallagher is live from our west coast news hub. i hope they don't start another poop cruise. how will we know? >> you mentioned there's a quarintine but based on the honor system. not actually locked in their rooms. this virus is spreading like wildfire on the ship and there's three days left. so they're trying to contain this best as possible, and there are dozens of crew members who are also sake. that makes it more difficult to disinfect the ship, and doctors believe this is the norovirus.
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>> we believe this is called norovirus, relatively mild gastrointestinal illness, causes some vomiting and can cause some diarrhea. so, it's not something that we're extremely concerned about. >> mild unless you have it. six ships in the past two months have had noro sky obvious. >> is that hurting the cruise ship? >> the old saying, the rise can tide lifts all boats. this is the opposite. look at the poll from harris, 59% believe that air travel is more reliable. 54% believe air travel is safer. 54% say they're less likely to cruise now than a year ago. poo.
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so stephen colbert is replacing david letterman next year, and we is going to drop the character and just be his funny self. he is hilarious, and a lot of you are furious. what's up? >> we have some facebook and twitter comments. >> these are representative. >> yes. from twitter, this person says it's going to be hard for stephen to not take his comedy central ways to cbs. it will be interesting. this guy tweets, colbert's wallet just tweeted, ca-ching.
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>> one says he is the best one available. and ted says, honey boo-boo may have been a better choice. >> honey boo-boo? a lot of people were talking about who? >> about -- you told me. i wanted her to take it. >> i dent remember. >> come on. i was afraid you didn't want me to say. seriously? all right. i didn't think you were that drunk. >> on this day in 1970, paul mccartney unofficially announced the beatles were breaking up. that was the end of the show. tensions had been running high among the band members for a few years. each focusing on its own songs and mccartney was about to release his debut solo album. he interviewed himself and said he had no plans to work with john lennon again.
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the media reported it as the end of the beatles and it was. the final studio album "let it be" would hit the shelves a month later but the fab four were no more. 44 years ago today. insure >> there's a reason why they call april technically the worst month for the market, and the second quarter of the most problematic quarter. in this month, a big hit for the dow today and a really big hit for the nasdaq. single largest hit in two and a half points. welcome everybody, i'm neil cavuto. to show you how volatile things were and are, the volatility index which rentalsters collect it angst, surged 17% in one day. a lot of this harkens back to when the the federal
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