tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News June 3, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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carolyn says, mcdonald's is here time and frank says he feels the least amount of stress when he is at the bar. what about the control room? >> no stress here whatsoever. >> that's a lie. a total lie. >> like this all day long. >> have to keep it real here. here's shep. >> we're tracking developments in the case of bowe bergdahl. what we learn about why washington did not try to rescue him instead of trying to cut a deal. the note bergdahl is said to have left behind the night he disappeared and what's the joints chief chairman saying about an investigation and possible desertion charges, or is he -- was he a hostage at all? was he captured or a prisoner of war? plus, two 12-year-old girls in wisconsin excused of stabbing a friend and nearly killing her, all to please a fictional demon. it is a bizarre case and wait until you hear what girls told
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detectives,. dangerous weather in the planes. nebraska, kansas in particular, facing the threat of violent tornadoes today. we'll be watching it. let's get to it. good tuesday afternoon to you. fir, from the fox news deck this afternoon. sergeant bowe bergdahl is said to have left behind a note the night he left his afghan army post, a note that expressed disillusion with the army and the united states. that is according to pentagon sources who debrief soldierses who were there at the time. they say the note did signature that sergeant bergdahl wanted to renounce is u.s. citizen ship and find the taliban. of course, the taliban ended up holding him as a prisoner of war if you will for nearly five years. the questions over bergdahl's disappearance are just part of the controversy surrounding his release. this is complicated. with different parts. this is not a soup of
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controversy. the obama administration exchanged five top taliban leaders, prisoners of war in return. a price that some republicans in congress say was too high. but some of several bergdahl's fellow soldiers are calling for him to face a court-martial for desertion. the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff says the military will not ignore potential misconduct but general demps see defended the deal to free america's last known prisoner of war. he wrote, the questions about this particular soldiers' one duct are separate from our effort to recover any u.s. service member in him in captivity president obama echoesed that today. >> whatever the circumstances may turn out to be, we still get an american soldier back if he is held in captivity. period. full stop. we don't condition that. >> the president also defended the release of those five taliban leaders, which the
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republican senator lindsey graham called the taliban dream team. that says a general defense official tells fox news the pentagon had a good idea where the taliban was holding sergeant bergdahl but officials decided on a route because any mission could have gotten sirring bergdahl killed. we have team fox coverage on a complicated story. mike emanuale on capital hill. but let start with ed henry who is traveling with the president in poland. ed? >> good to see you, shep. the bottom line is the white house knows there's a huge fire storm in washington, back home, across the country, about exactly what happened here and questions, frankly, whether the president of the united states broke the law by not informing congress and also by moving forward on, as you say, a deal that is leading republicans to charges there's going to be taliban commanders back out on the battlefield, potentially harming america. we saw pushback from white house
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officials saying there's legal justification because the sect of defense is allowed to release prisoners from guantanamo if he invoked the idea that national security interests of the u.s. will not be harmed. they say chuck hagel did go forward with that belief, even though republicans like john mccain says our national security interests are actually harmed here, and the president acknowledged today he notice sure whether or not these commanders will go back to the battlefield and wage jihad against the u.s. >> i want be doing it if i thought it was contrary to mesh national security and we have confidence that we will be in a position to go after them if in fact they are engaging in activities that threaten our defenses. >> i don't think the american people want their lives of their men and women in the military at risk on the premise we can go after them again? is that the american national security kdz policy?
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>> it is very obvious that a trip in which the white house thought it would be focused mostly on the situation in ukraine, and the back and forth with russian president vladimir putin, instead right now is being overshadowed by this big controversy back home, shep. >> ed henry live this tuesday night. the president's critics congress are accusing him of breaking the law by not giving them enough notice before releasing the taliban detainees. the white house argues that sergeant bergdahl's health was so bad there would -- was no time to wait. what how hearing, mike? >> we're hearing some bipartisan frustration, dianne feinstein, the california democrat who is the chair of the senate intelligence committee, told reporters earlier, quote, it's very disappointing. there was not a level of trust to tell us. that in regard to the 30-day notification required for transferring come detainees. the top senate republican on the intelligence committee says he
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wants the american people to know what the american government knows about the five taliban fighters. >> this afternoon i'm going to send a letter to the president, and i'm going to demand that he declassify each of the classified files on these five individuals, so that all of you will have access to that and the american people will know what each one of these individuals was accused of. >> and shouse speaker john boehner this afternoon is saying the administration kept this deal a secret because they knew that congress opposed it. >> secretary hagel signed off on this trade, prisoners of war for prisoner of war. what about congressional leaders on consultation with them on this matter? >> we know there were conversations held privately, very quietly, between top administration officials and key leaders in congress, late 2011, early 2012, about the idea of trading five guantanamo detainees for sirring bergdahl. i'm told there was serious
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>> severe storms and the chance of towards threatening people in states across the central plains and midwest. i showed you the area on the wall. severe thunderstorm warning in this yellow region that you see on the top left, and then some here, and then this is a tornado watch area in red. it's just after, what, 2:00 in the afternoon in that part of the country so it's the tomb of dow when these things heat up and forecasters say the storms could continue through tomorrow. our chief meteorologist is in the fox extreme weather center, a big area, rick. >> we have not had a ton of severe weather this year, and tonight is one of those nights and it's going to go overnight. we're starting off with the threat of activity and i think that's near nebraska and iowa.
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but this moderate risk across the a big area, parts of nebraska, iowa, missouri, illinois, and as you just showed already we have the severe weather choose south dakota and these are not tornadic, but that's going to cut through and get towards the missouri river valley. hsu you see individual storms here, those would be tornadic potentially, and maybe some of them cutting down through central nebraska as well. during the overnight hours, shep, this begins to change you. see the heavy rain, 11:00 tonight, omaha, be ready, and then you see this backwards c. we think this will develop into a very big area, widespread, with very strong winds, maybe 60-80 miles-per-hour cutting all the way across iowa, cutting through the st. louis area, chicago by the morning hours, so
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talking about a big area that is potentially going to see some very damaging winds tonight overnight. iowa, illinois, eventually indiana, and ohio. we need to watch this all night long. >> what about into tomorrow, rick? >> we still have the threat with us for tomorrow. it's kind of separate. we see some of this redevelop back across parts of the high planes and then the ohio valley, not as big of a tornado threat tomorrow, more hail and wind .38. today and tonight is the worst for towards and this incredibly strong damaging winds overnight. >> we'll be watching all afternoon. thank you. the fbi revealing more details in the man in california suspected of possessing bombmaking materials in his home. this is less than a day they're arrested the map. that's ahead on the fox news deck.
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probably the most ridiculous and sad story of the day. syria holding its first multicandidate presidential election in decades as the civil war ranges throughout the country. the united states, saudi arainy and other allies called the vote a complete sham. still the "associated press" is now reporting tens of thousands of people have vote for the syrian president, bashar al-assad. this is an assad machine here, and this is an assad voter here. some supporters of the regime stamped their ballot with their own blood which this woman has done. they did this in iraq for the voting. this image shows president asaud and his wife casting their ballot. everybody happy in the picture, everybody is smiling. everything is really wonderful. after all, all they do is murder
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hundreds of thousands of people. activists call this a charade, because it is a charade, and there has been no voting at install rebel controlled areas, none. another picture of somebody voting. and then some reality here. hours ago activists provided this photo of a government air strike in a war-torn city of lepo as voting goes on today in syria. more than 160,000 people have tied in the civil war which some nearly three years ago and say a third of the victims have been civilians, innocent men, women, and children, and yet a democratic style vote is underway in syria. and pigs are flying. the guy from california who sparked a nationwide manhunt had items in his home that could have caused great harm to the public. that's according to the fbi. agents arrested the suspect yesterday in san francisco, just south of the golden gate bridge.
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he is ryan chamberlain ii, social media worker he calls himself. he work on campaigns on both sides of the aisle. the feds launched the manhunt because he was suspected of carrying explosive materials. investigators say when they arrived with a search warrant on saturday he was gone but they found him three days later. will carr is on the="
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the reporting of the south florida newspaper. the court documents show he was among more than a dozen players seeking money for medical treatment and compensation for long-term and chronic injuries. now da marino and his lawyers reported by discussing pulling out of the lawsuit they filed. the sources say, and i quote, it was never marino's intention to initiate litigation in this case, but to ensure that in the event he had adverse health consequences down the road, he would be covered with health benefits. they are working to correct the error. hmm. remember back in 2012, thousands of former players filed a class
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action lawsuit against the nfl. they claim that league hid the dangers of brain injuries among players while profiting from the sport's violent hits. the nfl and the plaintiffs agreed to a $765 million settlement last year, but a federal judge said that is just not enough. the damages may go even higher. so it's still open. so, what was it like for sergeant bowe bergdahl these past five years? we'll speak with somebody who spent more than seven months as a prisoner of the taliban. plus, china has reportedly shut down google 25 years after a deadly day in that nation's history. why analysts say the government wants to keep its people in the dark yet again. china, coming up from the fox news deck as we approach the bottom of the area and the top of the news.
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motors cars. reuters is reporting similar collisions killed at least 74 people. gm initially reported 13 had died when it re-called more than two million vehicles in february. the big three automakers reported sales jumped last month. >> witnesses say a police officer stunned a pregnant woman with a taser and she fell on her stomach as cops tried to break up a fight. the police department reports it's investigating. >> officials in egypt just declared the winner of the election, the former army chief by a landslideful he won with nearly, get this, 97% of the vote. he is booted the islamist president mohammad morsi out of office last year.
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returning to the battlefield. some republicans accuse the president of raising the taliban's -- the taliban still plate throughout much of the territory in the afghanistan-pakistan border, an area larger than the state of california. a recent study by the pentagon shows the taliban strength will likely surge after u.s. come bat troops leave afghanistan. catherine herridge is live. >> the state department briefing the reporters asking about the office in qatar, and the spokeswoman saying the administration hopes this bergdahl swap is not the beginning but in fact the end of the conversation. >> this was the only issue discussed with the taliban, obviously through a third party, as you all know from the reports
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this weekend. we're hopeful this will be an opening but we have received no assurances to that effect. >> critics say the negotiation for the five men, all senior members of the taliban, further legitimatizes the terror network as a power broker in the region that the u.s. will work with and republicans are not buying into the third-party explanation. >> with a straight face they're telling the american people we didn't do the negotiation with the taliban, that qatar did. do you really believe it was qatar that was doing the actual negotiations? of course, with the united states of america. >> the state department denying that this prisoner swap gave more legitimacy to the taliban, shep. >> so, what are supporters of this move saying about this now, catherine? >> well, with the war wining down the u.s. has to resolve issues with the taliban because the detainees cannot be held
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indefinitely are in authority that allowed foe their use of military force in afghanistan. >> this conflict in afghanistan is winding down and we would bee require, at least under the traditional laws of war, to return people who we have detained in that conflict. so, it seems in this case we have gotten -- we traded them for a reasonable deal. >> for his part the afghan president hamid karzai felt blindside by the deal which six-culp vented the effort to restart the discussions between the tall began government and the afghan government. >> our next guest was a prisoner of taliban. kidnapped in 2008 when he was a reporter for "the new york times" newspaper. he and his translator escaped from a compound in northern pakistan. david is now an investigative reporter for reuters and has won two pulitzer prizes.
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the store what it was like for you has been oft toll. can you give us a thought maybe what it was like for this guy? >> it's hard for me to say. just time-wise, i was held for one tenth of the time, seven months versus five years, that bowe bergdahl was held. i was lucky because i had this afghan journalist that helped me escape and he speaks english. bowe bergdahl was alone with guards who spoke pashtun, the local language, for five years no english speakers for five years. >> when you were there they didn't seem to know how the united states worked very well. for instance, they weren't aware that the united states doesn't pay for hostages. >> yes, and this is one of the problems. a bigger policy issue where the united states done pay for hostage and we have to, no, and europe, the french in particular, pay very large ransoms as a source of funding for al qaeda. >> an investigation has to
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happen and i'm disgusted by happened here. we read that he learned the disillusioned with war. if this two things are true he is not alone. that is not enough. i still wonder what happened there and what his treatment was like. what was yours like? >> in the beginning everyone thinks you must be terrified the whole time they're going to kill you. it's clear, they know they can hold you as long as they want in pakistan, they have a safe haven. they gave me food, medicine. the:'ll keep you barely alive until they can trade you and that's when you're alone and you're thinking i'll be held here forever, it anyone going to remember if i'm here. >> if you're barely alive i think a lot of things go through your head and this possible of your thoughts being reshaped and your ideas being molded is not so outlandish. >> i'll just be blunt here. i hated my can't temperatures --
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captors. i talked to other journalists who are captors. they hated their captors. bowe bergdahl hated the people that did this to him. i still feel guilty towards what my family went through and he will feel terrible remorse what his family has gone through, what the military has gone through itch don't know. he may have walked off the base. it's a terrible mistake. i want to hear more of the facts of the case, but he had been through this for five years now there should be an investigation. the other soldiers are upset deserve some answers. >> an. an investigation is in order, prejumping is not. you said you hated them. that makes perfect sense. i wonder there if was a time along the way when you got so desperate you would say or do anything. >> i did and part of the hatred was trying to escape. myself and this afghan journal just thought we would be killed but we were so angry and desperate that we did that there
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is an unconfirmed report that bowe bergdahl himself escaped but a was recaptured and fought aggressively. i don't know yet. a lot of unanswered questions. but it's not five years in captivity is not an easy ride. >> seven months in captivity isn't either. anyone would say that's a life changing spearens do you find you're the same guy you used to be? so many of these psychologists want to convince me it doesn't matter. you're a different human being. >> you are different. you appreciate life more. i just gotten married when i got kidnapped. i'm now home, my wife is pregnant with our social child, i'm back in -- second child. when he hears he probably doesn't even know about how upset the membered of his unit are there, there may have been deaths looking for him. that's a burden he will carry his entire life. >> i wonder about the claims who are speaking about those times were organized with folks of a
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political bent? that a couple of years ago the word came out, they may trade these five. that's not new. it was talked about in 2011-2012 and if they were beginning this campaign to get these guys together and begin a new narrative that might happen politics. that's kind of gross, too. >> i don't know who set up the interview but i would say more time -- there was statement from bowe bergdahl's home town and said, due process, have an investigation, if they want to court-martial, let's get the facts our, try to do this right, and not prejudge. but he should be asked these questions. there's no question. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. >> nice to see you. we asked-under --ed a you earlier about the prisoner watch and what should happen next. hopefully most people want to allow the process to move forward.
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>> a lot of responses on twitter today. cat says how many will die as result of us swapping five nope terrorists for a possible deserter. >> possible deserter? isn't he an american soldier unless provide otherwise? you can't have it one way up in one situation. it's no fair. >> no president, republican or democrat, has the right to place us or our troops in germ by unilaterally releasing terrorists. >> prisoners of war. that's the argue. you can't say this is a war, battlefield, and then change what you think it is now. you can have ways. >> this tweet, we're festival waiting for bowe bergdahl's side of the story, as a veteran if you commit treason -- >> if you desert or commit
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treason you have -- it has to be proven. as the passenger said you bring them home. you bring them home first, and then you investigate. one thing is, you fix that, the other thing allegations he decertained -- deserted you deal with that. it ain't a soup. not a soup. the chinese government reports -- thank you, sarah -- the chinese government reportedly blocked gookle and tomorrow is 25 years shin chinese government killed protesters in tianimen square. the image you cannot see on the computer in china shows a man standing in front of a line of armored tanks. unbelievable. witnesses say chinese soldiers killed unarmed protesters and peep people watching on june 4,
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1989. to this day chinese government officials well not even speak publicly about that very public massacre and they have a history of censorship going back years and years. analysts say this year it's been far more intense. lea gabrielle is with us on the fox news deck. what are the reports we're getting about chinese officials blocking -- no way surprising but in every way -- >> well, the chinese web site is regarding that users have not been able to access google since last week. this shows you the daily up and downs and shows what appears to be a sharp decline in use today. now, this is google's traffic log you're seeing, google spokesman said, quote, we check extensively and there are no technical problems on our side. a source familiar with the sayings says this appears to be linked with increased censorship and this happens every time of
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the year. some user are able to access google through mobile devices so they're not completely knocked out. >> police say a game of make believe ended with 12-year-old girls stabbing and slashing a friend again and again and again. we'll complain to you what they told police about a fictional demon who lives in the for rest, and the question remains, do you charge 12-year-old children as adults, and if so, should they face up to 74 -- i should say -- 60 years in prison? 12-year-olds? and if not, what do you do with them? that's next. great job! okay! here you go. good catch! alright, now for the best part. ooh, let's get those in the bowl. these are way too good to waste, right? share what you love with who you love. kellogg's frosted flakes® they're g-r-r-reat!tm say "hi" rudy.
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all politics on the biggest primary day of the year, eight states voting today with control of congress on the line inch mississippi, a difficult one. the republican senator that cochran, long-time member, facing a tea party challenger now to state senator chris mcdaniel, analysts are calling this the dirtiest primary of the year. a mcdaniel supporter is charged with sneaking into a nursing home and taking a picture of senator cochran's bed-ridden life and posting it online. there were other mcdaniel supporters arrested, including a leader. mcdaniel insists he had nothing to do with any of it. >> in iowa, both sides fighting
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to replace tom harkin. joany ernst ran an ad. >> i grew up castrating animals growing up on a farm. when i get to washington i know what to do. >> cockman dr. kingman >> two 12-year-old girls in wisconsin reportedly stabbed their friend after a slumber party because they wanted to please a mythological creature who lived in the for for forest. the girls lured their girl into the woods and stabbed her 17 times and left her to die. we blurred the girls' faces because they're not even teenagers yet, just 12 years
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old. investigators say the girls stabbed their friend over and over again to please this fictional character slenderman, a demon, they said. more on that in a moment. the victim somehow managed to survive. police say she crawled out of the woods and a bicyclist found her and called for help. doctors say the suspect missed a major artery near her heart by just one millimeter. later, one of the suspects told investigators, and i quote, it was weird that i didn't feel remorse. the other suspect said, quote, the bad part of me wanted her to die. the good part of me wanted her to live. if convicted, each suspect faces more than 60 years behind bars. 1-year-olds, jeremy ross from fox station in walk with us. jeremy, what's been the reaction to these allegations? >> neighbors in that community have been shocked. they have been stunned. i can tell you, i worked here for more than eight years, most
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as a crime reporter. i've seen hundreds of criminal complaints, very few are as disturbing as this one. >> one of the questions here is, what do you do with 12-year-olds who are accused of an adult crime? i realize they charged them as adults but is the thinking that if convicted day would look them up and put them in the pen until they're 72, 73, 74? >> well, in theory, that's what the law allows here. i haven't spoken directly with the prosecutor involved in this. i have spoken with him in the past, and i can tell you, major contributor to this kind of decision certainly would be how prepared, how planned out these plans were, apparently, and also how brutal this alleged crime was. those are two major factors certainly weighing on the division. >> the victim is better, right? >> yes. stable condition is what we're hearing from law enforcement last night. doctors in that criminal
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complaint basically said, it's just shy of a miracle that she survived and we're not talking bat murder case. >> jeremy ross with us from milwaukee, thank you. the nation's unemployment rate may be at five and a half years lowers but quite a different story sponsor teenagers. their -- story for teenagers. their jobless rate is staggering. that's next with jerri willis. [ male announcer ] this is kevin. to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for him, he's agreed to give it up. that's today?
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trwith secure wifie for your business. it also comes with public wifi for your customers. not so with internet from the phone company. i would email the phone company to inquire as to why they have shortchanged these customers. but that would require wifi. switch to comcast business internet and get two wifi networks included. comcast business built for business. seven minutes before the top of the hour. we have staggering new jobs numbers that involve the nation's youth. the unemployment rate for teenagers has now topped 50% in two major u.s. cities. that's according to new analysis that is out today from the employment policy institute. no job for one of every two teens looking for work. jerri willis is here, and the
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willis report at 5:00 p.m. eastern time on the fox business network, where is this? >> so san bernardino, california, riverside, the inlands empire, 54% unemployment rate. talking about kids who are 18 to 19 years old, have not finished high school. portland, 53.8%. l.a., san diego, san francisco, up and down that west coast, and what you see is if you are in that age category and you haven't finished high school, you're not working. >> why is this happening? >> why? well, don't know if you noticed by the economy isn't spinning up enough jobs and those jobs are going to people with more education and experience so it's tough for these kids to get something, and keep in mine, too home construction, down, right and we have seen just a bust in that industry. so that's where some of these people would start working, it's not happening. >> something seems very weird right now. all the markets are up. new highs on the s&p and the dow
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yesterday, yet there's no volatility in the market and all of the numbers from the different sectors are starting to look weird. i wonder if something isn't up. >> 15 to 16 days of settling new highs in the stock market, concerns about the first quarter, not going well. but everybody is saying how bright. there's no volume, no volume it. it's volatility. it's a totele conundrum. >> there's no place for anybody to move their money. what do you do? >> they always say, professional traders leave the market in the summer because they don't want to have to watch their stocks, hasn't happened. >> we'll see you in an hour, and see you after this. okay, listen up! i'm re-workin' the menu.
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on this day in 1539 the explorer hernando desoto claimed florida for his home country spain help already conquered new territories during his expedition to peru but got the urge to ship out again, this time to florida, sunshine, palm trees, which other explorers claimed to find fertile land. desoto set sail with ten ships and his crew would spend years exploring the region. they would keep pushing west, eventually discovering the mississippi river. spain and britain would trade control of florida before u.s. took ownership eventually. but hernando desoto staked his
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claim 475 years ago. we wouldn't have really even known about it because it was so long ago, except as it turns out, o'reilly was there that day. who would have had such luck. >> some massive new environmental regulations that have some critics saying it's going to kill jobs. long waits at va hospitals investigator are say are killing vets and new the fire tomorrow over the president's controversl prisoner swap. and senator rand paul says enough is enough. the senator is here. welcome everybody, glad to have you. forget epa. try ep-u, because it's not just republicans slamming those tough new environmental rules that the white house is pushing. vulnerable democrats are also clearly nervous.
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