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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  July 14, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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>> hamas militants busted out an armed drown, and israel blew it out of the sky. that is not the only big development today. plus, she was trapped inside a crashed helicopter as it rolled on its side in water. she couldn't get her seatbelt open. trap thread to drown. ahead you'll hear from a woman who says she was absolutely convinced she was about to die, and how she survived. >> and the modern-day amelia earhart back on the ground after finishing the flight her namesake could not. this hour she'll join us here for her first live national interview since landing. let's get to it. >> good monday afternoon to you and yours. first from the fox news deck. israeli military officials say they shot down a hamas drone today. the first one they've seen since they began their battle against militants in gaza last week. fox news has gotten video of a
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drone from hamas web site. you can see it appears to have rockets under its wings. ham whereas released a statement saying i launched three drones but israeli officials insist there was but one. today they said the militants have about ten thousand rocket in their arsenal, including longer range weapons that can reach certainly anywhere in israel. look at the wall over here. the fighting has already triggered air raid sirens in israel's three largest sis, tel aviv, haifa, and jerusalem. the rockets have not killed any israelis thanks to the iron dome missile defense system. palestinian health officials say israeli air strikes in gaza have killed 175 people. israeli police say the three israelis appeared in court today after they admitted they kidnapped a palestinian teenager and burned him alive. defense lawyers say they're having trouble getting access to their client so they're not sure really how the men will plead when they face charges.
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investigators say the suspects claim they killed the 16-year-old in retaliation for the recent kidnapping and killing of three israeli teenagers. all this comes as officials with the european union push for a cease fire. david lee miller is live in southern israel. what more do we know about this drone? >> analysts are still trying to determine the significance of this drone. right now we're at one of the iron dome missile battery sites in southern israel. and the hamas militants have desperately been trying to beat the iron dome, fire rockets. they have been unsuccessful there have been no israeli fatilities. now they have introduced into the conflict drone. what we know about the drone it is it of iranian design, the one today made it some 14 miles across the border before it was literally shot out of the sky. the video released by hamas is not necessarily the same drone
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that crossed the border today. this particular drone just has a range of about 100 miles. that would mean it could make it as far as northern israel. this particular drone is described as being portable, can be fired from the back of a truck, it's only about nine feet long, and, yet, israeli intelligence has confirmed that hamas militants do have the capable to manufacture these drones and they have done so. where the one came from today we do not know. we do not even know if it did have rockets on it, or simply for surveillance. i'm told they have not found what is left of this particular drone. >> david lee, the hope is diplomacy can end this. anything new on that front? >> diplomatic efforts continue and if any country holds the key, it is egypt. egypt is going to be vital in moving forward with some type of a cease fire.
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they were crucial in 2012, and even though there's a new regime in egypt, they will be crucial again. the egyptians have leverage with hamas. quickly, let me tell you why. among the demeans from -- demands from hamas the want to stop the black okayed of gaza and want israel to open up the port of entry to gaza. but they are also demanding, shepard, that access be provided to and from gaza at the egyptian border, and even though egypt is not a party to this conflict, they are, like it or not, party. so egypt will be a key player here. ruth now they're no friend of hamas. it could take a while until there is a resolution but egypt is almost definitely going to be involved. shepard? >> david lee miller in southern israel. thank you. a mother in the state of tennessee is in jail, just days after she gave birth. she is charged with assaulting her daughter before the baby was
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born. this is the first arrest under a state law there that just took effect. it makes it a crime for women to use drugs while they're pregnant. police say the mother and her number baby tested positive for meth. the mom admitted she used meth just days before the birth. she faces up to one year in jail. several states consider it child abuse to use drugs while pregnant, but tennessee is the first to call it assault. supporters say the law will force addicted mothers to get the help they need. >> children northeast -- children need the chance and it's sad to see children born into the world already attracted to drugs. >> it's a great thought but some major medical groups argue it makes babies less safe because the threat of jail will keep somewoman from seeing a doctor, and some civil rights groups claim the law unfatherly affects minorities and the poor by targeting street drugs but not alcohol and prescription pills.
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let's get a legal view on this. joining us is mercedes. this is a tough one. you don't want the kid to be without their parents you want potential parents to see a doctor. >> here's the big issue, though. because this law is -- does exactly that. they need help. addicted mothers need help. there is what is called an affirmative defense. if the baby is born with an addiction to drugs, and the mother can show, oh, no, but i south treatment during the time i actually was using these drugs, she can get out. that's her get out of jail card. that's why there's this huge impetus and that why the tennessee governor came sudden and said this bill is not about criminalizing mothers that need help. it's the impetus for these mothers to get help. they're not getting treatment they need. the babies are born with strong addictions and it costs quite a bit of money to taxpayers. these babies cost $60,000 just in those few days in the
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hospital alone, and let alone just look at these -- a lot of them have learning disabilities and continue to tax the economy. >> there are similar laws in other states but tennessee is the first to call this act, the use of drugs, while your pregnant an assault. can that stand up? >> great question. this is what lot of challengers are saying. this is the first time a criminal act is jennifer based. -- gender based. a man can't assault an unborn fetus. this law targets women. so in order for it to withstand -- obviously they're going to challengely it. there's a compelling state interest here. the interest is these babies are addicted, they're going to tax the economy. there's a compelling state interest to make sure those mothers seek treatment. so it's built into the statute. getting the mothers into the treatment centers before the baby is born, because the laws only broken if the baby is born
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with harm. >> what happens to the baby if mom is in jail? >> well, most of them end up in foster care. they will be placed with family, if there other family members and that's the other issue. then you have these children, if they're addicted, the mother didn't seek the treatment, these children will fall into foster care, another cost to the state of tennessee and other states. >> society has been looking for a way to deal with this horrible problem for a long time. if this stands up, which you think this might spread, this mom as assault for taking drugs while pregnant? >> it's certainly a deterrent. not just endangering your baby. what you're going to have on your record is an assault on a human being. that certainly is strong deterrent. and the other deterrent, to get the treatment, is to -- look, you can get out of jail if you show you went to get this treatment you needed during the course of your pregnancy. >> mercedes, thank you. next, the girl who survived
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a massacre that left her family dead. she called police, and stopped the accused gunman. cops say from killing again. now we're hearing from this 15-year-old about her recovery, and why she says harry potter is helping her get through this. that's coming up from the fox news deck. block
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the 15-year-old girl who played dead to survive a shooting that killed the rest of her family, spoke for the first
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time at a memorial ceremony for her parents and four siblings. the shooting unfolded last week in the town of spring, texas. police there say a gunman stormed into the family's home and shot all seven members, all of them. the girl on the far left here, cassidy stay, was the only one who survived. prosecutors say the suspect killed her relatives because they would not tell him where to find his ex-wife. doctors released the survivor from the hospital on friday, and the next day, she thanked everybody for their support during a vigil for her family. >> i'd like to thank all the first responders, nurses and doctors, that have taken care of me, and i'm feeling a lot better and only a very straightforward path to a full recovery. >> she also quoted a character from harry potter saying, happiness can be found even in the darkest of times if one only remembers to turn on the light.
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>> cops in utah say a man let his nine-year-old grandson back his jeep out of the driveway -- nine -- didn't go well. investigators say the boy panicked and hit the gas instead of the brake and drove smack dab into the neighbor's living room. they say a woman inside was watching television and a couch rolled on to her foot. she'll be okay. grandpa was in the passenger seat when it happened. cops gave him a citation. no word on whether the kid will face punishment. >> we're hearing from a single mother of six who survived a helicopter crash after the chopper plummeted to the water and satisfying. she said she had to survive for her kids. she was flying northwest of seattle with her boss and a friend when the chopper wend down in pug eh t sound. >> the water is got basically
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all the way to my chin, and i try to hold my head up so i can breathe. >> all three people on board made it out safely after some locals came to the rescue. trace gallagher is working the story from the west coast news hub. do we know what caused the crash? >> still under investigation bus the helicopter originally took knopf seattle and then landed on a private beach, and when it took off again the witnesses say you could see that the chopper was flying very erratically and it appeared the pilot was trying to land and then got 25 or 50 feet over the water and it plummeted into the water, and that mother of six was sitting in a middle seat and two men were trying to rescue her but she could not get her belt undone. >> the belt was holding me. doesn't matter how deep it, i'm going to drown and die. >> just working as fast as we could to get the seat belt cut
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off but we cut her a little bit with the becomes knife, it was so tight. >> the two men were working on summer cabins on the shore, and without those two, shep, this could be an entirely different story out there in the pew -- >> and it was at low tide. >> the citied starts rolling in, you're talking ten to 15 feet deep and then you have a chopper on its side, goeses to the bottom, and you have people at the bottom of the puget sound. she could not get her seatbelt undone. national trying -- imagine trying to dive down and get the seatbelt undone. she realizes she is very lucky. >> thinking about if you're going to survive or die. your have so much appreciation, so much, for every moment of your life. >> we should mention a little bit of fuel did leak out of the
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helicopter but was contained and absorbed very quickly. >> mighty lucky lady. thank you very much. an 11-year-old boy ended up in the hospital after doctors say his ipad gave him a rash. this happened in san diego. those doctors say the boy is allergic to nickel. recent studies show nearly 25% of kids who get skin tests are allergic to that metal. it's not clear yet whether all apple products contain nickel. the company has no comment, as it often does. the boy's parents say it stopped bothering him after they put a protective case over his ipad. next, we'll talk to the youngest woman to fly around the world in a single engine plane. amelia rose earhart. her first national live television interview ships finished one historic trip.
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unless you have been under a rock you know the germans are champions of the world in soccer, and then world cup celebrations turned violent in argentina after its team lost to the germans in the final. it wasn't horrible. they came out and did some celebrating to celebrate they're teams' performance. thousands of people in the streets of downtown. there were problems. this is police tear gas here and here's a couple folks, man and woman, trying to escape, started throwing rocks and destroying store fronts. you can see the fans trying to get out of the way of tear gas. these are police officers here under cover ones, government official says cops arrested 120 people. the police say more than a dozen officers were hurt in the
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violence. this is a train station platform. today, fans really were more well-behaved and in a very good mood about things it's my understanding. they welcomed the team home and still security guards needed to hold back the crowds from the team bus. argentina are number two and up in to pleased i'm sure. a 31-year-old named amelia earhart is now the youngest woman ever to fly around the world in a single-engine plane. her full name, amelia rose earhart. she was named after the famous pilot who went missing 77 years ago on her trip around the world. amelia rose earhart retraced the exact route that her namesake started, over 17 days. her journey began in denver. she and her coach, pilot, traveled more than 24,000 miles. stopping in 14 countries, before she landed back in the united states on friday. in addition to flying, she is also the president of nye with
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amelia foundation, which gives education and scholarship opportunities to young women who are interested in taking to the skies. she recently handed out 10 flight training scholarships to girls in their teens. they love her and now she has done something nobody else has done april. meal ya -- we have her live. welcome home. how was it. >> stunning. we took off at sunrise out of every approach to see the sunrise and also fly over spots where amelia intended to land after her exit from new guinea, where is where she disappeared. it's amazing to see how brave she was in the 1930s without our navigation. >> how many h would you -- a day would you spend and what was the most striking thing. >> we would spend anywhere from six to nine hours in the flight.
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the lodgest leg was between singapore and darwin. we had a 47 knot head wind which gave us nine and a half hours of flight. a very long journey. one of the most stunning images is when we departed from kill -- kilimanjaro, and when we rose above the clouds, there it was, and a friend of mind was on top of the mountain and sent us a picture because he saw is take off. >> why did you decide to do this? any trepidation? >> you know, just a little trepidation, like anyone would have about flying flying 80% ovr water. but i've been flying for ten years, and i really had to grow into the name. being amelia's namesake has a lot of responsibilities and people would constantly ask me, are you ever going to fly around the world? could you become a pilot? and honest to god got so sick of being asked, thought, got to investigate this and see if i like it, and turns out i absolutely love it.
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the biggest passion of my whole 31 years, and flying around the world is a culmination of that and felt great to complete the goal. >> scary moments? >> scary moments mostly happened on the ground to be honest to be met by armed guards in these countries where they don't see a lot of women flying airplanes. it caught a lot of people offguard and not a lot of friendly faces flying across remote areas but i made a lot of friends. goes to show, aviation, we may not see a lot of women there now but our goal is to change that. >> tell us abouture foundation. ten lucky young lady. >> all high school age girls -- i was tweeting from the aircraft after we flew over helen island where amelia intended to land, and at that moment we handed out the scholarships and the girls are over the moon excited. they have all the enthusiasm and energy in the world. so they're going to start their
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flight lessons in the next 30 days, and it felt good to do that. we had aviation past and the present and the future. these girls go on to change the world of aero space. >> fox 2 in san francisco shot your landing for us and we thank them. 24,000 miles later -- 24,000 and how many? >> 24,300 nautical miles which is 28,000-mile ifs you were to drive a car. >> i'm tired just thinking about it. it's mighty nice to meet you. congratulations, and welcome hem to the mile high. >> thank you very much. >> the last moan american prisoner of -- last known american prisoner of war is back on the job. bowe bergdahl has finished therapy after five years in taliban captivity, and we are learning what he'll now be doing with the army. plus, shopkeeper in pakistan is talking about his best customers. the taliban. he is revealing what the militants have on their shopping
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list, including brand names that are probably in your home.
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fiber one now makes cookies. find them in the cookie aisle. a fox report now and more headlines from the fox news deck. man accused of bludgeoning his girlfriend in a bathtub and taking off with three of their kid is under arrest. the woman was found dead in her home, and the suspect was hundreds of miles away. all three children are safe and have no idea why he did it. crews managed to float the costa concordia after it sank. workers are set to tow away the ship for scrap later this mock, and in florida, the private company spacex launched a rocket hauling six communication
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satellites, weather and technical problems delayed the launch three times but today it was all systems go. bottom of the hour, top of the news, after this. he review. and now angie's list is revolutionizing local service again. you can easily buy and schedule services from top-rated providers. conveniently stay up to date on progress. and effortlessly turn your photos into finished projects with our snapfix app. visit angieslist.com today. ♪
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the bottom of the hour, time for the top of the news. the former taliban prisoner, sergeant bowe bergdahl is returning to work in the military six weeks after a controversial prison swap set him free. he spent five years in captivity. we have video showing she taliban handing him back over. in exchange the united states released five leaders from guantanamo. some lawmakers slammed the deal and said tray trading the taliban fighters was too high a price. they cite fellow soldiers who say he wandered off. the army says it is looking into what happened. a full investigation is coming. bergdahl could soon meet with investigators to finally give his side of the story.
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shannon bream is live in washington. what are we learning about the investigation? >> according to the army it is ongoing but has not included credit come pen meants. no interview of bergdahl and know interview of the men he served with. >> to not interview the very people who were there seems crazy. the only explanation would be that the military absolutely understands that he did desert and the evidence is overwhelming. >> it's possible the army could offer bergdahl a deal and he could be demoted and less than honorably discharged. his critics do not want to see that happen, believing he should face a court-martial. >> do we know what life is like for him. >> he will be doing administrative work, a desk job at the fort sam houston in san antonio texas.
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he is free to leave the base without any type of military escort. there will be the upcoming interviews soon to give his side of the story regarding what happened with his disappearance when he was serving in afghanistan. meantime, he is on regular duty and being paid for any other soldier. we still don't know if he has talked to his family. his army says he is free to talk to us, the media, but is declining all media requests. >> a military offensive in pakistan is forcing taliban fighters to find safer ground and that put a shopkeeper in the region out of business. he spoke with the bbc about the taliban fighters and said that it were some of his best customers. we have this taliban shopping list. a lot of consuming. >> they did. especially of american products. especially things that smell good, like soap and -- also fighting a war on dandruff.
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lots of head & shoulders and like to keep their women smelling good. this is a brand of perfume they bought by the bucket loads blue lady in. >> and white briefs. tighty whiteys. >> i don't even want to know. thank you. back to the cries in the middle east. thousand -- the crisis in the middle east. thousands have left their homes in northern gaza after israel dropped havelets from the sky warping of imminent military operations. israel confirmed they sent troops into georgia sample it was a quick operation, tarting specifically a rocket-launching site. they were in and out. israel has almost 40,000 forces, the military reports, on standby for any pop larger invasion -- any possible larger invasion. the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu warped
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israel's military offensive could last what the calls a long time. tory is a policy adviser and is live with us hire on the fox news deck this afternoon. nice to see you. >> good to be here. >> i'm hearing pundits say it looks like this is going to be quick, not last too long, with the game of getting the rockets out, and i don't know how they're able to say this with 40,000 troops on the border. >> the point is not to look at an event like this with a stop watch but to look at a mission. the mission is to bring to hand end this constant rocket fire on israel. people of israel are resilient and are supporting the government, supporting their army, because they want this to come to an end so therefore whatever is required, and how much ever time is required, i think the prime minister and his government will receive support. >> there's no way you want to send troops over the border. starting to look like that's not going to be necessary? >> i wouldn't want to start guessing and -- monday-morning
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quarterbacking. the military moves that are necessary. we have a very serious problem. the hamas has imbedded its military capability inside the palestinian pop population ilks if you're israel, do you just say we're going to use massive fire power? we're not at war with the palestinians. we're at war with hamas, so separate the capable from the palestinians and that's that the israeli military strategy its right now. >> have you heard anything about a cease fire? >> yeah, on television. >> you know, i'm seeing it on television, too. i know there's talk of a cease fire. in the past cease fires have delayed more than anything else. sounds to me like what israel wants to do this time is not cease fire but get in there and get rid of the rockets because they're reaching tel aviv and haifa, and haifa is of particular interest, in ways they haven't before. >> the word is sustainable. a sustainable cease fire.
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it's not a cease fire that leaves thousands of iranian rockets sitting in place, ready to be used at the next crisis, the next time tehran wants them to put pressure on israel. we're just not going to allow that situation. >> do people who say that those in gaza have struck but killed no one, and the israelis have killed 175 people, and those people would say, this doesn't seem very fair to a people who are basically occupied? what do you say? >> they're not occupied. israel withdrew from the gaza strip. >> they're blocked. >> but that's not an occupation, and israel hoped the palestinians would use the opportunity of the israeli withdrawal in 2005 to bid a new society, build a new country. they didn't do that. they invested instead in huge amounts of weaponry and we could see the rate of rocket fire increase on israel after this. >> were the settlements not encroaching, and is it possible the three israelis would not be dead and this wouldn't happen. >> there were no settlements in the gaza strip.
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there's no basis for hamas to make reference to settlements. >> the three kids were from a settlement. >> in the west bank. but that was pure murder, picking up teenagers and killing them at the first opportunity. >> and now it's your belief that israel needs to get in and get rid of these rockets. that's going to be a difficult and life-costing endeavor. >> in parallel to that horrible act of hamas, in murdering those three israeli teenagers, they began escalating rocket fire against israel. so what is the prime minister supposed to do? sit back and take it? no. he has to protect his country and he has to make sure that huge rocket supply that exists in gaza can't be used at will by hamas anytime they want. >> nice to see you again. >> pleasure. >> for the second time this year, former president george w. bush, bush 43rd, is recovering after doctors replaced parts of
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his knee. that according to a spokesman for the former president. he says president bush went into surgery on saturday in chicago for work on his right knee. back on memorial day weekend doctors operated on his left knee. the spokesman says president bush 43 left chicago for his home and is looking forward to getting back on his mountain back soon. >> citigroup. one of the country's largest banks. now has to hand over $7 billion to the fed as part of a settlement. 7 billion. federal prosecutor says citigroup knowingly sold bad mortgage securities which contributed to the housing market collapse and the financial crisis of 2008. the 7 bill sentiment is double what the analysts expected citigroup to pay. still the feds reportedly asked for 12 billion in the beginning. gerri will with -- willis is here with us.
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how does to this deal affect citigroup customer. >> you're talking about people with citimortgages. they may get 2.5 bill but that money will be used to modify their mortgages to make them easier to pay off, probably the length. people who got bad mortgages during the downturn. the bank has to make it right with those folks. >> how big a deal for the bank? >> not as much as you might think. take a look at the citigroup's earnings and wall street is applauding with a huge rally in the market. 19 billion in revenue. this is single quarter. almost 4 billion in profits. so you have to say the $7 billion figure you're talking about is really about two quarters of profit for the bank. understand, the banks as a whole paid something like $100 billion in fees and fines, ate, dealing with the mortgage meltdown, how many people have gone to jail? >> zero. >> yes. >> the rules haven't changed. the rules. that allowed all of this to happen in the first
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place have that changed. >> the same old same old.ck thr. this is record territory. >> its. >> nobody can explain why these is happening. we have a lot of people and they'll come out the back door to have a economic and go, you better watch for what is going to happen in the market. be ready for a correction. >> everybody is talking bat correction right now. they say the numbers aren't sustainable. the recovery has not reached every household. we have not seen an improvement in income. jobs market not what it could be. so there's this kind of tale of two cities, wall street and the markets and what is going on in main street two different things. >> we'll watch you bring the two together in an hour and 20 minutes on the fox business network. thank you. >> a father made a promise to his daughter and then took it to the extreme. he claimed his own kingdom in africa so that his little girl could become a princess. you cool with that?
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kennedy is not cool with that. hang on. ♪ ♪ ♪ great rates for great rides. geico motorcycle, see how much you could save.
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a fox report now and more headlines. secretary of state john kerry met with iran's foreign minister in vienna today. the u.s. and other world powers are trying to finalize a deal to put limits on iran's nuclear program in exchange for relief from financial punishment. negotiators set a deadline of this sunday but could extend that up to six months. >> look at this. [ gunshots ] >> cops say they arrested the man who opened fire on a crowd outside a nightclub in stamford, connection. police say five people were hurt. none seriously. and -- two children are dead after a violent hail storm in
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russia. happened over the weekend in siberia. peopled a this beach say the temperature dropped more than 30 degrees in a matter of seconds. official say a tree fell on a tent in a nearby town and killed the two young girls. >> at home, many families would probably do anything for their daughters. but a dad from virginia has taken things to a new level. he has now officially claimed a kingdom in northern africa so his little girl could be an actual princess. this is real. the guy says his seven-year-old always wanted to be a princess, always, all seven years so he researched where on the planet that could happen. he found a stretch of land on the border of egypt and the sudan which belongs to neither country. dad got the okay from the egyptian government to travel there, and when he got there, he planted a custom flag in the ground and claimed the land for his family, calling it the
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dipping -- kingdom of north sudan and want0s to apply for official recognition with other african nations. meantime, he bought his daughter a crown, and calls her princess emily. kennedy joins us now. and wearing her princess gown. >> i am. >> you do you feel. >> i think it's ridiculous and this type of indulgement is dangerous. when a girl says will i ever be a princess? the answer is, really, no, because i'm not going to kill anyone or and you don't have the right genes. on prom night and wedding night you feel like a princess. >> you think this is a dangerous precedence. >> of course. he has three kids and he said he wanted to travel to the ends of
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the earth to show his kids he would do anything for them. how about instilling values or larger goals you achieve through hard work and good character. >> so the other two children are probably going to be very jess jealous,eye can see enemy the 20 years anywhere 12-step meeting my dad bought a piece of land that no one wanted. is he the american. >> i would prefer to have my own brewery. she has her own kingdom. >> would you send your seven-year-old to a region where bed dough wins are roaming next to sudden yap and it takes a caravan to get there. >> i wouldn't. >> wise choices. i have two daughters. they love princess movies and one favorite is the princess and in the frog, and one subplot is
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the dad promises his daughter she will be a princess. she doesn't get to be a princess because a prince didn't fall in love with her because she is crazy. >> she is going to need therapy. >> big dadey made rock enemies hi couldn't keep some there have been several political science experts who weighed in and said you have to have recognition, not only from other countries but from international bodies and organizations and it's never going to happen. >> she is a fake princess. >> he is a failed congressman, which means this guy is on some sort of weird life-long desperate power grab. >> you have a tierra. what are you princess of. >> right now the news deck. but there might be a dispute over that. >> sarah, you're the princess here, don't worry. [inaudible] >> sarah and i are very close and have a lot of things in common and we can be joint prison sessions.
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a princess sorority. >> all right, kennedy, what's happening today any we're going to talk about a lot of pressing issues. >> in other words you have not decided. >> there's some video put out by north korea where didn't othe state-run news agency that north korea won the world cup. we're going to -- still trying to figure out if that's a phony clip. we're hoping -- we have a north korea expert on the show, and who has been to the hermit and if it's not true, we'll tell the north koreans they did not win. >> angela merkel. >> she will an pick -- putin was there. >> shirtless on a horse. >> i thought he would claim a kingdom, like take over argentina had they won. >> a south american land grab. they got oil. >> thank you, kennedy.
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top of the hour headlines. first, the military is taking one of its brand new robots out for a spin, and officials say it will really lighten the load for our troops. they call it the mule. it's a four-legged machine designed to move across difficult terrain while carrying up to 400 pounds of equipment. they say it's been in the works for a few years now. tell us more about the mule? >> like a real mule it has to be fed but can go on a 20-mile, 24-hour mission before marines have to stop and refuel it.
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according to the marine corps, a five-marine team has beenfield testing the robot and called it kujo, some you can see the mule following one of them during a military exercise in hawai'i. actually no driver. it uses computerized vision and tracks a sensor that a marine is wearing on his boot. marines can also program the mule who travel on its own using terrain sense something gps and have been using kujo on resupply missions. i brought them water in areas atvs cannot reach. they have been using it for logistics because it makes too much noise and has trouble with some types of terrain. one of the marines testing it says that he expected it to just stumble around a lot and be kind of difficult to work with but it usually rights itself and if it tips over it only takes one person to put it back on its feet. this project was funded by the
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defense department and the company which designed the robot was just purchased by google. >> we'll be back in just a minute. at legalzoom you can take care of virtually all your important legal matters in just minutes. now it's quicker and easier for you to start your business, protect your family, and launch your dreams. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side.
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the bastille, marking the start of the french revolution. for centuries the bastille was a prison on the border of paris. by the 18th century, rioters began protesting the rule of king louis xvi, accused him of living the life of luxury while his people starved. military leaders raided the fortress but do not hold back the armed mob. eventually the king and his marie anthoineette ended up opening the wrong side of the guillotine. the revolution kicked off in
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1789 today. >> a little breaking news. just a few points shy of an all-time hey for the dow. here comes "your world." >> get ready for more of this. [shouting] [shouting] >> when did the u.s. government go into the orphanage business? >> please, use the word illegal aliens. they come across here illegally. >> immigration is wonderful but legal immigration and not coming and taking from our families and our -- >> we have no rights. we have no rights whatsoever. >> who is going to take care of them? >> are they going to be schooled? where? >> it's not right. not billions of dollars want to be