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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  July 25, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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the city of buffalo is not happy about possibly moving to toronto. >> thank you for being part of "the real enjoy. have a fabulous weekend. harris faulkner now in for shepard smith. >> i am harris falkner in today for shep. inside the shooting at a hospital today. police say a doctor stopped an attacker by grabbing his own gun and opening fire. but hospital rules don't allow guns. so is that doctor in trouble? in california, investigators say an 80-year-old man shot and killed a burglar in his home. the woman, who reportedly was pleading with him she was pregnant. self-defense or a crime? and a team of elite soldiers reportedly headed to ukraine to secure the site of the passenger jet crash. it comes amid news russia is delivering weapons to the pro-russian forces inside ukraine. that's coming up from the fox
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news deck. we begin now with a fox urgent. we're waiting for major white house meeting on the immigration crisis at our border to now wrap up. anytime now we're expecting to hear president obama's comments. he just sat down with several central american leaders. the goal of the meeting, we understand is to convince the leaders to do more to stop the children from making the long, dangerous trip, to enter our country illegally. according to government figures some 57,000 unaccompanied minors have illegally crossed our border since last fall, putting enormous strains on towns, cities, military bases, trying to house them all. up here on the wall, mostly guatemala, el valve -- el salvador and hon hon dura. the presidents are meeting with president obama. white house officials say one proposal would give emergency refugee status to children
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coming from honduras particularly. that's because that country is one of the most dangerous nations in the world and gangs are known to force children to join or else. that proposal is similar to a plan from the republican senators from arizona, john mccain and jeff blake. still, critics slammed the idea saying granting children refugee status would only cause more immigrants illegally to flood the border. and by the way. congress has only days left to strike any sort of a deal on this because lawmakers are head it out of town for their five-week summer break. wendell goeler at the white house. any sign congress can get anything done quickly? >> white house press secretary says his cynical side may be showing but thinks there's a chance the lawmakers may go home without doing anything. the president's supplemental aid request for the border and reform authorize foe veterans administration system are priorities about it's possible neither get done.
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officials are considering implementing the honduran refugee program under mr. obama's executive authority to keep kids from making a long trip on which many are abused. >> our broader intent is a broad message of deterrence that people would see that there is an organized process if they feel like they have a legitimate asylum claim. they don't need to make the dangerous journey to the u.s. and they can be processed in their own country. >> vice-president biden had lunch with the central american leaders who say the u.s. bears some responsibility because our appetite for illegal drugs and sale of weapons to central americans are producing the crime the kids are running from. the president is meeting with the leaders right now. >> what are republicans saying about this border aid request at this point? >> the house has cut it by two-thirds. even the senate cut it considerably, and the senate is under the control of democrats. some house members say there shouldn't be any additional aid
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granted. republican lawmakers are concerns the money wouldn't be spent as they intend, and they're saying mistrust of mr. obama is affected by -- and might be ignored by the obama white house. the president, using republican inaction to defend acting on his own executive authority. immigration activists believe he will move to reduce deportations bus mr. obama's aides won't say if that's accurate. >> there's a chance that meeting will wrap up and if it does and the news warrants, we kole -- wallace is here from washington. what is it like inside that meeting right now? just yesterday the honduran president criticized the white house immigration policy, calling it ambiguous, without clarity. i wonder what the mood is inside
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that meeting right now? >> well, with three presidents from central america and president obama and some of them don't speak english and the president, don't think speaks fluid spanish. my guess is it's fairly formal. not terrifically with a bark off. having said that i kind of agree with what josh ernest said. i think it's a real chance you could get nothing out of all of this. the president is calling for $3.7 billion, both in humanitarian aid and beefed up enforcement the democrats are calling for 2.7 billion, and the latest word out of the house they may want less than a bill, nothing for humanitarian aid. and that's just a possibility they won't be able to get together and congress will go on a five-week break. and then you also have the president now talking about by executive action, just kind of refugee status for 500 of these unaccompanied minors, to get
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refugee status from honduras. 500 when we're talking about 57,000 since october is really a drop in the bucket, and that's only going to add to suspicion by republicans that whatever they pass the president will do what he wants, will enforce it or not, and by executive authority. so that lessens their feel that i go have to play ball with him. >> and not just suspicions by republicans but the country. you look at recent polling, chris, and people are establishing this very strong feeling that the president does what he wants when he wants, and my question would be, why did it take so long to get to this point where president obama has three countries with the most people fleeing to sit down? >> well, it's a good question, and the fact is that there was a report in the paper earlier this week that there were officials in the state department and in immigration and border security telling the white house, a year ago, that they thought this was going to be a coming storm of growing immigration by these
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unaccompanied minors and they kind of dismissed it as a local problem, not something that would be this flood of 57,000 since last october. so they, as in a lot of other areas, were way behind the ball on this. >> i'm sure i'm not alone in asking this. other countries have to be watching. and thinking, the united states can't even secure its own borders. make it's time to hop, skip and get over there. this could be an invitation from around the world to people we don't want coming here, like terrorists. >> obviously that's a concern. it's a little bit different because in this case, it's not that the unaccompanied minors are getting through and we can't detect them. in fact the first thing they want when they get across the border is to be picked up by american security because they think that they'll be allowed to stay here and given safe passage, and a lot of cases they are because they're sent to live with families or to various shelters and told to show up for a hearing weeks or months from now, and they just don't show up
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and become part of the huge number of millions of illegals in this country. terrorists would be a somewhat different case but doesn't increase any sense of security about our border and our immigration policy when this kind of thing is happening and you have the president and the senate and the house and, as i say, the end result of all of this may be a big fat zero when they begin their five-week -- five-week -- recess next week. >> of course, my big question for wendell would be for the white house, can you get anything done that quickly when we haven't seen washington move at more than a molasses pace in the near memory. chris, wallace, thank you very much. we rand to remind everybody we'll be watching this as news breaks in terms of getting either some live reporting from web -- wendell goaler or videotape of what went on in that meeting. chris will have more on the immigration debate on "fox news sunday." watch for that.
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he'll talk with republican congressman of louisiana who is about to become house majority whip. chris will have the latest on the crisis in the middle east. with -- a member of the plo executive committee and ron coarser, the israeli ambassador to the unites nations who we have seen speak at the u.n. this week. this weekend on your local fox station. check your tv lightings in your area. >> israel has reportedly rejected a cease fire proposal from secretary of state john kerry. the about big breaking news store we're watching, we just heard from secretary kerry, who says he is still trying to negotiate a one-week truce. he wanted to hit the because button in the fighting between hamas and the israeli military. it did not work. no cease fire. israel rejecting that. details on why that is. a live update from the middle east. stay close.
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ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever, fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. make the most of every moment. ask your dermatologist about humira, today. clearer skin is possible. israel's security cabinet unanimously reject secretary of state kerry's proposal for on-week cease fire. secretary kerry says more work will be needed to reach a dale. more than 800 palestinians and
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dozens of israelis have died since the fight can broke out. medical officials in the gaza area say thousands of civilians are among the wounded, many children. now the violence has spread to the west bank. [explosion] >> last night, palestinian protesters fought with israeli troops in the streets after one of the deadliest days of fighting with losses on both sides in gaza. israeli officials say they deployed more security forces along the west bank and upupafter palestinian leaders called for a day of rage. conor powell is live. what made israel reject the cease-fire suggestion? >> reporter: for a few hours today it seemed as if there was a reel potential for a cease fire and many people thought it would be hamas that rejected it. the cease fire seemed to be a seven-day cease fire that would allow israeli troops to stay in
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gaza. that seemed something that would be completely rejected by hamas. hamas said nothing all day. i it was actually the israeli security cabinet that rejected the cease fire today. one israeli official say it was basically hamas cease fire put forward by the united states and qatar and turkey and the unites nations. israel feeling they can get better terms in a few days most likely so at least for the next sort of 24, 48 hours, we expect the fighting to continue here. secretary kerry did say that he feels like he has a framework in place for a cease fire, that they need to got at the terminology right. so he did leave the door open there could be a cease fire and continues to be talks and discussions about this, but for at least the near term, the next 24-48 hours, seems the violence here is just going to continue on. >> so, we're seeing this video of these protesters in the west bank. what's happening there? >> reporter: so, we have had the fighting here now in gaza for 18 days, and for the last sort of
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24-48 hours, we have seen increased protests and fighting by the palestinians that are in the west bank. huge protests last night. thousands of people turned out. went to a checkpoint, trying to go into jerusalem. we understand in the last 24 hours five palestinians have been killed and there's been heavy fighting, hundreds or so injured. they're calling for a day of rage. so the anger in the palestinian community not only in gaza but also in the west bank, really growing, and this has the potential for things to get out of hand as we're talking bat cease fire here. if things don't calm down here in gaza, things can get really out of hand in the west bank, which will sort of exacerbate the ongoing problems here. >> conor paul, reporting live. thank you very much. the top spy in norway says a group of terrorists is on its way to his country to carry out an attack. he says they concretely named norway as the target. he says reliable information
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indicates the would-be atakes are coming from syria and the threats are imminent. of all the countries in europe, norway is the far fest this from seare. u.s. intelligence officials say the threat is greater and more complex. the number of foreign fightes in the syrian civil war has exploded. some 12,000 of them. that includes more than 100 americans joining the fight, as we reported before, intelligence official says the rebel fighters al qaeda offshoot to make bombs that are easieríbún]z get past airport security. the pentagon is calling it an escalation of the crisis in ukraine now. officials say not only is russia firing on ukrainian targets inside that country, it's also handing over more powerful weapons to the insurgents. that as some of our key allies getting ready to send in troops. the details. stay close.
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>> we're expecting some kind of information. what can help relieve the situation on our southern border with mexico where we have had tens of thousands of unaccompanied children coming across the border illegally, putting such a burden on different facilities and municipalities across the country. we'll keep you posted when news breaks. for now, there is word a group of special forces could be in eastern ukraine by this weekend. the dutch telegraph newspaper is report thing netherlands is preparing to send its most elead
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soldiers to the malaysia air crash site to make sure investigators and officers on scene can do their job and survive it all. the paper is reporting military officials have cancelled leave for a number of commandos and have re-called others from africa. australia is also announcing it's going to send 100 police officers to europe to join the dutch-led team. our corporate cousin, sky news, is reporting the officers have arrived in the uk where they're working with british soldiers. still not clear whether the britts would seasoned anybody to inare ukraine. otherwise, securing the site is no easy task. pentagon officials say they have evidence that russia is firing on ukrainian targets from within russia. shooting at the country next door. the russian military, not the rebels. this video shows this. fox news cannot confirm it but pentagon says it has evidence that russia is also in the process of delivering more weapons to the rebels,
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specifically high-caliber rocket launching systems, and that delivery is, quote, imminent. steve harrigan with the news live in a rebel stronghold. the city of donetsk. you just heard some fighting. what is happening? >> reporter: that shelling is happening on the outskirts of the city of one million people. a rebel stronghold, the ukrainian offensive trying to seal it off. we're hearing fighting perhaps it is from the russian side of the border. we can't be sure but the news not just from ukrainian government officials but from the u.s. state department as well. the assertion that russia is firing on ukrainian fors. russian military, from inside russia, is really a game-changer according to the head of the joint chiefs of staff, general martin dempsey. >> you have a russian government that has made the conscious decision to use its military
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force inside of another sovereign nation to achieve its objectives. first time, i think, probably since 1939 or so that's been the case. >> general dempsey making the assertion that the use of direct intervention from the russian military, from russian territory, into the conflict could change the nature of the relationship between the united states and russia. >> still you have the crash site in eastern ukraine. what is happening there? >> the fighting around the crash site, within 20 miles, has slowed down any real investigation to a halt. some european observers were on the scene today and have uncovered more evidence as though identity of the passengers. some passports and continue to find body parts as well. another planeload of remains went to the netherlands today.
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transfer should be completed by tomorrow. back to you. >> thank you very much. let's bring in now retired u.s. army major general bob scales, fox news military analyst. general, i was reading your notes. you're not buying any of this. what is your take? >> my take is that this is a psychological war, harris. the russians are trying continue nuisance world opinion. they're not trying to conquer eastern ukraine and trying to convince the world they're the aggrieved party and if they're shooting rockets and guns, the evidence is easy to gather and you don't have to rely on the nsa to get it. but for whatever reason, the western nations, the ukraines and the united states are not going the extra mile to prove to the russians that they're the aggressors, not the ukrainians, and so in many ways, the russians are actually doubling down after the downing of this airliner, in an attempt to gain the emotional and psychological high ground and we should do the
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same. >> what's interesting. i imagine it would be pretty easy to say where they're coming from. i don't have the knowledge you do so, tell me, is it easy or hard? >> you know, it's very technology include complex. you need two pieces of string and a compass. and -- >> okay. >> it's very easy to do. you go to the craters, shoot a agent muss back into russia, and you measure the angles and where they intersect is where the gun or rocket is firing from. and it's very simple. you can get an accuracy location to within 200 meters. pick up pieces of the rocket or the shell and the fuses, put them in front of the western media and you have an adlai stevenston moment where where you say the russians are lying. why haven't we done that yet? >> i know you were an artillery man, and the two pieces of string and the come -- compass, but you make a good point here.
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we have to be skeptical now. and why wouldn't they want to just say the russians did it? why hold out? >> i don't know. i still think there's a latent attitude in this administration and the eu the stale have to play nice with putin and the russians. put pit is not reciprocating. this is putin's war, his attempt to restore the glory of the empire. his effort to impose his well on the former eastern european states and we should be as aggressive as he is. if he sends 20mlrs launchers into the ukraine, we should help the ukraines out by sending tanks and our own mlrs and advisers and ammunition and antitank and antiaircraft rockets. let's help the aggrieved party here rather than playing nice with the russians. i don't debt it. >> now there are reports that russia is going to up the ante what it sends over to the pro-russian forces.
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>> they're sending 220mrls, multiple rocket launchers, very, very deadly weapon. a range of 22-miles and fires what is called an icm warhead. essentially bomblet war heat, which scatters bomblets over a broad area when it explodes and is terribly destructive. the the most lethal weapon in the soviet arsenal and if fired begins ukrainian troops could cause enormous damage. >> sounds like a moment for a red line but we have seen how that can go. we'll have to see our this plays out. thank you for your expertise on this. here at home a new development in the story of a marine's missing wife. she disappeared more than three weeks ago. a close friend of hers reportedly says the woman experienced a troubling medical issue earlier this year. plus, an 80-year-old man admits he shot and killed an intruder, woman. she said she was pregnant. don't shoot me.
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but he says, for now, no charges. will he be charged? we'll take a legal look at it. stave with -- stay with us.
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>> more of today's headlines from the fox news deck. the kansas supreme court overturned death sentences for two brothers convictedded of murdering four people in 2000. prosecutors say the men raped some victims, forced them on to a snowy soccer field and shot them each in the head. to the state's highest court sent the case back to a lower court after ruling the judge failed to hold separate sentencing phases for each brother. >> a wildfire forced people to leave a camp site. in reports of damage or injuries. investigators say they're trying to figure out how this river in eastern china suddenly turned blood red. there are no chemical plants or factories nearby but the river
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banks are covered with garbage. we'll have much more right after these messages.
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experience crabfest at red lobster today. only for a limited time. come in and sea food differently! iran is now confirming it has arrested four journalists, including three americans. the "washington post" is reporting the iranians detained one of its reporters and his iranian wife on tuesday in tehran. no word yet on why they're keeping them. iran also says it's holding two american photographers but has not identified them. a state department spokeswoman says u.s. officials are, quote, concerned about the detentions but won't make any comment because of privacy considerations. also, soldiers have recovered a black box from the site of yesterday's deadly plane crash in the african nation of mali. the plane disappeared off the radar. now, of course, they have this. that's according to the french foreign minister. you're looking at the video of
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the wreckage site. investigators say all 118 people on board the algerie flight are dead. they say bad weather is the most likely cause of the crash but are not yet ruling out terrorism. some disturbing new details in the case of marine roz pregnant wife who went missing a month ago. according to the reporting of abc news, close friend says the woman suffered a miscarriage a few months earlier. we covered her story over the past few weeks and police say 20-year-old erin corwin went missing june 28th from her home in the city of twentynine palms. police say she could have been having an affair with her neighbor and he could be the father of the child. plus and hundreds of volunteers scoured a huge section of the desert in southern california's joshua tree national park and
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you can see this on the map how remote this area is. according to court documents, that former marine told police he did go hunting in the park that day corwin vanished but said he was alone. trace gallagher is live in the west coast news hub. do we know who the father of the first pregnancy was? >> we don't yet, harris. we know when she announced, erin corwin announced the pregnancy on facebook the first time she tagged her husband, jonathan corwin, on heir facebook picture. so we know she was pregnant. we don't know exactly when she miscarried, but her friend in tennessee has confirmed that when she got pregnant the second time, corwin believed her lover, christopher lee, former marine, was the father, because she said he was concerned if his wife found out she would divorce him and keep his child away from him. but now police believe that wife of the lover might also be involved because she apparently
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told her landlord that the body of erin corwin would never be found. >> so everybody is focused on the couple, and i understand they moved. >> moved to alaska, and police don't have enough evidence to bring them back. right now all they know is the couple is missing a few guns, and they know when they found erin corwin's car there were shoe tracks leading away from the car to another vehicle, and that other vehicle, the tracks, match exactly to the lover, christopher lee. so speculation by police is that he car and drove off to joshua tree together. the problem is that is a very big part of the southern california desert, and so far there has been zero sign of erin corwin. >> if you don't know where to go it's hard to find any trace of anything without some kind of lead. trace gallagher, thank you very much. now to an area two hours from there. in long beach, california.
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an 80-year-old man could face charges for shooting at two burglars tuesday night, killing one of them after she told him, pleaded with him, she was pregnant. he admits it. watch. >> she says, don't shoot me. i'm pregnant, i'm having a baby. i shot her anyway. >> i shot her anyway, he says, take a look at the wall. the woman who died is on the letter. police arrested the other suspect on murder charges saying he took part in the crime that led to her death. police have not confirmed if the woman was actually pregnant. i'm bringing in now a trial attorney. what jumps out. >> these particular facts, what is going on here, what happened, did he have the right to do it? and that's what we're looking at here, california gives the presumption to somebody -- if somebody breaks into your house that's a presumption of reasonable fear of death or bodily injury, and in the case that happened. when he came in, they pummeled him to the ground. so prosecutors have to consider
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whether or not that threat existed once they ran out of the house. >> if she were pregnant or not, how does that play into the case? >> interestingly enough, in california, if he is charged with murder, murder is defined as the unlawful killing of a person or unborn fetus. so then there becomes also a question of whether or not he knew. well, he admits she said to him, don't kill me, i'm pregnant. and that may work to the prosecutor's favor. but i don't know if is going to go there or whether he will be charged. >> why is that? >> the question becomes whether the threat continued. he has a right to defend himself in california. and there was a threat to him. that privilege of self-defense goes away when that threat is gone. but the question was, was there a threat of harm when she was running snout he didn't know they were unarmed. he didn't know if they were going to come back, and he was a vic of three other burglaries and he believes they were the ones who did it. >> you did have another person involved in this so even if he
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didn't think he was under imminent danger from her at that moment, would it matter there was this other person in the room? >> well, certainly, there's the fear. the fear has to be what a reasonable person in that situation would be. this is an 8 80-year-old mon. >> a reasonable person who has been robbed three times. >> it's a tough case. the prosecutor is a very sympathetic person or party -- if he is charged but people don't have the right to shoot and kill anybody. >> on this other person who is charged bus of his actions prosecutors say led to her death. how does that play a role? >> the fact he was involved in the commission of this felony that led to somebody's death is why he would get charged with the murder, because of what he was doing. >> okay, so, follow me here because this would be my logic. maybe it's not right. i if you charging him for being culpable, how do you charge the 80-year-old man? two people didn't kill one
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person. >> the question is whether they'll charge the man but the fact he was involved in the commission, the second guy, the perpetrator in the commission of the felony that led to the death is what the charge will be for him. >> i guess i'd have to play devil's advocate as a prosecutor if i worked this. how many people rob houses without weapons? >> exactly. and who would know, though? >> who would know. and you believe this woman or not. >> right. based on the reasonable person standard, did he feel the threat? >> thank you very much for coming in. appreciate it. police in philadelphia say at least two children are dead after a pair of carjackers plowed a vehicle into a crowd of people. now they are looking for the suspects. it happened four hours ago. in fact, if you look you can almost see the car there underneath the trees. police say two men held a woman of gunpoint, then drove off with her in the backseat. they said, quote, something obviously went horribly wrong and the vehicle went out of control. three other people in critical condition.
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the suspects ran from the scene. >> an update now on a story that was breaking yesterday. the deadly shooting inside a hospital in pennsylvania. police say that without a doubt, the man who had his own gun in his office saved lives when he critically shot and wounded the gunman. under the hospital rules, on-duty law enforcement officers are the only people allowed to carry weapons there. the shootings unfold it yesterday afternoon at mercy fitzgerald hospital just outside philadelphia. police say a patient with a gun got into an argument with a doctor. according to the district attorney, workers say the patient was pointing a gun at the doctor and then quietly they were able to dial 9-1-1. minutes later they heard shots ringing out. the prosecutor says the patient shot and killed the caseworker, and another bullet grazed the doctor's head so the doctor pulled out his own gun and returned fire before other workers pinned the suspect to the floor. i'm really curious to know how
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the hospital will happen that. >> we all use going toll search for things online and shop. it might be the fastest route from a to b. now google wants to get into your body to figure out what makes you tick, what makes you sick. should they be able to do that? hmm. we'll take a look. that's next. [ female announcer ] there's a gap out there. that's keeping you from the healthcare you deserve. at humana, we believe if healthcare changes,
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in the study will use google's products during the study. for example to help monitor blood sugar levels they have to ware special contact lenses that google developed. critics say the whole study raises privacy concerns. gerri willis joins us. privacy. that was my big question. >> it's worse than that. the lenses you put in your eye, the information that comes from that, they're going to know you down to your. [cell phone -- know your heart rate, so much information that google will know but the whole goal here is you make it anonymous. they say anatomize. your information will not be connected to your name but a lot of people worry, what if some day out there they decide to sell this information to, say, employers who would know something about the future of
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your health, how much you've might cost them in terms of health care down the road. >> i look at all the privacy concerns that facebook has had recently. i dent know we want govern these companies all this information. they say they're going to be anonymous but they're 175 people. it's not like they're considering the whole world. they're going to know which came from whom. >> extrapolate from there to the whole population. that's the idea. what is really interesting about this i think is that google is doing it. you expect his to be a big government study, but instead it's google. >> or a medical facility. >> exactly right. white google? they have the commuter systems to crunch the data. the amount of data crunched here, amazing. that's why the cost of sequencing a human genome has gone down dramatically. a thousand bucks today a decade ago it was $100 million. it's because the computers are nuts. there's so much technology they
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can crunch these numbers quickly. >> my second agreed teacher said i deserved an s on my chest not for secure girl but skin -- supergirl but skeptic girl. >> when they look at the dat to and bring it together they can tell us more about disease. how can we tell ahead of time if we are going to get sick. i think that's valuable. i. >> all right. sounds good. always good to see you garnishings to see. >> facebook founder mark zuckerberg add $1.6 billion to his fortune in one day, bring his net worth to 33 billion. now worth more than either of google founders and the ceo of amazon, all because zuckerberg owns nearly half a billion shares of facebook stock and analysts say facebook is one of wall street's best performing start. after the rocky start remember
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that, back in 2012. a u.s. marine who officials accuse of stages his own kidnapping and desserting the military twice, could soon face charges that could get him the death penalty. we'll break down the case when we come back. did you know, your eyes can lose vital nutrients as you age? [ male announcer ] that's why there's ocuvite to help replenish key eye nutrients. ocuvite has a unique formula not found in your multivitamin to help protect your eye health. ocuvite. help protect your eye health.
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breaking news now. and this is a story we have been watching this hour. the israeli defense minister is now reportedly telling troops that israel might significantly widen the gaza ground operation. they have been looking for the tunnels where the terror group hamas has been firing rockets into israel. that's how the whole thing started. comes shortly after the israeli security cabinet voted unanimously, and we reported, they have rejected the cease fire pushed by the united states and our secretary john kerry --
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secretary of state. also breaking, reuters is reporting several countries, including the u.s., britain, germany, tucker, and qatar, will attend talks in paris to push for a cease fire. a united states marine could face charges after military investigators say he desert evidence his post twice and faked his kidnapping. this is back in 2004, he was serving as a translator when officials say he took a military vehicle and left his base in iraq. at the time officials say they thought insurgentses captured him and a week later this video surfaced home his blindfolded. web sites claimed he was beheaded. but the next month he toward up out a u.s. embassy in beirut. he was charged with desertion. then he went missing again. fast forward now to last month. the military officials say they took him into custody in the middle east. they did not say where they found him. but the "associated press" reported in 2011 he was staying
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with family in lebanon when relatives contacted publicist in los angeles asking for a million dollar book and movie deal. lea gabrielle joins us now. this is a winding place to get here. >> the military has very complex process of legal checks checks d investigations before it can formally charge him. the marine corps is alleging that the corporal deserted -- destroyed government property and committed larceny. a senior officer will be deciding whether or not to convene the military equivalent of a grand jury. listen. >> at this point, we are still at the allegation stage. if it does go forward to formal charges, then the evidence woult court-martial process. >> in the meantime the military is holding him in a jail in north carolina, and, harris, they're being very tight-lipped what evidence they actually have against him. >> you know, from what i read
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and from what i understand, decade ago this corporal claimed he was innocent. >> that's right. back in 2004 he said he was kidnapped. we have some video of his family during that time. they said they learned of his abduction through news reports and were begging his captors for mercy. well, after he surfaced in lebanon the following month the marine corps brought him home to face charges. this is what he said before he disappeared again while on leave several months later. >> i did not desert my post. i was captured and held against my will for 19 days. this was a very difficult time for me. >> now, of course, that was before he disappeared again, and this time for nearly a decade, and the military isn't disclosing where he was -- where he surrendered or the details and hopefully we'll learn more if this case moves forward. >> no doubt. we'll be right back.
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on this day in 1965, bob dylan broke rock 'n' roll and folk music closer together, breaking hit when he ditched his acoustic guitar for an electric one at the newport folk festival in rhode island. earlier he helped shape the folk music scene with his lyrics and guitar playing. he would take the stage in new york city with nothing more an acoustic guitar and harmon nick could. so when we started using an electric guitar, fans were not happy. he would release many more iconic songs like "knock on heaven's door "the festival starts today. bob dylan plugged in for the first time in rhode island 49 years ago today. i'm harris falkner.
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have a fabulous friday. "your world" is next. listen to the music and enjoy it. ♪ forget walking. just leave the driving to us because, guess what, the gates are open. welcome everybody, i'm neil cavuto. the president huddling this afternoon with leaders of central america as the white house considers a plan to give hondurans fleeing to the u.s. in droves, refugee status they've no longer have to make the dangerous trek through mexico. the government would screen them there before determining how many to let in here. the white house says this plan is not set in stone. critics say, well, they must be stoned. what are they thinking here? >> good afternoon. this is month the topics of