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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  September 26, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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will take it off every night like humans do. he is so cute. thank you for being part of the story. here's shep. >> more money. publish the war in iraq and syria is costing $7 million to $10 million a day, and now the defense secretary saysñi we need more money. plus the brush parliament vote. all in on iraq, but syria? forget about it. plus, beheading in america. today a man in oklahoma city, who tried to get coworkers to convert to islam, and when one woman would not, cops say he cut off her head. and the manhunt for the cop killer in pennsylvania, new details expected at a news conference scheduled to begin right now, fresh from the scene, worth the survivalist intent to kill again holed up in huge abandoned hotel. it's an extraordinarily busy news day. let's get to it. >> good friday afternoon from the deck.
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words matter. and today the words changed at the top of united states command. iraqi troops are losing ground to isis by the day. it is no better in syria. and with that as a backdrop in a briefing at the pentagon, the joint chiefs chair, general martin dempsey, said there is shut lay possibility we'll need ground troops to wipe out isis but that does not mean american troops on the ground. he and the defense secretary, chuck hagel, briefed reporters an hour ago. last week general dempsey made beg headlines when he said he may recommend that president obama put american ground troops on the ground in the fight. now a week later he says american forces would not be as effective as the foreign fighters already on the ground. >> in fact, ideally, for the kind of issues we're confronting there, the ideal force, in fact the only truly effective force, that will actually be able to reject isil from within its own population, is a force comprised of iraqis and kurds and moderate
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syrian opposition. >> the kurds who fight for their own land, the iraqis who are not standing up so we can stand down, and the moderate syrian opposition. which we have not been able to locate. the defense secretary chuck hagel warned the fight is in the beginning stages, and said congress would have to authorize more money to pay for it all. that says the international coalition that the obama administration has touted has gotten bigger today. today britain and belgium voted to join in the fight -- or half the fight. not the safe haven half, the you stand up, we'll stand down have. ed henry is live at the white house. the british parliament voted to come on in. lots of folks are wondering about what about our congress, which is on vacation until after the election. >> basically after the mid-terms, and also, there's no consensus on capitol hill what to do. and in fact, in the british parliament, we saw an overwhelming vote, as you say, for half a mission.
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air strikes in iraq, not syria, military analysts said the head of the snake there is, and that's where the real airstrikes have to happen in order to stop isis dead in its tracks. bottom line is the british prime minister said the world can no longer wait. some of the president's critics here in the states say it's time for congress to jump in here,, too. >> this is not a threat on the far side of the world. left unchecked, we will face a terrorist caliphate on the shores of the mediterranean and boring a nato member, with a declared and proven determines to attack our country and our people. >> this president has in libya, and then this weekey syria, committed our sons and daughters to a war that is not authorized by congress. >> republican rand paul suggesting this is an abuse of executive power. they clearly disagree. inside the white house and say they have existing authorization from congress dating back to the bush administration that gives
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this president that power. >> mission accomplished. speaking of mission accomplished. economists today saying that so many on the far left have been saying for a long time. there's not a lot of difference between george bush and barack obama when it comes to these matters. like none. >> and they do it starkly by putting this president in a flight suit, suggesting not mission accomplished but mission relaunched. that he is basically just tweaking the bush war on terror, the economists in a tough editorial saying that president obama showed inaction earlier in dealing with these threats and now has been forced into launching the kinds of wars he railed against in his first campaign pain. josh earnest rejected that. got a lot of questions about it. said these are not ground wars, they're just airstrikes and said there's another big difference. listen. >> he believes that the use of force can be more effective if it is done alongside partners around the globe. >> and they're talking about that coalition they're building.
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the fact of the matter is the president currently has partners to a point. the british are now voting to move forward with airstrikes in iraq, not syria, the same that the french did as well, recently. the reason why? both the british and the french say we do not have the legal authority to be bombing inside syria right now, shep. >> international law seems to suggest. ed henry is live on the north lawn. thank you. the united states is, quote, fighting in the same trenches, unquote, with syria's brutal regime. that's what a syrian government official told a newspaper there, suggesting the u.s.-led airstrikes are actually helping assad. we are fighting with his fighters. but we're not really on the ground. we're the air force. president obama said the mission is meant to wipe out the islamic state, chit is, not to help assad and that's true. but welcome to unintended consequences. not surprised consequences, not
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unforeseen, just unintended. analysts say the airstrikes are giving a big boost to the leader who for years now murders his own people. that just one of the cornucopia of complications firing up president obama's critics who are questioning the administration's strategy, or lack thereof, and it's not just his critics. in many cases it's his supporters. let's bring in chris wallace who is live in washington. seems the bottom line on this, chris, on the right, and on the left, as long as you don't work in washington, this is so important that they may overrun part of the world, that they want to come over and kill all of us, that we have to spend right now $7 million to $10 million a day to fight them, but not important enough for congress to take a vote, and it is certainly not important enough for us to get our hands dirty on the ground. how do you wreck reconcile that? >> i think it's harder to reconcile the congressional part of it. we're involved in a new war. i know that the administration
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says under a variety of authorities, whether at the war powers act, whether it's the 2001 authorization to fight al qaeda, whether it's the 2002 authorization to fight in iraq, that they have legal authority, but 0 on the other hand, congress doesn't need the from do it. congress could decide to hold -- >> john boehner said that's not how it's done. the president sends the word over, we -- of course not lately but that's houston how it could be done if they actually wanted to do it, but thigh don't because mid-terms are coming. >> exactly. it could be done that it that it all rather, both republicans and democrats, liberals and conservatives, would rather take pass on this, get re-elected and then talk about it during the mid-terms. it certainly is -- i mean during the lame duck session, but is a legitimate question, why isn't congress under its constitutional powers -- why isn't it voting on whether or not to authorize the president
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to in effect launch a new war, even if it isn't a declaration of war, the authorization for the use of force. the question of ground troops is a different one. >> it is. >> you can compare them to bush but there are big differences. yes, we're involved in a war in that part of to the world but we're not sending tens of thousands or hundred thousand troops over there, and the president clearly thinks we don't want -- don't need to do that and don't want to do that. an interesting kole film the "washington post," saying it's an effort to destroy isis in iraq. it's an -- and to use the iraqis and they are certainly not effective now but may evegetablely be over time, and the peshmerga, the kurdish forces to try to destroy isis in iraq and try to contain them in syria. he calls it containment plus. is it a full measure? no. but it may be as far as we and can need to go while we try to train up the syrian rebels and that's going to be a process of
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years. >> why do we needó to continueo pretend? why are we pretending? they're pretending our goal is to wipe theout do destroy them. its not our goal -- if it is our strategy is wrong. the peshmerga will fight in kurdistan, fight for sudden stan, they want to be kurdistan, not iraq. got no use for iraq. that ship has sailed. you ask anyone involved in any way with that region and they'll tell you that. the iraqi troops have not stood up one single time. they just lost another battle two days ago, lost as many as 300 people and have melted away. the iraqi generals were on the phone with the isis people, and the isis people said we got your children and we'll kill them and all they just melt away. as for the moderate syrian rebels bunch, have yet to find out who the hell they are. this is -- >> in the case of iraq, the arguments you're making are the
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arguments made in 2006, and then george w. bush launched the surge, and the surge involved creating a fighting force, a viable fighting force out of the it should -- shiite military, and getting the sunnis -- talking bat sunni national guard -- to throw off in that case al qaeda in iraq, and now isis, and the brutal way they ruled that part of the world. the areas they controlled is not necessarily something even the sunnis like very much. it's five sunni arab nations are helping to us fight against isis. i'm not saying it's a perfect military situation but it may be one that at least degrades them and contains them and maybe over time -- i agree -- over time destroys them. what's the alternative? do we -- >> all i'm saying -- >> safe haven. >> stop pretending. they say we relying on this new government in iraq that is showing all these great signs. that's just not true.
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this new government does not yet have an interior minister, does not yet have a foreign minister, it doesn't even have a leader of its own army. they haven't even come to that point yet and they're no guarantees they'll be inclusive. i if they were they could have made the appointments. we don't know who they are and we're pretending like they're the second coming. they don't have a defense minister yet. it's crazy. >> i agree but those are a lot of the same arguments made in 2006 and '07 when george w. bush launched the surge -- >> we want 140,000 troops over there -- >> six months in -- i can remember six months in that people were concerned about it. do you want to send 20,000, 30,000 troops? i'm not sure people support that. >> i'm just tired of the pretending. that's all i'm saying. i'm confident that if we wanted to put 140,000 troops on the ground from now until -- i don't know -- the next generation is dead, that we can keep this
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thing under wraps. how about then? this is a civil war that should have been fought between world war i and world war ii and here it is right in front of us. we drew lines, there wasn't a civil war, and now they're having it. i with the sword of strategy in syria, and stand up, stand down in iraq, and kurdistan is better because the -- no, they're not. they'll deal with kurd land, that's it. i don't want them to have a safe haven but i'm getting tired of the pretending. getting tired of it. >> i understand that. come on over to the house on sunday. mrs. sunday will give you some soup. >> you no where i i'm going to be on sunday in oxford, because the rebels will have just played mississippi and we'll be on a stretch leading toward alabama. rebel, tide -- >> i know why you're in a bad mood. you're facing alabama in a week. >> no. i'm excited. this is the year, chris.
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>> you know what? stop pretending. >> well -- >> we got a show on sunday. "fox news sunday." >> i have words. want me to read them? >> okay. you promote it better than i do. >> chris will have the battle against they islamic state and talk with the white house deputy national security advicer and two senators, john barrasso, and angus king, this sunday on "fox news sunday" on the fox news broadcast network. check your local stations. well, chris? that's it? >> yes. >> that's it. right. >> we'll also have ben carson to talk about eric holder, and reese witherspoon, a nice southern girl to talk about her new movie. and go, mississippi. >> hodyed toy everybody. >> good to see you, chris, thank you. you're working in chicago, tell you, you have to work in
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hawai'i? you set a thing on fire that shuts down all the air traffic in all of the chicago area, it is a disaster and a parentally that is how it is how it happened. no pretending. starts working e gas bubbles in minutes for effective relief. dulcogas, from the makers of dulcolax- nothing relieves gas faster.
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that's chicago right there. would normally be auld covered up. but no mas. investigators say a contractor started the fire in an air traffic control facility near chicago, not at either airport. investigators say he tried to kill himself. happened this morning in the city of aurora, illinois. cops there say the fire started in the basement. but when the crews got there they found the man suffering from what they called self-inflicted wounds. fire is out. officials had to cancel hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of flights into and out of chicago, and here's how the situation looks now. the thing is, if -- chicago's center handles everything at altitude. right? so anything below 10,000 feet is being handled somewhere else. the center handles way up there. so if you flight up there, you can't do it. i if you're flight around in this area at 10,000 or below, youñi could. i want to show you earlier. this is, what --
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>> 10:20 eastern, few hours after crews summonedded to the fire. here's chicago. you can see this doughnut hole in the middle of the country. normally that would be packed. new york over here, philly, d.c. the whole earn seaboard. hundreds of flights in and out of chicago airports, on top of that a lot of flights diverted to st. louis and other cities. it was a mess. >> everybody transfers there. coming from the west coast or denver you go through chicago, not today. mike tobin, what would we know about the suspect? didn't want to go to hawai'i in a big way for some reason. >> sounds like this is a guy who had some personal problems and he made them a very public problem. you ran the details. he was found in the basement with his wrists slit. he was a computer systems operator there. working in the building that houses that control tower you called chicago center. he set the fires them fires were
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significant enough do destroy communications and radar at that building, and then when you get to that control tower that handles flights coming in at both o'hare and midway, the impact is significant because they're talking about now like at least a thousand flights canceled coming and going from o'hare, american airlines says it was upwards of 700 cancelled out of o'hare, and then midway, 400 canceled going and coming from there. so this individual has no connection to any terrorist plot or terrorist organization. injuries were minimal. you have the individual who slit his wrists and one individual who was treated for smoke inhalation. the impact is on the traveling public. >> i see people queuing behind you. things getting any better? no these are the people who are waiting in line just to get to the counter to find if they have a flight. and if i can get you to come over this way, this is the
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amount of people going through what is normally the big line, the tsa line. it's actually piling up. these people have a flight. this where is there's normally a lot of people piled up. aren't that many people because they don't have flights. >> mighty mike at chicago. thank you. >> the united states stepping up strikes against the militants, the fbi says it's not clear if the strikes thwarted a possible plot against the united states or europe. they don't know. we'll talk with the former homeland security secretary, michael chertoff, next. ♪ [announcer]when we make beyond natural dry dog and cat foods. we start with real meat as the first ingredient. we leave out corn,wheat and soy. and we own where our dry food is made-100 percent!
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>> more now on the american-led fight against militants in syria. the fbi director says he has no indication no indication the airstrikes in syria have stopped
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the al qaeda cell known as khorasan group u.s. officials say they have no idea what the iraqi prime minister was even talking about when he said that iraqi intelligence had picked up on a plot targeting subways in the united states and france, yet officials here in new york city have beefed up security despite the fact that they don't have any idea what he is talking about. yet they beefed up security. the iraqi prime minister later said he was speaking in general terms. all of this as the fed says they believe there are a dozen americans fighting alongside extremist groups in syria. yesterday they said 10, today they say 12. the fbi director says they're among the more than 100 americans who have traveled or tried to travel in some sway to syria. with us now former home happen security secretary, michael the e chertoff to talk about the pickle we're in.
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these are difficult times. motives are difficult to understand, mr. secretary. >> well, also, we're still in the relatively early stages of fully getting our arms around the problem. so there's a tendency for people to try to estimate what the threats are, but in the absence of concrete evidence, about a particular imminent threat, don't think you want to say we think there's going to be an attack on a particular installation. we do know historically that terrorists do focus on mass transit. we know they focus on subway. we know there are americans who have gone overseas to fight in syria and iraq, has have other westerns. so in a general sense the threat is elevate but we need good intelligence to find the individual particular threat wes need to focus on. >> if we need good intelligence that requires central intelligence agency boots on the ground which i'm told we have. >> it requires a lot of things. requires human intelligence,
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people on the ground, dealing with other human beings. also involves the signals and communications interception capability, which we have through nsa, and of course, it's ironic this is the very time when people are trying to push back and hamstring nsa when they're -- >> what do you mean by by pushback and hamstring nsa. >> the criticism about the fact that when we intercept or track foreign communications, we may incidentally pick up americans, the criticism overlooks the fact that part of what we want to find out is whether americans are communicating with terrorists overseas. that is how we know who to look for. they don't raise their hand and say, hi, i'm terrorist, i'm coming back to the u.s. i can tell you from my own experience that the ability to focus on these international communications, as well as international flow of money, were critical to news the years after 9/11, and helping identify and frustrate plots against the
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united states. >> i think what civil libertarians and others were suggesting was there ought to be a way to do this without treading on the constitutional rights of americans. we ought to be able to figure out how to track what is happening over there and leave innocent bystanders out of the collect all your data mix ump think that's what they were saying. >> i'd say two things. first, if you look at the courts that have reviewed these programs, virtually every judge has upheld these programs as constitutional. part of the problem is this. people don't self-identify as innocent or guilty. part of what you're trying to figure out is whether the guilty are hiding among the innocent. now, obviously if we determine someone is innocent, we ought to get rid of the data and not follow any further steps, but it's often difficult to tell and when you're looking for a needle in a hay stack you have to look at all the hay. >> how concerned are you about
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this group that supposedly had an imminent plot in the works? >> i think from what has been said publicly it is concerning, for two reasons. first, the group has connections to some sophisticated bombmakers in yemen, but also they are particularly focused on recruiting americans and westerners who they might turn against the west. so they really made it clear that we are their target. and the combination of capable ity and intent does mean they're at the top of the group wes ought to focus on. >> where khorasan has made it clear the west is the target, and isis wants to create a caliphate and the west to stay away. so we be more concerned about khorasan or multiple war fronts. >> i'm afraid we have multiple war fronts. even though is particularly called out the west as the first target, if they begin to build real infrastructure, i heard an
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estimate on the news they have over $1 million. some of that is going into researching and testing various kinds of weapons which can be turned against the west, and i think it's a big mistake to believe they're going to limit themselves to simply dealing with what is in their neighborhood. >> former homeland security secretary, michael chertoff, thank you. >> good to be on. >> coming up, the man who chopped off a woman's head in oklahoma. and there's word he recently tried to convert his coworker thursday toe islam. that -- workers to islam. that and the chilling 9-1-1 audio coming. >> pennsylvania state police searching for a man who killed one of their own. zeroing in now on an abandoned hotel. a news conference underweak and there's breaking news. that's next. man: i know the name of eight princesses. i'm on expert on softball. and tea parties. i'll have more awkward conversations than i'm equipped for, because i'm raising two girls
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on my own. i'll worry about the economy more than a few times before they're grown. but it's for them, so i've found a way. who matters most to you says the most about you. at massmutual we're owned by our policyowners, and they matter most to us. ready to plan for your future? we'll help you get there. 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. it's progressive pain. first you have that, that feeling of numbness. then you get the hot pins. it got to the point where i felt like, almost like lightning bolts, hot strikes into my feet. the pain was, it was... i just couldn't handle it, so my doctor prescribed lyrica. the pain has been reduced and i feel better than i did before.
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was 100% an accident, and that's a quote, when he struck and killed another driver on the track last month. the "associated press" reports this was his first interview after a grand jury on wednesday decided not to charge him. ford is re-calling 850,000 cars and suvs, affecting these models. the company reports a glitch could prevent the air bags from deploying. the problem has not caused any crashes or injuries. automakers have re-called a record 40 million cars and trucks in the united states this year. >> investigators say a postal work hoarded other peoples mail for a decade, failing to deliver 40,000 pieces of mail to homes and businesses in brooklyn. his attorney says he suffered from depression, and a judge ordered him to stay away from alcohol.
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police in oklahoma say a man walked into a food processing plant and cut off a former coworker's head. that was yesterday, just after
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his boss fired him, according to police. we were watching this unfold in the city of moore, oklahoma, 20 minutes south of oklahoma city. we have a picture of the suspect. police say the fbis investigating claims he tried to convert his coworkers to islam. the reason the fbi is on the case, we're told, is to try to figure out whether the suspect's religion actually motivated him to attack. investigator says it appears to them the suspect stabbed employees at random. listen to this 9-1-1 call. >> we don't know where the person went. he went through our front office, went to the shipping office, stabbed a woman in our customer service department. >> did he know her? is that who he was arguing with? was she an employee. >> she is an employee, yes. >> okay, thank you. >> lock that door. >> we're trying. okay. can you hear this in the
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background? >> is that him? >> yes. sounds like he is running around out here. that's a gunshot. >> that's a gunshot. police say after the suspect attacked the first woman and cut off her head, he then stabbed another woman before a company executive shot him. trace gallagher in our west coast news lab. man, what more are we learning? >> police were asked if the was trying to beheaded the second victim and that it d. know but he was not planning on stopping. he was using a produce knife which he would have had access to because the worked on the production line of the food processing plant. while he was stabbing the second victim, the cfo of the company, reserve sheriff deputy, he shot the suspect multiple times, and the other employees then barricaded themselves inside the office and made that 9-1-1 call you just played. the two women victims apparently were the first ones to come in
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contact with the suspect as he entered the building. >> what more have we learn about this suspect, trace? >> he is 30-year-old alton know lean. he served time in prison for drug offenses and for assaulting a state trooper in 2010 after a traffic stop, and after that assault he fled into the woods and led the police on a manhunt. we don't know if he was fired because he was trying to convert coworkers to islam, but police were asked about domestic terrorism. listen. >> statements made by coworkers that's what brought us to go ahead and contact the fbi, just to get assistance on a background investigation in that nature. as far as specifics, that is under investigation and i can't really comment on those. as soon as i can, i will. >> of course right now the fbi is clearly looking at his social
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networking footprint to see if he had contact with anybody overseas and there are now reports from witnesses inside the building he was shouting islamic phrases as he conducted the attack. police are hoping to interview the suspect at some opinion in the hospital later today. >> trace gal her in los angeles. breaking news now out of the maphunt in pennsylvania. cops just wrapped up a news conference on the search for the suspected cop killer. they say they scoured every inch of an abandoned hotel but have no signs of him. the police say it appears the suspect, named eric frein, seen here, was in the abandoned hotel at some point, possibly to take showers. nearly two weeks have passed now since sethors say the suspect shot two state troopers-killed one, seriously wounded the other. now some news outlets have taken to call the suspect the diaper sniper, because police say he has read sniper training material and left a trail of dirty diapers, among other
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things. rick leventhal is live. police had a news conference. what else did they say? >> a lot of headlines from lieutenant colonel of the pennsylvania state police. he says the suspect has been plotting this ambush attack for two years and they based that on hard drive they found that revealed searches how to elude a police manhunt and howard to survive in the wild. he experimented with explosives and they're concern bobby track traps and they say -- they talked about the search of the massive buck hill inn, a 900,000 square foot abandoned building on 4600 acres about four miles from here where frein lived with his parents that hotel closed 20
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years ago, frein was known to have spent time there in the past. the fbi sent a tactical team there searching room to room. there are numerous other abandoned hotels in the area, look with hundreds of structures, empty houses, hundreding cabins, sheds, trailers and garage anyway have to go through this one by one. and they called frein a coward. >> we're not intimidated. we will not leave. we have clear mission with specific objectives. we will protect the community, we we will find you and bring you to justice. >> police said they have had some success with tracking dogs. once they flushed him out but he popped out and then ran so fast into the thick brush they say they lost him and haven't seen him since tuesday. >> two weeks on, rick, thank you very much. back to the fox top story now. americas' new war. we're hearing reports members of
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al qaeda's affiliate in syria, are calling for it to join forces with the islamic state after coalition airstrikes there. that's according to the reuters news agency. it's reporting previous battles with isis have weak 'ed the al news nusra, and some activists say its fighters have joined the islamic state. militants announced u.s. airstrikes in syria killed the group's leader but u.s. officials have not confirmed that. analysts say eye and is and ah al nousra have beened at odds because of power problems. >> it's been said many times incorrectly, that isis and they're divided because isis is too extreme for a al qaeda linked group. the reality is more about power and loyalty and not tactics. the al qaeda affiliate in syria
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is weak, getting weaker. it's been fighting both pro assad government forces in syria and isis for the past year or so and now nousra is facing coalition strikes as well. the leader has to bow down before baghdadi. they heat each other and would lead to an end of al qaeda in syria. that would be an embarrassment to the leader of al qaeda is who losing to isis. there is back and forth who is the more important jihaddist move in the world. the more divided the groups. allows the u.s. to target both groups and not having to face a united islamic army in syria and
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iraq. >> connor powell, thank you. >> the suspect in the case of a missing college freshman is headed back now to virginia. the latest on the search for an 18-year-old student who at this moment is still missing. that's coming up. you pay your auto insurance premium every month on the dot. you're like the poster child for paying on time. and then one day you tap the bumper of a station wagon. no big deal... until your insurance company jacks up your rates. you freak out.
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where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible. >> careful with the trash truck. a pedestrian bridge collapses over a busy highway in detroit this morning and killed a truck driver. did a number on this thing. most of the bridge collapsed on the road. investigators say part of a garbage truck was extended to high in the air and slammed the bridge with enough momentum to take it down police say the driver died at a hospital. the bridge was in fair to good condition at the time. but they were set to replace it in three years. it will be sooner now. this all happened 6:00 in the morning local time, right before the morning rush. cop says nobody was walking on the thing. crews shut down the road in both
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directions and police say debris from the bridge hit two other vehicles but thankfully nobody seriously hurt. the suspect in the case of a missing college freshman at uva is now on his way back to virginia after a judge? texas ruled officials can extradite him to charlottesville. investigators tried to interview the suspect but he wouldn't talk. cops found the man's 32-year-old jesse matthew -- here's his picture -- found him wednesday afternoon on a beach near galveston. a source tells the ap it's possible the suspect was trying to escape to mexico. police say hey may have been the last person to see 18 year hannah graham before she disappeared two weeks ago. cops say there's still no sign of her. we're live in charlottesville. explain where the suspect is now. >> reporter: he is somewhere in a vehicle on his way back or possibly at an airport. we do know, though, that an hour and a half good we talked to the galveston county's sheriff's
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office and they said, we don't have him anymore. for security reasons his return here to virginia as to when and where is being kept a big secret. it is a parentally going to be on some kind of a commercial flight into virginia. now, on the sidewalk other block away this morning we ran into jesse matthews' lawyer help says it's been a few days since he talked to jesse. he advised jesse to waive extra digs and hey has known the matthew family for years and says they're good people. during a video link appearance before a texas judge yesterday, matthew did seemed confused and asked when he would trade the prison jump suit for his street clothes. his first court appearance in virginia won't be until thursday, and that's because the court is just closed on monday, tuesday, and wednesday. >> what about the search for this missing student? anything new? >> there's been some talk about possibly having another community-wide search this weekend. so far nothing is firm with that.
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officials today are focused on nearby carter mountain, and police are begging anyone who may have a wildlife camera to rewind and check for anything suspicious on the night hannah went missing, they're asking realtors to check vacant lots they may know about. >> doesn't sound good. thank you very much. new trouble for are in hot tub -- for mr. hot tub. at the former government official who spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a getaway in vegas now. he really needs a drink. and a hollywood ending in the bronx as, derek jeter, says goodbye as only derek jeter could. man, incredible. you swore you'd never do it. trading in your sporty little two door for a minivan? but here you are. counting cup holders and captain's chairs. not to worry.
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the return of mr. hot tub and in this chapter criminal charges. remember this guy? mr. neely. jeff neely, facing up to five years in the hoosegow now. the former government official who organized a ritzy recrete in vegas four years ago, complete with a clown, magician, and mind reader, costing taxpayers 800 grand or so all this from the general services administration this agency in charge of cutting government waste. neely took the fifth and left the agency. now a federal grand jury in california has indicted him on five counts of fraud. prosecutors say it's in not just about the vegas giveaway but personal travel, including trips to california and guam. so far no response from mr. hot tub. he has a court date next month. after 20 seasons in the bronx, the new york yankees shortstop derek jeter played his last major league baseball game in new york in pinstripes. the reigning captain played his final home game last night, and for the sellout crowd at yankee
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stadium the ending could not have been scripted this well. >> base hit to right field. >> in typical fashion, derek jeter came through in the clutch. >> derek jeter, his final game, with a walkoff single. >> after celebrating with his current teammates, he shared a moment with the so called core, joe torre was there to say goodbye as well. and as he headed out of the ballpark for the final time as a player, derek jeter admitted he was overcome with emotions. >> i tried to hide them. tried to trick myself and convince myself that i'm not feeling those particular emotions, whether it's nerves, whether i'm injured, pain. just try to trick myself i don't have it. today i wasn't able to do it. >> what he was able to do? was leave his fans with one last derek jeter memory.
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while leaving his sport with every reason to be proud. >> all i've ever wanted to do, and not too many people get an opportunity to do it, and it was above and beyond anything that i've ever dreamt of. >> was for us, too, mr. captain. respect to you. 14-time all-star will not be eligible for the hall of fame until 2020 put the mayor says they're preparing for the massive crowd they expect the induction ceremony will bring. >> the first girl ever to win a little league world soars game, herons her place at the baseball hall of fame. rene davis and her teammates attended the ceremony and she donated her jersey, she said she would not be here without them, and she is right. >> i come here a lot and it's dollar see all the jerseys, and to see my shoutout jersey would
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be amazing. >> she is 13 with a 70-miles-an-hour fast ball. she says that is throwing like a girl. we'll be right back. this is ho. her long day of outdoor adventure starts with knee pain. and a choice. take 6 tylenol in a day or just 2 aleve for all day relief. onward! before using her new bank of america credit card, which rewards her for responsibly managing her card balance. before receiving $25 toward her balance each quarter for making more than her minimum payment on time each month. tracy got the bankamericard better balance rewards credit card, which fits nicely with
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everything else in life she has to balance. that's the benefit of responsibility. apply online or visit a bank of america near you. oohh, you got it! i love the looks of it. [garage door closing] nobody touches my dodge dart, jake johnson. not even your best friend slash neighbor? no one. i can still get in craig. i'd like to see you try. all i'd have to do is roll in, dude. let's see it. i choose not to right now. come on indiana. craig, craig, craig. [in a british accent] is someone out there? don't do that accent on me! ♪don't touch my dart
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>> on this day in 1969, americans met those lovely ladies and they're hairs of gold like their mother. the brady bunch. gilligan's island creator came up with a sitcom about mike and carol and all the kids and marsha, and alice the house housekeeper. the show never made the top ten, win off the air in five years but what a hit in syndication, and the rerounds live today, and we first heard the story of the man named brady 45 years ago today. more proof i'm very, very old. all right, brainy -- brady
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bunch. we're up 168 on the session. up one percent if you round things up. cavuto next. see you next week from oxford. until then, have a good one. >> and thank you, shep. are we so focused on this that we are taking our eyes off of this? welcome everybody, i'm neil cavuto, and this headline says it all. u.s. homeland security moves to tackle climate change. just as a new isis tape emerges on vice in that tape, man identified as the canadian citizen is heard saying, and i quote, we will make some attacks in new york soon. a lot of brothers are mobilizing right now. mobilizing for a brilliant attack, my friend. add that to reports the fbi is now investigating a beheading in oklahoma that may or not be tied to that terror group,

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