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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  October 2, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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ke kent. >> thank you for being here, foxnews.com/outnumbered. -"happening now" starts right now. we start with the fox news alert. right now, doctors await for more possible cases of ebola after the shocking diagnosis of the liberia man in texas. >> the same one who went to the er for help and sent home last week. it's all happening now. >> odds of pushin low. >> so were the odds of the ebola coming to the u.s., and now it's here. health officials in texas say 1 00 people came into contact with the first person diagnosed in america after flying here from west africa. one hospital initially missed
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signs he had it, now thousands mil miles away in another different, a new case. >> early in the investigation of a patient who might have ebola. >> plus issis closing in on a strategic town. people have to choose between leaving their homes or staying alive. this as another key u.s. ally decides if it will join the fight against the terrorist group. also, a bond hearing for the suspect linked to missing college student hannah graham with reports segting matthew was accused of sexual assault after two separate college campuses. this after authorities deploy a drone to find the missing 18-year-old. it is all "happening now." ♪ now to the top story. he's in texas. he goes to the emergency room with a fever. reportedly says he arrived from liberia, a hot bed of ebola
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weeks earlier. he's begin pills and released. now he's in isolation and doctors awaiting to see if there's more cases. >> it turns out that patient would be the first diagnosed here in the states. that dallas hospital is answering for the initial decision that's 100 people may have been exposed to the guy with the deadly virus. so far, they are not showing symptoms. we track it all live from texas health presbyterian hospital. hello. >> reporter: good to see you, yeah, a developing situation, and as you know in these situations, the numbers seem to be constantly changing, but the latest number you talked about came out today, and that was from state health officials who say that they have now reached out to as many as 100 people who may have had some form of contact with this patient. we are talking about contact either directly or indirectly, and out of that number, out of a
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hundred, 12 to 18 people had direct contact. we're talking about his family members that also include five children who attend four different schools here in the dallas area. now, county health and human services saying that none of the individuals have shown any symptoms of ebola. however, as a precaution, a public health order has now been issued, which legally requires four of the patients' family members to stay at their home in this apartment complex in dlas, no visitors, and provide blood samples upon request up until october 19th when the virus incubation period would be over. meantime, thomas remains in serious condition. here at texas presbyterian health hospital in north dallas. he's, obviously, quarantined in
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isolation. the national came to the er here is after arriving in dollars, apparently told the nurse he had traveled from liberia, but that information somehow not conveyed to the doctors treating him. he was discharged. investigation into that ongoing. three days later, he's so sick that he has to come back to the hospital by ambulance. at this point, a team of ten from the cdc, centers for disease control and prevention, are on the ground assisting doctors and local health officials. >> thank you very much. meanwhile, liberia officials, responses from officials saying they plan to prosecute duncan, bringing ebola to the u.s. they claim he lied on the health form, filling out a health form at the airport saying he did not have symptoms or a fever or that he did help carry a body of his land lord's daughter, a woman
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who then the next day died from ebola, so he may be facing potential charges in his home country of liberia. meanwhile, another suspected case popping up in hawaii. the department of health officials there test a patient showing symptoms that could be of the deadly virus. >> very possible that they do. that they it have it, but it's also even more likely they have another condition with similar symptoms. >> patient is isolated in a hospital in honolulu and the doctors caution he could have a number of ailments like flu or malaria. they are taking precautions for anyone with a fever who traveled to or from west africa. >> don't panic. that's the message from the white house reminding americans ebola is difficult to catch. the administration reminding us, quote, you can't get through the air, through the water, or food in the u.s. two weeks after the president
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said there probably would not be an outbreak in our country. >> first and foremost, i want the american people to know that our experts here at the cdc and government agree the chances of an ebola outbreak here in the united states are extremely low. chris ross, producer of fox news sunday, joins us now. now that the first reported case is here, some say ban flights from west africa or block people temporarily from liberia and other countries from doming here in the first place. what do you think the administration will do? >> i think that's unlikely, and, you know, there is a protocol in place, and everything in the protocol worked other than the fact that that one nurse in texas in the hospital when he was there days ago, saying he had symptoms, that he came from liberia, that they didn't put him in the hospital in isolation right away, and, in fact, sent
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him home with anti biotics. they put out the property coal, nurses have it, read from the protocol. it's a enter interconnected world and almost impossible to just shut countries off from my contract at all with the country. an vz uncomfortable and frankly as this particular case is there's no reason to think there's going to be an upgreat because as appointmented out, you can't catch it unless the person is systematic. even if he did lie about the contact with ebola, he was not symptomatic on the plane, and, therefore, probably, almost certainly if you believe the doctors, did not spread it to those people on the plane. >> your sense in washington, then, is that there would be reassured properly and authorities are handling this correctly? >> oh, loutly, there's a feeling of panic, and i think that it's
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unwarranted because of the fact there's a protocol in place. this is not a disease. think of the threats faced in the past like the sars virus, could be transmitted through the air, more dangerous than this. come in contact with somebody who is symptomatic, who has a fever, you have to come in contact with their bodily fluids and get inside you. there may have to be a cut in your skin. there's a lot of things to happen to be transmitted from one person to another, and, yes, it is possible with the people that they came in contact with in close proximity after he was symptomatic in the family, the kids, five kids, four different schools, odds this is going to be an outbreak are nejble. >> that's comfortable and reassuring. the big issue in washington, the secret service director quitting, and a new acting director after the stunning reports of a man in the elevator
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with a give up next to the president and allege white house sprinter running into the east room. >> in a funny way, they are connected, ebola and the secret service. i'll explain my thoughts about that. which is when you see the secret service, the agency that we give the mandate to protect the president, such a lousy job of it, and just one story of dumb cops after another, would be funny if not so tragic, bust increases the sense, talk about irs targeting, the va scandal and lack of care there, some of the problems with obamacare, it just adds tots sense of deep skepticism, some warpted, some not, that, you know, nobody knows how to run anything, and that, you know, things are spinning out of control, creating anxiety in the country. there's a difference between
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secret service and, clearly, a break down in the administration there and what we've seen sfr in cdc, and if there's an illness, they may slip through the net. >> the agents protect our officials, putting lives on the line potentially every single day. thank you, good to see you. >> good to talk with you. >> watch chris wallace every sunday morning here on the fox news channel or local fox station, anchors the big show, fox news sunday, and catch him here at 2:00 p.m. eastern time. >> afghan president signing a bilateral agreement between his government and the sietsz as well as a status of forces kreemt with nato. twhast mean for u.s. diplomacy in the fuch role in the country? we have the latest. high, doug. >> is if to symbol the
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disapprovement of the agreement, wednesday this week, a day after the agreement was signed, two suicide bombers attacked busses carrying afghan national army solderie solderiers, seven killed, 21 wounded, a sign future stability is not assured in afghanistan, but nay are hopeful this agreement will help to that end. >> ten years is a long time, difficult to predict every bend in the road between now and then. the security forces already have done an exceptional job. look at this year, securing not one, but two national elections, put the taliban on their heels, no question about that. >> and commander of the international security assistance force, general john campbell spoke to reporters at the pentagon today at information where we should not mistake the army or iraqi soldiers. listen up.
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>> afghanistan is different than iraq in that you can't compare the two. we have a great window of opportunity for the entire country of afghanistan wants the coalition. >> the presence of a 9800 u.s. forces remaining in afghanistan after the start of the new year, more than 12,000 of people, if you add international partners, is not what the obama administration p envisioned. listen to biden from 2010. >> like in iraq, starting it in july of 2011 and totally out of there come held or high water by 2014. >> that agreement is stark contrast to the failure of the obama administration to reach a status of forces agreement in iraq, resulting in a pullout of all u.s. forces in 2011. leon panetta coming out with a memoir just next week on october 7 in which we blames the white
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house for the chaos that we are seeing in iraq today, he quotes directly here, our side, you, the white house, so eager to rid itself it was willing to withdrawal rather than lock inarrangements to preserve our interests. harsh words. back to you. >> thank you very much. big boost in the fight against isis. turk turkey's parol limit approved a motion allowing military operations against isis by turkish troops, iraq, and syria. this comes as isis advances to kobani, the islamic radical terrorists surrounding the town and could be a massacre there. this parliament vote alowers the presence of foreign troops on turk irk soil meaning potential american troops or other trips yous use air bases, there's the
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american air base, and this major step in turkey's move, a nato member, to try to join the foigt against isis which until now, turkey has been resisting. a rare respiratory virus rous led to the death of a 10-year-old girl inle rhode island. we are joined with what you should know about the virus. a high school financial game turns deadly when a 16-year-old suffered a fatal head injury. details coming up. [♪] great rates and safety working in harmony. open an optimizer +plus account from synchrony bank. visit myoptimizerplus.com to open an account. service. security. savings.
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learning more about the first ebola case diagnosed in the u.s. at least a hundred people may have been exposed to the deadly virus, a jump from the initial reports we received. thomas eric duncan now in stable condition at a dallas hospital. right now, no cure for the
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virus, but there are new experimental drugs in development that worked to help in the past, so what do you need to know about this threat? joining me now is dr. mary schimt, and, doctor, thank you for the time today. >> thank you, shan, for having me. >> in the research, this is identified the virus survives on surfaces six days after contact. that's not something i had heard before. >> we know it can survive. there was one study i found that shows it can survive for up to six days. that was the maximum. they were not sure if there were additional laboratory contamination, but this sis one of the questions we do not understand, one piece of the epidemic we do not understand. from what we do know, one does need to have a contact directly with the patient. we have not actually found anyone who has become infected
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without direct contact with a patient so that should make our community feel somewhat better. we do know that tears, saliva, vomit, and excrement are the most highly contagious, and act can with these are most concerning, but as our unfortunate victim in texas revealed, all this gentleman did was help carry someone and was there a contact there? did he come into contact with a body fluid? that would be a great answer to have if our patient. >> yeah, and now reports that officials say, you know, if he does well and survives this, they will pros cute him for lying on forms when he traveled about the fact he was in direct contact with someone. there's a number of precautions and things that, you know, unless everybody plays by the rules and follows them, we can't guarantee we wouldn't have more show up. i want to ask about the virus, i
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mispronounce is. entero virus, it's impacting younger patients. >> it's a family of viruses including entero, echo viruses, and polio virus. it's not surprising that this is causing neurologic side effects as well. this is a very common virus. we see it 12 months of the year. i had several patients, children in the past, who had neurological manifestations with the enterovirus, what's notable is it causes terrible respiratory tracks in children. one of the programs we have in addressing it is having an active as asthma and bronco spasm program and to drop in isolation to protect the health care workers and rest of the
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staff. opposed to the flu, which we have many hospitals including the one where i practice is mandatory for staff, unless there's an exemption, there's no vaccine for the virus. this virus, although there's a vaccine for polio so should it be a future problem, it might be helpful to develop a vaccine. >> all of us with all of these threats, be vigilant, care for ourselves, and follow recautions. doctor, thank you for your time. >> thank you. >> eric? >> voting to take action against isis in syria and iraq. it's an important next step. they will let foreign troops, meaning us, and ref cue gees on the soil. this could be a potential game changer in the fight against the islamic radical terrorists, a live report from the ground about this latest development. we are now in the streets of hong kong, the former british
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colo colony's leader refusing to step down. tens of thousands of protest rs still there. they want him to go. how they are reacting coming up.
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tragedy strikes a high school football team on long island, new york. a 16-year-old boy suffered a head injury and died at a hospital hours later. authorities say tom got hurt colliding with another player in the third quarter. he was in the icu after
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undergoing surgery, but dozens of teammates, friends, and relatives awaiting updates on the condition. data shows last year there were eight fatalities related to high school football, and half of them happening during a football competition. overseas, police in hong kong stockpiling riot gear and the escalating tensions there. tens of thousands of pro-democracy protesters threaten to occupy government buildings unless the city's beijing's chief executive steps down. it is now 1:26 in the morning there, and demonstrators show no signs of giving up or going home. david piper streaming live from bangkok with the latest. hi, david. >> reporter: hi, yes, a possible breakthrough at this hour. the chief executive of hong kong conducted a news conference an hour ago and announced he was offering talks to the protesters.
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-- >> we apologize for the technical problem with david piper and we'll return as soon as we can clear that up. shannon? a fox business alert. i think that's where we are going to go. maybe we'll skip ahead. we'll work out the technical difficulties and be right back. in the meantime, details about the man charged with the abduction of hannah graham, learning more about his past. turkey's parliament votes to send ground troops to iraq and afghanistan as isis marches close to the border. will they join the fight on the ground? a live report coming up. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends. three jobs. you're like "nothing can replace brad!" then liberty mutual calls. and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer
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fox news liz alert. labor department says number of americans seeking unemployment benefits dropped by 8,000 last week to 287,000, turns out to be the lowest level in more than eight years. jo lee kent joins us. what does this mean? >> good news, jobless claims, as you said, unexpectedly fell last week to the lowest level since 2006, 18 months before the ree session. this matters because it indicates more employers keep workers because they expect more economic growth to come and are thinking of hiring more people, but that has not been enough to give stocks a real boost today. they were slumping this morning. they are up a little bit right now, and it's the worst october start in three years.
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debt pilot good newsings on jobs. the international monetary fund does not have a funny outlook either. the global economy could be stuck in mediocre growth for years given the current landscape, tomorrow, watch for the monthly jobs report from the labor department. the drop in claims today corresponko corresponds with strong job claims for much of the year. hoping for good news. >> take the good news any time. thank you so much. a fox news alert. turkey joins the fight against isis, approving a moment moments ago allowing the government to send combat troops to battle islamic extremists in neighboring iraq and syria and allow forces on turkish air force bases. we are live in tour ke live with more. hello, greg. >> reporter: hey, the developments in the last 20 minutes or so could be a potential game changer for the
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increasingly difficult war the u.s. has taken on with isis terrorists. the parliament voting by a margin of 298-98 in favor of authorizing its military to help the u.s. and allies in the offensive, incoming, for example, letting the u.s. use bases inside turkey and nearby syria for air strikes as well as allowing turkish military boots on the ground discussed both for syria and iraq that turkish military is strong and well-trained. as we found out today, this vote tonight is an urgent matterment ta . take a look. this is the front line on the war on isis, a mile behind me inside syria, the town of kurdish kurd ish held, and a couple miles from where we are, villages held by the terrorists. in the past couple hours since
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we've been here, we heard some explosions. we are told it's isis militants shooting into the town. we're told in the last couple days there have been u.s. air strikes in the region. right nearby, the turkish military. they are not thinking of inva invading, just trying to keep a lid on things. >> reporter: might invade now that they have authorization and it is an urgent matter as i site. latest word we have from our contacts on the ground is that isis is closing in on that town, and that could be a trigger for turkish involvement. watching closely, of course, the 160,000 refugees who fled the region in the past week also authorized in the bill, creation of a safe zone, a buffer zone for the refugees, but, shannon, a note from the defense minister tonight, this will not necessarily happen tomorrow or in the next few days. turkey has to look long and hard about what could be a very
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difficult engagement. back to you. >> absolutely. all right, greg, thank you. can the decision by turkey save 400,000 desperate people in kobani and stop a potential massacre think islamic militants? as isis closes in as greg reported, seems the coalition air strikes to help kobani have not been enough. we have the latest. captain nash, you know, turkey can only deploy troops in syria and iraq and let the arm forces, us, use bases, which they have not let us use before. why is the parliament decision so important? >> like you pointed out -- i spent a fair amount of time there, an exceptionally good facility. we operated out of there with the turks, and independently for some time, especially during the gulf wars. having that base for logistics, port fills using that, there's
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app 800 mile border with syria, and so it would be very important to have that access down from the north, flying aircraft carriers from the arabian gulf up through iraq and bombing in iraq. this would allow nato and coalition forces to operate directly across the boarder which gives you more time on station because you're that much closer to your objectives. >> what changed their mind? they had been resisting this, letting the black market oil fund isis, let foreign fighters flood the boarder, and turkish tanks, captain, are on the border not moving to help the kurds. >> that's right. it's been a blocking action, but it's not working because as greg pointed out, there are hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing
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going to turkey, causing problems, and i think that's one of the reasons parliament is he situation is not getting better. in fact, appears to be getting worse so they had to step in and do that. if they send in ground forces, that's going to be a game changer. in fact, the whole calculus changes. >> gave me the game changer. >> all the sudden, it's two region countries, syria and turkey, and one has an invasion course in the other country. so, yes, they are in there, we are in there with the coalition, bombing isis, but up until this point, we have not taken direct action against syria. the turks and syria are not good buddies. if turkey sends grounds forces in, syria, the ground regime, has to weigh what it looks like. it it to take care of isis because the turks want a buffer zone inside syria, so is that
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what they are doing or a permanent relationship, so the assad regime has to react to the turkish incursion. >> the beheadings, massacres, rapes, so heart breaking. there was a compelling glimpse in "the new york times" interviewing a resident of kobani who fled. this is what he said, he's 45 years old. i worked as a laborer for 40 years before i was able to pay $15,000, and delivering goods was the way to feed my family. the coalition air strikes might push isis away, but i don't think they'll be able to give me back my car or the life i had. omar's claim makes is real. can the air strikes help omar and other desperate people of kobani who are fleeing? >> the air strikes can reduce the overwhelming capability that
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isis is displaying to this point, but it cannot eliminate it or degrade it enough to where it's no longer a threat. you need a ground force to go against a ground force. turks may be the ground force. we are hoping we can use the free syria army, but, in fact, what it appears is going on is that as we bomb isis, assad shifts the force away because he doesn't have to fight them as much, and he's shifting his forces against the free syria army, the people who we are trying to ally with. >> complicated and it continues. >> it does. >> captain chuck nash, always good to see you, thank you so much. >> you bet. learning more about the suspect charged with abducting a missing university of virginia student. much more, in fact. the accusations against him on two other college campuses. plus, students preparing to pack a local school board meeting saying a conservative board should not be forcing a version of history on them. >> it's not our teachers' forcing us to stand out or
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fight over history class could reach a breaking point. addressing changes they want to the curriculum and expected to have a packed house. students have been walking out of class, protesting in jefferson county colorado over the board's plan to promote patriotism in the curriculum and down play ef of civil disobedience. one is open to future discussions. >> have a teacher on the committee, a student that's taken it, and then one that is in the midst of it. i think that's a good idea. >> i'm not going to believe that because they change the petition they are listening to the community now, and all of the sudden they are going to let us be involved. i still think that their
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original intentions are still the there. >> critics believe students are influenced by the teachers who are upset about their pay package. eric? >> voter id law in wisconsin, asked to take action, block voter id before election on november 4. they claim there's not enough time to implement new rules. they are supposed to a voter id to vote, to cut u down on fraud, but some call it a tactic to suppress the vote of low income and minority voters. the suspect in the disappearance uva student, hannah graham a no-show this morning. meanwhile, a new report on jesse matthew saying he was accused of sexual assault twice years ago. let's bring in a forensic pathologist to talk about this. all right, doctor, the more we know, the more we learn, i mean, this thing seems to have a lot
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of, you know, threads out there. >> yes, yes, i think it started out back in 2002 with being accused of rape at college and another college as he became a serial rapist developing into possibly a serial murder because two of the rapes -- three incidents together, two of them that they knew was matthew, and they are connected to a murdered woman, and that case was a week after another person, both in lynchberg -- >> in 2009. >> killed in 2009, and the police have said that there's a connection of matthew to one of the girls. the brain room here at fox got together for me a list in the past five years, since 2009, of
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five young women -- excuse me, of 12 young women apart from hannah, 13 all together, which four were murdered, unsolved, and eight are missing, and i'm sure that the police and sheriff department throughout virginia are going to put ten to 15 years of all their unsolved murders and all the missing women because this is a pattern. patterns with other serial murderers like ted bundy in the 70s killed more than 30 people, a lot more than 30 people, in which a charming personable, young man offers lifts to women, college students, to bring them to the dorm, and they are never heard from again. get in the car and never heard from again. the police may have found with hannah's investigation in his
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car or at his residence of other women, often people take trophies of jewelry or clothing, and they are not saying anything about it because right now, everything's under seal. >> there's been allegations in the past, never convicted of anything, rein soand some of th, alleged victims declined, not enough to put together a case, but tracked an dogged by accusations that are troubling over the past ten to 12 years. asking about all the cases, there's a map up there, startling to see central virginia and broader parts of the state about unsolved cases. how does it work? keep dna from the cases? some we don't have a body, the girls are missing. >> yeah, that's a good question because virginia has been in the forefront of all the states, of getting dna evidence into legal requirements, police departments. in 2002, they would keep a data
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base on rape victims if convicted. the two girls at the colleges were not convicted and were not arrested so they wouldn't have been in the data base. now they have a data base since 2009 or so anybody who is arrested goes in the data base, even if later on they are not found to be guilty. keep it in the data base people like this, and can't get expu e expunged, and that is the future. to catch them in the early st e stage, and killing five people. >> there's evidence from that because she survived and helped police with the evidence and sketches and things so interesting to see if there's a link there. >> yeah, the one that was raped and rapist fled when someone came, her dna matched the 2002
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rapist, grand liberty, knew it was the same person, but didn't know who it was. they caught him with good old fashion vision seeing matthew with hannah visually, and that's how they connected him to her, and then they got information on his dna, and they matched other two people, so the dna is very helpful in these situations. >> to be clear, leaving liberty after the accusation in 2002. we'll see where it comes topgt. the evidence for the jury does not lie, and that's what they need. doctor, good to see you today. >> thank you. >> thanks. >> there's one really lucky surfer in australia, face-to-face with what you don't want to see a dangerous encounter with a great white shark. two housewives of new jersey, well, now they are real convicted felons.
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one-half of the married couple handed her sentence. what was it and what they face. while every business is unique,
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even develop a customized energy plan for your company. think of it as a way to take more control over your operating costs. and yet another energy saving opportunity from pg&e. find new ways to save energy and money with pg&e's business energy check-up. coming up on "the real story" we will have a live press conference from dallas on the ebola victim here in the u.s. and how the circle of those affected by it is growing. plus, is the u.s. on the virj of having another very important partner in the war against isis? we will let you know. and researchers say if you can't smell one of four items, you may only have five years left to live. you want to know what they are, don't you? find out top of the hour. a surfer has been attacked off the coast of western ahs rail wra. it's believed to be a great white shark attack. part of the surfer's arm was
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bitten off by that shark. he was rushed to the hospital where he thankfully now is 234 stable condition. >> we can confirm that a white shark of approximately three to 4.5 meters in length has been caught by the department's offices in the location of the incident. on the basis that white sharks of this size are known to have bitten humans, often with fatal consequences, the decision has been taken to destroy the shark humanely. >> it happens to be the second great white shark attack in that area just this year. fox news alert. a sentence just handed down for the husband of a real housewife of new jersey. reality star theresa giudice and her husband headed into court earlier. the couple had pleaded guilty earlier this year to bank and mortgage fraud. julie bandaras has the very latest. just coming in. >> hey, this shannon. husband joe guidice got the brunt of the hard time. he will serve 41 months in prison or at least three and a half years.
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we are still awaiting theresa's sentence who faces up to two years in jail. the government did suggest staggering the couple's sentences so theresa could search first and he can take care of the kids because her sentence will be shorter. it was silent, though, going into the courtroom this morning, but that all changed once inside. lawyers began court proceedings at 10:00 a.m. with lots of arguing over improperly filed financial forms and the couple's assets and, for example, court papers in one instance showed the giudice's own one atv when they actually own four. the judge clearly annoyed by the discrepancies and also made it clear that several anonymous letters sent in by the public would not be taken into consideration, obviously, during sentencing. in court documents theresa actually asked to be spared swral time and according to tmz theresa tried to play the nice girl in her defense, in fact, telling the judge the real housewives of new jersey is phony and she's actually really nice. contrary to how she is portrayed on her reality show, her "image
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is little more than a carefully crafted fiction engineered by bravo tv through scripted lines and clever editing." what theresa may not understand is that judges don't determine sentences based on your personality but your crime, and threesa and her husband, joe, broke several laws worthy of punishment. the couple pleaded fwlt to conspiracy and bankruptcy fraud charges in march. they admitted to hiding their assets from creditors and filing false loan applications which resulted in getting $5 million in mortgages and construction loans. theresa had hoped that they would sentence them concurrently so that they could care for their four children. in court papers she stated she wasotology do community service and accept home detenning as a trade-off. it doesn't seem that is going to be the case for house of representatives. they are in recess, and we will find out shortly what her sentence will be. >> talk about reality. that's about as big a reality check as any of us could get. >> i think they should probably kiss that reality show good-bye. >> all right. julie, good to see you. >> sure. >> thanks. >> julie, thank you. another reality, the trouble for the secret service.
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this after several of those highly publicized serious security braechz, including this one. that guy running across the lawn and right into the front doors of the white house. coming up, the former agent speaks out on what went so wrong and how it won't happen again.
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the real story with gretchen carlson starts now. >> thanks, guys. the threat and fear of ebola now spreading across the u.s. hi, everyone. i'm gretchen carlson, and this is "the real story." so it's this guy thomas eric duncan from liberia the first person diagnosed with ebola in the united states. he made his way through the u.s., brussels, belgium, and dulles airport and finally to dallas for his family visit. duncan in isolation now, and his close relatives are being told to stay home or face arrest. as many as 100 people being monitored after coming in contact with family and medical workers who had contact as well

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