tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News October 9, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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david would put in a photo of his wife because he loves her so much, he wants it to go on forever. what a perfect way to end thet show. thank you for being part of "the real story" today. here's harris in for shep. >> we're going to pick it up with a packed hour. i'm harris faulkner in for shepard smith in moments the latest developments on the ebola outbreak from around the 0 globe. we're also keeping a close eye on the battle against the islamist state. well take you live to turkey, and where theiñ u.s. coalition s reportedly carrying out some of the most intense airstrikes of the entire campaign so far. also, what is going on in the nuclear nation of north korea? we haven't seen that country's dictator in more than a month, and if he does not show up at a big anniversary party about to take place, well, you'll know there's something very weird going on. we're watching it. that's ahead. stay close. >> we begin with breaking news
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now. anyone who has a 401k or an aye ira. the dow in freefall right now. yesterday we saw the best rally for years after stocks plunging. expert says investors are worried about the global economic growth. and the price of oil has been dropping and energy stocks are tanking. we'll continue to monitor this. breaking news on this. at any moment now the secretary of homeland security will hold a news conference on border security. you're watching the lectern there. anything about a major story we have been watching develop. it's dealing with claims from two republican congressmen that terror suspects were arrested in texas after crossing over our border with mexico. homeland security has denied that. would certainly also ask, what the feds are going to do to keep ebola from getting into this country, and i might also ask
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about the ongoing secret service scandal breaking wide open today? we're told the secretary will take questions from journalists, so, again, we'll watch this news conference and bring you the news as it breaks. more breaking news. from the fox news deck. we'relash a hotel in europe is effectively on lockdown after a british man, who showed up with symptoms of ebola, suddenly died. reuters is reporting officials sealed off the hotel and say another british person showing symptoms is still inside the hotel along with the-: buildings staff. sky news is reporting this is happening in the capital city of mass don'ta. that's in southeast europe right next to greece. doctors there have not confirmed that this man had ebola but they say that symptoms move, and they are now running tests. reuters is reporting the man who died had travel from britain to macedonia, and macedonian
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spokesperson is telling the bbc the two traveled directly from britain to there and they had not been in any other country with ebola cases they know of. so, if this is ebola, and they did not go to west africa, where did they get it? they caught it somewhere else. where? meanwhile, hospital officials in spain say the ebola patient there is, quote, getting worse, and we have been reporting they're saying a nursing assistant may have gotten the disease after she touched her face with an infected glove. now, two doctors who were treating her are in isolation. although we're to no one elseñás showing symptoms. the woman in spain is the first person to contract ebola outside of west africa. we know she was treating a priest who ultimately died from it. officials yesterday killed her dog. we reported that. still not clear if the dog actually had ebola in dallas, texas, the other part we're watching, officials there say a sheriff's deputy who went into the apartment where the first u.s. ebola patient had stayed,
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is doing much better and that he does not haveua a fever. health officials say the man was inside that apartment, but briefly, but that the ebola patient was in the hospital so the deputy didn't actually have direct contact with him. further test results are expected later today. we're live outside the hospital in dallas. >> reporter: we're watching that developing situation out of europe right now. the only thing we know is that the u.k. foreign office says that it is investigating and that it is waiting on the results of those blood tests to see if the man who died, or if his friend in fact do test positive for ebola. all we noes british citizen was admitted to an infection clinic with symptoms of the disease. he was unable to communicate at the time and then suddenly died there. his friend is also sick, and officials on the ground now looking to the world health organization for the proper protocols here. we have been told that staff at the hotel, as well as paramedics
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and other medical workers who have been in contact with these two people, have been placed under quarintine for the time being, very much a fluid situation. we do not know if this is a false alarm at this point or if it in fact is ebola that has popped up there. >> and you can imagine how nervous the hotel staff are as they're in lockdown with this second person inside the hotel. let's get now toó3 what is happening in dallas, and i understand that there have been some developments. of curse we reported the very first person to be diagnosed with ebola in the united states has died, and then what's next now? >> there's this sheriff's deputy in the hospital behind me, but the silver lining of this at this hour is he is listed in good condition right now, and that he, too, is waiting on the official test results, although halve officials on the ground here in texas are now saying his symptoms do not appear to be consistent with ebola, but we have to wait for the official
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word from the blood test. in any case, they are erring on the side of caution as they're doing a hospitals and medical facilities all around the country. the dallas sheriff's deputy is named michael monigy, one of five members of law enforcement who briefly worked inside thed@ apartment where thomas duncan's family was staying last week, but started to feel sick yesterday. he was brought by ambulance to this hospital here. incidentally, the same hospital where thomas duncan died of ebola yesterday morning, disease now killed nearly 4,000 people across the globe, a sobering number. 4,000 people, harris, primarily in the three countries there in west africa. >> we hope the best for the sheriff's deputy. it is a good sign, though, he is not showing exact symptoms but we'll wait for the official word. casey, thank you very minute. we are get something details about the plan to stop travelers from bringing ebola into this country.
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this follows yesterday's news of the first death from the virus on american soil there in texas, right behind where casey was standing, and that hospital. but even before the new screening will take feet some health experts warn taking passengers' temperatures might actually do nothing to stop ebola from spreading. the in the screening program begins saturday at blue jackets -- at john f. kennedy and then will expand to other airports. and they route through other countries. the feds say customs will be responsible for taking their temperatures. the head of the centers for disease control and prevention admits nothing can keep the; country 100% safe. the best way to protect the u.s. is to stop the ebola outbreak at its source in west africa. today two military flights with marines are set to land in liberia. part of the mission to fight the
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virus with as many as 4,000 u.s. troops, lee leyland vitter is live at the airport in washington, dc. >> there's 150 people a day coming in from those countries where ebola is running unchecked. liberia, guinea, and sierra leon. when they land they will be met by custom and bored protection officials with a no-touch thermometer. they get a temperatureq reading. if it's high then they're subjected to additional health questions, additional health screenings with the cdc officials and they're also prepare quarintine rooms in a number of these airports to have a place to take these folks. at that point it's a gametime decision by local health officials whether to keep people in quarintine or give them a log and check in with them. people point out[37lv this woult have stopped duncan from entering dulles international
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airport and leaving because they don't think he had a fever when he came to the united states. the incue base period is 21 days. that's the time you can have the virus in your body and not show signs. that's the fear, somebody came in looking healthy and then was able to leave, and the flight that connects to the liberia flight lands here in just a couple of hours, as dulles, and there won't be any screening for those folks. doesn't start here until next week. >> all right. so, sometimes our best questions come from viewers and this one judy smith on my twitter page, says i why are we waiting for saturday at jfk and you say there's a plane from liberia now but they're not testing. why are they waiting? >> not from lieee -- lie beera. there's no direct frights from liberia orthos countries. that's they're saying it takes to get everything up and running. the other issue is the false positive issue. a lot of folks in africa who
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have fevers and get on airplanes but it's also because of malaria, a disease that presents similar to ebola. so they're trying not to cause a panic, and the past two scares they thought there was somebody coming in with ebola, that time in newark, a false positive, and then also an emergency landing in midland, texas, where they pulled a woman off who had been sick on the plane. she hadn't even been traveling from africa and that's something the cdc is worried about, causing a panic?o in terms of wt happens on airliners. >> thank you for cleaning that up because i misspoke about the flight. one last question for you in terms -- how are they going to deal -- people are worried. they'll have people who are no doubt so worried it witness look like panic inside the airport. >> there's no question there's -- they're worried about that. there's one times they had to send people in hazmat suits on to airplanes. one guy started screaming about
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having ebola on the plane. it was a hoax. he hadn't been to africa either. they're going to be able to look at people's passports and tell if they have a liberian transport, and the airlines give border protection before people get on the planes in terms of connecting flights. that's going to be part of what they'll use to cordon these people off. whether there will be people who zap people walking off the plane, we don't know. they're trying to figure this out on the fly. a couple days ago the program was announced. >> absolutely. thank you very minute. we appreciate it. airplane cleaners are walking off the job. they say among their concerns, the fear they could be exposed to ebola. and they're arguing passengers could be in danger as well. is there an actual risk? is this real or looking at this from just the perspective of rights of employees? we'll talk about the issue with
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more now on the break news from moments ago. the secretary of homeland security talking about the people arrested in texas for illegally entering this country, and here's what he says about those reports. >> in september the public heard a claim that four individuals with suspected ties toóf terrorm in the middle east had attempted
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to cross our southern border. far fewer know that in fact these four individuals were arrested, their supposed link to terrorism was thoroughly investigated and checked, and in the end, amounted to a claim by the individuals themselves that they were membersháof the kurdih workers party, an organization that is actually fighting against isil, and defended kurdish territory in iraq. nevertheless these individuals have been arrested for unlawful spray. they are detained and will be deported. in the recent outbreak, there has been only one case so far of ebola diagnosed in this country. nevertheless, this department, my department, the department of homeland security, the department of defense, and cdc, are heavily engaged. we are enhancing our ebola screening of air passengers from the three affected african
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countries and we are continually evaluating whether more is appropriate. >> so the secretary hit a couple of points there. he did talk about those arrests on our border with mexico, and then he segwayed into his thoughts about where we are in the fight against ebola. that was from his prepared comments just moments ago. we're told he will take questions so we'll monitor that event and bring you news as it breaks. let's bring in retired general jack keene, chairman for the institute of the study of warçc and a military analyst. one of my favorite people to talk to about this. general, as we start with what is going on at our border, is it un -- i guess unfathomable this could happen? you hear the secretary's comments pushing back, didn't happen this time with the terrorist but there is a wider concern. correct? >> yes, certainly. the fact of the matter is the radical islamists in the region
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have the intent to come to the united states and do damage. whether they have the means is another thing. we have to react to their intent. so, clearly, security at the border is important. the vigilance our intelligence agencies have you're seas to pick them up before the come to the united states and then what we do inside the united states. this is the area we shouldn't get overly concerned about to be able to set up terror cells where they can sustain some kind of activity against the united states, in multiple cities simultaneously, that would truly threaten the american people, i don't believe they have the infrastructure to too that and our intelligence departments pick that up. the so-called lone wolf like in boston, that's another matter. somebody could self-motivate, radicalize themselves or return to the united states and do something like that on an isolated basis. >> specific with the border issue, we have seen how pourous
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it is. there's an estimate of upwards of 60,000, 70,000 illegal children who have comp across the boredder into the country, and they were attended by those who would do them harm, mules bringing them into this country, people carrying drugs and so on, and now those children have been disbursed, waiting to get through the legal system, the deportation process, if our government has the stomach to do that. we'll see. it's a real thought. not a threat. somebody could come that way. wouldn't have to be necessarily disbursed. they call it terror for a rope. you scare people. might not be an ultimate simultaneous attack. >> certainly our border is vulnerable. it's protected in some spots but not in all spots, and we move our resources around to counter where penetrations are, and could somebody get throughu there? certainly. anybody looking at our border in the last few years knows full well you can penetrate it. it's done regularly. >> do we need to do something about that immediately? >> i don't think we have -- i
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think we should secure the border a long time ago. having nothing to do with this issue, frankly. so, anything that we can do to shore up the security of that border is in our security interests. >> okay. let's move on. the next thing you heard the secretary talking about is the ebola outbreak in west africa, and of course, if you have been watching the first few minutes of this hour you have cases in spain, now in macedonia, two men who traveled from britain -- they're not surezñ if it's ebol, they're looking at it. now we're sending 4,000 of our fighting-for-s to go help with this. what are your thoughts on that? >> i think this is what the united states does. we -- the most generous country in the world, not only do we fight for other people's freedoms and the abuse that thugs cause them, but when they're in trouble, we have the capacity to come to their need, and i think it's a reflection of the american people itself. this is the 101st airborne
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division, air assault, headquarters, an outfit i used to command, that will deploy out of fort campbell and will go to africa, western africa to deal with this. they will not be doing what doctors and nur but they're going to assist overall in dealing with this and helping them cope with it. as you know, a major catastrophe in that part of the world. >> as we're reading and we think about or men and women going, they will be touching blood samples and so forth. what comes to mind in terms of their preparedness? we're getting dribs and drabs and we have a general on set and now we have an actual way to find out, are our troops ready. >> general odierno, he slowed down our deployment to make certain that all the training was necessary to do something that we normally don't do. if it's going to a war zone, obviously that is something that
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is in our kit bag and we do that routinely. probably much too routinely given the last 13 years. the fact of the matter is, he wanted to ensure that all the training done, all the preparations that are done, to safeguard our troops' welfare. >> god speed to them. quickly, just your thought of where we are now with kobani. right on the border, turkey, syria, the air strikes don't seem!l to be stopping them from taking this key point. >> i think the airstrikes began on september 23rd. kobani was attacked by isis on september 16th. the airstrikes initially focused on the entire support infrastructure that first week, it was command and control, training bases, it was station bases that were close to iraq, oil refineries, and kobani was not part of the menu. then asc@ that attack persiste- and quite frankly, as the media was able to focus on it and take pictures of a war taking place,
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lil' kim, as shep likes to call him, has gone missing. kim jong-un has not made a public appearance in more than a month and with a big political event set for tomorrow there's a possibility he may no longer be calling the shots. kim jong-un attended the celebration last year but the last time he was seen was last month. before that observers noticed he was walking with a limp. there's talk hey developed arthritis, diabetes, or some
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other illness, problems with his ankles after putting on a few pounds, from his love of swiss cheese. a couple weeks ago he was not feeling well but officials say he was healthy. he was a no-show at a gathering this week in honor of his late dad. some north korean defector says his younger sister by the -- be the person in charge. joining us is ambassador richardson. he has visited north korea severalz times. your thoughts. what does this mean if he does not show up? >> well, first of all, i don't think there's a coup going on. i think there's some kind of ailment. i think what happens is there's a lot of south korean rumons and a rumor mill almost governing
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north korea by a rumor mill. my view is there are a lot of power centers there, not just kim jong-un. there's the party, the military, members of his family. doesn't surprise me maybe that in his absence, his sister has also more power, a little more juice, but i think it's wishful thinking. some people may think he will be replaced and there's another regime. i think -- there must be an ailment of some kind. doesn't show up tomorrow, it's even going to increase the rumors out there. >> you know, i don't know if the concern so much is who is in charge, they're rogue anyway, but when you see a nation like this with nuclear weapons and they like to display them and defy condemnation from the rest of the world. i'm just wondering, are we concern at out about who controlling that element of the country and who might step up? what do we know about this guy's
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sister? >> we know the family is very controlling. at the same time, we know that kim jong-un, if he doesn't feel he is getting loyalty from his family, he basically takes action, as he did with his uncle, which was generated by kim jong-un. but i do think the sister, members of the family, they're toeing the line. i think he may be sick there may be an ailment. i don't think it's serious, from what i understand. but at the same time, there's a rumor mill that gets everybody excited, but those that think there's going to be a regime change, coup, i just think that's wishful thinking. >> every time we see somebody pass the torch here they like to brandish the weapons they have and we hope and pray they don't get a little more bold as we might see history repeat itself. ambassador, thank you forn$ joining us. see what happens. america is stepping up its
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bombing campaign. as the deadly battle against the islamic state rages right up against turkey's border. so far airstrike have not stopped the pill tenants, and our nato ally, turkey, is facing increased pressure to jump into the fight. now one turkish official is responding. >> the mother of an american isis prisoner, sendingxs a messe to the leader of the terrorist army. how much money do you have in your pocket right now? i have $40, $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so. well if you start putting that towards your retirement every week and let it grow over time, for twenty to thirty years, that retirement challenge might not seem so big after all. ♪
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more headlines from the fox news deck. investigators say it appears of fires in northern california. they report those fires have burned at least five homes. further south, crews continue to battle flames in yosemite national park. officials have grounded the state's air tanker fleet after one of those planes crashed and killed the pilot earlier this week. and a volcano sending a plume of ash into the air over indonesia.
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the column was two miles high. one of more than 100 active volcanos in indonesia. and, green day, is among the nominees for the rock 'n' roll hall of fame. they including sting and nine inch nails. the music community will vote to determine which musicians they'll enshrine in cleveland next spring. much more right after this.
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the u.s. and its allies should not expect turkey to go it alone when its comes to launching a ground war against the islamic state in syrian that's the word from turkey'ss foreign minister as kurdish and isis forces battle across the border. pentagon officials today said several u.s. airstrikes point militant targets inside the syrian city of kobani. human rights activist say
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coalition bombings have failed to push back the militants but u.s. officials say for now the kurds still control most of the city, and just across the border, turkish forces are monitoring the fight but have not yet joined in. u.s. officials tell the "associated press" they're worried turkey's military might target kurdish fighters. the kurds have been fighting former independence inside turkey. the'x turkish government and militants agreed to a cease fire but tensions have been flaring lately. greg palkot is near the border in turkey. greg? >> centcom might be saying that the kurdish militia have the town of kobani under control, burt the view from the ground is quite a bit different. take a look at what we saw today. >> this is a look tyco back any battlefield today in the east it's quiet. isis in control. the center, quiet. we saw a lot of fighting yesterday. maybe isis in control.
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to the west of center, a lot of smoke, a lot of noise. kurd defenders fighting isis. to the western side we're seeing smoke. we have seen u.s. coalition airstrikes there in the past. we're hearing jets overhead. so to the far right, turkish tanks, poised, ready, doing nothing. on the western side of the city we witnessed what we believe is one or maybe more isis car or truck bombs targeting kurdish positions. five u.s. coalition airstrikes ivúñ the last 24 hours, hitting various isis targets, but outside, south of the city, this could disrupt terrorist supply lines but the main fight reminds inside the town. on this side of the border in turkey, fighting continues, too. we're in the third night of clashes between the ethnic kurds and -- the role of turkey
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regarding this fight probably the topic of discussions, too between general john allan who is heading up the u.s.-led anti-isis campaign, and turkish officials in the capital of the country back to you. >> isis isn't just fighting a war there they're also really working on their propaganda campaign as well. very sad. the mother of the american prisoner, the islamic state, is threatening to kill next is using twitter to reach out to the group's leader, quote, she says, i'm trying to get in tough with the islamic state about my son's fate. i'm an old woman and he is my only child. she used her son's muslim name. he converted to islam. trace gallagher is live watching this. what else did the mom say? >> this is the first time the mother used her twitter account, and on the account of two pictures of her son, and he
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mentioned he was her only child, and she said, my husband and i are on our own with no help from the government. we would like to talk to you. how can we reach you? this, of course, is not the first time the parents reached out. they sent a videotaped plea to >> there's so much beyond our control. we have asked our government to change its actions, but like our son, we have no more control over the u.s. government than you have over the breaking of dawn. we implore his captors to show mercy and use their power to let our son go. >> there's no indication that the leader of isis has responded to either message. >> i understand that friends of the american who is being held by isis are showing their support. >> about 300 friends and supporters came out last night to butler university, where he attended backk= in 2011-2012.
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they came out to show support for the parents and pray for his release and well as members of the indianapolis muslim community were also on hand. listen to one of them. >> god is merciful. god is forgiving. we ask his can't temperatures -- captors be equally forgiving. >> a form captor who shared a cell with raw rahman say he voluntarily converted to islam. this story came together quickly this hour. hundreds of airport workers here in new york city are now apparently returning to their jobs after the port authority reports it has agreed to review safety concerns during the current ebola scare. about 200 of the workers, as i reported earlier in the hour, walked if a their jobs this morning. that was the scene at la guardia airport. the men and women who clean the
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jets after each flight, say they often come across vomit and w blood, even hypodermic needles, representative for the company for which they work is saying -- air serve trains its cabin cleaners in cleaning protocols, click for blood borne pathogens, these include providing cleaners with protective equipment. again, just breaking, the port authority indicates the workers are returning to the job and there will be a review of workplace safety. our legal anis is with me now on the news deck you. said of course they greed. >> if you want to know if they have a legitimate gripe, look out with a statement, within hours, which means there is meat on the bones of their argument here. and their argument isn't that this is something new hampshire just kind of like the ebola scare is the straw that broke the camel's back.
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it's like, okay, we were willing to clean up all those nasty things without the proper gloves, without the proper protective gear, when it was just regular illnesses we were subjecting ourselves to but now you want us to subject ourselves to death? huh-uh. and these people are vital workers. the plane lands, everyone is waiting to board to get it cleaned. if they're not cleaning it, the next plane doesn't depart. >> these people are our first line of defense right now. whether it be for ebola or -- >> anything -- >> avian flu -- we have had certain things we have had to look out for over the years. between them and the customs agents that are going to be taking temperatures, they're critical to the operation for keeping us safe because the flights are still going to be not routed directly here but through other countries to get here from the west african nations where this outbreak is happening. >> what you're saying is absolutely true and that's why you see such swift action here. there was no hesitation. it was like, okay, we need to address this because they basicallyfh have the facts on their side and we can't
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hesitate. >> let's carry this out. you know about the hotel situation in europe right now. where the workers are now locked inside as they take a look at another man who died and then another person who possibly is showing some ebola symptoms. will we see this kind of spread from airport cleaners to others in this country? >> everybody wants to protect themselves. our number one human instinct, and if we're subjecting people, whether they know or not to the possibility of crag this deadly disease, the guy died now in texas -- that raises everybody's level of sensitivity. i think it's going to make everyone act more judiciously and cautiously, like taking away people's civil,! rights like not leaving the country or leaving the hotel. >> thank you for coming in. a new report claiming a white house volunteer wasles involved in the secret service prostitution scandal in colombia. details on a possible coverup and the white house is responding.
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a fox report now. more headlines from the fox news deck. government officials in hong kong called off talks with leaders of the prodemocracy protests after the student leaders called on their supporters to redouble efforts to occupy the protest zone. the number of demonstrators has fall can sharply and a government officials sayui the students' comments undermind their goal of talks. >> a vintage plain crashed at an airport in louisiana. you can see how it flipped over on to its front. airport officials a no one was hurt. the plane may have been worth as much as two million dollars. this is how the otherryqá"t weather. this is a massive typhoon over the pacific.
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this is the strongest storm to form on earth so far this year. we have harris faulkner on the news deck today. back to you. >> thank you very minute. the white house is responding to a new report about a possible coverup in the secret service prostitute candle. a report claims a white house volunteer brought a prostitute into his hotel room in colombia. the secret service fired or punished nearly two dozen agents accused of partying with prostitutes in their hotel room day before the president arrived. white house officials denied any involvement from anybody in the obama administration but according to the reporting of the "washington post" sources and documents show, quote, senior white house aides were given information at the time, suggesting a prostitute was an overnight guest in the hotel room of an advance presidential room of an advance presidential team so ally bank really has no hidden fees on savings accounts?
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the ultimate arena for business. hour after hour of diving deep, touching base, and putting ducks in rows. the only problem with conference calls: eventually they have to end. unless you have the comcast business voiceedge mobile app. it lets you switch seamlessly from your desk phone to your mobile with no interruptions. i've never felt so alive. get the future of phone and the phones are free. comcast business. built for business. breaking news now on this. the sheriff's deputy who went into the apartment where the ebola victim in texas stayed, does not have ebola. texas state health services are confirming he has tested negative for the deadly virus. the hospital said earlier the deputy had no symptoms of the disease. he was one of the deputies who went inside the apartment.
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he did not have direct contact with the victim but did see some of his family members who are now in isolation. so that, and we'll brick -- bring you more as we learn itb™ñ >> an off dotty officer in st. fired shots and killed a man. the man opened fires -- fire on the police officer first, relatives of the man say the man was not armed. this happened ten miles from ferguson. fired shots at the officer, who returned fire, killing him. the st. louis dispatch says the cousin said the man was holding a sandwich and police thought it was a gun. [chanting] >> this was the scene last night after the latest shooting. protesters took to the streets reportedly shouting, "hands up,
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don't shoot" in reference to ferguson. garrett, the family says this guy was holding a sandwich. police say he had a gun. which is it? >> reporter: i spoke with the manager of shaw market, the shop this trio left just minutes before the shooting, and he told me the 18-year-old, who is identified as bonduranta myers, did buy a sandwich but dunce believe anybody had a gun because their pants were sagging and their shorts so short they would have seen it. but about his stick evidence at the scene says meyer fired three shots at the officer, using a nine millimeter handgun, and tried to let off several more rounds after his gun jammed. >> i know emotions are high and tensions are high, but the reality is, what we have seen94 and what the evidence tells me right now is an individual point it a gun at a police officer, fired at lease three rounds and
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continuedded to pull the trigger. >> reporter: police say it was at that point the officer in self-defense, shot back, firing 17 times. >> it's the number of shots, as i understand it, that has some of the demonstrators upset. what are police sayings. >> the chief doesn't know why the officer fired so many times or just how many of those shots actually hit the suspect. but the case is now being reviewed by the department's new force investigative unit, which was formed after the shooting of michael brun to review every officer-involved shooting that results in a fatility. and the officer, six year veteran of the st. louis police department, is now on administrative leave until the investigation is over. >> we'll be right back. before earning enough cash back from bank of america to help entertain some friends at the beach. before earning 1% cash back everywhere, every time. and 2% back at the grocery store. even before he got 3% back on gas. all with no hoops to jump through.
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